- B THE MORNING OREGONIAN, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 13. 1913. RUSSIA WILL SEND ARMY TO BALKANS Troops An$ Promised as Soon as They Are Available, Says Sir Edward Grey. SERBIAN SITUATION ACUTE Crecec Must Stand or rail "With Neighboring .IVatlon, Declares British loreign M inlster Mil- Itary rian Is Secret. LONDON, Oot. 14. Sir Edward Grey, the Secretary for Foreign Affairs, an nounced, in the Ilouao of Commons today, that tho co-operation of Rus sian troops in tho Balkan3 had been jiromiaed a soon as troops were avail able. Sir Kdward "?rey, alluding to Serli.i. praised tho skill and courapre with which she had turned on her foes and driven them out of her country as one of the outstanding features of tho war. Once again, he said, the crisis noa n Serbia, and she was meeting it with the same splendkl courage. The en try of Bulgaria . mado a great differ once in the situation and raised tho riuetition of treaty obligations bctiveen Greece and Serbia. Regarding the attitude of Greece, fiir Edward Grey refered to the state ments made by ex-Premier Venizelos nnd the new Greek Premier, M. Zaim!, nnd said it must be obvious that the interest of Greece and Serbia were now one. In the long run, he said, they must stand or fall together. Britain Otves All Alii Poxslhlr. Through Greek territory alone couM flstaiice ' be sent to Serbia, continued the Foreign ecretary, and that this assistance was welcome was sufficient ly proved by the reception accorded by Greece to the allied troops. Great Britain was giving Serbia all tho help iln its power freely and -unconditionally. "In view of the treaty between Greece and Serbia," naid the Foreign Secretary, "how can there bo any other sttltude on tho part of Greece toward "4he assistance offered through her to Serbia? In the steps taken we acted -In the ulosest co-operation with France, nnd the co-operation of Russian troops Is promised as soon as they can be made available. "The military measures adopted to meet the requirements of the new situ ation are the subject of continuous at tention by the military authorities ot the allies and they will be taken In lose consultation with each other. It Is not my. province to make a public liHclosuro of the military plans and I ran only say I believe they will be based on the principles of sound strategy. situation Admittedly Acute. "Serbia Is fighting for her national existence, and with her the struggle Is just now intense and acute, but the struggle la one and the issue is one. In whatever theater of war fighting is taking place'. . ' ' "All the allies are fighting for na tional existence., and .for ail who are fighting the same Issues arise. It is a fight for the right to live, not under 1he shadow of Prussian militarism, which does not observe the ordinary rules of humanity In war, and to leave lis free from the menace of oppres BRITISH GUP WAR NEWS AMERIC'A NEWSPAPERS Fl'HMSH STORIES ABOUT EN'GLAND. Censors Paaa Reprinted Articles on Navy, but Explain They Mo , "ot Vouch for Them. ( LONDON. Oct. 5. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) British news papers have republished from Amer ican and other neutral papers various estimates of the number of German submarines sunk by the British, but so far the Admiralty has authorized no figures or estimates of its own. This Is but one of the naval topics on which the press virtually is silent, except to reproduce the comment of -the foreign papers. American news paper readers are dally presented with more or less well supported discussions of matters relating to the British navy, of which not a line appears in print here. Recently some of the London papers republished from an American paper an article about a new aircraft constructed to- fight Zeppelins. It was passed by the press bureau with the observation that It could in no degree vouch for the accuracy of any of the statements therein. When the American papers were printing references to the net across the English Channel, describing it even to the name of the makers, there was not a word about it In the British papers. Indeed It would be an almost startling experience If a London pub lisher should be permitted to print any of the many articles about the British -navy that appear so frequently in American journals. PLAINS OF WARSAW VAST (Continued From