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THE SAN ¥FRANCISCO %ALL, SUNDAY, OUCTOBER 6, 1895. 15 Where Dame Fashion Holds Her Sway. TIMELY HINTS ON THE There is to be an absolute rage for vel- vets; and can one wonder when weloqn\ that the exquisite colorings of the chine silks being reproduced in velvets. Needless to remark they will never be- come common, as they w nge in price from $5 to $15 per yard. The swellest of blouses are being worn New York by the belles. They are iped in red, blues and brown, black and cerise ana peach and n, and watered over the shot gr. < of silks, in pink lue, are being made the plain-tinted soft The Paisley pa and green, violet ¢ up -charmi w vicunas. s Mignonette silks W s tiny pin-point brocade oy ng to the fore. 1 set Miss Consuelo Van- , clothing, etc., are terest; so much so er a few days ago e Duke has been de- was a bolero, with at the waist line, and s. the sleeves and revers With it she wore a large d with plumes. Amongac derbilt all topi that a jacket bl M n, with bright e color, so Mr. Harper n subject worthy of his r it is known that the portrait g ber in a gown of pure white ow in the neck both back and nmed with snowy lace and : completed rapidly and is t England to be hung on s of Blenheim. rysanthemums are to be the fashion- e flower for weddings all through the g of weadings I want to in print which has been asked me in private and ould a bride be expected to fur- ffer to pay for her bridesmaids’ I have my own opinion on this and should say certainly not. de can present her maids, if she de- res to make handsome gifts, with beau- jeweled pins with her monogram te bracelets and numerous 3 aw the line at rowns, and have no especial reason for [ st friend to pay for my gown on occasion. However, so good an 1e says: idesmaids supply their own ie about the en_the bride’s d’s costumes nses, which they fre- ceful compliment, E: that it should be t ¢ ex The s the their . John D. Rockefeller intends, on the of her daughter’s marri 0 orty trousseaux to that numberof A pret dea, is it not? another fair American will shortly, the engagement hav- unced of Miss Marie Read to Miss Read is the daughter Meredith Read, formerly ited States Minister to Athens. Count Foras is Grand Marshal at the court of ince Ferdinand of Bulgaria. I see that unt de Fora: General J. A simple outfit for an autumn bride (who desires to be suitably garbed for the ous occasions which arise in a city, whose means limited) must in- 1de a tailor-made suit, consisting of a_pretty new woolen should be lined with feta & the jacket with or contrasting with the toilet a silk waist is contrast in color. A more_dressy jacket of black velvet or bro- | caded silk will be tound exceeding] . A gown of v handsome bla es—one high and trimmed with jet and lace, the other cut low for evening wear—will be serviceable. An evening clo: anecessity, and must be long and fu ned and wadded. The cape or collarette should be trimmed or fur. The outdoor cape can be loth or watered silk. It is un- v to go into further detail, as un- g can be as simple or elaborate derclot. ngs are also necessary which most women possess before marriage. There were a few new and pretty waists visible on Monday night at the Baldwin. That the spell of the demi-season_is upon us is only too evident, but Trilby was gowned just as we all knew she would be, for of course from Du Maurier's illustra- ns and descriptions we were acquainted every gown. Her very caps and s were known to us and whether in neat trim black frock, the pale gray or the gorgeous robe of Tich white silk ocaded with gold T was most ef- e and very pretty. MARCELLA. k- 02 Sl FASHIONS FOR THE MEN. Overcoats are to be long and plain. Browns and grays continue to enjoy h popularity for suitings. I have been requested to give informa- tion as to the correct dress for an usher at aday w erat home orin church. It invariably consists of frock coat and waist of b vicuna cloth, gray trousers, white shirt with high standing collar, white or gray silk four-in-hand tie or ascot, gray gloves, patent leatner shoes top hat. Boutonniere should be a gardenia, or a spray of lilies-of-the-valley. 