The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 26, 1910, Page 5

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SUPREME COURT IS NMASKED 4.) | thom {t was agreed that the Great i (Conclude = sao” | Northern would not prosecute Gor- ve cere equalized at $7,920 | don, The Nuzums told other prom! yey Thue railroads were | nont attorneys tn Spokane that the at less than 10 Great Northern officials could not their value, while ether | prosecute Gordon without becom was being assessed at | ng themselves = involved. Later to 7S per cent | when Gordon was indicted for om: 5 created &/ bessioment in Spokane minty the at Northern officials refused to per was The 2 sist the authorities in proancut : ing him, even evading the pro. : p cesses of the Spokane county on. It was courts. af the legislature to W. W. HINDMAN IS ONE OF! authority ’ THE SPOKANE ATTORNENYS | te other taxing TO WHOM THE NUZUMS TOLD to the understanding Of) THESE CIRCUMSTANCES. N, E. rs of the legislature the | NUZUM TOLD HINDMAN THAT ‘of the commission Were °d | AMONG THESE PAPERS WERE aly. After the commlssio® | LETTERS AND RECEIPTS its & Se canctede d that they powers only. For two SHOWING THAT A SUPREME COURT JUDGE EITHER DID oR WAS TO RECEIVE $20,000 FOR! made no efforts pe THE OPINION IN THESE TAX! mandatory powers Y | CASES. | advice, but fasued ne = ers. | The Nusums showed theae Papers | jssoners advised ne Frank T. Post and Frank! the assessed) Graves, leading corporation law | Januery.| vers of Spokane. Post told Hind | conve) man that they showed that both ‘the ae — Gordon and the Great Northern 4 this policy upon * | officials were guilty. Hindman re there, The assessors T liated the circumstances to Su the matter to a committee, |) brome Judge Herman D. Crow and committee reported, Tec | post and Graves related them to 4 ® uniform assessment) s. J. Chadwick, who had then Just Deiweds in all counties at {P| deen elected to the supreme bench 4.250 a mile for f Crow and Chadwick carried the in pat Ihe reads to all the assess galled attention ‘o the ac |} the convention. The com: |; algo urged al! assessors i ‘ail property on 2 60 per cen sion of the documents or to! finitely the character of Being without legal author. compel the production uta, they adoned the arn to y Hose a mile for ayy formation to Olympla, laid it be pada, and $7,920 # mile fOr} fore the court and, at the requeat roads. They re : ye wf Chief Justice Had! President | tax commission to « fy ine J. B. Bridges of the to Bar As} which the commission | .clation, appointed a committee to te do. srandea | 2¥estigate them. mee ike assessors attended) ‘This committee tried to Investh So the tax COM | gate these charg but after dtit KANSAS CIT transmitted its class sent efforts failed either to procure] thousand women theatre wate tights today i pag | MVOstiAation and recommended Tyet of the assessors adopted | that it be resumed by somebody agreed scale of values. | possess be such authority A ene those of Snoho| Later the $20,000 grafi story aad Sevens counties, decided / broke out in a new place. State ‘oe values for railroad® Senator Paulhamus of Pierce jonately below the which they were aesess property, so they adopted The assessor of county assessed the ferhern main line at $25, wie instead of $14,250, the weate. The assessor of county county, who had long been a close | friend of Judge Gordon, carried te/ the editor of a Seattic paper the! story that @ supreme court judge! had been corruptly paid $20,000, | |Paulhamus was summoned before! the Powell committee but declined | to give the source of his informa. | tion. Asked If he knew who might | have direct knowledge of the facts! he suggested Judge Gordon. | Evidence regarding all the cir! cumstances here related regardin, this $20,000 graft story was give the roads as now officialiy | before the Powell committee and al ined. But they increased copy of it transmitted to the su- taxes of the Great Northern | preme court, ined by some $25,000 in each) Tomorrow's story will tell of the! | decision of the supreme court writ-| s assessed the Spo- pe Falls & Northern branch of ‘Great Northern, a third class at $10,560 a mile instead of These