The east Oregonian. (Pendleton, Umatilla County, Or.) 1875-1911, October 21, 1904, WEEKLY EDITION, Image 4

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    GIVING AWAY THEIR BRAINS.
•
• We round up. up; round on
•
and on.
As rounding eagles rise and
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•
rise!
• The darkest hour ushers dawn.
The dawn is dashing up the
•
•
skies!
• Thank God for light,—God’s
face is light!
•
The light of Truth, the faith
•
•
in kind—
• The light of Love, the light of
Right—
•
The blind shall no more lead
•
•
the blind!
—Joaquin Miller.
•
•
•
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•
In the employ of the United States
government are several hundred pro­
fessional men of the highest rank,
who are literally giving their brains
and life work to the people.
They are under salary while per­
forming their work, but the priceless
discoveries they make, the high re­
sults they achieve in science, are ail
the property of the people.
Other scientists sacredly guard their
discoveries, and sell them at enormous
prices;
other professional men are
selfish and mercenary in all their ex­
periments. But the services of these
men belong to the people—the find­
ings of their brains become the com­
mon property of the United States
government.
now only one full train and a piece
of train runs, it will stand ull the
abuse. The East Oregonian exists
and prospers by the patronage of an
appreciative public and its alm is to
serve that public. It believes Uma­
tilla county Is entitled to tlie bes|
possible train service and II has the
support of every business
man In
Pendleton and every farmer ami Inis
Iness outside of Pendleton In its con­
tentions for better ami more certain
train service between the busy f irm­
ing communities of the east end of
the county and the county seat. Of
i nurse. Editor Wood, of the Weston
Leader, does not need a better train
service just now. He will either stay
at Weston or ride to Pendleton in a
farm wagon until he replenishes the
fortune he squandered In St. Iaruls.
and it don’t matter to him whether
the trains run at all or not. for the
next few
months.
As to
Editor
Boy J, of the Press, who always rides
on an annual pass, in a Pullman, he
really doesn’t know the woes of the
common herd, whose fate assign
them to the "mixed local” train—
whose arrival in Pendleton depends
on the swiftness of the crew in
switching out all the stations, plat­
forms and side tracks along the line.
Prof. George T. Moore, of the de­
Portland should be a heavenly partment of agriculture, has exhibit­
place to resile, if the Chinese con­ ed in a thrilling manner this broad,
tinue to burn one devil a week for a self-sacrifice of the public servant..
He recently discovered and patent­
few months.
ed a system of soil inoculation by
If Joe Folk is elected governor of
which plants gather nitrogen from the
Missouri and Bob La Follette gover­
air and deposit it in the ground.
nor of Wisconsin, it matters but lit­
Thus certain kinds of plants, that
tle who is elected president
have a tendency to supply nutriment
Poor writing is no longer consider­ to the soli, are grafted with nitrogen
ed to be a sure sign of genius The nodules, which attach themselves to
public school and the typewriter the root*, draw nitrogen from the
All is not peace In Panama. John
have knocked all the foundation from air and distribute it in the ground.
Barrett's recent assurance that the
under that old "saw."
This Is a priceless discovery, and disturbances there have been magni­
Please don’t use the words "web­ one which might have made a fortune fied for political effect. Is now seen
foot" or "webfooter." Clear up the for its discoverer, but after having to be one of Barrett s regular pipe
Mr.
Moore dreams for his party, regardless of
Oregon vocabulary and show the patented the system,
deeded
it
to
the
United
States
gov­ the welfare of the government. To
Easterners who come to Portland in
1905 that Oregon is as precise In ernment without cost, to be enjoyed prove that the president didn't be­
speech as gracious in manners and as perpetually by the people.
lieve Barrett’s assurance of peaceful
The department of agriculture is conditions in Panama, he orders Sec­
clear and keen in thought as any
Boston prodigy who ever read the now prepared to ship these nitrogen­ retary Taft to go personally to the
Bible through at three years of age gathering nodules to farmers in every isthmus and Investigate the disturb­
The poorest ances. If possible, the American peo­
or digested Webster before he was part of the country.
land may* be Inoculated with them, ple now have less confidence in Bar­
weaned.
sunshine will be drawn down into the re.t than ever. He wilfully conceal­
Higher salaries for teachers, fewer
roots of the plants—such as clover, ed the true conditions in Panama,
studies in the lower grades of the
peas, beans, vetch and alfalfa, and wl tully lied to the state department
public schools, more practical ques­
soil energy for future crops will thus when he said only last week that dis­
tions and fewer nerve-racking tests
be stored.
