PiATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL, MQNpAY. vOY?MBSR. 8, 1915. PAGE 6. 33 HPt is M-t H-i--:-f4- "554- -:- 3 c 1 Serge (all colors) 60c to $1.75 per yard Wool Taffeta (40-inches wide) 1.00 " " Chuddah Cloth, an imported fabric, 40-in wide. . 1.25 " " White Serge and Gabardine, 50-in wide.. $1.00 to 1.75 " " Plaids, beautiful patterns 30c to 60c " " Silk Poplins, all silk and wool, 40-in wide $1.25 " " Chiffon Taffeta, in the new Twotone colors, 36-in 1.50 " " Taffetas, new plains and stripes, 27 to 36-in, $1 to 1.40 " " ttf 5-J-4- :-: -- - -s-:- -QJ ID UUUB Call Phone 53 and 54. The Dayligh tStore. V J. UNCLAIMED LETTER LIST. . The following is the list of letter. jemaining uncalled for at the postof fice at Plattsmouth at the close of business November (Uh: Hugh Chalfant. Jack Graham. Postals: Charles E. Warner. Edward Kohrell. If the above mail is not called for lefore November 22, 1915, it will hi sent to the dead letetr office. D. C. MORGAN, Postmaster. Head the want ads in the Journal Fancy Wcrk Sale Postponed. The Fancy Work Sale and Market which the ladies of the M. E. church had planned on holding next Saturday, November 13th, has been postponed indefinitely fon account of the meet ings which are being held at the church. ll-8-2td Woodmen Circle, Notice! Hours for Roller Skating. The hours for skating at the Crys tal Star roller rink will be the same as last week and will continue on this schedule as long as the revival services are being held at the Methodist church. ll-8-2td W. R. C. Social Meeting Tomorrow. The Woodmen Circle lodge will meet in regular session at their lodg rooms tomorrow (Tuesday) evening at 8 o'clock. All members of the Wood men Circle team are requested to be present. I The Woman's Relief Corns will hold their social meeting tomorrow (Tues day) afternoon, and will be entertain ed by Mesdames F. G. Egenberger, II. J. Streight and J. H. Thrasher, at the home of Mrs. F. G. Egenberger. Everybody invited. Moore's Non-Leakable Fountain Pens for sale at the Journal office. See the kinds of fancy stationery, the latest up-to-date, and suie to please, at the Journal office. g tosBimg ut Sale of ForaQtuiren airpeft and nlygs! Begmnig on Wednesday, Nevember 10th, the entire line of FURNI TURE, CARPETS AND RUGS now in the massive stock of M. Hild, will be sold at a discount of 25 per cent. Everything in this great stock will go at these prices. .This is one of the finest lines of house furnishing goods ever before offered to the public at such prices. Re member this is a bona-fide saving to you of 25 per cent, on any article in the house. .There is nothing old in the line, all new goods, and the best that can be bought anywhere, regardless of price. THIS SALE WILL CONTINUE FOR THE NEXT SIXTY DAYS, WITH THESE PRICES. If you need Furniture or Household Furnishings of any kind, or will be in need in the near future, this is certainly the time to buy. REMEMBER, THIS SALE IS FOR CASH ONLY. BED THE FURNITURE MAN, s Plattsmouth, Nebraska OLD FARM RESIDENCE OF TOM RUBY DESTROY ED BY FIRE SATURDAY The house on the farm of 'torn Ruby, which was vacated a short time ago by the family when they moved into the new home a short distance away, was destroyed by fire Saturday and there was not enough left of the build ing to tell what it looked like. From what could be learned of the fire it would appear that a man employed about the farm was staying in the old house and was endeavoring to rid the place of some wasps and flies that had made their headquarters there, and to do this he employed a torch made out of newspapers, and the treatment was effective, too, but unfortunately before it was noticed the woodwork of the house was blazing, as a result of the fire cure for the insects, and before anything could be did to check the spread of the flames the building was a roaring furnace and it required the hardest kind of work to save the new house just a short distance away. The heat scorched the paint on the new residence in bad shape and but for tha prompt work of the family would probably have resulted in the loss o: both houses. There was no insurance on the burned building and it will be a total loss to Mr. Ruby. At the time the fire was discovered the family was getting ready to start for Platismouth and if it had been a few minutes late it is probable that both houses woul 1 have gone up in smoke. J. N. Wise came down this mornirg from Omaha to visit for a few hours with his old friends, who were de lighted to meet him. He reports Mr. Wise as enjoying good health at pres ent. Anton Kanka departed this morning for Hugo. Colorado, where he goes to join his wife, who has been there fo several months visiting with her par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Claus Jess, in