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MISCELLANEOUS. PATTOSIEN’ GREAT SEMI-ANNUAL ODDS AND ENDS SAL ower of cash is great, 'wonderful, but it never had the force to get the most of good The p e and Cappets that it has this week at Pattosien’s. actual cost ABSOLUTELY NOTHING IS TO BE RESERVED. DINING ROGM ties here this week come the housekeeper only at this time. SIDEBOARDS. $40 Patterns 6 2 Ptorne. . '32_; dresser, 53 inches wide, shaped 1350 Sideboard . ol tnirior. SNdl S 1—3110 Pattern 80 00 s fmon”?o:.!z! ‘9‘2 | 6 =R Laoal L Sl :; 3;; SUIT, full swell front dresser, W | e s v W 845,00 | BUFFETS, $225 3-PIECE QUARTERED 2§18 Patterns ...........813 50 OAK TOILET SUIT, colonial 2§40 Buffets ..., RN e e 177.50 1865 Weather Oak 48 00 inches wide...... $ o 1-8130 Grand Buffet ....105 00 2 5180 Désigna t.......... 85 00 DRESSERS. | 3 shapely golden oak with bev- B | CHINA CLOSETS. cled glass mirror..... @€ O 535 Bwell Front ......823 00 0 A s | 1—§7 Full Mirror. Back. 55 50 s e $6885.50 | ine Glass. 75 00 $50.0 hahogany, | e Top o b3 0 e o K i §34.00 §| Round Sides 24 50 ° $60 “;:ld:nn 'nak,” | idadion ¢ ey et (8 - I e T EXTENSION TABLES. 550 masie Frencn Pm;sziall 5(1-% 0> Value $21.25 2-$% Round Tables .....812 5O ol front ; A ; 1-827 50 Square, now.... 19 50O | THIS SIDEBOARD_A rcal barga 2 at 15 00 FOLDING BEDS. | e k—arge lockers 1 now... 30 00 ne e | . Bl " only 7 50 Tod for 830:00 2 00 Bed for $55.00 DRAPERY BARGAINS. NOTTINGHAM LACE CURTAINS. w : 95¢ e g9 05 nor et $38.00 CURTAINS. > at 5% 8350 £4.00 $4.50 $5.00 $6.75 P, & 125 pairs aaraniesd b7 Us Beeause We Xake Lhem Bargalns in 0d4d Suits. 200 pairs = 120 pairs ARABIAN LACE mahogans - brocaded .. .B4R.50 Davenports. ndid f FIGURED BURLA SPECIAL R Cora UG VALUES. | en. low-frama 0dd Couches Sacrificed. M . £ C \.) ches at.. .81 s week 2 sch 2t W2 $10 Couches at... . # SMYRKNA, § feet I feet .00 1 ghes o s s week -525'50 Comches &t iu uches at i e 53,75 AXMINSTER, “ f AXMINSTER, 1x6 feet o O T 7 SRR P T w1 (NI s € KIS TR 1w AWy oo SN W i e T R —" TR ST T AR pe— T, T S R NY CAR IS A CAR FOR PATTOSIEN'S taking :s completed, and now throghout the.entire store the odd pieces of Parlor, Bed- room Furniture, short ends of Carpets, odd pairs of Curtains, Portieres, etc., will ' be ODDS e ENDS The special opportuni- PATTOSIEN'S, and only 00 ds i‘ PATTOSIEN GO. THE SAN See supplement to this ad in to-day's Chronicle, Mon- day's Examiner and Tues- day's Post and Bulletin. S ODD BARGAINS ror iz BEDROOM. There are one and two, sometimes three of these, but no more. | $30 3-PIECE WHITE MAPLE SUIT, dresser, glass beveled A D R to at $45 3-PIECE GOLDEN OAK E SUIT, with heavy carvings, " swell front dresser, French plate mirror, 24x30. ! $35.50 $150 2-PIECE BIRDSEYE MAPLE SUIT, exquisitepattefn, Beds. one and two of a Bra Brass, Brass, Brass, Brass, this weelk, this week, this weel, this week, this week, In Fre ch Velour $12,00 Pattosien's upholstery and most thorough workmanship. A $25 value. Eusrantee? Sixteenth and Mission Streets Ay s saiwe It Pays to~ e o e W 9D 0 Sty MYRNA feet 6 feet, $4.75 the Mission o g $3.25 - e T e AR T S G SRS TH; ART OF MAKING make them. AWhen the pipes are partially FOPULAR “HIUIE EIFis-{ 4 they are placd o B atupe o s holes punched in it, and then To Required and They Are : A Siin For ’,1«.” “";"‘;mi;;‘ of the Simplest Char- She the .5 ara: al- thrown in the fire ite gl Kiln burning if and requires consider- temper the heat to the is the a s it is in the kiln that th its color, “smoothness acter or wher sorf with the are a cane, shipped from the nd come in bundles five ints are sawed out on the length made by n c kind tem a very respectable sed in of the pipe. clay until perfectly to the next room they are i of the bending process. Long, er B |- | regular rows of stems are placed on a ooved block of wood, on the top of hollowed - part is a »w iron tube aching across a row two yards long. A 1-he bar is inserted in the hollow, in a very few moments the heat will end the cane the shape of the grooves. completes the manufacture of a ipe and stem at demand and small competi- it a profitable business.