turbances in Panama were being en-
on far-fetched subjects in teachers'
Fertility can be increased by inoc­ laiged for political effect, and risked
examinations, the addition of practi­
ulation. The barren and wornout precipitating an open rupture be­
cal business branches to the high
lands can be revived and Impregnated tween that government and the
school studies to keep pace with the
with nitrogen. The government get* United States, in order to shield the
times—these are some of the thoughts
the benefit of the intellect of this administration from the embarrass­
that should find utterance in the res­
great chemist and instead of selfish­ ment of a rupture during the presi­
olutions to be passed by the teachers
ly hoarding his store of learning, he dential campaign. Barrett Is not a
now in session in this city.
spreads it in a perpetual glory upon repiesentatlve of the Interests of the
The teachers who meet in this city his country for the benefit of man­ American people. He ha* betrayed
in their institute tonight, will leave kind.
hi:- trust to deceive the people, ha*
In other departments of the gov­ be n caught in the betrayal and ha*
their task undone if they tail to pass
resolutions favoring fewer studies in ernment. the same broad self-sacri­ received an open rebuff from the
the public school grades, at least fice in scientific lines is exhibited. In president, tn the president's act In or­
from the fourth to the eighth grades chemistry, in geology, in ethnology, in dering Taft to go to Panama and set­
No one understands the nonsense of irrigation, drainage, stock breeding, tle the trouble in the face of Barrett's
crowding so many studies Into such plant and tree life, and a thousand assurance that there was no trouble
a short space of time, better than the other useful branches of human sci­
More local history and current
teacher, for the teacher sees and la­ ence. able and persistent searchers
ments the immediate result of such are dedicating their lives to the events and less ancient history and
"cramming" method*.
It makes a government, for pitiful salaries that mythology should be taught in tbe
poor showing in the work of the dwarf into insignificance when com­ public schools. Bead Eva Emery Dye
teacher, because the desultory skim­ pared to the matchless wonders of more and Xenophon less. Leave
ming over 12 to 14 studies each their achievements for mankind.
room in your mind for more living
The utter lack of selfishness among tacts, even though you crowd out a
school day, by children of 10 to 15
years of age, can bring out no per­ this class of scientists is one of the few swathed mummies.
manent standard. The child makes refreshing oases in the history of an
Honest ignorance is more to be ad­
a record today in the hurry of class otherwise monotonous service.
mired than an education used for a
work that it could not reach tomor­
Nine hundred shots a minute; every wrong purpose. The soul within reg­
row or next week in an examination.
shot good for a man and every man ulates the standard of the man with­
None of the impressions are perma­
an immortal soul. That is the last out.
nent. None of the class training can
record of the military murdering en­
be thorough. Parents should revolt
gineer. The Colt rapid fire gun. one
IBM KEIEII.Elt PHILOSOPHY.
against it and teachers should reso­
of the latest models of field pieces,
lute against It. until the legislature
"The kind of men the world needs
has a capacity of 900 shots per min­
wipes the unwise law regulating the
most today Is. first, men of integrlty
ute for eight minutes, or untjl the
and high moral principal, and. sec­
course of study from the statute*.
gun metal gets so hot it must be ondly. men capable of bearing respon­
The city council
of Huntington. cocled off. For two minutes it must sibility.
"The majority of life failure* can
W. Va, yesterday denied the social­ then rest and be "swabbed” out with
be traced directly to the lack of ca­
cold
water,
when
it
is
ready
for
an
­
ists the privilege of holding a public
pacity for bearing responsibility." said
meeting in the city halL The social­ other murderous fusilade of 7200 John D. Rockefeller. Jr., yesterday
ist party there is composed of think­ shots. This piece of war machinery before the member* of the Young
ing men in all the walks of life, as weighs but 200 pounds mounted, can Men s Bible class of the Fifth Avenue
Baptist church, of which he is the
are both the other parties, and as be hauled all over a battlefield with
leader, discussing "The Ideal of Re­
one
mule
or
picked
up
by
two
husky
­
are the socialists in every other in­
sponsibility." say* the New York
telligent community.
At
this dis­ gunners and carried bodily from po­ World.
“If I had to choose between a man
tance it is scarcely possible to con­ sition to position and fired with such
ceive of the diminutive calibre of a demoralizing and murderous effect of brilliance but lacking responsibility
and a man without exceptional talent
city council that would thus place that it can drive an army before IV but upon whom I could rely. I would
itself on record.