First Ta had blown up, went lurching across to Frag a. Wagon trains and military autos struck into a whirl of frantlo horses and peasants'- carts and marching troops -when they reached the Praga bank and the consequent lashing and shouting and horn tooting and pranc ing were a source of infinite satisfac tion to scores of little peasant boys who sat on top of piles of furniture and bod clothes in their fathers' carts and plainly were well content to be the children of refugees. Hoad Mender at 'Werk. To get from the (cut out by censor) bridge to the main street of Praga the procession had to bend off Into a shock ing slough, where the German road menders were at work. " Often they had to stop their road mending to dig a cart out of the black ruts. Tha scene., had numerous diverting and some pitiful aspects, but Its principal novelty to an American was the ab. sence of profanity. At home worki would have stopped until somebody bad' blasted the landscape with oaths. Here there were hoarse commands and wild shouts of encouragement to the horses: but Germans and Poles alike seemed to. get on without damning each other either up the bank or down. Most of the refugees' carts were bedded with hay, which the cows, tied to the wagon tails, nipped at anxiously. Ovr the hay bed quilts were spread and over the quilts were strewn ob jects as various as new babies, clocks, cooking things, bird cages, colored pic tures of saints and mothers who bore an obvious relation to the new babies, for they lay almost at length, on the quilts and looked weary and 111. Clrls Drive Cattle and Geeae. Behind the wagons trudged girls driving cows and geese. The colts they did not have to drive because those frightened creatures kept close to the mares which were drawing the carts. There was one woman who walked by herself and appeared undisturbed by the clamor and scurry around her. She carried a cooking pot with a feather hat stuck in it. and the driver of the four-horse team of an ammunition wagon had to swing his horses half, out of the roadway to avoid crushing hat, pot and woman. Sometimes there were heartrending things to pee. Once a little low-hung cart went bouncing by us as we sat stalled in tfie ruts, and set across the cart on a kind of improvised treetlj was a baby'n coffin of black wood. There was not a mother nor a mourner In sight, but there was an attendant, for a littlo boy had crawled under the trestle to which the coffin was lashed and he was riding along under the tiny black box all intent upon tho stir of soldiers and horses around him.' The glimpse of the wide, eager eyes peering out from between the lattice work of the wagon boil and of tha tousled head bobbing beneath the little coffin was the most fantastically grisly sight I have seen in the war. It made a man catch his breath. Funeral Held W ithout Mourners. We passed other civilian funerals on the way through Praga, and dignifying not one of them was a hint of even to much as the pitiful pageantry which the poor have to bestow upon their dead, it was Just a case of hurrying a corpse into the earth, and no mourn ers walked behind the carta. Aside from these sights and the sight of the thousands of prisoners we passed on the way there was notn ing about Praga that interested roe, save recollection of an old story. That story embalms one of the classic laconiclsms of military dispatch-writing, a. laconielsm almost worthy to rank with the "Peccavi" I have sinned), and "Cantharides" (the Span ish, fly) sent by victorious generals whose names I have forgotten. (One of the burdens of this wandering life Is never having a book of reference save Baedeker under one's hand.) Anyway, In 1794, after the second partition of Poland. General Suvorov stormed Praga for 12 hours at tha head of 25.000 Russians and routed Its da fending force, amounting to some 28. 