Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 23, 1904, Page 4, Image 4

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    TIIE OMAIIA DAILY DEE: BAT PHD AY. JPLY 23, 1004. "
OMAHA WEATHER-Saturday, ' Fair and Warmer.
1 V (, ,
RUROKISMOVE INMANCIIURIA
First Army's Preparation, for Movement
to Liao Tang Aftor Crowing Yalu.
CHINESE COOLIES REPLACE - COREANS
In See Liberal Payment, wltk Pebla
' Carts and Many rostra, Maoebus
Transport Supplies (or the
Jn pa inc Foren,
(Copyright, by New Tork Herald Co.. 190t)
ANTTNO, Manchuria, May 11. (From a
Etnff Correspondent of the New York Her
ald Special to .Tho Bee.) Lieutenant Gen
eral Kurokl this morning move his head
quarters on from this place to a little be
yond Feng Huang Cheng, and the move
ment of the Flrat army toward the Russian
poaitlon at Uao Yang may be aald to bti
well under way. The Second army la al
ready on the railroad near Kin Chow, they
say, and we mu.t mark time until It ha
: advanood sufficiently north-ward to develop
the Russian Intention. Then It will ap
pear whether the Russians mean to dis
pute Oenenil Kurokl' Advance at the pass
went of Feng Huang Cheng, and, Jf to,
whether he will give them the opportunity
or And meani of getting around them
without rlaklng an encounter in such a
atronghold.
Blocking the northward advance of the
Second army la the Russian force at Hal
Cheng, and If there. I to be a light at the
paas beyond Feng Huang Cheng theae
Russians at Hal Cheng must alao fight,
for whichever force retire first exposes
the other to tha danger of being turned by
the Jappnese. The meaner report which
reach the correspondent with the First
army a to the doing beyond our front
arc uniformly to the effect that tho Rus
sians ar retiring all alone their line upon
. Llao Yang and that there they will make
n determined stand. If that actually hap
pens the battle will be taking place about
the lime this letter reaches New York.
Tbe Flrat and Sopor d armies will operate
together and ther.i will' probubly be a
' thach greater engagement than the one at
Chu- Liang Cheng.
The 'Russians have to meet one of the
most perfectly orgnnlted and completely
equipped armjea ever sent Into the field,
an army handled with the highest skill and
rare, whoso thoroughness of provision and
prevision la amusing. The slackness and
carelessness which have marked the earlier
operations of tha Ruaslnna will not suffice
against the Japanese There must be an
'. attention to business such as nothing they
to be possible with them, Llao Yang will !
give them the opportunity to nhow whether
they can make the change or not. If they
cannot mako It they may as well begin to
negotiate for terms of settlement
As was tho case on the other aide of the
Ynlu, the commanding general of the First
army does not go forward until his army
Is well on Its road The Japanese advance
was In Feng Huang Cheng several days
ago, and already a considerable force has
gpr.o. beyond that town. The foreign corre.
epnndents have nc. been permitted to ride
Cut for themselves to ne Just what has
taken place, and It Is violating no pledge
pf secrecjr to say that we are not In the
confidence of th general. Very few bits
of Information have filtered through the
devious channels of officialdom to us. Such
n have, however. Indicate rather that Oen
Kurokl Is planning to go around the great
pass a few miles to th wt of Feng
Huang Chen In prefcrnc to fighting
' there. The pas Is 4,000 feet high, and the
approach very difficult.
It It a position whore a small force could
give the entire arm a great del of trou
ble, so that, dlfflcul; as the traiU through
the mountains elsewhere may be, It Is quite
' natural that (he general should prefer them
to the hazardous task of forcing Ms way
through the pass. The three divisions com-
' prising the first nrm' were all sent forward
from here soun aftor the battle at Chu
Liang Cheng- The cavalry that had not
been employed scouting out the country
ahuftd of the advance line went out three
or four day ago. Most of the artillery Is
also up. A battery of howltsers cams In
hue- yesterday afternoon from Chu Liang
Chens? and goej on this morning. General
Kurokl la not the man to lose sight of
the very Important part his guns played
in his success nt tho Yalu. His artillery
certainly will not be weaker In 'the next
engagement thnn it was there,
Manohs as Coolies.
Thq quantities of suppllos of all sorts
tnat have been going forward steadily
TORTURING
DISFIGURING
Skin, Scalp and Blood
Humours
From Pimples to Scrofula, from
Infancy to Ago
Spetdltj Cored by Coticora tbsa
AH Ehi Falls.
Tbe agonising itching and burning
of the skin, aa lu cctemaj tbe fright,
fnl scaling, aa la psoriasis j the lose of
balr and crusting of the scalp, as ta
called bead the facial dUAgurementj,
as in acne and ringworm tbe awful
suffering of infants and anxiety of
worn-out parents, as in milk crust, tet
ter and salt-rheum all demand a rem
edy of almost superhuman virtues to
successfully oope with there. Thai
Cattaure Soap. Ointment and Resolv.