53 cos The groom usually gives a dinner to_ his ushers and best man and also provides them with gl ties and tiepins. He also may pay their hotel bills and travel- ing exp hen the wedding is an out- of-town ; the other expenses on such an occasion are great, including a present to the bride, new clothes and many inci- dental expenditures which always arise. Fashionable men in London and New York never wear fobs, and the watch and chain are tucked away in an inside trouser pocket. Lockets and charms show hope less bad form when worn. As the resnlt of the yacht race, it is re- ported that Dunlap never had such a rush of business, and on the Monday after the race he was completely sold ont and com- pelled to order up 200 d When Mr. Belmont gave his ball this year at Belcour in his stable he wore a pink hunting coat and canary-colored waistcoat—in short, he was in a proper hunt costume. This has been criticised by some, but he was perfectly correct under the circumstances. A tiger distributed the cotillon favors, among which were riding whips, tiny horse-blankets, etc. One who is an authority says: “It was an enter- tainment such as a bachelor of means, position ana taste alone can give.” T fear we are not destined to have such an affair here for many moon: Charles Dana Gibson has almost en- tirely recovered from injuries received re- cently in a runaway accident and will be married on the 15th of November. Two young Yale men lately took their cles with them to Europe, and report them in all respects superior to those to be had across the pond. AL HOW MANY WOMEN ARE GOING INTO BUSINESS ? A manufacturer who employs300 people The jacket was of | Consuelo is a | so, excepting that I would not like | as desired, and a thousand other little ! SEASON'S RULING FADS. told me that 1n _seven years he had em- ployed four different young women as | bookkeepers and five as stenographers, | and that every one had married and lefs | him. *“That is a reason,” said he, *‘why | I cannot depend upon a woman for a bookkeeper or stenographer. About the | time they are familiar with my books and vrivate papers, and have learnéd my meth- ods of work, they leave me, and I have been for seven yvears at these two vital points in my offices educating women to do my work until 1am sick and tired, and propose to engage men who will stay with me.” This is true of a class of young women who ere just out of school, and who desire to earn a little extra money, since they can doit in a respectable way, that they may have more to spend on their wardrobe than would be furnished them by their { parents. But it is tne one obstacle to | woman’s progress in the business world in | her early life, since every young woman | | does have thoughts of married life and | does look forward to the time when she will be settled in her own home. There- fore, she regards any business she may engage in as temporary employment. 3 | Nature has handicapped her with this | natural instinct for matrimony, the family, | home and social ambition, so that she can- | not go with the same freedom into busi- | ness life that man does. Therefore man | | will always have the advantage in the busi ness world, and it would seem that this is | right, because upon man the chief burden | | of earning a living for himself and woman | will always rest. A woman’s heart will | hold her to the hearthstone, while 2 man’'s | heart will long for the world of activity { and achievement, and he will go there. | We shall never see more than a very small | minority of women engaged in business. The law of a woman’s life is that her | greatest achievement must be in the home, in the family, as a wife and a_mother, while with man it is different. His very nature leads him to toil and struggle in the world that he may bring back to the woman of his love the living that she de- serves. These laws may be interrupted for a time in places and in some gener- ations, but in the course of human progress these matters will regulate themselves, and woman will fill her own womanly | place while man wili find his sphere in the active, noisy business world.