' ' r 1 II l& I ik SiM Cfl .--T .5?fI---V 1 u l 1 L X rSfLJr, invest J m "Dirn us:A..tt'Vc5! Jkfi i?fnnfef&5sv& -.Jr;l?ra ( -ri, fc3KUP,,tt Y:!rrafc&ri i r: -c s V-Ai,&a '" .a i33l,'flW ' . MmfVm or smooth faced materials, in indistinct over-patterns, not too pronounced in colorings, full of clothing Miiartiie and style, carefully tailored, lined with correctly matched, material.-, genteel in design, cut the new shape and all correct for spring and summer, 'iiictceii-fivc. Trices jut what you would expect $10 to $20. We think you will agree with us that we have used clothes-cn:c in our selections of these noted waken' liis;li iiiality clothes. GREiSEN ..11th COLUMBUS, Closing Save 25 to 30 Per 6ent ...On Groceries... You can do this while our Closing Out Sale continues. The Stock will be closed out by May 1 Come first and get the best. , WEffl Ii1 r.x - 1000.0X00.000 Come in and J. Eleventh Street t00M0X0rr,f:i0 i000 00ak0Hn0 IAT COST i s nnniiniiiJiiiiiiiniunniKiaiiiiusrantiifiiiiuiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuJiiiniiiJiiHi!! J WANTED-. Ten Regular I Table Boa.rdcjrs at the 1 C. E. SNYDER, Propr. 5wiimiiiiniiHiiint7HHiiii!MrtiHiHiiiiiiniifii!iniiiiiiiiiiiiHi"mnminii" . -t; Painting, Paper Hanging, Frescoing, Sign Writing, Glazing. Etc. Besides the regular Wall Paper Stock we carry we have sample books from the largest manufacturers of Wall Paper and can suit you in "quality and price. NORTH STREET 1 Door north Tollock's COLUMBUS w 0 w m w YOU WA'CfT Journal BECAUSE: Civics are tilways up-to-date, ork is jiu:inintecl. Prompt delivery. Reasonable prices. If we haven't it we will order it. Wc can save business men money on printed forms; we can get engraved cards for society people; letter styles at lower prices. Journal Sale Bills hrinir crowds. Journal Letter Heads bring business. Try us. Only Daily in Columbus. Columbus E do not see how any well-dretscl man can think of wearing a year ago sack suit again this year. Everybody will see the (Inference at a glance. uck suits this year are so different. Yon will buy one of our Crouse & Brandegee Normandie suits, that is one sure thing, as soon as you sec them. Thev are made in rough Street. NEBRASKA i a Out Sale i & SONS ' w BROS gocQgnsgxxxKXXxgg We Don't KEEP ANYTHING! We Sell Everything in the line of SHELF AND HEAVY HARD WAKE be convinced. ersenbrock Columbus, Nebraska .0 ! xrasxKunso: WMMM a. a a 5 r Job Printing Help us push. Journal Co. UsTABLifciixui Mai U, leiu Columlms gonranl. Colunbust Nlr. Enteral Ht ttio I'ostotfice, Colusibu.'-, Nolr.. tu-fecond-cla mail matter l'Oni.ISIIED WEDNESDAYS HY (dm In Journal Co., (INCOiirOUATED.) TKHXS OKSUllsOUII-THi- One reer. by audi, pot-taic iriMtiil Six months. ......... .. ..... ..... Three months ...II.SO ... .75 ... .40 WEDNESDAY, APRILS!. 10T,. FSHKXCS 2. AMCtT. Eiii:r UENKWALS TI.-itiMiii"iTi'ynnrn:impin yonr 'ut. rvrnijilriiit to wiint lime n:r snlxcrijition i ikiiiI. T'i f .rn" statu tint pijint'nt h- boon n'wivi-I n,. t J:m. I. IUT.. FeWiS to Fi-h. I. U'X. Mr.l m m. Wlnn im incut i mml. the ilntt,.'liii"h iuwi i ur a j'-cipt, will bechaapelut'eonHnt:!. .DISCONTI NUANCES-lt.r'iiW niM:rili erswill conti:n' to nwiie thJNJouru.il until the lnlli-hf rt r.iv iioSintnl by lMtT to 1 M-o:iliuuc. when nil arri-:ir.'e- mu-t U paiii If jon lo not wihIi the Journal cont.nninl foranotlu-r jc.ir af terthp tlmo paid for In exmr.il. jou nhonll previonfly notify ut- to ilicatithii:L it. CHANGE IN ADDUESS-When n!winir a chaoKP in tho aililrt"i,t utttTiln'ri "-lmnhl N f ur to ;ie their old a ill at their nrw adiirt . If yon have birls to file, prepare to file thorn now. Did yon ever try to hold down the seat of honor?" The Woodmen am paid to have the meanest froat that ever batted in Co lombns. If Easter hats for men should sud denly become the thine, we are ready to bet that Emil vounergon would be the first purchaser. It will soon be over, this great con test which will settle the city print ingi And what a rest it will be for the readers of Columbus. Of course, all the papers that don't get it will go out of business ami that will per haps give them another shock of rest fulness.. Don't forget the second