—New usual thing for e tion make r g arc York Commercial as described P s SR ently, but An Intercepted letter—“‘Deer Mr, Car- r's table there are £ niggy 1 Monny to them, which are | for Librarys and 1 want to tell you that Y who are styled us Kids has Fixed up a Lair in a Cave ! nly tools required for their trade are | witch We Bilt Ourselfs and we would and-a grain bag. The latter is | like you to send us Eather the Monny or crose the lap, and after the pipe rimmed with the Enife it f& rubbed on until it is smooth. One finigher sth as rapidly as a puncher can BABY'S VOICE {o a Ceries of the 6 fingered lke stories and | the Noosboy Detective Ceries if. you donte | mined the Troubel. Your cinsere frend Johnny.'—Indianapolis Press. Is the joy of the household, for without it no happiness can be complete. How sweet the picture of mother and babe, angels smile at and commend the thoughts and aspirations of the mother bending over the cradle. The ordeal through which the expectant mother must pass, how- ever, is so full of danger and suffering that she looks forward to the hour when she shall ie exquisite thrill of motherhood with indescribable dread and fear. Every woman should know that the danger, pain and horror of child-birth can be entirely avoided by the use of 's Friend, & scientific liniment for external use only, which !ougb.em and renders pliable ‘all the parts, and 7o Sk MnT“ER’s work. By its aid thousands of women have passed this great crisis in perfect safety Soct by drmn Proerslirss o Al ttle by ists. ur value to .n‘:um sent free. Address BRADFIELD REGULATOR ©0.. Atianta. Ge. -important part | » | With a bear story that would have done | at ma called a o run great risk of losing w th at Maga- ine is also man- . r sort in the State 2 yment to over s and girls, : ad$ < tttie village nd whirled constantly, | ;'THE BIGGEST TREE IN THE WORLD | Contains Enough Lumber to In- case Chicago’s Masonic Temple. | One evening five or six weeks ago Rich- | ard D. Williams of the Unfon Paclfic and Southern Pacific | railroads, George Lee of | | the Rock Island Raflroad Company, | | Charles . Daly of the Lake Shore and | Max Bowman of the Erle were dining to- | | gether in a downtown cafe and spicing | the meal with a serles of railroad yarns, | | Daly told a fish story that was a whop- | per and that stumped his two compan- fons for awhile. Then Bowman came back | crey it to Munchausen. I'm not telling any bear or fish | sald Willlams a minute later, | “but T can tell you fellows a few things about trees. I know you don’t believe all you hear about the glant redwoods, even if you have seen them. Do you know that | the Grizzly Giant redwood contafns | enough lumber to build a box that would ! encase the Masonic. Temple?” | Lee and Bowman laughed. is turned red and added, “Well, right.” ‘s “Why, man, it would take a dozen of those big trees to furnish enou, gh lumber | for that purpose,” said Daly. | | “A dozen?" exclalmed Willlams. *No, { sir; not half the number. One will do it. | ;\\'h_\'. that Grizzly Gilant is more than | elghty feet in circumference and 300 feet high. The three doubters laughed again. “I'll bet you each a new Panama hat on it,” rald Williams, as he threw down his napkin and pushed back his chair, “‘Taken,” said the others. The railroad men agreed to accept the word of “‘Honést John' Horsburgh of San Francisco. They telegraphed him to go to the Mariposa grove, measure the Griz- | zly Glant and send the tape with an af- fidavit to Chicago, A few days ago Williams received a let- ter from San Franeisco. It contained a { long paper ribbon and a legal-looking doc- ument, which read that James Hors- burgh, being duly sworn, ete., declared he ‘‘was in the Mariposa big tree grove, Yo- semite Valley, National Park, California and that he then and there, In presence of | several witnesses, measured the big tree known as Sequola gigantea, popularly | called the Grizzly Giant, and that he found the girth of said tree at a height of five feet from the ground to be ninety- eight feet ten inches; and, further, that the string attached to the affidavit is the identical plece with which he measured sald tree, and that it required the entire piece to make the cireumference.” —_—— “I've brought you a little brother,” sald the doctor. “No,” gaid the Impossible Chud, “the stork brought my 'little brother.” “Well, I'm the stork,” said the doctor. “But where is your bill?” sald the Im- possible Child. It is claimed by those who should know that an Tmpossible Child is probably nev- er wittier than upon the occasion of some- body being born mnto the family.