sasesements were) than 40 per cent of the) fo give mandatory orders The other was that de railroads resisted the! ten by the attorney for the Great | '0ca! appearance of Aun " reagan and went Into court.) Northern railroad. it noted Russian dancer, and eed agweits attorneys advanced | tio |supporting company and orchestrs propositions. One | lot nearly 100 people. There will ssion, with b three performances ORKeNBed Wednesday matiace b ; ; RATE CASE (IN The stay here of the big organiza @anission, without knowing tet feed orders establishing| Hearings on the regulation of the f convention seale,| Seattle telephone rates were com were binding upon | menced by Rallroad Commissioners Fairchild, Lawrence and Jones this | Tams pleadings in the Stev- | morning at the Chamber of Com ‘8 county case were passed merce. : je Sullivan of Spo L. Gray, expert engineer, was the tunty, who decided for jonly witness called. He esti The Snohomish [that it would cost $2,078,067 to es passed upon tablish a plant similar to that of of that county, the Independent Telephone com for the county. | pany. The matter comes up on the pe | tition of F. W. Baker of the Seattle Hardware company to permit the Independent company to raise |rates because it cannot give ade | quate service der the prese j rate per month for business phones | Beker al asks that the Sunset rate of $7.50 per month be reduced Scott Calhoun, behalf of the leity of Seattle, wit! resist a tempt to lower the Ind t | rates, contending that its franchise ig a contract with the city, which court, in an opin- ty Rudkin, held with the company. These ap case owas The Snohomish county me went back to Judge Black, m tried it on the facts to ascer- the commission had actually issued such orders. rs of the tax commission ap aval in the trial as witnesses does not allow more than $4 per | KEEP SCHOOL LANDS NEW YORK, Oct. 26.—The lure;ment at No, 973 Highpoint av. W. oe that they had never | moath. DR RRO of t litle farm with its dainty | Hoboken it they possessed man-| 4 seting | brotiers and maybe a pigeon or two| The woman, who was born in At the regular monthly me &) bi ’ maybe a pigeon or | Bowers over assessors, that | ee | tthe hoard of regents of the Unt-|cut in half and rolled over a bed| Austrian Poland, has long tawney | ever, up to that time, de} iy Cuties Prom.) versity of Washington yesterday} and enough money from hair reaching well below knees. the value of railroad prop-| PORTLAND, Ore., Oct. 26—Tho| Versity Of | \ sen ee re wanc for an occasional porterhouse | This crowning glory of womanhood Sat they had never intended | jury that ts to try Mrs. Carric| Afternoon. | Wim vo tversity lands.|steak has sounded tts note to|she is willing to sacrifice in order Met had never issued orders to|Kersch for complicity in the mur-| {0 MO SAl Ol Mette wever,| Helen Dysko, who lives with her|that she and her family may live Sessors establishing a value|der of Wm. A. Johnson was not a a change in the law so asjhusband and little daughter,|on a farm. She advertised her hair found with ia ates sea le forenoon when court) |" vive them authority to fix the| Stephanie, in two rooms in a tene | for sale yesterd ee ¢ a ‘ |price and name the conditions| == = the | gy gestion Soak silver im sour milk over | under which the lands may be | id.| faliroad again appealed and | night. In the morning it will look|The students and alumnl favor TIMBER WOLVES WIPE OUT EL | Gipreme court reversed Black, | # bright as if it had been polished. | holding the lands Intact ) that the railroad’s taxes | === a ee we me en 47 cow elks with| or ””™ KIGH WIND PUTS spewed af Paes fetta ee 4 tail, and weighing 149) of deer would have about 60 young | fons aroused a de pounds, the wolf almost invariably | Ones 1 should say tho olk ought} @ astonishment on the part fr msg jon : | tex 4 goes after the calves. A band of /ty have at least 20 or | taxis Commissioners = ané nik will be grazing on a hillaide, Al . ] e ee ocnis amo nting to : calf strays a few feet from ite} ‘There is a $15 bounty on the “ Many fen were i venrdiean ot the attitude| mother. There is a swift leap of a| Wolves, but that ts worse than none Drivately 1 effort to (By United