that locality. Fred Haffke and wife and Mrs. Henry Ofe and son, Ed, motored wk to Lincoln yesterday, where they spent few hours with Mr. Ofe at the sanitarium, where he is tEi'.:.ig ncr.t ment for rheumatism. II. E. Becker and wife and Louis Egenberger, jr., and wife, and Sewart Egenberger motored out to South Rend yesterday, where they visited at the state fisheries for a few hours. They also drove to Ashland. P. M. Meisinger of Benson, who has been visiting w ith relatives in this city nd vicinity, returned yesterday to his home in the metropolis. Mr. Meising er has disposed of his hardware sore in Benson and will assist the new own er for a few weeks in getting things to running smoothly. w Mr. and Mrs. Fred Beil and Mrs. Chris Beil, residing near Rock Bluffs, rove to this city Saturday for a visit ith county seat friends and to atten 1 to some business matters. Mrs. Chris Beil was a pleasant caller at this of- ce. and while here had her subscrip tion to this paper extended for another year. How to Prevent Croup. It may be a surprise to you to learn that in many cases croup can be pre vented. Mrs. II. M. Johns, Elida, Ohio, relates her experience as fol lows: "My little boy is subject to croup. During the past winter I kept a bottle of Chamberlain's Cough Rem edy in the house, and when he began having that croupy cough I would give him one or two doses of it and it would break the attack. I like it bet ter for children than any other cough medicine, because children take it wil lingly, and it is safe and reliable." Obtainable eevrywhere. Rummage Sale November 11, 12, 13. The ladies of the Presbyterian church will hold their Annual Rum mage Sale in the Gorder building on November 11, ,12 and 13. All those having any donations for this sale please have them at the room in the Gorder building not later than Novem ber 10th. Those who have no way of having their rummage delivered, please notify Mrs. Mary Allison or Mrs. John Gorder. 11-3-tfd Deafness Cannot Be Cured by liiral application. thoy cannot reach the discawd Mjitki of the car. There in only one way to ci?h uVafnexH. him! that i by constitution, al remedies. Hvafncos t caused liy an InUamed condition of the muei.ii llnln? of the tuntachlan Tube. When this tube l lunamed you have a rumbllnir sound or Imperfect bearing, and when It l entirely closed IK-afuess la the result, and nnleas the Inflammation can be taken out and tbla tube restored to Its normal condition, hear ing will be destroyed foreTcr; nine cases out or ten are caused bv Catarrh, which Is nothing but an tuflanied condition of the niuooim surfaces. We will Rive One Hundred Dollar for any case of. Deafness (caused by catarrh) that cannot he cured by Ilaira Catarrh Cure. Send for circu lars, free. CFIENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by DniKgUts, 75c. " Take Hall's Family Fills for comtlpatlou. THE FEZ AND THE OTTOMAN. Colors Mean Much, and Only the Arab Foregoes the Tarboosh. That stream of people crossing the Galata bridge, over the Golden Horn runs red. for every Ottoman, except the Arab, must wear the tarboosh vThe man with a hat" nieaus the for eigner. The way to see Constantino ple without attracting attention to yourself is to slip on a tarlniosli, but the wise foreigner has been slow thus to surrender the one visible token of his special extraterritorial rights, for when trouble is afoot the word goes out to spare "the man with a hat'' be ta use of the fear of international com plications. During the reactionary rev olution that followed on the heels of the constitution there was a ludicrous scramble on the part of t lie Greeks and other Christians to get beneath hats, and the sudden crop of silk hats ami derbies was wonderful to behold. Fashions in fezzes pass in review across the bridge. The Albanian has a white headdress a cross between a fez and a skullcap. The Persian wears a huge black felt dome that is matt bed in size only by the big brown bull that crowns the head of the dervish. The hadji. whose merit in ha ing male the h:ij. or pilgrimage, to Mecca is pro claimed bv his huge turhaii. is a fre quent figure on the bridge, for every Moslem man who has the means and the physical strength is expected to visit the birthplace of the prophet at least once in Ids life. The elaborately wound headdress of the hndji is of white cloth, but a say id's, or descend ant or Moli:iinmeI, is of green. Some times the iiiosjue officials, or imams, even when they are not of tfie proph et's blood, wear the green turban. Only the men wear any sort of head gear. The oriental woman goes hat less. A cloth or veil Is as much cover ing as she wears on her head. As I stood there on the bridge 1 saw a group of Turkish women stare through t heir thick veils at the hat of a foreign wom an