—D¢ w't Journal, | deadly instrument. | club, which | the boomerang at an early age. FRANCISCO CALL, SUNDAY, JULY 5, PUEBLD INDIANS EARNING MONEY OF SANTA GLARK Only Tribe That Uses the Boomerang in the Hunt. Begin Practics at Early Age and Becdms Very Adept in Its Use. S G SR AL The Santa Clara Pueblo Indians recent- Iy held a rabbit hunt of enormous propor- tions, slaughtering thousands of.the pests that have grown to be a mendce to South- western ranchmen. At these rabbit hunts boomerang throwers play a leading part in the work of extermination. The New Mexican boomerang throwers have been using this primitive weapon for countless generatlons. When the Spanfards first penetrated New Mexico in search of gold in the mining districts of the territory the Pueblos were using the boomerang almost exclusively as a weapon. The Pueblo Indian boy to-day occasionally sallles forth with his bow and arrow, but most of the tribe stick to | the ancient boomerang, especially when ! at their favorite sport of rabbit hunting. The boomerang is not, properly speaking, the returning boomerang of the Austra- lian savages but is a varlation of that It is simply a curved is thrown with wonderful skill and precision by the Pueblo Indians, even to the smallest boys and girls. CHILDREN CARRIED STICK. The Indians begin practicing throwing Mere in- fants can be seen on the sagebrush plat- eaus, imitating their larger brothers and sisters and hurling tiny sticks at each other, shouts of glee going up as some particularly clever shot is made. Some of the older Indians manifest a degree of skill with the boomerang which is little short of amazing. It is a common sight to see a skilled boomerang thrower bring down a bird on the wing, and to miss a Jackrabbit in the open is ..ue short of a disgrac The raobit hunts, which are held every winter, are made the occasion of festivities in the pueblos of the tribes. The Indians have peculiar dances in which they indulge just before the arrival of a rabbit hunt day. 1908. DURING VAGATION How College Girls Work to Pay for Educa- tion. Coaching Companions in Har- vest Fields, Orchards and as Waitresses. ———— With the approach of commencement day the all-important question which | comes to the graduate is, “What shall I wear?” The self-sustalning undergrad- | ulate faces a more difficult and serious problem, “How can I support myself thyough the vacation and lay aside some- thing toward my expenses for term?" | ‘The young woman who is determined to work her way through the four-year | llege course regards the summer vaca- | tion as a vertitable harvest time, with dollars for her crop. From the middie of | June until the middle of September she | executes those little triumphs of inge- nuity which pave the way for nine | months more at her beloved Institution of learning. If she is wise as well as in- | | genious. she has her plans made before | j the college doors shut for the vacation | | | period. Naturally, she first turns her attention | to lines of work in which she can make | use of the learning acquired during the | past term. One of the most popular i means of raising funds is ‘‘coaching” students In the same college who have | | been “conditioned” or have failed utterly | in their examinations. Strangely enough, | | the majorily of these summer pupils are | {mot drewn from the homes of the| | wealthy; they are not girls whose interesg | iin social matters has Interfered with | their work, but children of college pro- | | fessors and educationists. Just as the | sons of industrial magnates frequently ' | develop into most irresponsible