Press.) ' regar *. P Brean gray, shaggy body through the air; |“t all. A bounty means that inex for them BELMONT PARK, N. Y., Oct. 26 m by the French entrants inj # sharp teeth fasten into the |pereinced hunters will come after the Stevens « case]_¢ 4omile gale swept over the| refusing to enter unless the course|long, sharp teeth fasten into the }Derstices nunkel Wie coe ee Sttled Gordon ten the : , {is changed, according to an an-| cal ege? 7B selln ike with |More than the hunters, The dogs rer of the cou 4 |aviation field at Belmont today, but} |. ncement today M. Gaanie turns and atte pts to strike with Tis chase cik aad decr, and thse! Mt of the company’s taxes,|in spite of the announcement representing the Aero Club of] ber front mee - + apd ae — that really do catch up with a wolf| Was returned dishonored. | there would be no flights unless the | France, officially filed a pro The ‘rift on and the wolvea| Wil be sorr Some fellows came the company paid these taxes | wind 4, a large crowd gath-| against having the course laid over} . a 5 ‘4a hore once with seven dogs to get iMeond time " ; A 4 for the|houses and trees, but Chairman| feast on the elk calf, Often the} sone | fered and patiently waited fo: © | hou an¢ » bw wena wolves oat but a single “feed” from {| Wolves. They lost six ne ¢ t the same time, the m t to begin. McCoy, of the aviation committer . t The , re too a ne, the eu ators to be * the calf they kill; that is, they tear | and « it up. ne W A % 1908, Gordon, repr pg| The wind was @ source of keen | refused to alter it Se et attt teoeek nek ica “tae Lomart dogs, and one bite from fallroad company, « 1 by | disappointment especially to Cur “Curtiss, the American yo ant aa ages ‘ally uneoucia 4. The| those fangs is all that’s necessary ee a ¢ suit brought |tiss, who had gma ale ye wed sompetion to fy ores bet - ~ arenes ita tsegy ge ion hg ica fF | Sparrow ag @| monopla racer and intended to | anc bes 8 vesptder / . calf. The onty way to protect the few 12. Gordon received t e el ation con-|to avold houses and trees and the ( Hiason of Port Angelegj| remaining elk, says Sisson, | a tr ne it In th ‘ va n t| who for 1 urs has been a guide| the government or state to hire the comp t arrose to choose American entrie present course im the safe nea : ited t th tno € , 201 in ~ ‘ at Rheim ter and packer in the Olym>}trrined men to kill off 0 wo ount, the a f t ternational race, | hand, far safer than 4 . , f OW signed jt, ( 5 | 20k, SES: SONS ee aL. ee eee ace, will be held| ples, and who knows the mountain | these men to do the work of forest 884 4id not pay | rd Rage . scheduled for this aftr - a wm Gate Janimals like a book, in talking with hi angers in addition to their task of Bey spar , sei , nan t aid killing fi took Mpulation fe amount, Daid it for the anwhile Gordon had beer ed from duty by the Y and the report became mt that he had emberzied € large amoun: ng th - Stusation, he . ond t “ Eee? © Nuzum, Spokane a1 “ Ben’ and turne over to ‘ ty & mass of Correspondence documents of Mating charact, 4, aracte, Jas: what the BS beopie of an Mer been, y P ; eM Permitied to kn pa ‘en. at oon Bite onty coer a mow. We| A ey Thomas Meade, 0 today announe t he had served very dan oday unced that he ha notice on Contractor Erickson not }| to go ahead with the Lake Wash || ington blasting, Meade on Satur day got an Injunction from Judge Mitchell at Olympia, holding up Erickson’s work on petition of Lake Washington dwellers. East to moct Boug farted West ana they met in 8 conference het. on it | mt $4) atlk Y, in ANNETTE KELLERMAN Oct. ANNETTE PROVES SHE DOESN’T PAD; NO MEN WERE ON HAND, THOUGH 25.—A| near the Orpheum | snip. hed Mise Annette Kel-| acissors, as they cut through the! lerman cut a long wilt fn her black} a: j att Bhe stood side ways to the audience of women, #0 they might get a better look at what had been deciared the “moat perfect womanly form in the world.” « Kellerma: upon the age first wearing a drews of black | jantin. Then she disrobed down to the skintight covering of black People have said that | am pad ded,” she said maid to bring her # pair of scis nore. it's w shame to have to cut this pretty sult, bat I guess I'll have to do tt." She raised her right hand and inserted the point of the sclasors November 15 Grand, are the which toda were tion for two nights may to Beattie, much as New York, Brooklyn and Baltimore were played last week|, as & compliment as one night stan LTS 0 Charles Lyta, WASHINGTON, Oct. 26.