appear ance of the "councilmanic com edy" next Friday night at tho council chamber. The great scene in the com edy will bo in the second act when the "official paper" for 11)05 will be made to evaporate in mid air unit the editor of that paper will do the "cake walk"to music written by councilman Galley at the first meeting and to words written by conncilman Gray at the second meeting. Henry Carrig andHonry Hoskenber ger held a real estate dealers' meet ing at the railroad station this morn ing to which thev invited a Journal reporter. They passed a resolution, declaring unanimously in favor of buying the space that is given in Co lumbus newspapers to tho discussion of the ?I3 city printing proposition, and using it to boem the great real est i re rasts of the Hub city. The Journal man being promised a rake off on all the deals male through the instrumentality of the Journal, agreed to write a series of real etare boom editorials to brgiu after the mooting of the council next Friday night. 1 Tiiwurt: FROM MX. It is feared that E. Daniel Fitznat rick, the war mayor of Columbus, one of tho most kindly and wholesome of Nebraska's pioneers, is approaching very near to the crest of tho mountain where he may soon look over and see it all. He has been a resident ot Ne braska for about thirty-five years and his early experiences of privation and rdship were as fierce as any man could endure, and much more than some would have 6tood up under bravo ly as ho did. Having failed to make farming a success with the crude im plements at his disposal when he first camo to the country, be sold his oxen and moved into town where ho started a little news stand near the depot. For a long time his sales were so un satisfactory that ho used to lie awake nights wondering where the three dollars wo8 coming from to pay next month's rent. Whenever ho accumu lated a errulos dime it went to the local newspaper for a little line ad vertising in these wor-s, "Follow the crowd to Fritzpat rick's." And peo ple began going to his little news and toy counter out of sheer curiosity. Once fairly started his business grew year by year, and all the time he was accounted by the newspaper men of the place a veritable oasis i i the desert of Platte county. The admonition to "follow the crowd" was in the papers when the rest of the merchants were waiting until crops were harvested be fore holding out any special induce ments to the public. And now the whole-souled "Fritz" lies ttricken with paralysis from which it is feared he may never recover. If ho is spared his friends will be greatly rejoiced ;and if ho goes, gates of paradise will swing wide onen to give royal welcome to a royal man. Bixbv iuStateJournal. CAUSE OF STRIKES. " The continuance of a civilzatiou is never more imperilled than when the rich and poor have no common in terests, no common hardsliips.no com mon affairs, when a different direc tion of thought conceeds the spirit of the one from the other and the class of people excluded from all the higher gratifications of life, awakens to the consciousness of its might and its higher destiny. "Thus writes Brentano in his great work on the "Relation of Labor to the Law of Today." And these words contain the true explana tion of our labor difficulties. Strikes occur not because the principles of trades unions axe all wrong, nor be cause employers are all wicked and heartless. Our free schools and free institutions are raising the standards of life for the laboring classes who have for centuries been barred from the pleasures and privileges of the rich. The laboring classes strike, not because they are not better off than they hare been before, 'bat because they know better tham they ever did before, that there are people who do not work so hard as they do, who are better off than they are. .i CONTRAST. Tha contrast between Jansu of today an 1 that of fifty years ago when Com moiloro Perry visited tbn inland for ihs pzrposo of negotiating friendly trad relation between .this country au'l the orient is amazing. Japan at the time was unfriendly to all foreingers, and when one of our luckless boats emi:i(!el on the t-hores of Japan.it was gcrd