as she hastened by. Since Young Turkey has come into power western fashions are much in favor in Constan tinople. Youth's Companion. A BATTLE OF THE WINDS. When Boreas and Notus Rage at Each Other on the Bosporus. By a strange phenomenon, if the south wind prevails the superficial cur rent tif the Bosporus is reversed, though the inferior current continues its accustomed course. Then the wa ters on the surface are piled timiuliu ously hack uion one another, and the quays, which are several feet above the ordinary Bosporus level, are 13ok1 ed and perliaps made impassable. At such times caiques and smaller boats do not dare to venture upon the tem pestuous surface. Sometimes a strong wind blows northward from the Marmora, and an other wind as strong blows with equal violence southward from the Black sea. Then, as one gazes from some central point like Roumeli Ilissar. lie beholds ships under full sail majestic ally approaching each other from loth directions till at last they are only two or three miles apart. Between them lies a belt of moveless sea. into which they are forced and on which they drift helplessly about and per liaps crash into each other's sides. This is a duel royal between Boreas and Notus and may continue for hours. Gradually the zone of calm is forced north or south. At last one wind with draws like a defeated champion from the arena. The ships which it has brought thus far drop their anchors and wait or else hire one of the nu merous steam tugs which are paddling expectantly about. The ships which have come with the victorious wind triumphantly resume their course, and meanwhile their sailors mock and jeer their fel'ow mariners whose breeze has failed them. Prom "Constantino ple," by Dr. Edwin A. Grosveuor. Clothes In Colonial Days. When Salem was settled the Massa chusetts Hay company furnished clothes for all the men who immigrat ed and settled in that town. Every man had four pairs of shoes, four pairs of stockings, a pair of Norwich garters, four shirts, two suits of doub lets, a pair of hose of leather lined with oilskin, a wooden suit lined with leather, four bands, two handker chiefs, a green cotton waistcoat, a leather belt, a woolen cap, a black hat. two red knit caps, two pairs of gloves, a cloak lined with cotton and an extra pair of breeches. Wills In Argentina. In Argentina the laws provide that a father must leave his children four fifths of his fortune, and a husband, if he has no children, has to leave half of his property to his wife. An un married son is compelled to leave his parents two-thirds of his property, and only unmarried persons without par ents or descendants can make wills disposing of their possessions as they see tit. Shocked Him. "What did the boss do when you threatened to resign if he didn't raise your pay?" "lie surprised me." How?" "He failed to show the slightest sign of alarm at the prospect of my leav ing." Detroit Free Press. An Advantage. "To what do you attribute your re uarkable health?" "Weil." replied the very old gentle man. "1 reckon I got a good start on most people by bein' born before germs was discovered, thereby bavin" les to worry about." Washington Star. Bucks Stoves and Ranges! We are very fortunate in securingtlie agency for this famous line of heaters and cast ranges. Their line of stoves are known the world over and hardly need any mention as to quality and material as is used in tieir building of these ex cellent stoves. Our line is now complete. Be sure and see the BUCKS HOTC BLAST that holds fire nearly equal to a base burner. J5dttir & Telephone 151 waflob South Sixth St. T. H. POLLOCK, Real Estate, Insurance, Loans luoeEi Sbxqs $950.00, $985.00, $1,485.00 Office and Salesroom - Riley Block, 16th St., Plattsmouth, Neb. TELEPHONE NO. 1 AT THE GEM TOMORROW. "The Plunderer," played at the Strand theater in Omaha for three days at 10c, 20c and 30c. See the won derful photo play at the Gem tomor row. Matinee at 3 o'clock, 5 and 10c; night, 5 and 15c. A 'want ad will bring you a buyer. APPLES- Extra Fancy Jonathans, bushel. . 75c Grimes Golden, bushel $1.00 Ben Davis, bushel 75c Choice Apples, bushel 40c and 50c Just Received A keg of Nehawk.i Cider. II. M. SOENNICIISEN. II Waists in a Great Variety of Fresh New Styles featuring the season's best models in Crepe de Chine, Georgette Crepe, Strip ed Wash Silks, Novelty Striped Taffetas and Wool Cliallies. Shades include Teach, Flesh, Pink, Maize, Vellow aud White. Many original ideas in good combination effects. Prices range from $2.50 to $7.50 Washable Kid Gloves $1.25 wash these gloves as you do your own hands. Wash on hands in warm wa ter with pure soap. A new idea and a good one does away with the need for wearing soiled leather gloves. Value! DIVEV & SI Quality! Service! I c m Mir- trvry