—On the] guarded in the central office safe] wife died at the Providence b0*| discretion of two Central office de | tells which of the quoene of the! ta July 31 as the result of a) inn Deen aa nation’s capital off 100,000 to| Sere ack teak a 30-20 rifle, was] (ectives hang tho reputations and! is, soothsayer if he could bring an| | placed on trial She called to her} *|Pavlowa on Noy. 15 and. 16, at the time y dn L Judge Ronald's court and fixed fi t the pl lor inas N TRIAL whose divorced ro a jury in| fortunes of many his morning for murder in the first degree pertur torney, Griffiths, | jurors Lots called the ambulance on the| than is whispered over the teacups day of the tragedy, explaining that} Lyts did not seem vie - |day, and chewed gum while his at | are " questioned a little son, Walter, had accident rifle. ally discharged t with boy Some time to¢ Contractor ©. } plode a blast of der and the last which ha the bent on lay <ixt me” “Hallowe'en Must Be Quiet,” Says Wappy GUARDSMEN ANGRY vein MAY BLOCK CANAL norrow Brickson will ex 50 pounds of nk been keeping the of Lake Washington from the pow earth water new illway, which is part of the gov ernment canal, will more. Lake Union and Lake Washington will then become the | know MAY WONT PA “BOYS, FARE rhe great state of Washington AK THE STAR—WEDNESDAY, through its chief executive, M. EB Hay, in on record with the state mont that an 11-year-old boy ts old enough to find his way back to Washington without any money or Anaistane This starting information from the governor comes in a letter to Sheriff Hodge relative to the kid naping of Dewey Wellman, son of Mrs. Emma Wellman, Fourth ay, N, W and Stat st. W The police in Omaha found Dewey and arrested bis abductor, Bert Schuman, Sheriff Hodge prepared | to send a deputy to Omaha to bring back the prisoner and the kidnaped boy, whose mother ts frantle to © him Mut “Bolomon” Hay tn Olympia decrees as follows: The state will pay for the return of Schuman, the kidnaper, but it will not pay for the return of the boy. One concession Hay makes. As soon as little 11 yearold Dewey walks to the atate line Washington, the state will! pay him mileage from there here| a8 a witness, But between Omaha! and Washington Dewey will have to| shift for himaelf. | Hut not if Hodge knows anything | aboot it. When the sheriff got the} fovernor’s letter yesterday he was! home with an attack of pneumonia The letter brought him out of b and the things the sheriff sald about the governor were typically Hodge esque. In his finest Dumbarton burr, the sheriff heatedly remarked Hodge le Angry } “If the governor of this state or| anybody else thinks we are going to turn an 11-year-old kid loose in Oma ha to find his way home tike a hunting dog they are all badly mis taken, | nave an accidental fund that still has a few dollars, and that fund brings little Wewey home to his mother, if | have to sight every the tentp right went shoulder. Snip,/ the shining little transparent silk eut dow < © ht ae dio oie ieee en ode oat ne county commissioner and state of hip. Then whe laid the seixsors| “ela! in Washington. Mra Ww man is @ poor woman | down and took hold of of each side to work te & knitting of the cut garment and ead it . ‘aon. rene for her living. She has no} The thousand women cheered vy to py Pe — . pol aes But there wasn't a man there to i ac aa “es gd — oat ad applaud. Even the ushers were | armed estate anxious to punish the kidnaper than | ‘id jt@ restore her child to her. In her Police Stop Woman's Talk mpthe way she could not under NEW YORK, Oct. 26.