—Martha J. Owens, in the Chautauquan. { e | ABOUT WOMEN. The Association for the Advancement of Women will meet in New Orleans No- | vember 6-8. Miss Willard has issued the official call for the National conveation of the Wo- man's Christian Temperance Union to be | held 1n Baltimore October 18-28. | Miss Florence Bascom has been added to the faculty of Bryn Mawr College as reader in geology. She is said to be the only woman who has received the degree | of Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins. The quarterly conference of St. Paul's Methodist Church, Delaware, Ohio, by a animous vote has elected Mrs. J. W. ford, wife of President Bashford, as its delegate to the Ohio Lay Conference. It is announced that the intrepid suffrage leader, Susan B. Anthony, is to retire from the platform for the purpose of writing the account of her forty years' labors in the | cause of woman’s enfranchisement. | _ The vote in the recent Cincinnati con- | ference of the Methodist Episcopal Church on the Baltimore proposition was 133 in favor of the change to admit women and none against. Six members refused to vote. Mrs. Alice Gordon-Gulick, principal of the American school for the higher educa- tion of young women in San Sebastian, | Spain, has prepared young women for the examinations in the State University at | Madrid, and they have passed with higher | honors than any of the young men. This is a thing unprecedented in Spain and marks the beginning of a new era for high- | er education of women. The National Department of the Wo- | man’s Keeley League, Mrs. Ellen M. Wat- | son, superintendent, Pittsburg, Pa., is cir- culating a petition to be presented to the international committee of the Evangelical Alliance, to secure a day of prayer in the | Week of Prayer for the removal of the | drinking usages of society, and the aboli- | tion of the traffic in aulcoholic beverages, | and of the opium habit and trade. | "The Catholic University at Washington has decided to admit women as pupils in all the higher studies, embracing courses | of science, philosophy and the arts. The university heretofore has been available for priests alone. With the ovening of the institution in October women students 2lso will be accorded admission to the lec- tures and studies in the regular and spe- | cial courses, though not permitted to ma triculate and secure degrees. - WHERE THE WOMEN VOTE. In view of the recent agitations in favor | of woman's suffrage in the United States, it may be of interest to know that in nearly all the countries on the globe | women have had some form of suffrage for years. We of the United States are some- | what slow in extending to them this | privilege. | In England, Scotland, and Wales women | vote for all elective officers, except mem- | bers of Parliament. In France the women teachers elect | women members on all boards of educa- | tion. Sweden women vote for all elective officers except representatives. In Norway they have school suffrage. In Ireland they vote for the harbor boards, poor law guardians, and in Belfast for municipal officers. In Russia women householders vote for all elective officers. In Finland they vote for all elective officers. In Austria-Hungary they vote, by proxy, for all elective officers. In Ttaly widows vote for members of Parliament. In Hindostan women exercise the right | of suffrage. Women have municipal suffrage in Cape | Colony, which rules one million square miles. Municipal woman suffrage rules in New Zealand. Iceland, in the North Atlantic, the Isle | of Man, between England and Ireland, | Pitcairn Island in the South Pacific, have full woman suffrage. In the Dominion of Canada women have municipal suffrage in every province, and also in the Northwest Territories. In the United States twenty-eight States and Territories have given women some form of suffrage.