In this advanced Such is the last achievement of the unhesitatingly select the latter." he
murdering
engineer. continued. "If you ask why so many
age, in the presence of such splendid military
individual and collective progress, Doesn’t it really seem a disgrace to men. young and old. are losing their
positions and are not sought after for
such broad tolerance and fraternity, civilization to think that such con­
employment. I would give the reason
it seems impossible to think that summate genius should be so wan­ as a lack of responsibility. I want a
there yet exists a community within tonly wasted—and worse than wasted, man whom I don't have to tell to do
the United States, composed of such because used to accomplish whole­ a thing and then go and ask him.
’Have you done It?1 "
execrable
and
nameless mental sale destruction of human life? Of
Yesterday’s meeting was the sec­
"fogies" as the city council of Hunt­ what avail is it that parents rear their ond of this season and brought to­
children,
educate
them,
strive
for
ington must be.
It is this anti-
gether one of the largest gatherings
American spirit among those tn pow­ them, struggle for them, and die in of “young” men ever present at the
er that is multiplying the anarchist the heart-breaking task of making class meetings. Almost 300 members
were on hand. Including young men
sentiment in the United States. It is honorable men and women of them, not out of their "teens" and "young
such intolerance that adds fuel to the when the boys are in line to be tar­ men” with white hair and bald heads.
Young Rockefeller, after opening
fires of national
discontentment. gets for such engines and the girls
Such "old fogyism" and blind ignor­ will rear other sons to be victims to the services with prayer, devoted the
greater part of his talk to outlining
ance is more dangerous to the insti­ the same Moloch, at a later day?
the plan of work for the coming sea­
tutions of this government than the Isn’t it time to turn back from this son. which will be a detailed discus­
wildest dreams of Herr Most or Em­ insane glory of militarism? Isn’t it sion of the 14 parables made use of
ma Goldman.
time to think seriously about making by Christ.
The young millionaire wqs plainly
peace and not war, the watchword of
dressed in a brown frock coat and
The meeting called for next Satur­
the world?
looked rather older than In past years
day in thia city, for the purpose of
showing more reserve force.
appointing a committee to confer
On the recent visit in Dee Moines,
with the government engineers on the Iowa, a Pendleton man saw a ban­
THE BL P.’S NATI HAI. ROUTE.
Echo irrigation proposition,
should ner stretched across a street, bearing
be well attended. It will consider the legend: “Walla Walla Fruit." He
When one see* a train of 25 or 30
an advanced phase of this vexed went down to have a feast of luscious cars, mostly loaded with wheat, being
moved easily down the Columbia
government Irrigation
question.
It pears and grapes, and was dumb­
river route by one locomotive, and
will approach the government au­ founded to find that the entire ship­ then considers how much power It
thorities from a new side, and will ment of peaches, pears, prunes and would take to move that train up the
make them feel that the enterprise of plums bore the stamp of Milton, Ore., eastern slope of the Cascade moun­
tains by the Northern Pacific or Great
the people of Umatilla county is only on every box and that there was actu­
Northern route, one can but realize
equalled by their bulldog tenacity. ally ^not a box of native Walla Walla the great advantage of this downhill
That the reservoir plan at Echo is fruit in the store. True, the stuff had route, and of Portland's position, and
certain to fall, la now undisputed. been shipped from Walla Walla, but wonder why the construction of the
Careful and extensive surveys fall to It was all Oregon "thunder." In this Northern Pacific down the Columbia
has been so long deferred.
locate a suitable site for a large res­ way Oregon is robbed of her Just
The ways of railroads are often in­
ervoir. The next thing to do is to get dues, while she supplies the goods scrutable to the average observer,
the government Interested in the ca­ that bring Walla Walla her glory. and there is nothing on earth more
nal and winter flooding system. The Pendleton prices are never quoted in unreliable than the average rullroad
rumor; yet that the Northern Pacific
engineers are highly practical and the wheat markets, but Walla Walla
will come Into Portland by a line
observant men and appreciate the has a fixed place in every market In down the Columbia river seems to Ire
full weight of all conclusive evidence. the world.
Why is It that we sit one of the events of transportation
If It can be shown that winter irri­ idly by and let Washington absorb development that cannot be very
much longer delayed. It seems as if
gation can be made to reclaim the and appropriate the credit that should
there can be nothing in the railroad
Echo tract, without the possibility of come to Oregon? The Oregon brand game that could compensate this
doubt, they should be ready to ac­ should be placed in flaming colors on great railroad for not building this
line.
cept the truth, in spite of theories every Oregon product exported.
