The morning Astorian. (Astoria, Or.) 1899-1930, February 07, 1908, Page 8, Image 8

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8
THE MORNING ASTOUIAN. X STOMA, OREGON.
.M. 1 y
FKIUAY, fAOftUAni (, two, f
1 M
econd and Last Saturday Bit One
Of This Great Clearing Out of All Odds and Small Lots
Left From the Season's Business
s 1
Corner Commercial and Eleventh Streets, Astoria's Greatest Clothiers. k
Every Day the Best Day ot This bale
Every lot of goods in this sale is placed on separate tables or counters and a price ticket
attached to them that simply says go. Because the prices are so low that the people
can't help but appreciate them its our set policy to sell out all odds and broken lots each
season. No matter what the loss may be and this season we have simply ignored all
past price habits by just closing our eyes, and slashing away at the prices. Danzigcr &
Co. don't believe in half hearted methods. That's why you can always expect more and
better bargains during our clearing sale than all the half hearted clearing sales in this city
if they were rolled in one.
829
Lien's Suits
Consisting of lots where there is
one, two, or op to five of a kind
left over and consisting of the
best selling and most desirable
suits of the season. Of course you
won't find your size in every lot
but you will find a dozen or more
suits to fit you in the different lots.
Note the price reductions and re
member they are bonifide; no
mythical or vissionary statements
ever eminate from this store.
$4.65
For choice of about 30 odd suits;
dark and medium colors; cut from
$8 and $10.
$13.50
that will rouse all pants buyers to
action.
$8.52
For choice of about 100 double or
single breasted suits in plain or
fancy materials; union, worsteds,
casemeres, cheviots and all wool
fabrics; splendid styles; worth
to $15.
$11.50
Stein-Bloch Co.'s and others of
the best and high standard make
of America; worth up to $20;
elegant materials; both dressy and
select business styles.
Full costom finished, hand-tailored
throughout; sewed with double
test silk in best merchant tailor
qaulity fabrics; beautiful colorings
and styles; regular selling prices
up to $25. ,
Overcoats
and Cravenettes
About 150 garments are in this
clearing; the man that gets one
will sing a song of praise, for our
straight forward way of giving
out wholesale bargains.
$3.15
Several medium, light, small sized
garments.
$6.75
A very select lot of up to $12
overcoats.
$9.75
Hand-tailored overcoats and crav
enettes worth up to $18.
Hats
$1.75
A great variety, all kinds, worth
to $3.
$2.35
Very choice; wool and medium
materials; worth to $4.
$2.85
Custom styles; dress and business,
to $5 pants.
$385
$13.50
Imported materials, elegant to $25
overcoats and cravanettes.
Pants
We will give some pants bargains
Select imported materials; hand
tailored to $6.50 values.
Boys' Knee Pants
Suits
Wholesale cost for some, and lots
are going for less; but they must
go; it's clearing time at Danziger's
$2.35
For very elegant $4 suits.
$3.85
Most beautful styles of up to $6
suits.
$2.65
One lot mixed values worth to
$7.50; great bargains.
There will be lots of bargains to
be found here that are not men
tioned in the advertisements.
We name only one special price;
but there are hats in this lot that
are fit for any man, both in style
and quality.
$1.35
Soft and stiff hats, black, brown,
tan, drab, pearl, etc. Hats right
up to date, worth up to $2.50.
Furnishings
Table after table, bins, baskets,
racks, counters and windows, filled
with bonifide bargains in odds and
small lots of furnishings, and each
day finds new lots added to take
the place of the lots sold.
5c
For red, blue and white handker
chiefs, worth 10c.
10c
For good 25c suspenders.
21c
For regular 35c suspenders.
35c
For odd lot up to 65c suspenders..
39c
For odd lot overalls; several kinds.
war I
35c
18c
35c
For the best 50c heavy wool so
in America.
95c
Boys and youths' Jersey and wool
rib $1.50 sweaters.
For black sateen and fancy golf For our great 25c wool ao.
shirts, cut from 75c.
65c
Golf and negligee, all $1 values,
some better.
$1.35
French flannels and wool shirts,
cut from $2.
I Rn
For fancy 25c .ilk mercerized For .ome .Tightly damaged $2.50
heel and toe sox.
3c
Pair for 50c, best black Balbrig
gan 25c sox.
$1.15
40c
Broken lot, fleece and rib, worth
to 65c.
ACCUSED MURDERER. :
TACOMA, Feb. 6 Accused of one '
of the most brutal and cold blooded .
murders in the criminal annals of St. !
Joseph, Mo., Hayden Peoples, alias ;
William Marshall, a negro, was yes
terday arrested by City Detectives
Fitzgerald and Ellison, who may be
line to claim a reward of $3,000.
For three and one halt years Peo
ples has been fugitive from justice.
The crime for which Peoples is al
leged to be wanted is for the murder
of Henry Syferd, an aged German
saloonkeeper, the night of May 29,
1904, in St. Joe, Mo.
Ask Yourself the Question.
Why not use Chamberlain's Pain
Balm when you have rheumatism?
We feel sure that the result will be
prompt and satisfactory. One appli
cation relieves the pain, and many
have been permanently cured by its
use. 25 and 50 cent sizes. For sale
by Frank Hart and leading druggists.
EXCLUSION LEAGUE FORMED
SEATTLE, Feb. 6.-The Asiatic
Leaeue of North America,
formally inaugurated here today at a
jneetins of exclusionists from all over
the coast, demands that Congress act
immediately on legislation looking
toward an absolute barring out of the
Japanese, Coreans and Chinese from
American shores. The merorial pro
tests against the presence of the
Orientals in America as a menace to
labor, and hints that if Congress does
not act .quickly, the people will take
the alw in their own hands.