—Ram’s Horn. PUT UP BONDS. ¥. W. Ereling & Sons Manage to Satisfy Their Creditors. Owing to & misunderstanding among the business firms interested another at- tachment was levied yesterday on the fur- niture firm of F. W. Kreling & Sons. Several weeks ago an attachment was levied by the First National Bank to secure $2000. It tnen transpired that the firm owed something like $10,000. There was no doubt that the firm had assets worth several times that amount, so a temporary accommodation was. easily arranged. All the creditors assigned their claims to a committee of which Sanford Bennett of the Dunham, Carrigan & Hayden Com- pany was the head. A mortgage wasgiven to Mr. Bennett on the Guerrero-street prop- erty of F. W. Kreling & Sons to cover_all the debts due the firms in the combination. For some reason or other, or possibly by accident, the Allen & Higgins Company was left out of the pool, so their claim was not secured by the mortgage. Yesterday they attached the machinery | one seeing him. and goods. In order to prevent the re- moval of the attached property the firm furnished proper bonds. Up to date, therefore, all the creditors consider themselves amply secured. ROBBED A SALOON. Over Two Hundred Dollars Taken by Unknown Thieves From the Auditorium. A bold robbery committed early yester- day morning, but at a time when plenty of people were in the streets, has cost W. H. Harrison, proprietor of the Auditorium saloon, something over $200. That it cost him no more was due to the fact that there was no more in the tills, the cash registers or the slot machines. The Auditorium saloon adjoins the Co- lumbia Theater. It was evidently entered by some one who had a key to the door, for there were no marks of violence either upon the door from the street or the en- trance from the vestibule of the Columbia Theater. . The saloon was closed about 3 o’clock in the morning; but even after that hour people are constantly passing up and down Powell street, and no one could have spent much time at the door without some At 6 o’clock, when prep- arations were being made to open for the day, the work of the thieves was dis- covered. The saloon had evidently been entered from the door in front, opening on Powell street, for that door was found unlocked. Inside all was confusion. The slot ma- chines were all broken and their contents removed. The cash register was also broken, and most of the money taken in during theday was gone. An atfempt had been nfade on the safe, but it resisted the efforts of the thieves, and they then turned their attention to the cigar-store in front. The till in the cigar-store had been broken open and a roll of nickels, aggre- ating $2, was removed. The slot machine had been shaken up, but was not broken, and the thieves had helped themselves to whatever was to their liking. The loss will be all in cusE, for only that part of the stock which could be carried away in pockets was taken. There was about §200 taken from the tills and ma- chines in the saloon. There is no one so far suspected of the robbery. CONTEST OF A LUX WILL Jesse Sheldon Potter After His Mother’s $3,000,000 Estate. Allegation That Mrs. Lux Was Im= properly Influenced by T. B. Bishop and Others. Jesse sheldon Potter, the Lux estate ad- ministrator, has begun a new feature of | the already famous litication by demand- ing the revocation of the Miranda W. Lux will. His petition was filed in this Qity yesterday. Mr. Potter alleges that Mrs. Lux was of unsound mind and that she was unduly influenced. He says that Thomas B. Bishop, Azro N. Lewis and Miranda W. Lewis conspired to direct Mrs. Lux in the making of a will that would be favor- able to them, Mr. Bishop having obtained possession of a previous will that Mrs, Lux had signed. Mrs. Lux died in this City on September 21, 1894, after four years of widowhood. On September 25 a will dated December 10, | 1893, was presented in court, together with another will dated January 7, 1894, and still another dated June 5, 1894. The lat- ter had a codicil dated June 23, 1894. Mr. Bishop and Mr. Lewis were named as ex- | ecutors, and on their petition the June will was admitted to probate. In the contest, which is being conducted by Attorney E. 8. Pillsbury, Mr. Potter says that in 1893 and 1894, Mrs. Lux was of unsound mind. Then he continues: Your petitioner further alleges that said decedent was unduly influenced and induced to execute said pretended last wills and testa- ments and the codicil thereto, which have been as aforesaid together admitted to probate as purporting to be the