business | | men, so the children of very learned men | | show a singular inaptitude for the arts | {and sciences. | The member of a college or school fac- | ulty whose daughter has failed or been | conditioned feels personally disgraced | These rabbit hunt- | Aad Wil make almost any sacrifice to ing dances vary little from the deer and | have her properly coached during the | corn dances and other picturesque cere- monials of the tribe, He does not coach her himself | reasons—first, because she may | | summer. | for two AD 31 THEWHI HOSIERY AND TE HOUSE UNDERWEAR. Childrea’s Black Ribbed Cotton Hose _Light and reavy weights. Specia Ladies’ Black Cotton Hose White soles ; also ail black. Regularly 35¢....... - 25¢ Ladies’ Imported Black Lace Lisle Hose In ell-cver lace effects a- d lace ankl:s ; darge variety of designs 50¢ Ladies’ Silk Embroidered Lisle Hose Large assortment of pittarns. Ladies’ Cotton and Lisle Vests Hand Crochet in several different d 50¢, 75¢, $1:00 Special \(llu:......... 5 OC esigns. { Ladies’ Ribbed Cotton Co.r;e-t—Covers Exceptional value Short zn1 long sleeves. 50¢ Ladies’ Combination Suifs Svmmer we'ght; low neck. no s'eeves ; white only....a.- Ladies’ Spun Silk Vests Pl:in and hand crochet yoke. Special. - . Agents for Dr. Jaeger’s Celebrated Sanitary Underwear. Also Ramie Health Underwear. A Hoill f Go S Cor.PosT % KEarny 37s. E be left alone a single day. A ropose to D vmetous college girl secured the position for her. Tt paid well. The principal drawbacks were the incessant repining of the wife and the rather vapid guests en- tertained at her home. A clever.girl, with pleasing address and a gift for inventing amusements, can se- curs employment at summer hotels in assisting the management to amuse the guests. There are many summer holiday makers who have no resources and must be planned for like so many helpless, The ingenlous girl ar- children. The Pueblo Indians, the most clvilized ; have failed in a branch remotely removed of all Southwestern tribes, have suffered from the line he teaches, and, second, severely owing to the depredations of | because the student who has just passed rabbit The Pueblos are expert farmers. They had the science of irrigation at their finger tips before the Spaniards first in- vaded America. ‘Lo-day thelr {rrigated farms are models which the white man can follow to good advantage. Conse- quently these aboriginal farmers have taken to rabbit hunting not only for sport but as a means of self-protection. The Indlans when hunting rabbits scat- ter over a broad area with shrill cries that frighten the rabbits from their bur- rows, and then the well-aimed boomer- angs never fail to bring down the leaping animals. Where a rabbit refuses to come from his burrow the Indian boys gather | about with sharpened sticks and die un- til the animal is forced to make a break | for liberty. The Indian dogs have their share in the hunt, of course, and the scene is a stirring one as the tribesmen scurry over the plain, .searching every arroyo for lnrking rabbits. KILLING JACKRABBITS. The real feature of an Indian rabbit hunt is the dexterity shown by individual boomerang hunters. A 16-year-old boy, straight as an arrow and as Hthe as a | young panther, will frighten a rabbit from a clump of sagebrush. To the eye of the inexperienced there is no rabbit there, but the Indian has not been de- ceived. As =oon as the jackrabbit starts from his place of concealment and goes in long bounds, which speedily carry him away from an ordinary enemy, the Indian youth gives a shrill cry and draws back the hand holding the deadly boomerang. Like a baseball pitcher he poises for an instant, and then, with an overhand swing, the boomerang is sent forth, cut- ting the air with a swish, and almost {n- variably sending the rabbit head over heels. Inasmuch as the sportsman must manifest a fair degree of skill with the shotgun to shoot a jackrabbit when it is well under_way, the precision necessary to kill one of the animals with a club can be readily understood. The average white boy, however he may pride himself on his skill in throwing the