000 Poles. And when he eat down at night to tell his Empress about it he wrote merely: "Hurrah! Praga. Suvorov." The Empress, taking a le,af out of his book, gave congratulations and a promotion with these three words: "Bravo, field marshal! Catherine." Praga Vastly Desolate. Musing on the different aspect of affairs In Praga today I found myself on the outskirts of the town. Here stood tho blackened walls of burned factories and warehouses which had been bombed by the flyers of both ar mies, and here, where the Industrial quarter and the poorer residential quarter straggle off into the grassy plain, were acres of freight yards. In some places grass was growing between the ties, as it will in ground over which grain cars are moved, but for the most part the yards were Just a scorched, blackened waste, and sprad dling along the rails were what looked like a mile or two of burned freight cars into which the Russians had thrown fire Just before their evacua tion of the city. It was war, and It was right, but the vastness of the desolate, silent scene and the knowledge that not only hun dreds of cars, but also millions of ru bles' worth of goods had been destroyed In a night bore In again the dreary consciousness of the shocking waste of war. How many hospitals and homes for the oid and universities and libra ries and endowed theaters and parks could the world have had for all this, J have thought a hundred times In my wanderings back and forth through the wastage of Belgium and France and East Prussia, and Poland and Galicia and the bitterest part of the thought was that after all the world would not have had them even had no war come. IVQlMEN ARE MAKING FRENCH IIIIIIOFIS Factories Behind Line Work 24 Hours-a Day to Keep Up Army Supplies. American Machinery and Tools Ac complish Transformation -Output Three Shells a Day . for Each Worker. defense, an estimated' deficit of more than $135,000,000. The Secretary of the Treaaury now has authority to issue the Panama Canal bonds to -the amount of 1240,000, 000. That would fee a temporary rem edy, however, and may not ba resorted to If the Administration proceeds on the theory that the Government will meintatn the same rate of expenditures for National defense during coming years as now is proposed for the next session of Congress. Estimates for the Department of Commerce will show an increase over last year's total, $16,774,000, if they are agreed on in the form now before 6eo retary Redfield. The principal request for more money will come from the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Com merce, which desires to take advantage of the opportunity afforded by the war to extend its foreign trade organiza- FACTORIES ARE MADE OVER for the funds necessary for that work. The Coast and Geodetic Survey has taken up with the Secretary tho question of secaring appropriation for a thorough survey , of the Alaskan coast. Immigration Is Curtailed. The Department of Labor contem plates few changes In Its estimates. which last year amounted to $4,443,000. Secretary Wilton is considering a re duction in the estimates for the bureau of immigration, which has found its ac tivities materially curtailed by the tail ing off of immigration caused by the European war. ' The estimates for the Postofflce De partment will be slightly above the $299,000,000 estimated for the present year. The increase is credited to the automatic promotions of carriers and clerks provided for by Congress. In creased pay for railway transportation in the middle states as a result of the new weighing statistics, and the Na tional growth of the system. The esti mate for ocean mail transportation la the same as the current appropriation, no allowance being made for the growth of the service, as an offset to the war. The estimates for the de partment as a whole were prepared with a. view to resumption of normal peace conditions. Interior Department Makea Savins;. In tho Interior Department the esti mates are less than the appropriation of $210,000,000 for the current year, ex cluding $8,000,000 for construction of the Government railroad in Alaska. - Secretary Houston had not completed tonight his estimates for the Depart ment of Agriculture, but they will not vary much from the present appropria tion of about $24,000,000. Most of the Cabinet officers, or their assistants, were at work; tonight fin ishing their estimates. -Although it was believed at first there would be a delay by Secretaries Garrison and Dan iels on account of extraordinary condi tions, it practically was certain tonight that both Army and Navy budgets would be ready tomorrow in compli ance with the law. PARIS. .Sept. 25. (Correspondence of the Associated Press.) The unremit ting French artillery attack proceed ing along the whole front is made pos sible by equally