-~Mande}stand how th w could be #0 jeal Malone, a auffragette, arose in the?ons of any infraction and yet ac Stimson meeting in Carnegie hallteallour ax to her loss | the gubernatorial candidate| Deputy Sheriff Meyer hna left for! speech | Omah Hodge's last words were er own. It lasted till the police f y or don’t you! reached her. y ‘ | DDITIES IN THE NEW j wirts NO EPISCOPAL MARRIAGE FOR DIVORCEES Episcopal convention the provision! now holds that divorced members that gives a clergyman latitude in|of the church cannot marry DEER'S ANTLERS COMPRISE 50 PRONGS BANGOR, Me, Oct 26. Ss 1 — in ~ pte | The | — oA by, a taxidermist, is mounting | 108" set of antlers recorded ad) 33 prongs j the way of 8)" "The head of Gould's buck ts in « world beater from a buck killed by jeer bead good condition and the teeth are 1 Jould of Grand Lake Stream! sound, sbowing It was tn ite prime The has antlers with 50) when shot. The antlers are weil prongs argest number ever. balan 26 being on one aide and seen on or cottom tall Virginia) 24 on the of ir WEALTHY WOMEN VICTIM OF “SEER” Washington wo of wealth and standing If s seized when the occult of Leon Devoux was raided made public, the world will & «reat deal more of the | {nner lives of Washington's elect ‘ir to her husband's millions. An-} other tells of a woman who stole! a diamond ring from her husband to satiefy the demands of the seer and pleads with the man to throw his influence so that her husband) wilt not mies the ring. | Already two women are suffering from nervous prostration. mea | lette stud One of the letters #0 closely WOMAN WOULD SELL HAIR FOR FARM AT GEN. LAMPTON | That the don't-care polley of the;why we should have to wait on| ri f Adjt. Gen. George B.\ the whims of Lamping,” said one| ardsman today If the present natior iard is the complaint of | wij) jost its eff c | nar member Among other In the Oregon guard pay is| hings, their pa Ince August 26) promptly disbursed, Formerly in|} ast is being held up, they claim, | this state it was customary for le r of 10 companies|the adjutant general to mall to hroughout the state aver that un pac captain @& warrant covering ler former administrations encamp-|the salaries due his men, Under ment pay was disbursed tmmediate-|the Lamping regime individual ly. Although more than two months |checks are made out, but so long |has elapsed since the American|a 10 elapses before their deliv |Lake camp, but up to date no pri-jery that many of the men have jvate has received his pay. left the company, These check Some of us lost our salaries to are turned back to Lamping’s of make the trip, and we can't see floe ath RRR RK Hh when the stork came the doctor could not be found for three hours, and that as a result she has suffered physical disability * . * a * WASHINGTON DOCTOR SUED FOR 95,000 * * DAMAGES BECAUSE HE MISSED STORK *& * ” . WASHINGTON, D, C., Oct. 26—Mra. Mary A. Thomas has * *® begun sult for 000 damages against Dr. Arthur ©. Mer * * riam, alleging that he missed the stork when it visited her * * home in April * + She says he bad been told of the approaching visit, but #* a - * * * * Jt. fff eee eee ee eee eee 2 2 2 Want Dogs Killed Convinced that there are too many unilcensed and vicious dogs in Senttle, Inspector Powers last night started Poundmaster Gregg on & campaign of extermination A. P. Danielson and A, Benson, letter carriers, were attacked by dogs, one 1815% Bast Denny way, the other at 14th av. 8. | vicious a few days ag }and Atlantic st., Notion Sale At a time when dressmakers are busiest tions for unusually little prices Dress Shields, 10c Pair Light Weight Nain- sook Dress Shields, sizes 2,3 and 4. Sale price, 10c a pair; regu- lar value, 15¢. 15c Hat Pins, 10c Se With large crystal heads and long stems; Topaz, Green, Ame- thyst, etc.; cards of three; regularly 15c. Sale price, 10c a Set. Cube ome ETN pine in eaen ¢ lOc, Bale pri or colors; 200 regularly 5c oni” Wire Hair d; all lengths Hinen Tape—Tiocked India Tape; bundles of six ted pieces; oF egy de im all 10c 15¢ 19 Mage quality with blunt tren's and lor Bale Magne price, 2 for Gum—The great dry ves, slippera, § 100 packag ona <F regularly Bale pri Safety Pine—Small regular a card sizes Bale finish; quality = 2 in Rale price k Hrooma—Large sine titehed, Bale h handle: best per net of Aix Baie price ownem—Alr we red, with extra pins to attach; regularly fale p Nooka— 4 Batety regularly 1 mat findah worth 7 Hate ¢ 2 ries, £ for pe—Cotton Tape, warranted four yard 5c Afast” White Ta: inch wide