last willand testament | of said Miranda W. Lux, deceased, and cach { and every one of them, solely through undue in- fluence used, exercised and practiced upon her while in a weak, diseased and unfit mental condition, which then incapacitated her from executing any will or testament whatsoever, and that such undue influence was used, practiced and exercised upon said deceased by the above-named Thomas B. Bishop and by Azro N. Lewis and Miranda W. Lewis, his wife, And your petitioner alleges in this behalf that said Thomas B. Bishop, at the time of the alleged execution of each and all of the said documents and long prior_thereto and up to the time of the deeth of said decedent, was the attorney-at-law of saia Miranda W. Lux and her sole legal adviser. That said Miranda W. Lewis was the niece of said decedent and the wife of said Azro N. Lewis, and the said Azro and Miranda and the said Thomas B. Bishop and each ot them exercised and practiced un- due influence upon said decedent and in this regard yeur petitioner avers: That at the time of the alleged making and execution of the said pretended documents, constituting together the said last will and testament of = said deceased, and each and all of them, and for a long | time prior thereto, and continuously there- after until her death, the said Miranda W. Lux, deceased, was suffering from a cancer of the stomach and from other physical diseases and disorders, the precise names and nature of which are unknown to your petitioner, and that by reason thereof the said Miranda W. Lux, déceased, became and was on said 10th day of December, 1893, and prior thereto, and ) thereafter, to the time of her death, weakened in body and mind and susceptible to prejudice and to'the influence and artifices of designin persons, and particularly to the influences ang artifices of those immediately about her and who possessed her trust and confidence. That for a long time prior to said 10th day of December. 1893, and to the making and exe- cution of said alleged documents and of each of them, constituting together the said pre- tended last will and testament of said de- ceased, the said Thomas B. Bishop, Azro Lewis and Miranda W. Lewis, his wife, an who, during all said time, possessed the trust and confidence of said deceased, had the desire and intent to 1nfluence and induce the said Mirande W. Lux, deceased, to make a last will and testament, in such form that the greater part of the estate of said deceasea should, after her death, be placed and held in trust for a very long period of time, and_that the provis- ions of said will should be so framed that very large profits, remunerations and benefits should accrue thereirom and thereunder to them and each of them. That pur- suant to said aforesaid design and intent the saiddplrlles combined, conspired and confederated together for the purpose of influencing and compelling the said Miranda W. Lux, contrary to her own wishes and will, but pursuant to thelr wishes, will and purposes, and with the intent of oLtaining an unfair ad- vantage over said deceased by the use and abuse of her confidence, to make and execute a pretended last will and testament, wherelin unlé whereby they would be benefited as afore- said. Mr, Potter talks of the original will, in which Mrs. Lux, his mother, bequeathed nearly all of the $3,000,000 estate to him. He says: That prior to the month of January, 1893, caid decedent made and executed her Inst will and testament, thereby giving nearly all of her estate nnconditionally to petitioner, and in so doing employed attorneys of high stand- ing, who hiad been theretofore in her service, snd in whom she had always reposed the jullest trust and confidence; thatabout the said month of January said Bishop made the acquaintance of said decedent and soon there- ter became employed as one of her attorneys, and visited said decedent frequently thereafier for the rest of her life; that thereupon said Bishop also proceeded to supplant and did sup- plant &nd supersede all other attorneys then and theretofore employed by said décedent, and became, in fact, her sole legal and busi- ness adviser, in order to effect the ends herein- after