unremitting and in tensive effort in tho production of pro jectiles in works which have been transformed by equipment with Ameri can machine tools" and are working regularly 24 hours a day. One of these great establishments near Paris, visited today by an Asso ciated Press representative, by official permission, makes more than 0000 shells and several aeroplane motors a day. The works visited produced 600 auto mobiles annually before the war. The order of operations was different in shell making, so it was necessary to displace and rearrange 5000 machines. Install many new ones and at the same time find hands to replace 1000 mobi lized mechanics. , Tnt.lt Speedily Accomplished. So formidable a task would have seemed before the war to bo the work of a year, but it was accomplished in a few weeks and the works were ready to turn out daily thousands of parts of rifles and bayonets. In additions to high-power flying machine motors and sheUs. Women, old, young and middle-aged, are working there in the places of hus bands, fathers, sons and brothers at the front. Projectiles and rifle parts have the precision ,of a. chronometer and every operation is supervised and the result verified before it goes on to the next hand. Sheila Must Have Right Rlnc. The finished shell must not only stand a high hydraulie pressure, but it must give the proper ring. An ex pert in steel, isolated from the clang and hum of the factory, in an almost hermetically sealed hut, taps each shell aa it is sent to htm on a. little trolley. Those which give out the proper ring are sent on, while the others go to the scrap heap. This is the final trial be fore loading. (Shrapnel bullets are placed In the core of the shell by young girls, whose work is rully up to that of trained arsenal workmen. The average rate of production in different factories is about three shells a day for each worker employed, but it varies greatly according to tho ma chine used. GIRL'S MURDER DENIED HEW LINE 15 ORDERED MILLION-DOLLAR, VESSEL TO . ADDED TO HONOLULU Kl'X. BE tous for them. Their safety is -merely his assignment, and he would take equally good care of an equal number of column horses or of ammunition carts intrusted to him. As the vener able General von II. (cut out by cen sor) once said to an officer who was to take a party out to a stretch of coun try (cut out by censor) where it was warm, "I have no doubt that these gentlemen would consider it a great experience to be wounded, but be as sured, captain, that that would relieve neither you nor me of our responsi bility." It wa6 the same way once In the trenches near Peronne, when, through our heedlessness. Ed Welgle and I got fired on. The officer in charge of us was mad as a hatter, not at the French riflemen who had taken a shot at each of us, but at us for giving him the chance to do It. I am sure that Weigle and I wero much more frightened by the German captain's scolding than we were by the Frenchmen's bullets. We "anschliessed" all tho rest of that day. Pontoon Bridge Streams W ith Waajons. All along tho way out of town triple Fpans of horses wero plunging down the bank of the Vintula with tho mu nition wagons and out to the pontoon bridge, which was fairly streaming with these wagon trains. On masts at the entrance of this bridge the German flag and the Hungarian flag, which Is broad stripes of green, white r.nd red and the most striking combination of national colors I ever saw, were flying. and half a mile down the yellow river the shattered spans of the enormous Aleksandrowskl bridge, which is neafly 600 yards long, and which the Russians C. tv. CAMPBELL ON STAND IN OWN BEHALF AT TRIAL. Wife of Walla. Walla Man Insist Poison Was Vaed to Kill Squirrels. Defendant Explains Much. WALLA WALLA. Wash.. Oct. 14. (Special.) Cornelius .W. Campbell, de fendant in the sensational murder case now being heard in the Superior Court, took the stand today in his own be half, but had not proceeded far when court adjourned. He will finish his evidence tomorrow and the Jury will likely get the case before tonight Today's trial had plenty of sensa tional features, including the testimony given by Campbell and his wife, a legal battle over admittance of testimony of Dr. M. A. Nelms and the introduction of two bottles which had contained strychnine, the bottles having been found in