Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, January 28, 1916, Page 3, Image 3

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    TIIE HORSING- OREGOXIAy, FRIDAY, JANUARY 28. 1916.
MINISTER RIVAL IN
MRS. MOHR'S HEART
Woman Admits Early Friend
ship Was Cause of First
Break With Husband.
FIRST MARRIAGE IN DOUBT
Doctor Said to Have Been Earning
S53.00O a Year at Time Suit for
tseparato Allowance of 9 1 00
a Month Was Filed.
T.OVIDENCE. n. I, Jan. IT. The
first serious outbreak in the marital
relations of the late Dr. C. Franklin
Mohr an.l his wife. Elizabeth F. Mohr.
who is charged with having hired two
negroes to kill him, occurred at the
time she told her husband of her friend
ship for a man named Samuel A. Mc
Dougall. who is now a, mtntster in Pic
tou. Nova Scotia. This statement was
elicited from Mrs. Mohr in the course
of a severe cross-examination today by
Attorney-General Rice. Step by step
the Prosecuting Attorney brought out
the details of Mrs. Mohr's life. Occa
' sionally she broke down and sobbed.
It was in 1312, she said, that she
first told Dr. Mohr about McDougall.
The doctor, she admitted, was incensed
and went to Nova Scotia to try to have
the minister unfrocked.
Preference for Minister Admitted.
"The doctor was under the Influence
of drugs." said Mrs. Mohr. "He asked
me if I preferred McDougall to him
and I told him that the way he was
actinic I thought McDougall would have
been better, aa he did not touch liquor."
Mrs. Mohr admitted that she was
"fooled" about her first marriage with
the doctor, in Brooklyn, but that she
relied on the word of the doctor and
took no other precautions. She denied
that she had lived with the doctor a
year and a half before their marriage.
When the doctor told her, she said,
that she would have trouble in proving
that they were legally married, aa she
-ouli not produce the certificate and
the man who performed the ceremony
was dead, she decided not to live with
him another day until there was an
other ceremony.
Marrtase Performed Later.
Mrs. Mohr later said that she and
the doctor were married at Lynn. Mass.,
May II, 1909. The doctor thought it
would be best, she said, on account
of the children.
Karllcr Mrs. Mohr had told of re
peated beatings from her husband when
be objected to bis attentions to other
women. Questioned further by her
counsel. Arthur Cushlng. she told of
a reconciliation in 1913, followed soon
by the final break.
Mrs. Mohr said that at the time she
filed her suit for separate maintenance
the doctor was earning $52,000 a year,
hut she asked for an allowance of only
SI 00 a month. She attached his prop
erty and refused his request to have
the attachment released. Later, the
witness said, she signed over her prop
erty to the doctor as a result of his
threats.
"I thought I had a right to get it
back again, because he was so cruel to
1 Die," she said.
ALFRED CLARK CANDIDATE
Aspirations for Douglas County As
rcssorshtp Announced.
ROSKBURG. Or.. Jan. 17. (Special.)
Alfred Clark, brother of Senator
Kathryn Clark, of Glendale. yesterday
announced his candidacy for County
Assessor at the primary election to
be held in May. Mr. Clark is a Re
publican. Miss Clark Is a Democrat and avers
he will not accept the nomination for
state Senator. She was appointed to
the office of State Senator by Gover
nor West, and later was elected by the
voters of Douglas County. She served
during the last session of the State
Legislature.
. .
SCHOOL SWEETHEART WED
Bride of Amity Youth Is 15-Year-Old
Berlin Girl.
ALBANY, Or.. Jan. 27. (Special.)
Vera Seelye, a 15-year-old Linn County
Kirl. was married to Irvin Elliot, aged
;o. of Amity, last night at the home of
the bride's parents at Berlin.
The marriage was the outcome of a
romance which began when Elliot i
attending the same school with Miss
Seelye at Berlin. The newlyweds will
make their home on the Elliot ranch,
near Amity.
Cottage Grove Man Buried.
COTTAGE GROVE.. Or.. Jan. 57.
tSpeclal.) The funeral of Edgar King
was held here today. He was So years
old and had been a resident of Cottage
Grove 12 year. He was born at Burnt
l'ralrte, 111. The wife and the follow
ing children survive: Frank. Alta. Ben.