bye, William, aim no voice of ap peal for ca)t:iin or crew. The Japanese, wore a primitive little people content with tho renditions that had exi-m d for centuries and with traditions dating back pretty nearly to the beginning of tbinps. Like the Chinese thev wanted to he lat alone, and yot. unlike tho Chine?? they had an oveiniRFterisc cnrioi-ity.wheu once aroused, to kn ow and to under tand. Commodore Perry knocked and Japan opened the denr. It was tho beginning of a communication with the outside world that has rcs-nlfct! in the most ma'velous national transformation in thy hisiory jf tho world Occidental ism prcvoked a revolution among her own i enp'e in which the nrcressive elt-imnr won out. Thf p it of Japan wore opened in thi- truinu of the world ard tho iniMi of her people to the reeepiiou cf world-ui.'dom. Imitator at firr, they have become leaders in advanced thcnjjbt. Her inilitaiy meu hr.vo broken th.' world's record of achievement on the battleiield.aud the army pbyticinns of Japan have done wonders, in tho maintenance cf sanitary conditions that have jireserved the health of the soldiers at thu frout.nnd brought about r. iiflrcentage of recov eries among tho wounded phenomenal ly larj,'e But Janin has been equally progres sive in other lines; in general educa tion and the establishment of condi tions of absolute religious freedom. and the cultivation of a broad humanitar ian spirit- Japan undoubtedly received her inspiration to progress from abroad br.t- tho t-ecret ot her wonderful con quest has been attributed to this rule which her neople from the highest to the lowest obey:" The imperative duty of man in his capacity of a subject is to sacrifice his private intere! to tho public good State Journal. 1 THE SEW NORMAL. Ex-State Superintendent W. K. Fowler has formallv declared that he is not a candidate for the principal ship of the new state normal school at Kearney, and would not accept if elected. He makes this announcement because of the open hostility of two members of the board. This takes from the field tho man who lias l.eeu considered to have a cinch on tho place, and consequently leaves tho race open without any par ticular favorite. Numerous school meu throughout the state are no doubt in receptive attitude, as the politi cians wiy, and there is plenty of good material to le found inJVebraska with out going outside tho state, as Omaha hUil Lincoln recently did for men- for their public schools. One of tho few leading school men of Nebraska who have nor expressed any deire for tho place at Kearney is Superintendent Kern of our Columbus school., thonph ho has been talked ot as a suitable man by tho school men wliu aro interested in thu subject. No more comp"tent man could bo found in Nth::ikn. and none h-.s mnre frien !? or fewei -i:emi( s. If Prof. Kra should beromo n candidate for tho normal principalship, tho only thing that would restrain Columbus people from using their best endeavors m Ins hnhalf would he a consider ation cf self interest, namely, a de sire to keep him at tho head of the Columbus schools. However, he has shown no inclination to feek the ap pointment, though tho field is- onen and his chance would be as good as the best. One consideration which restrains many of tho best men from going after such places is the fact that the state board of cdu ration, liko a great many cth.ir boards, is composed partly of callable men and partly of peanut politicians. The oest school men are not always tho lr.-t practitioners of petty politics, and many able educa tors have found audi places: too warm for thei.i uierelv ber-aoe thoy refused to hearken to tlio mandates of tho gralfrs .l.V EXAMPLE. The following item is taken from news correspondence from Lincoln. It is interesting in its .suggeslivencss. Of course it involovs tho old fanuiar questicn of whether tho purchase of supplies is to b considered as part of a system cf spoils or as a business matter: "The state board of purchase and supplies has instituted another reform which will ba endorsed most heartily by everyone with tho possi ble exception of a few largo business concerns which by studying tho art of bidding have received