an old stove In the bunk house. Mrs. Campbell explained that three years ago the poison was used to kill squirrels. The state established that Ethel Mc Donald's death was caused by strych nine and Campbell is charged with administering it. The defense's theory is that the girl was a suicide. The girl, aged 15, was soon to have become a mother, the autopsy showed. The girl was employed by Campbell. Campbell today told of the trips he had made with the girl on several oc casions, denying some evidence brought out by i.ie state and explaining cir cumstances of other 'details. Attorney Smith had Just asked him to state what happened June 30, 1915, the day the girl died, when court adjourned. In addition to Campbell's partially completed evidence, Mrs. Campbell sob- blngly told her story. Dr. M. A. Nelms, after a wordy battle between counsel, told the Jury that Ethel McDonald had consulted him with a view to having him perform a criminal operation some time in June. Campbell's testimony was given In a nuiet. but apparently confident man ner. His relations with the girl He insisted were always proper. He ad mitted he had been with her a great deal. Standard Oil Also Contracts for Big Tanker Iron Works to Increase Force by OOO Men. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 14. A mil lion-dollar steamer for the run between San Francisco and Honolulu was an nounced as contracted for today by William Mataon. head of the Matson Navigation Company, which now owns and operates six vessels between the two ports. The vesHcl will be built by the Union Iron Works hero and is to be ready in 1917. Plans for another, new boat to fly the American flag were made public today when the Standard Oil Company awarded the Union Iron Works a con tract for the construction of a tank steamer to cost $980,000. Off iclals-said the new tanker would be the finest boat of its kind ' ever constructed on the Pacific Coast. The Standard Oil boat will be completed in 14 months. It will b-50 feet long and have a ca pacity of 14,000 tons. As the result of tho Increased activ ity in ship construction, it was said today, the Union Iron Works will aug ment Its present working force of 3100 to 4000 men. .For the first time In sev eral years a large night shift is now being employed. Whether the new Standard Oil tank er will fly the American flag. It was said, would depend upon the service it will b put into. BEN LIKDSEY IS EJECTED DENVER JUVENILE JIDGE IS LED FROM DISTRICT COURT. Use ef Strong Term In Denying Attor- ney's Accusation and Demonstra tion Presented by Jurist. DENVER. Oct. 14. Ben B. Lindsey, Judge of Denver's Juvenile Court, was ordered ejected from the criminal divi sion of the District Court here today by Judge W. D. Wright. The court's action was taken when Lindsey ' con tradicted statements made by Attorney J. J. Sullivan, using a short and em phatic term, and grabbed 'Sullivan by the coat. Sullivan was ' presenting arguments for the defense in the case of Frank I Rose on trial charged with conspiracy to ruin Judge Lindsey. He had de voted considerable time to criticism of Lindsey, the prosecuting witness, in the course of which he declared Lindsey toured the country on time that should be devoted to "taxpayers' business," delivering leouree in which he maligned Denver and its people. At this point Judge Lindsey ' inter jected: "You are deliberately lying about me; you can't lie about me; you're a liar," starting toward Sul livan and grabbed him by the coat. Court bailiffs sprang to each. man. and under the court's order took Judge Lindsey. from the room. Mrs. Lind sey and some of the attaches of Judge Lindsey's court present went out with him. NATIONAL MILL TO RESUME Half Interest In Washington Com pany Is Sold to Partner. ASHFORD, Wrash., Oct. 14 (Special.) It was reported here by a visiting Tacoma Eastern Railroad official that L. H. Mller. of Tacoma. has sold his Interest in the Paclfio National Lum ber Company, whose mill is at National, to his partner. Mr. Demarest The in tention is to resume operations, for a short time at least, this week. It is conceded by all mill men fa miliar with this property that it is one of the most valuable in the state. Large, long timbers are a specialty, the mill having cut them as large as 30x30. 