Luther. Edward and Dwlght King, of
this city, and Mrs. J. M. Davison, of
Oakland. Or.
TIRED WORKING MEN
A Local Drupgist Suggests a
Remedy for Overworked,
Run-Down Men.
The following letter from Manager
llodes recounts the experience and con
dition of many Portland men. Read
this letter and our offer which fol
lows: Brooklyn. X. Y. "I am the general
office manager, and became so nervous
and run-down in health that I lost my
appetite and finally my health broke
down completely, largely because of
overwork. I tried Beef. Iron and Wine,
and other remedies without help. I saw
Vinol advertised, and soon after taking
it I noticed an improvement. I now
have a hearty anpetite. sleep better,
feel better ami have gained consid
erable in weight." Samuel Hodea. 501
Stone ave.
The reason Vinol is so successful in
ruch cases is because it contains the
three oldest and most famous tonics.
vis the medicinal elements, of fresh
cod livers without oil. peptone of iron
and beef peptone.
tVe ask every run-down, over-worked
man In Portland to try a bottle of Vinol
with the understanding that their
money will be returned if it fails to
help them as it did Mr. Hodes.
The Owl Drug Co.. Portland. Or..
P. s. In your own town, wharever
you live, there Is a Vinol drug store.
Look for the sign.
SUIT FOB DIVORCE AGAINST HIM REVEALS INTERESTING. FACTS
ABOUT NOTED AVIATOR.
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Photo Copyright by Underwood,
MRS. CLAIDE GRAHAM K-W HIT hi.
Mrs Claude Grahame-White, who previous to her marriage In June, 1912,
to the British Flight Commander, was Miss Dorothy Caldwell Taylor, daugh
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Bertrand Leroy Taylor, of New York. has. according to
report, started suit in London against her husband for divorce. The pro
ceedings reveal the interesting fact that Grahame-White had not. as had
been reported, been shot as a spy. but that he no longer is a flight commander
in His Majesty's aeronautic forces.
WOMEN GET NO HOPE
President Declines to Support
National Suffrage Move.
ATTEMPT TO QUIZ FAILS
Mr. Wilson Refuses Courteously to
Be Cross-Questioned; Congress
ional Union Speakers Ask Part
In Preparedness Plans.
NEW TOP.K, Jan. !7. Speaking
briefly to a delegation of 200 members
of the Congressional Union for Woman
Suffrage today. President Wilson de
clined firmly to support the movement
for an amendment to the United States
Constitution providing for woman suf
frage. He told them he felt the suf
frage question should be dealt with by
individual states.
The President received the suffragists
after they had sent him a series of
notes and had waited for him for more
than an hour at the Waldorf Astoria
Hotel, which he made his headquarters
on his arrival here early this morning
from Washington.
Kfforts made by Mrs. Beard, wire or
a Columbia University professor, to
cross-examine the President on his po
sition met with failure. He refused
courteously to reply to her queries.
The President admitted he had prom
ised several months ago to discuss with
the leaders of the congress the suffrage
Question, but said that other matters
of legislation had come up which he
thought should take precedence ' over
everything else.
Silence greeted his reiteration of his
opposition to the Federal suffrage
amendment, but other portions of his
address were marked by applause.
Mrs. Tiffanv Dyer. Mrs. Bruere and
Mrs. Beard spoke before the President.
They asked that while he was work
ing out his preparedness programme he
should remember that no scheme of de
fense would be adequate which did not
include the mobilization of women.
They asked that while speaking in the
Middle West for Nationaot defense ne
also advocate woman suffrage.
OFFICERS FACE TRIAL
COIRTMARTIAL IS PROBABLE FOL
LOWING VESTURE IXTO MEXICO.
Lleatenaats May Be Held Responsible
for Deatha Four Soldlera Wha
Went t Rescue Comrades.
WASHINGTON. Jan. i7. There was
no indication tonight that the United
States Government would consider any
action necessary in the case of the
two American soldiers captured yes
terday by armed Mexicans near
Brownsville. Tex, and returned un
harmed to their commands today, other
than to investigate the Incident ana
probably courtmartial Lieutenants
Peyton. Mort and Waldron. who led
the detachment of soldiers into Mexi
can territory to rescue their comrades.
