Image provided by: East Oregonian; Pendleton, OR
About The east Oregonian. (Pendleton, Umatilla County, Or.) 1875-1911 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 25, 1904)
— neurly At freezing There la little (iian vlilagr- juat north of Spokane. clue to th« perpetrators of til»* out- William Chrisman, of Mc.Mli nvll?«-, LttrtRs ron Just now. wjille the dispatches are The amusement street at the Lewis rage. WtSTCUN STATES bequeathe«! by will (.7000 to th«- A. F. alite with President Roosevelt's pub- and Clark fair has been named "The and A. M of that pla«e The Inter Trail." XOIIT1IU i : st M WK. tic Indorsement of Prof. Charles est only may I m - used. The |>rln<i|>al More tlian 70,000 electric lamps must icrnaln Intact. Wagner's new book. "The Simple will be used In lighting the grounds T. lillyeu. a prominent farm- The f»Oth annual conference of the. Life." it Is pertinent to Inquire Into an 1 buildings of th« Lewis m<! Clark Cong regal i«»na I « hurrh at Oregon city the philosophy of this btsik I hat lias Centennial. is In >• ssioii. Rev. 1*. S. Night, of Ha- < *n.every pleasant day largo crouds made such an Impression on the Im l«-n>. who was pastor at Oregon City of s|ghls«*<*iH can be seen tns|*e<*tiiig pulsive Roosevelt. «luring l£5!k-6. Is attending. tile grounds and buildings of the Between 5 o’clock p. m. Sunday At a lecture by Wagner in W'ash- Lewis and Clark exposition. last, ami 5 o'clock p. in. of the next <>n the government building at the Ingioi* TUesday afternoon, the pres- day. 5.35 inches of rain fell st As- be Ident Introduced the S|H*aker, saylng Ixwls and Clark <*«vitennlal will Eugene expect» t<» have a ga» plant Coria. Even the people down there At two towers, each 26<* feet high. that It would lx* the last time during night these lowers will be Illuminat- in operation before next Hpring. in admitted they were having a damp «pile of th«- oppoMitiofi <»f the electric spell. his term as president that he would ed by thousands of electric llglits On the hillside leading to Guild's iiglit company. Introduce a public speaker. Stewart B. Winslow, for the lake, at lhe Lewis and Clark ernten- Ix»okout iiaH a new shingle mill i Norina, on the Snake, invented What. then, is the brand of phil- nial. 17 distinct varieties of shrubs with a capacity* of 25,000 shingles per a flying machine that osophy that has excited so deeply lhe , and small trees are growing side by day, and Sloliler has < new flouring I course, though It has I admiration of Roosevelt, who is a lit side. mill with a capacity of 100 barrels per so It ail! be tested in Tile Oregon building at St. laruis day. at Ix’wiston. erary genius of no mean ability? Per- has In-ell solil for 3101*0. The money Richard A. Bogle, a pioneer of At Hoa«iuim, Wash , Miss C. K. i haps the first chapter of the book Is will be added to the appropriation Walia W.ilia. tiled Tues<iay night aged Drurhrnnnd last week saved the life la true index to the general lines of made for Oregon's exhibit at the 70 yearn H»- u . ih a nativ«- of the of Mr. Jaeger, an old man who was Ia*wls and Clark centennial. W«* k I Indie» and came to Walla Wall.i drowning in Joe crei ek. of straw" set up by the big spokes- thought it contains, November The foreign exhibits building one In 18C2. man of Portland “jointists.” Intelli- 20 sh«- was accidentally drowned at Mere is n typical extract from chay I of th.- largest exhibition i>alaces of ArchbiMhop ChriKti«- and Father the same spot. i gence and good morals will triumph. ter I: ¡the Lewis and «'lark exposition. Is Black, of Portland, arc taking the The 25th anniversary of < the or- ! despite the mill stones, in the shape From the cradle to the grave, in his , now completed, and exhibits will be- preliminary MtepH toward founding a ganixation of lhe First M I. E. church i gin to be installed In a few weeks Catholic hoapltal and academy at of purchaseable newspapers, tied to FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 25. 