120 feet long. It is understood Mr. Miller is look ing around for another location. ARMY RULES THE HAGUE Martial Law Applied to Munition Plants and Workers. THE HAGUE, via London October 14. Martial law in & specified and partial form was proclaimed here today. The proclamation affects the various trades which furnish supplies for the army. The proclamation, announcing that The Hague was placed under a minor state of martial law. was placarded this morning. The measure affects move ments of workmen employed in the trades which provide military supplies. These workmen hereafter will be com pelled to obtain military permits if they desire to go to other districts. Foreigners are not affected by the de cree. . EXPENSE TO SET RECORD (Continue! From plrt Pagg Santiseptic Boon to Mothers. Wrthes nnd relleTM chafed, irritated sktns of In. fants. K'ps skin fr.nli and wt. Fine tot baby's tender 6k La. 60c. All druggists. $1,300,000 for tho State Department. The $2,000,000 appropriated by Con gress as an emergency ' war fund for use of that Department has been all spent, but much of it already has been or will be reimbursed, so that the re approprlatlon will not represent any real expense. The ordinary disbursements of the Government last year wore about $702, 000.000. If the receipts are as much as $750,000,000 in. the coming year and the appropriations of all Government departments but the State, War and Navy remain the same, there still would be, wiWHhe added budget for National EVERYBODY NEEDS PURE. RICH BLOOD Pure blood enables the stomach, liver and other digestive organs to do their work properly. . Without it they are sluggish, there is loss of appetite, some times faintness. a deranged state of the intestines, and, in general, all the symptoms of dyspepsia. Pure blood la required by every organ of the body for the proper per formance of its functions. Hood's Sarsapartlla makes pure blood, and this is why it is so successful In the treatment of so many diseases and ailments. It acts directly on the blood, ridding it of scrofulous and other humors. It ie a peculiar combination of blood - purifying. nerve - toning, strength-giving substances. TO GREAT SOOTH ANY INFLAMED SKIN FoHlam does remarkable work in clearing complexions, oftentimes over night; soothes inflamed skin, banishes that aggravating feeling of unrest; takes out the soreness. The same rapid healing power which Poslam exerts In cases of stubborn Eczema will serve you. If you will but employ it, to be rid of similar affections or disordered conditions of the Hkin. Minor troubles usually require but few applications. Pimples are quickly, reduced. As to soaps, you should know that Poslain Soap is an absolutely Fafe soap for tender, sensitive skin a dally de light for Toilet and Bath. For sample., send 4c stamps to Emer gency Laboratories. 32 West 25th St., New York City. Bold by all druggists. Dress-Up-Week"--0ct. ll-16"Dress Up, Uncle Sam Can Afford It "TOU CAN DO BETTER FOE IESS ON THIRD STREET Store Opens Daily at 8:30 A..M. On Saturdays 9:00 A. M. Pacific Phone Marshall 5080 The Most in Value The Best in Quality Store Closes Daily at 5:30 P.M. On Saturdays 6:00 P.M. Home Phone A 2112 for Choice A last of Unmatchafole Offerings for Our 7 79 tli Bargain Friday There will be unusual selling in every department tomorrow. These prices, coupled with a little evidence that cold weather is not far away, will awaken everybody to their Fall and Winter needs. No store is better prepared to fill your wants than ours. No store will equal these prices on such seasonable and desir able merchandise. In each and every Instance the purchaser saves money. That is why we hold the cus tom of our old patrons and axe continually making new ones daily for this big store. Read carefully the following items and note the great price reductions for tomorrow: It's tlie Sale You've Been Waiting for An Underpricing of Women's Fashionable Fall Suits In Poplins, Serges and Mixtures Included Are the Popular Box Coat, Russian Fur. or Braid-Trimmed Models, as Well as Conservative, Plain Styles All Sizes and Colors Values to $16.50 Friday Only at A Fashionable Style and Perfect Fit Assured in Every Transaction It is a special assortment of attractive new styles just received an opportunity for you to secure a handsome suit at a splendid saving. The materials are fine wool poplins, serges and mixtures