perhaps more than a fair price for the goods they have sold to the state in years past. The system cf letting biJs by items, instead of in tho lump, has succeded so well under a leugthy test by tho state printing board that the board of purchase and supplies has concluded to adopt; it, and in future Trhen goods are purchased each bidder will be allowed to furnish the item or items aprn which his did is r':o Inwpst The slntf i tinting Lii. v.o kwered about Sopeicent in that way and it is thought that the costs on supplies for the state institutions will fall almost as far be low the cost in former years. " A XEW JOURNALIST. George W. Berge, late fusion can didate for Governor of Nebraska, has bought the Nebraska Independent, one of the last relics of populism in Nebraska. It is announced that the publication henceforth wll be an anti- railroad oragn, the special feature of its policy being that no candidate for any office will be supported by the paper unless be pledges himself to re fuse to accept free railroad transpor tation of any form. While an extreme radical on politi cal questions. Mr. Berge is a man of honor and of scholarly attainments. Jf he will content himself with starting out in moderation and with an eye to practicability and common sense as well as Utopian theories, his journal istic campaign may be effective of good results. But it is rather a slim hope. In his public speaking on poli tical topics Mr Berge is a fire-eater, what most people call a ranter, ana his political writings are liable to be in the Eaine vein. Frenzied journalism is sometimes popular "knd entertaining but it is neither persuasive nor con vincing and it is going out of style along with frenzied pulpit oratory, hysterical Fourth of July spasms, blood and thunder novel, cruel punishments, ami other forms of violence. If Mr. Berge will steer clear of the sound and furv that signifies nothing and deal in facts and figures, calm argument and temperate suggestion, there is no doubt that be will have the popular side of a living question and he may live to see himself re garded as one of the effective instru ments in the abolition of the political pass evil. There is no donbt that it is au evil. Everybody knows it and everybody admits it. But practically everybody accepts it when he gets tbn chance, from the president down. There is scarcely n donbt that the new Independent will stumble into tho pitfall of trying to make the matter ti party issue and tbus destroy the force of his effort, for every man known from abundant experience that the political pass onenres in all parties alike and is condemned by all partips alike. ANOTHER iiXE GONE. The bloody war between tbn saloons and drug stores the flagrant insult offered to the druggists by the mayor, the official permit given to the saloon keepers to break the law on Sunday, etc., when sifted down to bedrock, prove to be correct in all but one essential, namely, truth. These 6tories have been published as part of a partisan attack directed against the mayor. On investigation, the facts are as follows : The mayor did not give the saloons permission to open their doors or to sell liquor on Sunday. It is the prac tice of saloon men to scrub and sweep and clean out their places of business on Sunday forenoon, and Mayor Dick inson told them they would be per mitted to do this up to the hour of ten o'clock. The doors were not to be open, nothing was to be sold, and no body was to be admitted except the proprietor and his employees The mayor had already notified the saloon men that the screens mu6t be removed ou Sundovs. This notice was served on them before the council adopted a resolution to the same effect. Tho saloon men pay license to sell liquor and they protested to the mayor that drug stores should not be allowed to conduct a bar without license. Accordingly the mayor sent each druggist a note savincr that infractions of the law would be prosecuteu. Those druggists who were reported to be so highly incensed at this outrageous in suit have not been found up to date. The Journal has seen three of the druggists and each of tbem expressed tho opinion that the mayor was per fectly tight in