1904. needs as in his pleasures, in his «con at Spokane, was on November • 20 Just outside the colonnade entrance Roseburg. the neck of the communities. ception of the world and himself, the to the Ixwls and Clark exposition, a Abraham Ha« kh-man im dead at Al- made th«- o«<asi<»n for ntising 222. .350 which uas >2350 more than the debt modern mail struggles through a shelter building has been erected. It bany. aged fc7. He croaaed the plain» against the church. For 30 years the people of the In- What is to come we know not. maze of numberless complications, Is designated for the convenience of in 1S47 and built the first hou»r on but we know land Empire have battled for an open the public, providing a pleasant wait the site of Albany, where hr took a A general agitation in favor of the Nothing is simple now. neither That what has been was good ing room. donation claim. development of Idaho's dairy Inter river to the sea. Congressmen and thought nor action. amusement or —was good to show. Club women of Seattle have taken ¡.»ewiNton now has an ordinance est« is In progress The state pro lived, senators have b«,n elected. Better to hide, and best of all an active interest in promoting the ltn|M>sing a license of $50 per oay up duces 500,000 ¡*ounds of butter per even death are almost forgotten, pleas died and ! 1a*wls and «'lark centennial by «>ffer- on transient merchants and awtlon- to bear. We have with our own hands add- Ing a free trip to I'ortlan*! to th** eeers 4»f goods, no license to I m ? issueil and petitions have been poured into We are the masters of the days that were. the ear ot congresses and legislatures ed a train of difficulties to existence eighth grade school pupil who write« for less ihaii 30 days. We’ve lived, we’ve loved, we’ve The title to a portion of the site I am the Iwst account of the Lewis and —all without avail, until the p«*ople and cut off many pleasures, suffered—even so. Clark expedition. of Wallace, Idaho, is found to vest in at the present mo- persuaded that The themselves took up the task An unique feature Let the great winds their worst in old time homestead entry. About goal is now at hand, The contract tnent there are thousands of my fel- I Clark centennial will be the sunken and wildest blow. worth of improvements have In these gardens, which been put upon the ground. Or the gold weather around us for building the portage road is sign- low-beings who suffer from a too ar- gardens. , will be located in the central court of Jeremiah, aged 7*. and one of the mellow slow. ed and work will soon begin! This alfleial life. the exposition, will be grown many test known Spokane Indians. We have fulfilled ourselves and died is enough reward for all past labor. They will be grateful to those who varieties of tropical plants November 20 In hl* tepee In th«- In- we can dare. expense and disappointment, Uma- seek to give expression to their dls- The Montana mineral display, And we can conquer, though we may not share tilia county, while the last one of the comfort and encourage them in the which was awarded lhe grand prise THE In the rich quiet of the after < LEANS! NG great wheat growing counties to take regret for the simplicity which works , at the World’s fair, will be shipped direct front St. 1 I.oula to Portland. glow. up the work of raising her share ot In their mind oppre, . lg ■ them vague- w he re it will be exhibited St the AND HEALING What is to come? CURE FOR the 340,000 deficit in the portage iy- I«ewls and Clark centennial. Th- ex- —William E. Henley. Catarrh Let us enumerate first a series of hihlt will be enlarged for the Port fund, will not be the last on the 1» ground with the cash. The 35000 to facts which put into relief the truth land show ami will be the mo* com- prehensive display of the state'« min we wish to show. shippers be raised by the farmers and eral retourc«*» ever exhibited OPEN A ROAD TO THE RANGE. and pleaaant The complexity of life appears in of this county should be contributed The Bridge of Nations, which con to vuw CooiaIna no Senator Fulton can do Uma tilla tn a week. Nothing means more to the multiplicity of our material needs. nects the mainland! an<l the govern lojurloua dru< It ia quickly ab- Give» county and the Umatilla Indian an the future < of the county than the One of these universally conceded ment peninsula. Is over two thousand V’rbed feet long being the longest bridg* Hrf at ooc« It Before phenomena of this country is that our Infinite amount of good by securing construction of the portage ever used at an exposition It will bv i-D» and (Sranaea naaa i pram «; e* the repeal or revocation of the ruling that road is i complete«! the railroads needs have kept pace with our pro covered with staff. an«l wnen com kllaya Inflamma- on They know the gress. That is not in itself an evil pleted will re«emble in apf-earance an Kral» and pr**terts the mrmbra&e that taxes sheepmen »1 per head for will reduce rates. Re •t* rea the •« n»« of taate and emeli. ¡«ante trehe 1 stone bridge. once The birth of certain i needs, mark, in when alleged trespass in crossing reserva power of the people •lie. ail cents at dro<xi«tji or by mail. Trial aite 10 cent a. by ma J tion lands in going to and coming aroused. Boat lines on the river may fact, a progress. It is a sign of su- i.rxi iim m us FI )* ItKoTIll.'KS. 34 Warren Street. New from the summer ranges with their not directly benefit some portions of periorlty to feel the need of bathing | i orL DE LAVAL Dairy Supply Coiopaay Il 0n.e«.M..»F. COUPON F armers D airymen and E>«*r •rT.dtr *’ the mior- n.a‘ ■ »» adaerMMment ia Town State So. of Cow» Le-.Df Bsilkrd At Fayeite, Idaho, November 21. >*-ar and codsuuhm J.750.00*1 pound«. I The Fargo Mining company at . C. B Jackson drank from a Jug Asotin. Wash i« capitalized at 3.000,- which he supposed contained waler, but In reality he drank a solution of 000 shares at 31 per share. One- spraying third rit its Mock is hung up in a law arsenic and soda used in suit lately begun against the compa- - trees, and was dead within an hour Centralia, The postoffice safe at ny by M A. and L. D Lively James s. Sovereigi . the noted load Wash., was badly wrecked try burg er <»f organized lalwn. at one time the lars blowing it with dynamite the The thieves head of the Knights of Labor, lies night of November 20. •langerriusly ill at his home at Wai- . got notMng. as they were forced to lace. Idaho. He was at one time edi hik« before they got the Inner doors open tor of the Idaho State Tribune. The Standard of Endurance CATARRH Guarantee Covers Elf > «’ream Halm Responsibility COLD ' n HEAD PHOENIX PURE PAINT TAKE NO ONE’S WORD-TRY IT YOURSELF E. J. MURPHY herds. This ruling was never intended for use. and yet it remains in force and is a constant menace to the welfare of the Indian. There is a state law against tres pass. and that should be sufficient, both for the Indian's protection and the white man's guidance, even though the reservation is under fed eral control. The Indian knows that this ruling is In force, and yet he rarely, if ever, sees it enforced. This causes him to lose respect for all other federal laws. He becomes insolent and offensive without cause, and thinks the gov ernment will support him in forcibly expelling white men’s stock from the reservation range, while he claims unlimited license to run scabby cay- uses promiscuously all over the white man’s holdings and is deeply offend- ed if it is suggested that he remain on his own ground. The future welfare of the Indian depends on his association with and imitation of the white man and his customs. If he is forced to remain on the reservation he will not get this benefit, and his progress will be han dicapped. The Indian must get away from the idea that laws in his favor are to be enforced and that laws restricting him and regulating his conduct are to be ridden down with impunity. This idea is prevalent among the Umatillas and perhaps among all other reservation tribes. It the government hopes to civil ize the Indian and make him useful to himself, it must quit pampering him and make him know that he is on an equality with the white man. and that his own conduct must be regulated toward the whites, as well as the whites' conduct toward him. If this ruling forbidding sheep to pass over the reservation ia not mod ified. great injury will be done Uma tilla county stockmen and greater in jury will be done the Indian, because the stockmen will see that both sides of the federal rulings are enforced and the Indian will be confined to the reservation. Nothing more serious could happen to the Umatillas than this. Their very best progress is made through association with the whites and no crisis s.-iould arise that would restrict this in any way. In counties where prohibition car ried at the recent election, the whis key interests are now laying plans to wreck business and make It appear that the absence of saloons is respon sible tor poor government. The Or egonian has begun, evert this early, to print hard luck stories from Ben ton, Coos and Tillamook counties. In which the hired agents of the whis key interests, acting as correspond ents. picture the most direful pros pects ahead of the prohibition coun ties. After giving an outline of the financial disaster which threatens Corvallis, with the closing of four sa- loons, all of which have been con- ducted in rented houses, none of which were actual property owffers, the Oregonian says: "But. over in Curry county, where the communi ties are strongly prohibition, these financial conditions do not threaten, as the people will find a way." Then there is a way to avoid financial dis