in navy, brown, green, etc., as well as black. You have choice from three different models with box coat also Russian effects with fur or braid trimmings and the plainer conservative styles. All sizes for misses and women. Suits of excep tionally fine tailoring that should sell regularly up to $16.50 your tf r ff choice Bargain Friday at. . P l.UU An Extraordinary Showing and Sale of All Sorts of Beautiful New Ribbons Satins, Moires, Failles, Taffetas, Etc., Shown in Warp Print Fancies Plaids, Stripes, Jacquard Weaves--Floral Patterns -5 to 8-Inch Widths and Qualities Regularly Sold Up to $1.00 a Yard This Sale at. . . . . i . . . . See Our Morrison Street Window Display Values are really- sensational at this great sale of high grade ribbons suitable for most every purpose the great savings thus made possible will prompt prudent women to purchase now for both present use and future holiday needs. Included are Satins, Moires, Failles, Taf fetas, etc., shown in hundreds of pretty new designs and rich color combinations plaids, stripes, checks, jacquard fancies, floral patterns, warp prints and many exclusive novelties in by to 8-inch widths. Qualities regularly sold ofi up to $1.00 a yard all at one price Bargain Friday at .' OC Nothing to Compare With This Showing and Sale of Beautiful Dress and Waistin Silks Included Are Taffetas, Louissenes, Messalines, Bengalines, Poplins, Ottoman Cords, Etc., Plain Colors and Novelties in 24, 27 and 36-Inch Widths, 85c to $1.50 Qualities Priced Friday at An assortment so varied and so broad that every taste may be suited it is one of those unusual opportunities to se cure the most beautiful new Dress and Waisting Silks con siderably less than Regular selling figures included are Taffeta, Messalines, Louissenes, Poplins, Bengalines, Ottoman Cords, Fancy Trimming Silks, Etc., any wanted shade or color combination in checks, plaids, brocades, self-colored jacquard designs, stripes, pompadour and floral patterns; qualities regularly sold from 85c to $1.50 a yard. Bargain Friday, all at, yard. . wC Extra Special for Fridays 2000 Yards All Styles Checks, Plaids Stripes, Plain Colors, at Dress Yd. Ginghams Medium, Light and Dark Colors Best Standard lSVic Quality For this sale we have underpriced our entire stock of the best standard Dress Ginghams the kind so well known for their extremely durable quality and fast colors they come in light; medium and dark colors in stripes, checks, plaids and plain shades; all bright, clean new goods, of a quality sold Q everywhere at 12ic a yard. Priced for Bargain Friday at UNSURPASSED OFFERINGS IN JSStefll1 Hosiery and Knit Underwear VESTS AND PANTS FOR WOMEN $1.00 GRADE AT.. m Will i.iJF -i ,; "-- I-t 76c Seasonable weight fine ribbed wool Vests and Pants in desirable styles, but only in size3 34, 36 and 38. Garments of regular $1.00 quality on sale, Bar gain Friday, at 70 BLACK WOOI PANTS FOR CHILDREN 75c GRADE AT... A proper garment for this season. Chil dren's fine ribbed Black Wool Pants. Shown in all sizes from 2 to 14 years. A. garment of regular 75c quality. Bar gain Friday, at 49 49c 19c FLEECED STOCKINGS FOR WOMEN 25c GRADE AT... A warm, durable Fleeced Cotton Stock ing. Made with reinforced heel and toe and fine ribbed top. AJ1 sizes. Best 25c grade. On sale Bargain Friday, at 19 COTTON STOCKINGS FOR CHILDREN 20c GRADE AT A splendid wearing Stocking of medium heavy-weight. They come in a fine rib, are fast black and are regularly sold at 20c a pair. All sizes. On 6ale Bargain lie Friday at only , Stamped Pillow Tops and Center Pieces ON SALE -b r FRIDAY AT 1 U C Regular 25c to 50c Values An extensive variety of stamped Art Ticking Pillow Tops flag pillow top of fine art crash on cross-stitch designs. Center pieces in tan linen in floral and conventional patterns, etc Regular 25c to 50c lines on sale Bargain Fri day at 10c Royal Society and Cordicliet Cotton ON SALE p- a FRIDAY AT OC Ball Regular 10c Grade In our Act Section a sale of Royal Society and Cdrdichet Cotton in the following colors and num bers: Self-blue in 30, 60, 75; light blue in 50 and 70; yellow in 30, 50 and 70; pink in 50 and 70; lav ender in 30, 50 and 70; white in 1, 2, 3, 5, 10, 15, 80 and 100; ecru in 1, 2, 10, 15, 20, 30, 40 and 50; threads suitable for all kinds of crochet work. Regular 10r balls. Friday at '. ..5"