baseball, would owe it purely to luck should be bring down a jackrabbit with a boomerang. Yet an Indian boy thinks nothing killing ten or a dozen rabbits in a day's hunt and not having a single miss scored against him. Sclentists have speculated in vain as to the use of the hoomerang among these Indians. No other tribes of the West or Southwest use this weapon, which has figured so long In the history of the Pueblos. Some’ scientlsts have claimed that the boomerang shows the Pueblos to be descendants of some of the remote Asiatic tribes that used similar weapons. This, however, Is regarded as mere specu- lation, though the ancestry of the Pueb- los, as well as of several other tribes of the Southwest, is 5o shrouded in darkness that one guess is seemingly as good as another. At any rate, the Pueblos can- not be Induced to part with their anclent and favorite weapon. They -use the im- proved agreultural implements of the white man, but they have no use for the white man's gun. They cling to the boomerang in prefernce to the revolver or the repeating rifle, and in all probability this primitive weapon wjll be in use as long as the Pueblos exist as a nation.— | New York Tribune. ADVERTISEMENTS. H BiTYERS The Bitters is the beut known remedy for stomach ills. Having been before the public for 50 years it has been :aoroughly tested. We urge you to try it for Sour Stom- ach, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Liver and Kidney Ailments or Malaria, Fever and Ague. It always cures. TRUNK: AND VALISES AT MANUFACTURER'S PRICES J. MARTY, 22 TURK ST. . Fa:tory 526 rd St. | the examinations in which his daughter | failed is ‘up-to-date on the topic and ‘ posted on *‘trick’ questions. | | CONDITIONAL STUDENTS. | | i | A New England girl has doubly solved | the problem of summer employment by | using both her newly acquired stock of learning and her ancestral farm. The| | latter is a picturesque but barren hillside | | in the heart of the Berkshires with an | | cld-fashioned, rambling house. Here she | gathered the members of her summer | ciass for a month’'s work, combined de- | | lightfully with outdoor life. Her mother | { acted as chaperon and was a capable | | housekeeper for the family of eight. A { neighbor’s boy did the rough work and | tended the garden, which supplled fresh | fruit and vegetables for the table. | | Some o the pupils had their cycles, and | t horses could be hired at reasonable rates | from neighboring farmers. Fishing and | boating were enjoved on a pond at the | foot of the hill and the woods abounded in wild berries and pecimens.” Certain | hours were set aside for studying and ceaching and nothing was allowed to in- terfere with the work, though Lenox was leentleingly near., When the first month was over, several | of the girls decided to remain longer and | were joined by other friends, and, though “coaching” was abandoned, mother and aughter made a substantial their summer boarders. This year they | will conduct the summer school on a| larger scale and the farm. which hitherto | had grudgingly yielded enough to pay | the taxes, will now help to put the girl | through college. | CAMPING IN THE WOODS. ' sum from | | Frequently girls of small incomes club together and camp out in the woods of | Maine or other picturesque sectlons of | New England, living an outdoor life at an extremely low figure and gaining ! strength to take up ‘“coaching” during the opening months of the school term. | Even a chaperon is dispensed with by | these strictly modern camping partles, and they live as simply and frugally as | men do under similar circumstances. | But the average self-sustaining college | ! girl is not satisfled with merely saving her | funds earned during the rest of the vear, | Aanq storing up strength to renew the | ight. She wants to see a weekly stipend | coming In, and if any one Is willing to | pay for the pleasure of her company dur- ing the summer she is quite willing to ! play the part of companion. Busy, wealthy parents who desire their | children to expand mentally and physi- ! cally during the summer vacation and perhaps to