aster. Indeed, it would seem that people in a civilized and intelligent community could, “find a way” to conduct government without being tied to the whiskey Interest. But wherever this way can be blocked and financial ruin visited upon a pro hibition county or precinct, the whis key interests, by the aid of the Or egonian, will not hesitate to wreck business and force disaster as an "ex ample.” The people should keep possession of their senses and not be alarmed at the false cry and "man the Inland Empire, at first but the very existence of an open river will reduce rates, The transportation monopoly will be broken and the river will be the refuge and hope of the producers. Short lines of road will be built to tap the Interior. With competition, the entire traffic of the Inland Empire will be reorganized, Terminal rates will be granted and a new era in shipping conditions will open in Oregon. Washington and Idaho. If it were not that the port age will be detrimental to present shipping conditions, it would not be fought so bitterly. There is no doubt in the minds ot physicians and scientists that the pro fessional and sedentary classes eat too much, Half the nervous diseases that are sapping away the lite of the man who does office work and inside work, are due to three big meals eater, every day and a lack of exer cise. It is a tact that eating becomes largely a habit. Men do not require the enormous quantities of food they consume. It clogs the blood, weakens the stomach, overheats the system and overloads the heart, brain and kidneys and the common ills that kill seemingly strong men in the prime of life, result. Absttnence. exercise, temperance and judgment practiced in the matter of diet will add years to every life. Seeking a climate or physicians to cure ills brought on by intemperance, gluttony and injudic ious eating is a sad and empty mis sion for the wrecked system to under take. Men carefully select the acini and quantity of food they feed th-:r Jersey cow, their driving horse or their bird dog. but as for their own stomachs, they have little respect. They become alarmed to see a steam boiler crowding to the bursting point —but I a human stomach has no safety valve. except the voracious appetite, Walk more, eat less and live longer. Better ' be lean and live than to be a plump > plethoric subject for the worm. The •Trail” at the Lewis and Clark fair will be incomplete without a vil lage of Indians. To easterners such a village properly equipped and con ducted would be almost as instructive and interesting as the Philippine ex hibit to the westerner. The savage side should not be presented alone, but Indian art. home life, education al exhibits front the agency schools, their food. clothing, implements and customs should all be truthfully por trayed. To Umatilla county, and in fact to all Oregonians, such a village would be commonplace and even lu dicrous, in the presence of the gran der art treasures and Industrial won ders collected there; but to the east erner, every feature of Indian life would be a revelatiqp. every phase of it an educational feast. The fair to be truly typical must have an Indian exhibit. The newspapers of Oregon should unite and buy a gold medal for Farm- er James Kirk, of Lane county. When being examined for federal jury duty in the land fraud cases in Portland, yesterday, he frankly admitted that he had read the newspapers, follow ed up the fraud cases and had actu ally formed ah opinion from the newspaper accounts, which he ac- cepted as the truth. May his tribe increase! It ia estimated that the immense water supply of New York City, se- cured and delivered to the city mains at a first cost of over 130,000,000, would only be sufficient to irrigate 10,000 acres of land. This 1 m the first time since 1HS8 that Minaourf ha« been carried by the republicans. In that year, during the reconstruction period, the Mate went republican under the so-called “bayonet rule.” to wear fresh linen. I to Inhabit whole- Friction is known to < exist in th some houses. to eat healthful food, beef trust and the Swift Intere«« I expected to secede and • rga* •» an and to cultivate the mind. Hut. if there are certain need» "alongsider.” Judge W. H Moore. < whose birth is desirable and which lately paid Ir New York have a right u> live, there are others for a Hackn«y f*ony 11 which exercise a harmful Influence. three Inches high and exist at our expense, like para About SOO“'* independei ’ t stocco sites. It is the number and the Im- manufacturer« Jobbers a< ! dealers. perious character of these which pre- will meet in Ph Adelphla De-'ember 12 to organ!? ■ to fight tti trust occury our minds. Charles W Po«t. of Be. tie Cr-ek. It our forvfatlM-r« had bewn told Mich .. the niulto-milllonalre that on«* <la> humanity would iiavr urn” man. has married his st. at it« di**|«»al all tis- engine« of wlil<*h pher three week* after being It I- I««—««.