the action that he took. Furthermore they did not blame the saloon keepers for insisting on their rights. There seems to be no ill feeling be tween the druggists and saloon keep ers or between either of these and the mayor. The mayor has not sanctioned my illegal liquor selling. ' He has an nounced that all tinch will bo prose cuted. His course is approved by everv law-abiding citizen of Columbus, in cluding saloon keepers and druggists. Tho whole story bears almost a fam ily resemblance to other lurid dreams thnt have appeared in the columns of our amiable contemporary. A SEW FEATURE. Tho annual attack of the Telegram on the schools of Columbus takes a theological tnrn this year. We think that every friend of education in the Columbus school district, of whatever religious faith, will greatly regret this action on the part of tho Telegram. In the first place, it is a matter of regret to newspaper men that a mem ber of the profession should persistent ly use his paper as a vent for his own personal enmity against another man. It is not in accord with journalistic ethics, it is not a fair method of fight iutr, it is not the Southern chivalry of which wo hear so mnch. It is as if a man sbonld nse a gun to attack an unarmed enemy. In the second place, it should be "a matter of regret to all men that our public schools should be dragged into tho mire of personal or partisan mal ignity. We donbt if there is a man in Columbus, aside from the editor of the Telegram, to whom the Columbus schools are not a matter or approba tion and pride. It is true that the two men at the head of the schools are republicans ; is that sufficient reason why they should be persecuted by a democratic paper? It is true that they are of Protestant faith ; is that a reas on why any man should try to stir, up a religious war in the community, to the detriment of the schools? Religious strife is and always has been the most ruinous and wanton form of imbecility in which nations, communities or individuals nave ever engaged. The world is past that stage. Citizens of Columbus will no more enter into such a strife than they will start to burning witches or holdine gladiatorial combats. Good citizen ship is not n matter of politics or of religion. There are good citizens in all parties and all churches, and good citizens who are without either party or church. Both Catholics and Protes tants of this community, we believe, have too much sense and too much in terest in the all-important cause of education to.be driven into a foolish bickering over mediaeval theology when the only incentive to such a course is the unworthy one of the per sonal dislike of one man for another. To a Journal representative this morning Father Theobold and Father Marion, of the Monastery, said that the foundation of the Telegram's lat est spasm was the fact that a Catholic pupil of the high school had told them that in the study of mediaeval history the teacher had explained certain his torical incidents in a way which seemed to the pupil to show a bias in favor of the Protestant faith and against the Catholic Father Theo bold said that he had not investigated the matter and would of course form no opinion until he had heard ah sides of the question. He deplored the sen sational form of newspaper notoriety which the matter had been given and hoped that it might not bo continued. THE SIDEWALKS. A Columbus lady is said to have been insulted on the street the other day simply because she requested a man to clear a sidewalk of a vehicle on one of our main streets which was completely blockaded by them. He made tho following rude reply: "That sidewalk dcesn't belong to you. it be longs to Mr. ." This illustrates a habit of carelessness in the use of sidewalks in Colubmus that has grown all too common. Crowds cf men at times assemble on street corners block ading the streets so that ladies either have to elbow their way through or get clear off the walk in order to pass. Men who are too ignorant to know or too rude to rare that sidewalk constitute a part of the public thor oughfare should be given a very sud den and thorough awakeninc en the sabject. Citizens and business men can