work on lines denfed to them during thelr childhood, prefer a college | | girl to a French governess during the summer. The French governess seldom gets beyond book covers. | WORKING FOR A MILLIONAIRE. | A Wellesley girl In search of summer | employment was requested by a mutual acquaintance to call upon a millionaire noted for his ironclad business methods and a heart which was supposed to be as | { hard. As she entered his office he curtly | | dismissed his stenographer and turned to | his caller, saying: d } | “Driving down to the station this morn- ing with my little girl, a leaf aropped Into our carriaze. It had on the under side some queer little red things. like tiny eggs, rough to the touch. What were they?” The college girl explained the larvae deseribed and the man of stocks and bonds listened attentively. Then he asked why certain leaves showed one coloring when the wind blew from the north and another when it blew from the south. | In fact, he put the girl through a rapid- fire examination, watching her so narrow- | ly that she thought he was an authority | on botany. As abruptly as he had opened the conversation he closed it. ! “I think you know what you are talk-\| ing about. I've never had time to study leaves and flowers and outdoor life, and it annoys me when my children ask me | fool questions I cannot answer. Teach | 'em all you know, but don’t ram it in so | fast that they'll tire of it. Make it play. Will $25 a week and your board at our place be satisfactory? Very well. Good | morning. | The young woman nt a delightful | gummer, with servants at her command, dainty apartments and good living, sim- ply because she knew botany and pleased 1 the whim of a man who was willing to pay the price for baving that whim grati- fied. The mother and father were away muech of the time and the girl was prac- | tically the mistress of their beautiful country home. ’ | COMPANIONS TO PETTED WIVES. | Another peculiar mission which came to an undergraduate was that of companion 4 to a petted young wife and mother. She ' was a city girl, whose one idea of a sum- mer's vacation was the Incessant gayety ' of a fashionable resort. But with the coming of her children her husband in- sisted upon a summer home in the su- burbs, and in turn his wife insisted upon having a young and entertaining com- panion. Though she had the vrospect of much company at intervals, $he did not | curing favors for the germans. [ ® ! Is eevis l?anges the sailing parties, the calmbakes, the private theatricals for rainy nights, the euchres, and, if she plays and sings, is always at the command of the musle- ally inclined. She works with the man- ager in planning the big dances and se- Her st pend depends largely upon her usefulness and powers of attraction—for women guests. The girl who is too attractive to men defeats the purpose of her em- ployers. Men are too valuable at the summer resort, too much in demand. to be wasted on a paid employe. Some girls make only their board and a few inci- dental expenses. Others draw small sal- arfes, which they can augment by acting as correpondents for city papers. SUMMER HOTEL WAITRESSES. it | o In New England and the midwest States college girls take positiond as waitresses in summer hotels, and as hotel help is well paid they lay nest egg for the fall term. A Philadelphia girl who traveled abroad before meeting financial reverses com- pleted her college course by acting as guide for summer tourists, organizing par- ties of teachers. For this work she not only utilized the information and expe- rlence she had gained while traveling with her parents, but she studied routes and maps until she could conduct her tours on the most economical plan. She is now a teacher in a fashionable school | and her summers are spent in Europe at the head of clubs formed among her pu- pils. The college girl who seeks summer em- ployment must guard against adopting a line of work which will lead her from her | educational Interests. A bright young | woman from Wellesley possessed of a dainty but not brilllant singing voice was induced by well-meaning friends to join the