Secretary Garrison said positive or
ders had been given every officer in
the Army not to cross the boundary
under any provocation without specific
instructions from Washington. Should
the investigation ordered by Major
General Funston prove that the offi
cers violated this order, it was said
they undoubtedly would be conrtmar
tlaled and probably held responsible
for the deaths of the four soldiers
who were drowned in the Rio Grande.
The prompt action taken by Car
ranza authorities in returning the two
soldiers was regarded by State Depart
ment officials as indicative of their
desire to prove their innocence and to
display their good will toward, this
country.
BROWNSVILLE, Tex., Jan. 27. The
American soldiers captured by Mexi
cans yesterday were turned over to
day to United States Consul Johnson
at Matamoros. Consul Johnson re
turned them to Fort Brown today.
One of the four soldiers of the- res
cue party who were drowned last
night while returning to the American
side was Private Charles D. Wilton
best, Troop A, Twelfth Cavalry. Army
records give his home address as Port
land, Or.
ENVOYS TO MEET HOUSE
DIPLOMATS WILL JOURNEY TO
POINTS IN GERMANY.
Wllaon'a Representative Also ta Ob
tain German View at Dinner Ar
ranged by Mr. Gerard.
BERLIN. Jan. 27, via London, Jan. 2S.
American diplomatic representatives
in capitals other than London, Paris
and Berlin are planning trips to con
fer with Colonel E. M. House, personal
representative of President Wilson, at
points along nis route. Ambassador
Penfield will come from Vienna to Ber
lin this week for a conference. Am
bassador Page, from Rome, will meet
the Colonel in Switzerland. Ambassa
dor Morgenthau will make the trip
from Constantinople to meet him.
Colonel House, therefore, will be able
to convey to the President fairly com
plete reports on the situation as he
sees it through the eyes of American
representatives in the capitals of the
belligerents. He will also have the
fullest opportunity of hearing the
German view direct from leading Ger
man statesmen at dinners which Am
bassador Gerard has arranged. These
dinner engagements will put him in
contact, among others, with Dr. von
Bethmann-Hollweg. the Imperial Chan
cellor; Foreign Secretary von Jagow
and such prominent leaders of German
Industry as Dr. Walter Rathenau. the
heed of a large electrical interest.
Colonel House and his party are
quartered at the American embassy as
guests of Ambassador Gerard.
BEACH LANDMARK GOES.
Top of Arch of Jump-Orf Jot; al ,
Xevrport Is Torn Away. j
LBAXT. Or.. Jan. 27.-Special.)
Albany people returning from Newport
report that Jump-Off Joe. one of the
best-known landmarks of Nye Beach,
has been practically worn away by this
Winter s severe storms.
The top of the arch over the big hole
through the center has been torn off
by the waves and all that remains is
a few large rocks that still protrude
their tops above the high-tide level.
Prize Court Reported Swamped.
BERLIN. Jan. 27. (By wireless to
Sayvllle, N. T.) Reports from Dutch
sources 'say that the number of unde
cided cases now before the British
prize courts is so great that, if peaer
were concluded at the present time,
the courts would be occupied for twi
years.
Albany to Have Corset Factory.
ALBANY, Or, Jan. 27. A corset fac
tory is to be opened in Albany nex
week by T. G. Galloway, of Seattle
Three special machines are being in
stalled and experts are now on their
way here from the wasningion metrop
olis to superintend the work.
STORM IS GENERAL
OVER CALIFORNIA
Barometer Reading Reaches
Lowest Figure on Record
at San Francisco. '
COMMUNICATION CUT OFF
Two Feet of Water in San Diego Tel;
egraph Office Put Wires Out of
Business Snow Falling
In Mountain Region.
SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 27. The storm
on the Pacific Coaat was general in all
sections of California today. The
southern part of the atate was- gener
ally cut off from wire communication.
Before the wires began to go down
there were reports of heavy damage
by flood and wind.
The United States Weather Bureau
barometer here xegistered 29.05 just be
fore noon today, the lowest on record
for San Francisco since readeings were
recorded, beginning in 1871. Last night
it registered 29.89.
The Weather Bureau said the re
markable performance of the barometer
was caused by the intensity of the
storm, the center of which was passing
over here. General flood warnings
were sent out at once over Southern
California.
Rainfall Makes New Record.