do mnch to nsnst the office in these matters if they would. A fow rough lessons would no tbo business And no one will doubt in the liitht of this ona lady's experience there are donbtless many others who could tell a similar story that such lesions are badly needed. COLUMBINES. Wo know what a boar is, bnt whot in Sam Hill is a bob cat ': ;- e Oue day wheat goes away np or away down and the next day the de faulting bank presidents and cashiers and tellers begin to show up. My dear young ladies, if you mm t insist .on overworking that poor old word "exquisite.' at least bo good enough to accent it on the first syll able. -2 Easter is a good thing. A good many hardened old sinners of both sexes will attend divine worship on that day. Some of them are interested in the music und some in tho millinery. The papers say that a Mississippi man tried to kill himself with a re volver but the bullet flattened itself against his skull and he was not mnch hurt. He conies from tte santo state as Governor Vardaninn. People who are rationally interest ed in theonestion of woman's suffrage should read Grover Cleveland's essay in the current number of the Ladies' Home Journal. Grover is a little shy on diplomatic polish and somewhat ponderous in his English, but in the matter of horse sense ho can qualify. The Daughters of the AmericanKev olution elected a prosident of their so ciety in Washington yesterday. There was great excitement. The press re ports say that when the result was announced some of the ladies scream ed and some of them cried. We are happy to note that none of them swore. The cussing was probably done at sundry firesides throughout the land, where stern browed men were grimly essaying tbo composition of pan cakes, while tho beds were un made and the kids fought in the back yard. It would have been a powerful mean thing to do, but it would have been a red-letter event in the annals of emancipated woman if at the height of the proceedings some scoundrel bad turned loose a basketful of rats in that convention hall. That question of what re hit ion the man who married his stepmother is to himself, is not as hard as it looks. It is of courso apparent that he is his own fathor and own son and therefore is his own grandson. By the same token he is his own grandfather. Com bining these two equations we see that he becomes his own great-great-grandfather. Continuing the operaton to thirty decimal places we find that he is the man who built Noah's Ark and if he keeps his health will be the first man to enter the New Jerusalem in the year 6teen thousand. The student will readily be able to demonstrate that the unfortunate man is also his own sister-in-law and his wife's aunt ; and, con versely, the man who struck Billy Patterson. As an exercise in the high er mathematics, he may be considered a variable, moving in a line equidis tant from Balaam's ass and the man who tries to figure out the problem. The life of Joe Jefferson is another example of the universal truth that a genuine sense of humor and kind heart are always found together. The man who never laughs and the man who never weeps are the same man. The man who can't see a joke inside of forty-eight hours is the same man who would foreclose the mortgage on a widow's cow; and live happily ever afterward. Scientists say that the physical phenomenon of laughter, which is found only in the human species, is the evolutionary develop ment of the tiger's grin when he gets his eve on a bunk of fresh meat or some other delicacy and begins to whet up his teeth. In some members of the human tribe there has been no evolution in this respect. They go correctly through the anatomic motions of mirth but the real physiol ogy of it is lacking. This is not as fine a distinction as it may appear. Look such a man in the eye when he goes through the outward form of laughter and you will never donbt the theory of evolution. Then there is the other kind. the fellow who when he is really tickled ties himself in a bow-knot and laughs all over, both inside and out, to the great disparage ment of bis dignity and the prolong ation of his life. He will never make any money, unless times should change so that a man may make money con scientiously, and he wouldn't be a very good man to form a business part nership with, but be is the boy to take to your house to help you kill a bot tle. His wife may not bo long on sealskins but she will wear that con tented look in her dark brown eve. hi a in t n lne P. B. Soft Coal. Yards on ISth Street, near ii & M depot." 