pieces. Por mntalning black and Tc S k 00 Belts — “it Supporters Darn han Tapes Eight 3c Bias Tape—Extra fine Lawn Bias Tape; 6-yard pieces; worth Te. Sale price sir Nets—Manhattan ai hair; value ibe price . . a; bine with inted; 40 Nets of 25c Sterling Silver Thimbles, 15¢ Heavy Sterling Sil- ver Thimbles, each in a box; worth not less than 25c. Sale price, 15c. Hose Supporters, 10c Pair Children’s Heavy Lisle Elastic Hose Supporters, all sizes, good quality. Sale price, 10c a pair. ace JO outhwi SECOND‘AVENUE’S: PIKE when the home interest, comes this announcement of another of the QUALITY sale Very Little Prices for Good Qualities is alive with N ewing room of high-grade The list is a splendid one and worth careful reading Sewing Silk, 5c Spool For hand and ma- chine use; warranted full 100 yards; black and colors. Sale price, 5c a spool. Cotton Dar twenty diffe on card price Pearl Button» ie—For mendin t colored threads 10c perior quality; either two or four price, per 5¢ ine—Crimped; boxes con- 1 § pins. Bale 5¢ perry Kmeries — Small and were tc and 10¢ double yards long: and strong: of Laces—Tubular Shoe Laces strong; 4-6 and ack or ta and ends some are © and 10c values. 4 Companions — Lasiher povered; containing mirror, comb, penctl, toothpick and mahieure, in neat fancy-work aining bodkin, stilette ad winder; regu- Washable Hair Rolls, 39c Extra Large Size Washable Hair Rolls, in all shades; value 50c each. Sale price, 39c. ugall STREET, Thursday, Friday Saturday “Savers” THREE BIG DAYS Bartlett Springs Mineral Water An excellent remedy for the re- lief of kidney and liver trouble; full quart size bottle; 12¢ regular 2c, This week Pond’s Extract Cold Cream— Regular 25¢ size, This 14¢ Drug and Prescription Department 12c Horehound Candy Drops Per pound .. “A Rock Candy—Per pound . wan0 Kondon’s Catarrh Jelly— Regular 500, This week. Shaving Cups—Regular This week Menthol! Cough Drops—Regular Se. This week, 2 packages 5c te $2.75 Hote! Soap—25e per dozen; per gross Patent Medicines Doan's Kidney Pills— 35 Regular 60c renee Pinkham's Vegetable Compound—$!.00 D, D. D, Eczema Remedy—$1.00 Waterbury’s Codliver Oil $1.00 Swamp Root— $1.00 Syrup of Figs— Rex Headache Tablete— 8.8.8 Blood Remedy 1 33 $1.75 ' ek. « Krause's Liver Pill 1 Glyco Thymoline—Regular Listerine—Larg payee Original Regular Ib. This week 7c wee} Epsom Salts , age, 1 4 aimo Nerve Tablets— hampoo Soap Frost King and Chamois Vest ba Regular $1.00, This @4 OG | Gul Lakeside Chamois Vest—Regular $2.25, This 250. week ees eee ‘ Euthymol Tooth Paste— 15 Regular 250. This week.. C Hay’s Hair Health—Reg uy S60 This week ”..206 Rubberset Shaving Brushes— Regular 60c size. This Pape's Cold Compound— Jansen's Dog Soap—Reg ar 260 week 9c $1.00 Ic ette Rice Powder— res EO ize Pine Tar Phis 8c Per doz week Tooth Picks ar be, This 3d Vinol—A t pleas Vineland 500 per Umbrellas—A of beautiful handle rhi ek,.25 PER CENT OFF Grape Juice quart This we Peroxide \ will whiten ht skin blem 20¢ Zine thi week at Pike St. Store Soap uly t the skin remove blackhea ishes, it th Street store. use of this Ww yap leaving it smooth and sott Hoff’s Peptonized Emul- sion of Cod Liver Oil A splendid tonic, exceptionally good for that severe cold or bronchial trouble. Pleasant to take; $1.00 per bottl $2 50 ' 8% for Benzoin and Almond pe Regular 260. ream—Regular . This week lle Violet Glycerine Soap—Regular 40c per box. This 5c week, 3 cakes .......... 59c Goshen Razor Hone— Regular $1.00. This week bathing the This 8c Eye Cups—For eyes; regular 150, week Stationery Department 19¢ Post Card Albums. 100 cards; regular Lead Pencils—Regular Se each bh 6c Writing Tablets—Regular 10c. This week .t.., 58c Automatic Ink Stands and Double Regular Bridge Score Cards— Regular 90c. This week Skat Score C Deck—Res > Box Stationery—Regular Chis’ eek LT Pen Points— 8c Per dozen v Pen Holders Fountain Pen Ink—Regu lar This week Chamois Vest—Regular This A.-Y.-P. Souvenir Playing Cards—Regular 50c ..... Post Card Albums—Hold 50 cards; regular 500..... rds Regular Sc 15¢ Palm Olive Soap—Regular 1be. This week Scissors—Rk This week Boston week ‘ The Klondike regular week rhis

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