The rainfall here at noon was 13.S2
inches for January, and 21.18 inches for
the. season. The January figures con
stituted a record for that month. Only
four years since the establishment of
the Weather Bureau here In 1871 had a
greater total rainfall than the present
season.
"There's two feet of water in the of
fice," said a telegraph operator in San
Diego today, talking to San Francisco
wire failed, shutting off the town
over the wire, and a moment later the
from outside telegraphic communica
tion. Continued rains and snow upset tel
ephone and telegraph arrangements in
many places west of the Mississippi
River. Telegraph wires were routed
from Kansas City to Dallas, Tex., back
up to Denver and from Denver to San
Francisco.
Long Beach la Flooded.
The heaviest rainfall ever recorded
at Long Beach during a 2-hour period
registered 3.33 inches early today, and
all but a trace of this amount had
fallen since S o'clock last night. As
a result, the city's streets were run
ning Curb high in places with water
and the basements of numerous busi
ness places were filled, while outlying
sections were covered with water al
most the same depth as .during the
high water a week ago. ;
Michael Tiernan. a wood "chopper,
was found frozen dead today three
miles south of Redding, covered by a
heavy fall of snow which fell early in
the day, and which caused the col
lapse of small buildings there and in
surrounding towns. A wing: of the
Kellogg Hotel at Hayfork and scores
of barns were crushed by the weight
of the snow, added to that of pre
vious storms.
Snow was reported falling all over
Northern California.
LOS AN'GELES TJSES WIRELESS
Hundreds of 3Icn Working to Keep
One Railway iine Open.
LOS ANGELES. Jan. 27. (By radio
to San Francisco.) Los Angeles de
pended tonight on radio service as the
only means of telegraphic communica
tion with the rest of the world, while
strenuous efforts were being made by
hundreds of railroad workers to keep
the valley line of the Southern Pacific
the only system of land transporta
tion which withstood the terrific storm
which is raging here from succumb
ing to the ravages of wind and rain.
All telephone and telegraph wires
leading into the city failed shortly
after noon, and the rights of way of
the various, railroads were visited al
most constantly through the day by
washouts, which rendered impassable
long stretches of track.
Gangs were furnished tonight by
three of the railroad companies to cu-
HOW MRS. BEAN
MET THE CRISIS
Carried Safely Through Change '
of Life by Lydia EL Pinkham'i
Vegetable Compound.
Nashville,Tenn. "When I was going
through the Change of Life I had a tu-
imor as large as a
child's head. The
doctor said it was
three years coming
and gave me medi
cine for it until I
was called away
from the city for
some time. Of
course I could not
go to him then, so
my sister-in-law told
Jme that she thought
Lydia E. PinkhanTs Vegetable Com
pound would cure it. It helped both
the Change of Life and the tumor and
when I got home I did not need Vie doctor.
I took the Pinkham remedies until the
tumor was gone, the doctor said, and I
have not felt it since. I tell every one
how 1 was cured. If this letter will
help others you are welcome to use it."
Mrs. E. H. Bean, 525 Joseph Avenue,
Nashville, Tenn.
Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com
pound, a pure remedy containing the
extractive properties of good old fash
ioned roots and herbs, meets the needs
cf woman's system at this critical period
of her lif e. Try it.
If there is any symptom in your
rase which puzzles you, write to
the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine,
j Co., XjTHL.Mass. . Jlt .
TrTTTTTTlTTTTTTmTiiiiit
operate in the task of holding good the
sola remaining line of lano communi
cation. ,
At San Pedro, where Los Angeles
Harbor is located, great breakers swept
the piers and breakwaters and outgo
ing shipping was paralyzed. Only two
Incoming vessels successfully crossed
the bar. These were the steam schoon
ers A. M. Simpson and Yosemite, which
entered the harbor showing the effects
of the battering seas and heavy gale.
As night fell, the rain, which totaled
2.58 inches during the last 24 hours
and which assumed torrential violence
early today, had abated somewhat, but
the strength of the wind had materially
increased. Storm signals were up along
the coast and flood warnings were dis
tributed from here.
RELIEF THOUGHT LOST
FOUR DISAPPEAR IN FOG OV RE
TURN FROM FIRE ISLAND.