15,)tl l'".ups ? HENRY RIEDER, Manager. J n 1 1 1 1 a 1 1 1 1 1 s--g- u ; i u u' 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii 1 1 n ' ' ' ' ' I I I I I I I I I fli-M M I i I I I I SOME PAINT 1. Pnro J.tnriceI Oil Is ihe !oK:tittcn o2 nit 5:m Bcrrtblllty. & Tho irrnersl pr?jm!lre rurntuwt ItenU.r-.'Kl'ced lnni tn biuKl m Ujo fnct tlzviZ i-.iri o Jit-J tiro ittlalicrutnl iltt interior oil. 3. AH paint ? firs J romi-l Into n TIZtCK PASTE, nnt ttio ! Mixed pnini. rcitier trion tiu! i cry ciU: .f lliU atv will n galtoa ef -oil" you fcuo ( laUo bin worti lor Its purity. 4. When yon bay Ecwlr-?5lxea Point. yon rciy tlta Renilv-Elvf K pricv loriws rui:f:i "ou, or roe ircsu, pure raw v.i 0. There is a inCnt Tviiont rcalicrs STOP, wlitn ti:o panto in com pleted; content v.i:I tlic pruCt n Oo jmlnt ittone nnl UnoMlntc that any 1-t year o!d hoy run nils tZiin pa.sto unit tho pure- rmv all. hth bonjiht Nepurulely Intin lbt iornl ilvnW-r. Ntui;ty Mir toce! Titr. Cltoa for gallon, bo n:n;c, no lc.tv. nml iiothlntr -(w. nnl YO U Know yen hate on nIs.ett:!o:y :nro llssrctf oil pntnt ttiut ties cost j : at least 25, less tlinrs nr.y "2rij;h tirwlv" Keutty.Niscri lnlnt. An honest prico fur Ji;! p-::.t ;w.tl ell una your oiin pvr&ouai Iuvni edge el its pari:;- niul ;ur:'t)lliiy- " . This pnlni Is Ktalerli linusi I'alnt; ivMeli f m.-Mto In n full U ef standard, popnlnc nil'! OVRAllLIS ccJnr.N. It tn not u patent Paint It's jnst ilio ;oo;l u5I tii:t.tric(! pnlnt uintcrtnN. rcoukU teg-ethcr rciuly for yau to tW.a duna itli U:e pure raw ui!. WHEREVER .VE HAVE KO AGENT. YOUR OWN DEALER WILL GET "KINLOCH" FOR YOU. IF SHOWN KINLGCH PAIfi I COMPANY. ST. LOU!S..JJiO. J3? 0 - I 1 1 1 1 I I I I I i - ! - W - lammmiiwm' Both 'Pliones. rPIPrihiT Dry .Goods, Carpets, Clothing, vSlioes and Furnishings. During the season ve will advertise weekly some ....specials in.... Clothing, Shoes, atd Furnishings ior Friday and Saturday, April 28-29. yT WE WILLOFFEl: 7IIK I'OLI.ONIN;: "" Men's Suits (latest cut and fabric SIT.dOand m $18.50 for .... $15.00 -13 Z Men's Suits " $ir.t;0 nntl $1 (."() for $i:J.fi() jf 4f Hoy's Knee Pants Suits, brown or navy blue s g $C.00for ZZ2o Z jg Men's Working Shins (full made) 50c for 3S)c g JS- Woman's Brown Kid Oxford Turn. $2.50 for $l.l)S jf g Woman's Drown Kid Bal Turn, $'5.(10 for $2.25 jg - Woman's Brown Kid Bal Welt, $3.50 for $2.08 - S Men's Vici Kid or Pat. Oxfords, $:M for $2.08 " g Look lor our specials each week every- thing new and up-to-date. . t - a j"" t .VKaAatn-MBLi W ananar r h aini C'P aaafSiaWf j "En-fJa 'A AKBU- r"ti .--- ?tKrZ &?ml & ymy Nothing hxii stirctly up-to-season millinery at D. KELSO 13th st. 1st Door 7li4UeU4U444UiU444i4ii4U44.. AT COST FOR CASH Libbey Sparkling Cut Glass. Fruit Bowie Sl-"--0, cnt price Itool Trays $7, cut prico.. Berry Bowl ?f.2.'5, cut price , Lemonade Jnt; SIH, cnt prirc Ice Cream Tray $12.."0, cut price Salt Dips ."Oc, cut price Bon Bon Tray S2, cut price Bon Bon Tray S'l, cut pric Olive Dish S5, cut price. Olivo Dish 82.."0, cut price Tumblers Sii.--" (not less than I at Tumblers il.'A), Colonial cut. not Tnmblere Brilliant $!..")(, (not less On display in my southwest window. i 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ; SMITH 0, Prices xlgrlrfc II 8 I I I I I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 FACTS v. - rusu i i a iiimch f lie mnrurt an j our irm ccnivr burr? I. .7H!S A3.. BY WRITING DIRECT TO 2Bi." - S' - - r - M - - 4 - Miimiiii mmwtmK Bo t'i 'Phones. -vS .1 a?fcS 7? 5tV f i . - . -& s--J I-" -23 p bo. KmaBssaexsiiiMmz'jamism Kr East Nicwohner's -J ? E vi this pnc) less than (I at t than 2 iit tins .... 312.00 ... . $ .".r0 ? 1.7. 3Il..-iO SIO.IMI 10c S 2..-.0 S 2.2.r S UK) S 1.WI 8 1JU his r) $ 1.1.1 pr:ee 8 1.1.1 window. Ed. J. Niewohner, The Jeweler. i U f 1