More or less secret arrangements
and fixed beliefs to the
contrary.
If the East Oregonian can assist as to division of territory and traffic
Seeing the reclamation of the worst
are not likely permanently to prevent
class
of desert
land completed, the people of Umatilla county in get­ the building of this road, and then,
conven­ it may be hoped, the O. II. & N. will
through winter flooding, should con­ ting every possible public
vince them that a small project is ience in the way of better train be at liberty to Invade the Clearwater
valley. The products of the great In­
worth undertaking. The idle land is schedules, and cheaper bargains In
land empire are Increasing yearly;
here; the idle flood* run to waste trade, it Is willing to be cartooned, they can be Increased almost indefin­
annually; the idle reclamation fund lampooned, cursed and criticised by itely; and there will henceforth be
is accumulating in the treasury. Only the wit and fury of the county press. ample room and opportunity for both
these great railroads, even if their
the government engineers stand be­ If it can be Instrumental In making
locomotives hall one another across
tween these vital elements
and a two passenger trains run over the the big river of the Northwest, as
branch line of the O. R. & N. where rival trains move toward and from
completed civilization in the West.
Hie city that »its in the natural gate­
way of Pacific Northwest commerce
Oregon Dully Journal.
Nasal
CATARRH
Still at the Top
In nil It« Mtagua.
Th»- Japanese army
In
■hooting the Russian I s teaching the
rest of the world now to live. The
great lesson of this war I» that death
from »llsease Incident to campaigning
can b»- prevented, Major Louis Sea­
men, a military medical man buck
from Japan, read a paper befor< ’e the
Association of Military Surgeons at
st. Louis Tuesday that contained iiome
marvelous Information, When Ju;>an
began to prepare for fighting the
greatest attention was
the
medical department.
A great Japanese medii-ul authority
said the Russians may put 2.0UU.BO"
in the field
Many of them wHITtfe
from army life diseases. Japan will
put Ili.Oim men in tlie field. None
will »lie from other causes than col­
lisions in battle.
I p to July 1 there were no dlseas»**-
In the Japanes»- army. There were
no typhoid and other Intestinal dls-
eiux s that marked th.- camps of Alger.
Chickamauga and Miami »luring the
Spanish-American war. During our
war with Spain 70 |»er cent of the sol­
diers that perished died from disease.
Two hundred an»! sixty men were
killed, and 38(2 died in camps.
Up to July 1 the proportion of Jap­
anese soldiers dying from disease to
those killed wa* 2 per cent Th»-
Japanese have abolished sickness from
the army.
They did it. Dr. Seamen says, by
testing all water to be used for drink­
ing, The soldiers were lectured on
the proper f»x»<is to •at. The smal'.^st
squad had a portable bath, So thor-
ough are the Japanese that the sol-
diers are directed to keep their finger
nails cloaely ¡»ared and clean.
Of the thousand returned wounde 1
to Tokio before July 1 not one died,
There are no fever camps, as there
were In this country six year* ago.
Thus. Jaj»an saves all her soldier*
for the bullet. The "silent foe.” say*
the military observer, claims none.
The peaceful nations can learn
from Japan that disease is a matter
of neglect.—Chicago American.
GENERAL NEWS.
Ely’s Cream Balm
cloaiMN «.Boothe and heal«
the di’M'n-J membrane.
Jt cure« catarrh and dm-«
away a cold in the head
quickly.
( ream Huhn 1« place«! Into the noMr .In,npruad«
uh r t e membrane a
1 1« ab»orl>ed. Relief 1« tin*
mediate and a curt- f<»..oii a. It 1« nut drying—duce
n- it prtxiui e tim < mg. luirg«8i*e, cenU at Drug-
g.rt or by mail; Trial hixe, 10 cent«.
1J Y BROTHERS, 66 Warren tetrwt. New York
CUT HA’IE.S NEARLY
ILK IYs MEANS INIIiRIOR QI 11,1’1 4
I HATS THE REAM»’ THE Pill« 1
II
ON GENI INI
"MONOPOLE” GOODS < OS I
I LI 1’1 LI
"MONOPOLI
MOP.I
< INNI.D 4.OOD- Is NOT CUT.
THAN INFERIOR
MERCHANTS KNOW THEY ARE MORE TH IN WORTH 'I lli: DI I I I .III ,N< I
Bit INDS
IND Ull.l. GUI. YOU
Ml <11 BETTER SITISI ACTION IN EVI RY WAY.