Castaways Off Alaska Shore Whom
Party Sought Believed to Be Dead
r Talcem by Unknown VeeaeL
SEWARD. Alaska, Jan. 27. Four
men who crossed the channel to Fire
Island to rescue the castaways ma
rooned there by the. Cook Inlet Ice
field became lost in the fog while at
tempting to return to the mainland
and it is feared that they were lost,
according to word received here today
from the rescue part campins at
Campbell Point Watchers on the shore
saw the men, Ole Jacobsen, Balcimer,
Wicks and Irwin reach the island
safely and go ashore to search for the
castaways. After a time they returned
to their dory alone and started back
through the ice floes to the mainland.
They had rowed only a short distance
when a heavy fog swept down on the
channel and the men were lost to view.
When the fog lifted several hours later
no trace of the dory or its crew was
to be seen.
Members of the rescue party camp
ing at Campbell Point believe the cast
aways whom Jacobsen and his men
sought to resuce had been, taken off
by some unknown boat from Turnagain
Arm or d)ed from exposure while
awaiting assistance. No response to
sigal fires and rifle shots has been
received from the island since Monday
nirht.'
According to authentic information
received by the Alaska Engineering
Commission yesterday, the castaways
on Fire Island were Captain Henry
Schaeffler and' crew of the launch On
ward, which left Seldovia January 12
for Anchorage with a carsio of beer.
StcMinnville Chooses Peace Orator.
M'MINNVILLE,' Or.. Jan. 27. (Spe
cial.) The tryout to determine the
representative of McMinnville College
In the state peace oratorical contest
was held Tuesday evening. Monty
Smithson, won first place, speaking on
the subject of National preparedness.
Walter Elsfelder and Charles Stewart
tied for second honors.. The contest
was one of the most evenly balanced
ever heard in the college. Monty
Smithson won first place for McMinn
ville in the state prohibition contest
last year, and represented Oregon in
the Pacific Coast contest at Berkeley,
winning second place
DO YOU SUFFER
FR0MJACKACHE
When your kidneys are weak and
torpid they" do not properly perform
their functions: your back aches and
you do not feel like doing much of
anything. You are likely to be despond
ent and to borrow trouble. Just as If
you hadn't enough already. Don't be
a victim any longer.
The old reliable medicine. Hood's
Sarsaparllla, gives strength and tone to
the kidneys and builds up the whole
system.
Hood's Sarsaparllla is a peculiar com
bination of roots, barks and herbs. No
other medicine acts like it, because no
other medicine has the same formula
or ingredients. Accept no substitute,
but insist on having Hood's.
WRINKLES
HOW
'THE
JAPANESE BANISH THEM FOREVER
Accept hl Krrat offer made to Intro
duce In thin country a totally new
method guaranteed to perma
nently remove even the
deepeat ereaaea
within one week.
Nothing even remotely resembling
this new Japanese method has ever
been heard of in this country before.
That is the only reason why so many
women now have wrinkles and still
consider them incurable. I want one
thousand Ameri can
ladies to remove
the ir wrinkles b y
this method and
agree to recommend
it to their friends
AFTEK It has done
all I claim. This is
frankly an advertis
ing offer but the
names and addresses
will be treated as
strictly confidential
and not used in any
way. I prefer appli
cants to be from
forty to seven ty
years of age and the
more wrinkled their
faces arc the more
piub-ed I shall be to make them look
Len to thirty years younger. . .
Remember I am not asking some
ridiculously exorbitant price like five
or ten dollars to try this method, nor
do I charge you for any "instructions."
1 bind- no one to secrecy, and ask you
to use no kind of cream, flesh food,
powders, plasters, lotions, liquids or
pastes, prescriptions, medicines, steam
ing, bandages, masks, eiectricity. exer
cises, massage, apparatus, nor any me
chanical appliances whatsoever. In
fact, I have no toilet articles, of any
kind to recommend and I send you no
i complicated "treatment" or "system,"
1 either duplex, triplex or any other sort
j of "plex."
1 I guarantee to hold this offer open
I to ail applicants for one month from
the -time this announcement appears.
! SEND NO MONEY, but If convenient
three 2-cent stamps may be enclosed
for my posting expense. There is no
'obligation of any kind. Merely ad
dress Mme. V. Miyako. Dept. 512, 133
Oxford Street, London, W., England,
and vour letter will receive prompt at-
. tention. the packet being sent under
; plain, seaiea cover, postage on a iet
. ter to England is only 2 cents and
'there of course is no interruption to
mall service on account or the war. 1
I aeree to return even your postage in
t full if you are not surprised, aston
; tehed and delighted by what I send
I you. Adv. -
To Avoid Dandruff
You do not want a slow treatment
when hair Is falling and the dandruff
germ is killing the hair roots. Delay
means no hair.