«««I io maintain arid defend ed Rev. R J Taylor, of the San Diego Ils material exlstcncr. they Moukl Cai.. First Presbyterian church, was lair «■oiK-iixk'd al flr«t that drowned in San Diego Ray by acci wouki be an aiigtiM-tilation of Inde- dentally slipping off the edge of a pcndeiwe. ami I’.i o >n uence happi* boat. John Bioom. a wealthy landowner | nese. Iowa. «hot and J And. in the <«««ind place, a «««Ible near Shenandoah, killed his eldest son He immediate- i des-rvaM- In the omprtltk>n of the ne- .y gave himself up, claiming self-de- <*«*«-* tie- of Ufe. It wouki even haw fense. boil permitted them to think that American «’onsul Fowler at Chee- tlx simplification of existent«*. rr-.uit- foo is known to believe that the -JK ing from it»-«* |s*rfecird mean* of ac | Is up” very nearly with Russia In Manchuria and that Port Arthur tion. would bring the realization of a will soon surrender. higher morality. At Rtwland. B C. November 22. NOTHING OF ALL THIS HAS Emil Nlkolm fell 500 feet sheer down COME TO PASS NEITHER HAP- a coal mine «haft and struck on his PINES8. SOCIAL PEACE. NOR head, which was crushed, and his POWER FOR GOOD HAS BKEN IN- back broken In three places. George W Scoville. of Norwich, CREASED Conn., a veteran of the civil war. and In the first place. does It seem to two Indian wars and a survivor of you that your fellow-citizens, taken three shipwrecks, died November 19, as a whole, are better contented than choked to death by a fishbone. At Hinghampu*n. N. T., Christian their »newton. or surer of tomor* Kimmel 1» dead, aged SI. He wa» a row ? fugitive companion of Carl Schurz In I do not ask if they would be right 1848. when the two were forced to to be so. but If they are. To see them flee from Germany for treason as they live, it appears to me that the Engineer C. F Gyyant drew a solid majority are discontented with their mail train November 1». from Tole- Kendallville. »2 miles, at lot. before all being preoccupied with do. O.. to the rate of <2 mile» an hour. Seven their material needs, and under the miles was made in four minutes. obsession of cares for the morrow. John McKee prohibition candidate Never >«a- tl«e qm-Mbxi of f<«*d and for governor of New York. certi «iteltrr b«*«-ti *4u>r|s-r •* more absnrb- fies that his campaign cost him 12311 l**K titan now. wt««-n we are better J. Albert Boulton, the peoples party candidate for governor, spent 135 nouri«lwsl. better dotted and better Of the 13 miners killed In the Mor hslgtxl tiian ewer bt'fore. rissey coal mine disaster at Femle. He deceives himself who believes B. C.. one was named Jenkins His that the question of. "What shall we wife and children had arrived from eat, what shall we drink, and with Wales the day before the accident. Aaron Goldsmith died of conges what shall we be clothed?" Is present tion of the brain November 20 at ed to the poor alone—those that are Eugen«, where he had lived 4* years exposed to anguish of tomorrow with He was 84 years old. He was burled out bread or shelter. With those it in the Jewish cemetery at Portland. Is natural, and yet it ia Just there that James and Thomas Richey, broth- ers. quarreled at t’hesaw. Wash . No It presents Itself most simply. Thomas borrowed a vember 22. One must go to the homes of those Winchester and with it blew out his who have begun to enjoy a little own brains at his brother’se house. prosperity, to learn how much the William Wagner, of Bucyrus. O.. satisfaction with what they have Is had a presentiment of death, acting troubled by regret for that which upon which he bought a coffin, se they lack, And, if you would see the lected burial clothes and arranged all anxiety of the material future In all preliminaries and died of heart fail ure three days later. its luxurious development. observe There are 15 miles of freight tun the people of “comfortable means." nels under Chicago, and the system and above all. the rich Is to be greatly expanded. A com The women who have but one dress pany capitalized at 150.900.000 and In are not those who ask oftenest what which King Edward owns stock, has they shall wear, nor Is It those reduc- b«en organized for that purpose. The American four-masted