stated, by the use and abuse of her confi- dence, and thereafter he continued to be such legal * adviser to the time of her death; and. from the said month of January to the time of her death the said Azro N. Lewis and Miranda . Lewis, his wife, were the trusted companions and advisers of said deceased, and exercised great influence upon her will, mind and actions, and_during much of said time were living in the same house with decedent; and the said Bishop, when he had as aforesald, become the sole adviser of said decedent, proceeded to conspire and combine with the said Azro and Miranda to ob- tain entire and exclusive influence and con- trol over the mind, will and acts of said de- cedent, and to turn such infiuence and’ control to the eccomplishment of his and their own gains and selfish su‘rposel, and to the prejudice of petitioner; and in the accomplishment of this purpose the said Bishop obtained posses- sion of the sald will and testament so as efore- said made by decedent, from the custodian thereof, and upon receiving said document and learning its contents said Bishop and said Azro and Miranda conspired and con- trived to obtain the execution by said deced- ent of the documents so, as aforesald, admitted to probate as Ner last will and testament, and with intent to_thereby supersede her true will by one of their own making, and which would effect their said purposes; and to that end they then and there proceeded to poison the mind of said decedent against petitioner by false representations, and to exclude him and his friends, so far as possible, from her society, and to keep ber solely under their influence and control; and to the attainment of that end they did succeed in preventing your petitioner from seeing his said mother except at rare in- tervals, and then onli' for a few minutes, and also did succeed in almost entirely excluding his friends and scquaintances from her pres- ence, and they did thereby deprive her of in- dependent counsel and advice and prevent her from obtaining the same. During all this time the said T. B. Bishop and said Azro and Miranda, as petitioner is in- | formed and believes and avers, frequently sug- gested to said decedent thatshe should make anothet snd different will, and importuned her 50 to do, until she became entirely submis- sive to their influence,when said Bishop in pur- suance of said conspiracy, prepared the said will dated December 10,1893, and by the a1d and co-operation of said Azro and Miranda in- duced said decedent to execute the same and the said other documents dated January 7, June 5 and June 28, 1894, respectively, as aforesaid. That said decedent did not then or ever un- derstand or comprehend the terms or purport of said documents or either of them. That by said pretended will and testament the said Thomas B. Bishop and Azro N. Lewis made themselves executors thereof and trustees thereunder for an indefinite and practically unlimited period, and thereby obtained the control and exclusive management of nearly all the estate of said decedent—and amount- ing in value to over $3,000,000—during the life of petitioner (unless’ said pretended will and testament be revoked), to their great gain and benefit; and the said Miranda W. Lewis was mede a beneficiary thereunder as to a large portion of sald estate and the residuary | legatee to & great part of thereof. * * ¥ That, as appears by the said document on file herein, as aforesaid, and dated December 10, 1893, a large portion of the estate of said decedent was bequeathed and devised in and by said pretended last will and testament to saia Miranda W. Lewis, in pursuance of a fraudulent design on her part to obtain for her- self as great a part as possible of the property of said decedent; that, although a large part of the estate of said decedent was devised and bequeathed in and by said pretended last will unré testament, dated December 10, 1893, for certain charitable purposes, such bequests were caused to be made by said conspirators merely for the purpose of disguising any appearance of the use or exercise of undue lnzlucnoe by them upon said decedent in the making of said pretended last will and