Get. at any drug store, a bottle of
zemo for 25c or 1.00 for extra large
size. Use as directed, for it does the
work quickly. It kills the dandruff
term, nourishes the hair roots and im
mediately, stops itching scalp. It is
sure and safe, is not greasy. Is easy to
ue and will not stain. Soaps and
.shampoos are harmful, as they contain
alkali. The best thing to use is zemo,
for it is pure and also inexpensive.
Zemo, Cleveland.
ill
Final Sale-of
All this seasons latest models
That Have Sold From
$17.50 to $27.50
Of broadcloth, serge,
gabardine and whipcord
To Be Cleared Out Friday
at One Price
$10.00
Because this sale is lim
,ited, no phone orders will
be filled, no C. O. D. or
ders filled, and none sent
on approval.
- Third Floor
ALL PURCHASES MADE FRIDAY AND
BALANCE OF THE MONTH WILL BE
CHARGED ON MARCH 1ST BILLS
J" Mercriandiso
A True Artist
Inspired These New and
Exclusive '
Hair Ornaments
Which we aooreciated at
glance from the standpoint
of price as well as beauty,
enabling us to otter them
At 50c Each
The harmony of colors has not only been mastered
in these combs, but the designs have been created tvith
inimitable lines.
They are different, beautifully different, from any
ornamental combs heretofore offered, particularly those
set rvith s'tones in the gorgeous blending of peacock
colors. Others there are, too, set rvith rhinestones in
the most artistic effects.
Every one new, new in shape and new in settings
all so gracefully shaped that they give an added air
of elegance to any coiffurerand last, but not least,
they are the most fashionable hair pins of the day.
First Floor.
Two Beautiful Designs in Glassware
1500 pieces in all, in two designs as illustrated. Ex
quisite examples of light-blown etched glassware.
1000 Pieces That Sold From
$4.00 to $7.75 Dozen
This design includes goblets, saucer
champagnes, tall champagnes, hollow
stem champagnes, clarets, large wines,
sherry glasses, cordials, finger bowls and
sherbet glasses. Illustrated on the left.
500 Pieces That Sold From
$2.25 to $3.00 Dozen
In this design are water tumblers, gob
lets, whisky tumblers, iced tea tumblers
and mineral tumblers. Illustrated on the
right. Sixth Floor
25c
Each
ALL PURCHASES MADE FRIDAY AND
BALANCE OF THE MONTH WILL BE
CHARGED ON MARCH 1ST BILLS
t Merchandise
Friday Will See the Disposal
Sale of Discontinued Patterns of
Whiltall's Anglo-Persian Rugs
Renewed and Vigorous
The economy days for buying these rugs are slowly
drawing to a close have you purchased your needs,
if not avail yourself of this opportunity at once. Our
collection of these famous rugs is the best in the city
and the prices are the lowest. Their designs and col
orings are as good as anything brought out this season,
but because they are last season's drop patterns is the
only reason for these disposal reductions. ,
Whittall's Anglo-Persian Rugs
$39.50 Rugs, 6x9 feet, special $29.75
$58.00 Rugs, 8-3x10-6, special $44.50
$65.00 Rugs, 9x12 feet, special $52.00
$88.00 Rugs, 9x15 feet, special $49.75
$99.00 Rugs, 10-6x13-6, special . .$77.75
$110.00 Rugs, 11-3x15 feet, special . .$88.00
$55.00 Anglo-Indian Rugs, 9x12 $44.00
$42.50 Wilton Rugs, 8-3x10-6, sale . . .$34.75
$48.00 Wilton Rugs, 9x12, sale $37.75
$57.50 Wilton Rugs, 10-6x13x6, sale $46.00
$82.50 Wilton Rugs, 11-3x15 feet, sale $66.00
Fifth Floor
ALL PURCHASES MADE FRIDAY AND
BALANCE OF THE MONTH WILL BE
CHARGED ON MARCH 1ST BILLS
oPo Merit Only"
85 Suits
ofJ Merit Only"
of J Merit Only"
15c
Each