AND THE PIU<i: ASKED Kill ’ M O N O P O I. E,” BY THE Viti. Is .11 <1
IS HE 4 AN POSSIBLY MAKI
UHI N lol
Posili,ely tlie
Best
you
WANT Till
IS REASONABLE
IND MUNI UN THE HIGHEST QI II.ITY.
II
Olli BEsT Till: MIltKET AEEOItDS. WHETHER IN
CANNED FRUITS
VEGETABLES,
OYSTERS,
SALMON, ETC.
Beer
made.
Any quantity
PI N DI.I.TON »
<le-.lre
Dell,cred to your home
IsK YOUR DEALER I OR
II.W AYS
Always call for OLYMPLA
MONOPOLE
A. NOLTE
Telephone Main 881.
Expert Collectors
We have located a branch office In
Pendleton, and will make collecting
defunct bills a specialty. No ac­
count too old for u* to handle.
Our plan la "No collections, no
charges. Sulu instituted. Judgment*
| advertised.
King George of Saxony will
n«e Yan Al.tlne-Gordon a Co.. Mer­
buried among hl* forefather*
cantile Agency. H. V. IJpe a
Dresden.
Co.. Mgn.
The Chinese villager* In Manchuria 118 E. Court SU Tele-pitone Maln 311.
are helping the Japanese whatever
possible.
OLD NEWSP à PEM-T o PCT V.NDE3
wall* oc for wrap
Senator Burton, of Kansas, under ping *rp»t*. uo sbtlsm.
Old o.««paper* i* i*rf,
bond* for bribe taklag. has asked • ‘■'1'* of !•*> «rb *t 25 rw'i a Onodi,
for an early trial.
t the EAST GKBG g .N'IAN Ar- I'aodl.
•"«. OrwcM
Chile and Bolivia have signed a
treaty of peace.
This Is th« sixth
treaty In four year*.
Tuesday wa* "Helen Keller Day"
at the St. Louis fair, the blind girl
being the gue»t of honor.
♦ The
notorious
Filipino outlaw.
Oyomo. and 50 of his follower*, were
kilie I Tuesday by Island police.
William H. Kensington. United
States commissioner at Afton. Wyu .
ha* been arrested for polygamy.
Nan Pul lei son ha* failed to secure
bondsmen for 129.000 and la (till in
Ludlow street jail, in New York City
The Allegheny Coal Company has
shut down It* mines at Harwick, Pa-.
depopulating an entire village of
1000 people.
Serious -lots occurred In Cork,
Ireland. Wednesday, attending the
hearing of the cases of tenant* who
were In arrears In rent.
The attemlai.ee at Harvard College
Is 12 per cent les «than last year. In­
creasing popularity of W'estern col­
leges I* said to be the cause.
Erne« Lyon. American mintsier to
Liberia, accuses the missionaries In
that country of the gro-e—M immor­
alities. In a report to the state de­
partment.
A sensation In the New
York
wholesale drug business is threaten­
ed In the confession of a drug clerk,
who says half the patent medicines
■old a re bogus.
I.*-Mayor 8. F Smith, of Haven- i
port. la an<l a aon of Samuel Fran« I
ces Smith, author of "America." ha* I
confeeaed to the embezzlement
of
1129 000 in handling an estate.
John Lennox, a wealthy cattleman
of Dillon. Wvo. wa* killed In a row
by John Reed, hi* brother-in-law.
Wednesday. Both were drunk. Reed
struck I-ennox with the butt of a gun.
I
Vicente Fria*. a wealthy Mexican,
and hl* servant, were Instantly killed
by drunken Mexican desperadoes. In
the <*lty <»f Mexico. Wednesday. In a
fight between trooper* and bandits,
three bandits were killed.
Wadamsß Kerr Bros
Monopole Grocers and Dry Coffee Roasters
PORTLAND, OREGON
Th* East Oregonian I* Eastern Or
LEGAL BLANKS
alogue of them.
gOllidn for « free
A fall supply always kept tn stock.
Cdt-
"'“2
show it by their liberal patronage. It
• the advert *.na medium of th»*
section.
Reduced Prices in Two Dept
Wednesday, Thursday
Friday and Saturday
4.OOI» Kill W ID
Reduced Prices on
812 59 ladles' and misses’ suit«.......... SIOSO
14 09 ladies­ and misses' •ulti.. . . . 811.83
15.00 ladles’ and mimes' «ult« .... 882.43
81(0« ladles' and mimes' BUit«.......... . 813.00
21C 50 ladies' and misses' •ulta..... (13.80
There was no insurance on the flax
burned at Salem Sunduy
night. a
policy of 13000 having expired a
month ago.