testament and the said document and cod- icil subsequent thereto, and admitted to pro- bate as a part thereof; and that but for the use and exercise of said undue influence upon said decedent at the timesof the making of the doc- uments constituting said pretended last will and testament and codicil thereto and each of them as aforesaid, and the estrangement be- tween said decedent and your petitioner which was caused and procured by said conspirators as aforesaid, said decedent would have devised ard bequeathed the mostof her estate to your petitioner. Further, Mr. Potter declares that his mother was made to believe that in the new will there was no change regarding the bequests to him,and that Mrs. Lux was entirely under the control of the al- leged conspirators. HORE GOOD NEWS For All Women Who Are Sick. ([SPECIAL TO OUE LaDY READERS.) “I am happy to say your Vegetable Compound has cured me of painful men- struations and backache the remainder * My suffering every month was dread- ful. The doctor gave me morphine to ease the pain, but nothing to cure me; and I was obliged to spend two or three days in bed. Now I have no pain at all. “I can work harder, and be on my feet tonger, than I h: for years. I cannot praise your medicine enough. Iam glnd to tell every one that I was cured oy Lydia BE. Pinkham's Vegetable Comn- pound.” —MRs. NEwrox CoBB, Mao chester, Ohio. All druggists sell it. A PERFECT COMPLEXION Can Be Obtained by the Use of WNE. A. REPPERT'S World-Renowned Face Bleach. 7 WHAT IS GUARANTEED FOR MME. A. 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All new goods; shown for the first time in San Francisco. Popular prices. Embroidery Silks. The best in the world. Acknowledged to be tne only silks that are pure dye and fast color.” We have every imaginable shade and color in Filo Floss, Rope Silk, Art Fwist, Turkish Floss, Outline Silk and Knitting Silks. H We have the largest as- Stamping—tnent o amiens. for stamping in the world at the right prices. Our Illustrated Catalogue for Fall of 1895 now ready and mailed free upon application to any address. o0 ©® & D e e e e S e e *MILLINER Fall and Win= LATEST ter" Noveicies from Paris and New York. Hats, Laces, Flowers, Feathers, Ribbons, ETC., ETC. THE LARGEST STOCK Ever Dispiayed in the City. shefrslrsierprsfasirchefrshocrciachrshreiashrshreirslecircirciastocosirsasiente 10241028 Market ‘St BRANCH—999 MARKET ST. P T o S S S O U 8 o R O e WHALEBONE. PACIFIC STEAHF WHALING COMPANY'S Genuine Shell Whalehone *“Orca Brand.” Specially Prepared and Selected for the DRESS 600DS AXD CORNET TRADE. All Sizes. Every Package Guaranteed. One trial will convince you of {ts merits and superiority over all other brands in the market. See that your dressmakers do not use inferior grades or substi- Stesdeefs A SURE PREVENTIVE FOR CHOLERA. HIGHLAND SPRINGS, Lake County, Cal. tutes. NONEEQUAL T0 OUR “ORCA BRAND.” Never breaks, most elastic, lasts longest, cheap- est and best. For sale by all the leading dry-goods houses Office and Factory, 30 California Street, SAN FRANCISCO. A Comfortable Winter Resort at Rea- sonable Rates. Easy of Access. Altitude, 1700 feet. Pure Moun- taln Water and Air. The Best Mineral Water and Baths on Eerth. EQUABLE CLIMATE—FREE FROM ALL CHOLERAIC GERMS. THE BEST PLACE IN CALIFORNIA TO SPEND THE WINTER. For full particulars call at _city office, 316 Mont- gomery street, or address J. CRAIG, Manager. IVY LODGE, 117 Soquel Avenue, Santa Cruz, Cal., SELECT PRIVATE BOARDING. Large grounds, fruiis and flowers; central; firste class accommodations. LAUREL DELL HOTEL, N LAUREL DELL LAKE (FORMERLY Lower Blue Lake). A new hotel—the most artistic in the county. The rush is over. Rooms can now be had and you will be treated well. Boat- STHEVERY BESTONETO EXAMINE YOUR :gel and fit them to Spectacles or Eyeglasser :‘I x:‘:r.m:unu‘ gfeehll ozn.dfnv:;mn, 'h:: periority has not been equ sucoess been d\'ul{) the merlum::y ‘work. Office Hours—12 t0 4 P, M. RIGGS HOUSE, W ashington, ID. C. ing, bathing, fishing, etc., a e The Hotel * Par Excellence’” | anthsements. Tates, 5 o 815 per weck. Address Of the National Capital. First class in all 'lrppolnb H. WAMBOLD, Bertha P. O., e County. ments. G. DEWITT, Treas. American plan, $3 per day and REDUCED RATES, upward. At Saratoga Springs, Lake County, Cal., ACHELOR P. 0.