bark- ed to the strictest economy who ask the most frequently what they shall entln Mawakell went aground on the Clayoquot shoals, on the Alaskan eat tomorrow. By a necessary conse- coast during a terrific storm on No quence.of the law that needs increase vember 16 and went to pieces. All by their satisfactions: THE MORE ut the crew of 12 were drowned. GOODS A MAN HAS THE MORE The New York City board of health HE THINKS HE NEEDS. will carry on during the next six The more he is assured of tomor- months an especial investigation into the cause». nature, cure and preven row. according to the view of ordi tion of pneumonia. Thirty of the nary good sense, the more he con largest hospitals of the country will cerns himself with the question of co-operate. how he shall live, he and his child It Is 38» feet Trom thè bottom of ren. how he will establish them and the sub-cellar to thè roof of thè tali* their descendants. Nothing can por- est "skyscraper" In New York City. tray the fears of a man of means, The scientific limits of high building«, according to archltncts. are as yet un- their number^ their reach and their namable. The really formidable refined shades. problems are of capital an<l elevator service. “Burn Ntiame!” Citizens of Dunklin and Pemlscott Farmer Hayrick (looking over pa per)—Hklnem, the druggist. Is clcslng counties. Mo., are in large nutnlwr« out his entire stock uv patent medi signing petitions to be cut off and annexed to Arkansas. Their only cines at half price. Mrs. Hayrick—That's Jtst onr pesky grievance, (and It is expressly set luck! They hain't a thing the mat forth In the petition,> Is the disgrace ter with any uv the hull family.— of being citizens of a state which will give its electoral vote to a republi Chicago News. can. Creamery for Baker. Baker City, Nov. 22.—Through the efforts of the Baker City Develop ment League It Is now almost certain that a creamery will be started here next spring, capital having been In terested in the project. An automobile near Eastchester. N Y.. ran into and wrecked old man demon’s wagon In the night and nearly killed the old man outright To save themselves, the automobile people left him unconscious to die by the roadside with the thermomter 121 Court Street Want to Money NOT OXI.I WILL YOI SAVE MONEY It! PI R< IIA«ING HERI'. BIT YOU WILL sAY 3 TIMI \XI> ANNOYANCE. OCR I Wtt.l I'ORC E OI M <<1MM<I1IATIVG «Al i «1*3 < (1*1 >. Mil l W MT ON YOU PROMPTLY 5NI» « Mil > I LLY. COME IN. LET is «HOM YOt Altöl XI» YOI WILL BE TRI ATI I» RIGHT. Our Big Sale Now in FULL BLAST $15,000 Stock Dry Goods $5,000 Stock Suits and Cloaks $2,000 Stock Furs and Jackets $8,000 Stock Ladies’ and Children’s Shoes NOTH I Till FOIXOU1NG <.IU REDI <T1OX< THEN <’UM>. IX VXD SAVE YOI II H IRD-EARNED DOLLARS Rare Bargains in Underwear Ml Mi Ml Ml Ml Ml Ml Ml Ml Ml Ml Ml til Ml All Ml Ml All S2 30 S2.23 (2 <M> »1 30 »1 23 41.< mi 73<* T<H* S.M- 6Oc &Sc I.H* 33c Ms 2.M- 2Oe i 1 ixlemear I tMirmear 1 nderwear 1 iHicrwcar I mlerwear 1 mirro ear 1 ndrrorar 1 ndfrHisr 1 micro rar 1 i»«hTw«*sr 1 *Hi«*r««'ar I iMk'rncar 1 nderwrar 1 <ul<Tw<*ar 1 mirro rar I'mlerorar 1 mirro rar I ndrrorar now ............ now ............ now ......... now ............ m»w .......... ................. now .......... . ................. now . . . now ......... ................. now .... mm . . ................. now .......... ................. now .......... ................. now.......... ................. mm ......... ................. now . now .... ................. mm............ ................. now............................. »1.03 S1443 SI.TO »1 20 SKC tab- •Sc «3c 34v 4Tc 42c SHc 33c 27c 21c 2Oc I«c 12*' Ml All Ml til \li \ll Ml Ml Ml » 3.M 4 3.U4I S Stai X 7 IMI X S 4M» X 9 IM> Sio eo Ull oo »12 <«* «kirt» Skirt.« '»kirt* «kll-1- **kiri* «kirt» **kirt* **kirt * «kirt« thiU now now mm ncm now . now 14« IVA now ..«s.« ............... ............... »2.23 »303 »4 43 »3.33 S3.S3 MM ST SS ST M V. «3 Children’s »1.30 Drr^we» now »1 03 • 3.73 OnxM-s now »1.23 92 <W lirrvM'* now Sl.tS *2 SO now St.»5 Dre*«'*» now »2.23 «3 (Ml now »2.33 «3 30 D iv - m '-« now S_' »3 »4 OO l»r« now »3 43 Extra Hosiery Values 4X1TTON AND WOOL. ■Mio pair« Pancine Slipper«. Regular »2 30 tal »3.30 a iMür. in patent and kid; «ale pr*cp...................................................... tu »2.00 Ladies’ and Misses* Jackets Miaue«' Ml*«*« MI« hch ' Ml«««*«’ Jacket« Jacket« Jacket.« Jacket« Values. Values, Valaca. Value«. GENUINE BARGAINS Price Price I'ri«v l*rlcc OVER THE HOUSE LEE TEUTSCH’S DEPT. STOLE