Four time* the usual amount of
fall grain will be »own In Linn coun-
ty this year owing to the favorable
seeding weather.
R. G .Nordstrom, n well known
contractor and
architect of St.
John's, wa* killed by fulling from a
building Tuesday.
John Slovlch was killed nt Butte.
Wednesday, by a blow on the point of
the jaw from the fl»t of Frank Wise.
Wise has escaped.
Russian authorities In Portland are
going to slop the performance of
“For Her Sake." which Is said to be
prejudicial to Russia.
M. P. Weir, an engineer on the
Great Northern, was killed In a wreck
near Vancouver, B. C.. Wednesday.
Ten minutes after lie died word wa»
received that u son, ulso an engineer,
was killed In a wreck near st. Louis.
818.00 ladies’ suits..........
.. ladies’ suits..........
.................... (14.83
822.50 ladies- suits..........
.................... (18.(3
.................... 813.(0
ladies' suits..........
.................... $22 75
35 00 ladles' suits..........
......... (27.50
Ladies* and Misses
Skirts
A new bank with a capital of S2S.-
000. ha* been chartered at Marsh-
field.
Ed Fagan, a sheepherder, commit­
ted suicide l>y cutting his throat at
Brownlee Friday on Snake river.
Wednesday.
.................... (14.23
835.00 ladies' suits ..... .................... (21.33
XORTIIWEST NEWS.
It I* reported that elk are being
killed in large number* in the moun-
tain* of Linn county.
Norri* Morgan, of Malheur county,
had both Jaw* broken Tuesday by be­
ing run over by a wagon.
Mrs. Catherine McCarthy, of Che­
halis. Wash., died Wednesday aged
105. She wa* a native of Ireland.
The Beaver Hill mine at Marshfield
whit h ha* been on fire for some time,
ha* been reopened again and will be
worked.
The shingle industry of Bellingham
I* paralyzed by a shortage of car* in
the best shingle shipping season of
the year.
■ ladies' suits..........
I: :
The most desperate assault record­
ed In the Russo-Japanese war. was
made by the Russians Tuesday, in a
midnight assault on Lone Tree Hill,
which they recaptured from the Jap­
anese. Search lights were thrown on
the Japanese columns, to guide the
Russians.
John P.
Fisher, of Vancouver.
Wash., was killed In a runaway Wed-
re.day.
Thoma* Tibble*, populist candidate
for vice prevalent, la now vampalgn-
Ing In Idaho.
Tourist
Coats and
Jackets
3 < 50 Jackets. sale price . ................... ( 8.7*
Jacket*. ■ale price . ................. ( « 30
S
8 8 30 Jackets. sale price . .................. $ 7 25
810.00 Jackets, sale price . ................. ( 8.40
812 50 Jackets. Rain Coats. Etc. ... (10.30
815.00 Jackets. Ram Coat*. Etc. ... 812.23
814 50 Jackets. Rain C<»ats. Etc. ... (13.30
818.00 Jackets. Rain Coats. Etc. ... (14.73
820 00 Jackets
Rain Coats. Etc. ... (14.00
Misses and Children
Long Coats
kind.
The 8 3 50 kind, sale price
kind.
The 8 4.00 kind, sale price
kind.
price
The 84.50 kind, sale price
4<k-. 5Oc and <oc PatteriM at 3(c Yard.
French flannel*, cashmeres and fancy
mixture*. 15 piece*, for four day* your
choice........................................................ 36c )t|
The 8 5.00 kind, sale price
kind.
The 8 8 00 kind, sale price
kind.
The 1 4.50 kind, sale price
kind.
The 8 7.00 kind, sale price
Taffettà Silk
price
•he 8 7.50 kind, sale price
kind.
The 8 8.00 kind, sale price
10 piece*, regular value 75c and 85c;
black, brown, blue. red. grey,
tan and
many other *ha<les.. Sale price. . 38c yd
price
price
The 8 8.50 kind, sale price
I1”
The
The
The
1 (.00 kind, sale price
810 00 kind, sale price
811.00 kind, sale price
812.00 kind, sale price
Sale.
A Fit Guar.uiteed
Shoes! Shoes!
smooth a*
workmanship.
warranted
Every pair
Children • School
Shoes
Choice $ 1.00 pair
Lee Teutsch’s Dept. Store
MAIN AND ALTA STREETS