—FOR FALLAND WINTER. NOTARY PUBLIC. | Bliors sim nuci inishca s el e m mi s first-class. it CEABLES H. PHILLIPS, ATTORNEY-AT Write for part] uJ. CO. 3 Etl.i.n]gropl’le".?!l:“ site P aisos Honl) Babic, 038, Markerstr PR | A WEEKS. \ YOR 5 ORNTS— THE HotAsry s e A WEEKTY CALh in wrapper, for mailing. NEW TO-DAY. CUT THIS OUT ARD SAVE IT TO ORDER BY. THIS WEEK WE WILL GVE THEM MO BEASDN 70 Kick We Have Fifteen Bargain Counters And Will Mark the Prices STILL LOWER in Order to Close Out the Stock of Our Branch Stores. We Told You Thj We Would Paralyze the Shoe Market With SHOES! And It I Acknowledged by All That We Have Done So. PRICES ARE NO OBJECT! We Want to Flood the Market With SHOES WE WILL SELL LADIES' FRENCH HEEL SHOES At $2.50 Per Pair. WE WILL SELL “OUR OWN MAKE” LADIES' FRENCH KID BUTTON, cloth or kid tops, pointed and square toes, patent leather tips, At 81.75 Per Pair. SELL A WE WILL “OUR OW. A LADIES' FRENCH KID BUTTOX, cloth or kid tops, pointed or square toe, patent leather diamond tips, heel or spring heel, At $2 Per Pair. WE WILL SELL “OUR OWN MAKE" LADIES' EXTRA FINE FRENCH KID, cloth or Kkid top, satin finish, seamless foxed, pointed or square toes, diamond patent leather tips, At 82.50 Per Pair. WE_ WILL SELL “OUR OWN MAKE” LADIES' FINE FRENCH KID BUTTON, cloth or soles, I st style pol toes, diamond patent I At 83, $3.50 Per Pai xtra Quality, WE WILL SELL “OUR OWN MAKE” LADIES' EXTRA QUAL- ITY TAMPICO PEBBLE-GOAT, BUTTOX, square toe and tip, heel or spring heel, At 82.00 Per Palr. WE WILL SELL “OUR OWN MAKE" MISSES' FINE FRENCH KID BUTTON, cloth or kid tops, latest style, diamond patent leather tips, spring heels, At $2.00 Per Palr. WE WILL SELL “OUR OWN MAKE” MISSES’' FINE FRENCH PEBBLE GOAT BUTTON, satin finlsh, French kid fly. square toe and diamond-shaped tips, spring heels, At $1.75 Per Pair. WE WILL SELL “OUR _OWN MAKE"” CHILDREN'S FINE FRENCH KID BUTTON, cloth or kid tops, square toe, dlamond patent leather tips, spring heels, At $1.50 Per Pair. WE WILL SELL “OUR OWN MAKE” CHILDREN'S TAMPICO PEBBLE GOAT BUT1ON, FRENCH KID FLY, square toe and tip, spring heels, the best school shoe made, At $1.50 Per Pair. The above are all “Our Own Make,” and come in all sizes and widths. Every pair warrante NOW FOR CHEAPER SHOES! WE WILL SELL LADIES' KID BUTTON, pointed or square tos, diamond patent-leather tips, At $1.25 Per Pair. WE_ WILL SELL LADIES' PARIS KID BUTTON, pointed or square toes, diamond patent-leather tips, At $1.50 Per Pafr. WE WILL SELL LADIES’' SPRING HEEL, finelParis kid, button, square toe, diamond-shaped patent-leather tips, -At $1.50 Per Pair. WE WILL SELL MISSES’ AND CHILDREN'S SPRING HEEL KID BUTTON SHOES, square toe, diamond patent-leather tips, Sizes 1135 to 2 Sizes 813 to 11 Sizes 5 WE WILL SELL MISSES’ AND CHILD S HEAVY PEBBLE GOAT “BAY STPA CHOOL ~SHOES, spring heel, standard screwed soles, cannot rip, Sizes11to 2 $1 00 Sizes 801014 Sizes 6to Tia WE WILL SELL BOYS' AND GIRLS' SCHOOL SHOES, spring heels, or heels, standard screwed soles, sole leather tips; cannot wear out— Sizes 11 to 2. 8120 Sizes 8 t0 10: 100 Sizes 6 to 73 85 WE WILL SELL c per OFT SOLE BUTTON. .. 20c fi’irfi""u ¥ KID BUTTON, patent-leather tips ...4bc per pair WE WILL SELL CHILDKE. SPRING HEEL FRENCH KID BUTTON, patent-leather tips, turn sole, sizes 4toTya— At 65c Per Pair. THIS WEEK WE WILL SELL 20 cases BOYS' AND YOUTHS' CALF BUTTON AND LOW SHOES, sizes 12 t0 213, At $1.00 Per Pair. WE WILL SELL CHILDREN'S SPRING HEEL FINE FRENCH KID BUTTON, cloth or kid tops, turn soles, patent-leather tips, sizes 4 to At 90c Per Pair. WE WILL SELL BOYS' HEAVY CALF BUTTON AND LACE SHOES, Sizes 11 to Bizes 214 to 514. WE WILL SELL BOYS' FINE CALF LACE OR BUTTON SHOES, standard screwed soles, can’t rip. Sizes 11 to 2 Sizes 2% to 534 WE WILL SELL OUR OWN MAKE. BOYS' FINE CALF SHOES, button or lace, every pair warrante: Sizes 11 to 2 Sizes 234 t0 5 Mail orders will receive prompt at- tention. NOLAN BROS, SHOE CO. 812814 MNARKET STREET, 9 and 11 O'Farrell St., PHELAN BUILDING. Telephone 5527.