chorus of an opera company which was giving summer produetions. Her salary of $18 a week was alluring, and the manager, sceing her pretty face and vivacity, promised better things. To- day she is dancing in one of the leading Broadway productions, all thought of her college course driven from her head. She may score a brilliant success in her un- | expectedly found profession, but musical comedy is hardly the best preparation for serious dramatic work. A SHORT CUT TO MATRIMONY. Summer employment for the college girl sometimes proves to be the straight and narrow path to matrimony, and many a career of learning is stopped by Cupid ar- rayed in summer raiment. The college girl is never treated as a servant or a hireling in a well-regulated home. A cer- tain deference is accorded her alma mater and she is thrown into soclety which oth- er girls possessed of the same income do not reach. Here she sometimes meets her | fate, and the question of how to pay for next year's course is forever settled. There is no next term at college for this young woman. The more desirable lines of summer work cannot be secured through adver- tising or consulting the high-grade em- ployment Lureaus. They depend upon in- fluence an dacquaintance. A girl should aside a comfortable | The above new building is to be occu- | pled by Kelly & Liebes, 120 Kearny street. | These gentlemen are the oldest cloak and | suit merchants in San Francisce and have established a reputation which they cer- | tainly must be proud of. They have an- | nounced a great removal sale next Mor day. Julv 6. From the way the goods have been.marked down the ladies of th | State will long remember the effects of this sale. ' | @ciniiininiiiii i @ | open her campaign among her friends early and be frank with the authorities of the college, who frequently receive appli- catfons for summer ‘‘coaches,” governesses and companions.—Washington Star. —_———— The Dictionary. The average person seems somehow to | think of dictionaries as the invention of Dr. Johnson and an altogether modern product. Dr. Murray corrected that idea. They were not the work of one or of sev- eral men, he told his audience, but a growth developed through the ages. They began. with the glosses—that is, the ex- | planations in easy Latin or English—of | hard Latin words, written by the monks | between the lines of the manuscripts. Th glosses grew into translations, and co | lections of glosses by this monk or that | from ail the sources available to him | made glussaries or dictionarfes. Little by little English supplanted the easy Lat- | in explanations, and the words were ar- | ranged in a rudimentary alphabetical or- der, thus forming, so long ago as 1000 A. ‘D.. Latin-English dictionaries. The un- | educated Normans overthrew English | learning, and it was not until the fifteenth | century that the revival came.—New York | Evening Post. B — 1 *1 understand you whipped my boy this | morning,” the angry father said, striding | into the schoolroom after the children had | been dismissed. | “Yes, sir; 1 did,” the terrified teacher | answered. “But I did not whip him se- verely.” “That's what I'm kicking about,” he rejoined. “You didn't hurt him at all. | Now, look here, sir. I'm one of the largest taxpayers in this school district, and my boy is entitled to as good a whipping as you give any other boy. Understand that! If you slight him again you'll hear from me in a way you won't like. Good after- noon, sir. ON REMAINDER OF CLOAKS, Sul PREVIOUS TO STOCK-TAKING. TWO WEEKS® SALE, COMMENCING MONDAY, 9 a. m. GREATER REDUCTIONS THAN EVER SUMMER STOCK OF TS, JACKETS 9 REPRESENTATIVE BARGAINS. SILK BLOUSE JACKETS, rizhly trimmed, worth $12.50 and $15.00— now . . .« . e $4.45 and $4.95 TAILOR SUITS, Efimlnes, Broadcioths and Mixzd Cheviots; all up-to- date styles; regular $rs, $20 and PEAU DE SOIE and TAFFETA elegan ly trimmed, regular $12, 13, $ovalues now . . . . . .. .. . 95, $8.45 and $12.45 SILK SKIRTS, 2ll nsw shapes, $18 and $20 quuity—now . ... . $4.95, $6.95, $7.45, $8.45" SEE SPECIAL SUi'l' WINDOWS. 1142-11 46 MARKET STREET. Between Taylor and Mason.