O A. Tvictmoe, of San Francisco,
w fleeted orcsident today after a
long wrangle. C. O. Loung, of Ta-
coma, was first elected president but
resiirned when the San Francisco
delegation resented Tvietmoe's de
feat and began to block further ac
tion by the convention.
The convention will meet in Van
couver, B. C, on the fourth Mwiday
of March, 1909.
SUMMER PLAY GROUNDS.
XEW YORK. Feb. 6. -That
monev furnished by John D. Rocke
feller and Harold McCormick, his
son-in-law of Chicago, will provide
summer nlav crounds in the country
on an extensive scale for city cmi
ilren. was stated last night by Captain
Jack Crawford, some times known
as the "Poet Scout." Captain Jack
Crawford says he is to have charge
of, the first playgrounds to be opened
a tract of wilderness in Michigan, on
Portage Lake, near Manistee.
According to the plan outlined, the
boys' summer play, systematically
supervised, will be largely in wood
craft. Other parks, it is said, are
planned. Boys from the big cities
will be selected to make up the camp
ing parties.
Save Money by Buying Chamber
lain's Cough Remedy.
You will pay just as much for a
bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Rem
edy as for any of the other cough
medicines, but you save money in
buyng it. The saving is in what you
get, not what you pay. The sure-to-cure-you
duality is in every bottle of
this remedy, and you get good re
sults when you take it. Neglected
colds often develop serious condi
tions, and when you buy a cough
medicine you want to be sure you are
getting one that will cure your cold.
Chamberlain's Cough Remedy al
ways cures. Price 25 and 50 cents
a bottle. For sale by Frank Hart and
leading druggists.
PARLIAMENTARY REFORM.
WASHINGTON, Feb. 6.-A bitter
attack on the rules and powers of the
sneaker was made in the house yes
tcrflnv hv Mr. Nelson of Wisconsin,
Republican, who said 'the power of
the house was merged in the speaker.
"He is the house," he exclaimed amid
Democratic applause. He charged
that the business of the country was
not being despatched speedily, eco
nomically or considerately. He did
not, he said, believe in personalities
or partisanship. "I am speaking,"
he declared, "of principles and not of
men that are passing." ;
It was intended, he said, that the
speaker should be only a mere mod
erator in according the representa
tives of the people their just rights
and in securing a square deal. But
now he said, the speaker over-rules
ruthlessly the rights of his oppon
ents and his own associates as well.
The minority, he declared, were not
only 'speechless, but absolutely help-;
less, and as for the majority members j
they have to obey the will of the ,
speaker. i
At times, he added, they would 1
break away, but not for long because j
they were brought back under the :
power of the. speaker's spell. He!
said that many of the president's 1
policies were important, but they
were no more important than par-,
liamcntary reforms in the house. j
1
!
Cures Backachj
Corrects
Irregularities
Do not risk having
wrlvf w r, nf TCidnev or Bladder Disease not Briefs Disease
beyond the reach of medicine. No medicine can do more. of D"bete'
F. T. Laurin, Owl Drug Store.
what I get for being good. Good bye."
This message, written on a post
card, ami unsigned, was received to
day by Mrs. Theresa Zupo, owner of
a small candy store in the basement
of .157 Eighteenth street. This is the
first ntws the mother has received
since her 16-year-old daughter Mary
disappeared frpm her home late yes
terday afternoon.
Mrs, Zupo is grief-stricken over the
disanpcaraticc of Mary.
"1 shall go to the lake this after
noon and keep watch," she said, tear-
COFFEE
Cheap for those that
won't pay for good; Schil
ling's Best for those who
won't have poor.
Your f roeor rt lures jour monoy U o deal
UV It! w par him
fully, "for I do not think my poor
little Marv ha yet carried out the
threat on the postal. She was a good
uirl. kind and dutiful. She had no
young men or girl friends, her only
companions being books and maga
zine.
"About six mouth ago she took a
couisc in manicuring. Being an un
usually bright girl she learned quick
ly ami was graduated in two months.
Almost every morning since then she
left home looking for work. Her in
ability to-. secure employment of any
kind preyed upon her mind, and in
the evenings, after returning home
tired and foot-sore, she would often
weep for hours."
Mary is small for her age, She
has black hair, brown eyes, and is
considered pretty. When she left
home she wore a red felt hat with
ribbon to match, a yellow dress with
red dots and a brown cloak,
FOR THAT TERRIBLE ITCHING.
Eczema, tetter and salt rhenm keep
their vjctims in perpetual torment.
The application of Chamberlain's
Salve will instantly allay this itching
and many cases have been cured by
its seu. For sale by Frank Hart and
leading druggist3.
TELLS OF SUICIDE.
Sends Her Mother a Postal Card
Informing her of the Deed.
Brooklvn. N. Y. Feb. 6. -H" Mother:
My body is in Prospect Park Lake, j
What Gus done I was blamed for, j
and I never said anything. That is
. We are at last enabled to fill our orders for
FERN DISHES
Have just received a large assortments in
MATT GREEN
Exceptional values offered in our new
line of fancy Jugs and TanKards.
.... - SEE WINDOW DISPLAYS - --
A. V. AUUEN
Phones Branch Uniontown
Main 711, Main 2871 Phone Main 713
Sole agent for Baker's Barrington Hall Steel Cut Coffee.
S1