' nt are such steads proven beyond all
doubt. No statement Is made regard
ing them that Is not justified by tho
ptrongeet evidence. The purity and
sweetness, the power to afford Inimi di
ets relief, tbe certainty of speedy end
permanent core, the absolute safety
aud great economy, have made them
the standard skin cures, blood pnrtders
and humour remedies of tbe civilised
world. i
Bathe tbe affected parts with hot
water and Cntlcura Soap, to cleanse
the surface of crusts aud scales and
soften the thickened cuticle. Dry,
without karti ruhblog, and apply Cutl
cure Ointment freely, to allay itching,
Irritation ud Inflammation, and soothe
and heal, and. lastly, take Cutleora He
solvent, to cool and cleanse the Mood.
This complete local snd constitutional
treatment nffird.i Instant relief, per
mits rest and sleep In the severest
forms of ecseme aud other Itching,
burning aud scaly humours of tho skin,
scalp aud blood, and points to a speedy,
permanent and economical cure whea
aU else falls.
Sri IBNuhaal Um Wort. fvUisr Hull I L Kt.
(a imi l Ckutela 14 Fu. tM p-v m U mt,
lMvtfm.nl, . Sw.i. U. t-M. Lvawa. -1 t l,ti.
1 I rtH, 4 n.tM W Wla, S-ri. tTC-fcSfS
ln. tM I ! . r l
TMI''lwkVwtn(lliJn'
- .-.eWsaBBsssM
832,000 Slothing1 Stocli
of liirscli, Elson & Go.
On Sale Saturday at 35c
on the Dollar.
" Tha firm of Hirscta. Bison & Co., of Chicago, are foremost makers of men's,
young men's and boys' clothing. This latter fact assures you of the reliability
I
and excellent quality oi mo goods on
7.00 Men's $12.00 Men's $8.00 Men's $12.00 Men's
2- pleco suits 2-piece suits 3-piece suits 3-piece suits
3.90 5.00 I 4.98 6.90
7.50 Young $12.00 Young $15.00 Young $1.75 Men's
Men's Men's Men's
3- piece suits 3-piece suits 8-piece suits Bummer coats
2.98 4.98 I 6.90 98c
$2.50 Boys' $3.50 Boys' $5.00to$7.00 $2.50 Boys'
3-piece suits 3-piece suits a.pjeoguit3 2-piece suits
98c 1.95 2.98 98c
$3.50 Boys' $1.00 Boys' $1. 50 Boys' $2; 50 Boys'
2-piecn suits Vlltyles' wash uita ' wa8U 8uit3
1.95 25c 48c 98c
25c Boys' 50c Boys' 35o Boys' 75c Boys' all
wash pants wash pants knee pauts wool pants
Be 23c 15c 39c
Manufactur- New Exposi- bir line of Men's Bathing Suits
ore' line of Pa- tlon Tie- Balbrlggart Union value 75c
jama Talue to mam Suita value $1.50 . ;
12.50. at fcUC -at at. ,
1.39 .Essiss: 88c 45c .
Boys'PajamaS Men s fancy stripe White Duolc and With any Straw
ages 4 to 16 Bulbritrean Un- Wool,, Cups, value Hat from
valu e to 11.60, derwear, value 350 76o-a' 39C Up '
IQa ,O0 Saturday 13.00 in
"70a '' lUU 80(5 ,2- Little Green
III R . In Llule GrMn Stickers with
on bargain square. Stickers, eaoh hat.
slnca headquarters were established at An
tung would Indicate that the Japanese have
no thought of ever coming back by this
road. Train after train has gone up. All
day long the road has been full of trans
portation of one kind or another, carts and
ponies all heavily loaded. The Chinese or,
rather, the Manchu coolie Is not the pack
animal that his Corean brother Is. Usually
It takes two of him to manage tho load a
Corear. will walk along with for twenty
Hve or thirty miles a day. But the Man
chu Is a better man with four legged ani
mals, lie has better horses and mules and
he knows much more about handling them.
Us makes one of the clumsiest carts ever
designed, a heavy two-wheeled concern, so
hard to pull that It takes one mule to
manage the cart alone. But it la strong
and fairly serviceable and If you hitch In
mules enough you can take a big load. It
la the same old vehicle used aU through
northern China and known as a Peking
cart. The Japanese have hired or bought
many of these and employ Manchu cart
men to handle them. There are two kinds,
one covered, for use by travelers, and tbe
other open, used In freighting. The open
carta will carry from ,W) to 2.000 pounds
and the number of animals, necessary de
pends on the character of the road and the
spaed it is desired to make. The road from
here to fng Huang Cheng is very bad,
being soft sand for the greater part of the
distance. ' The Manchu cartmen hit oh five
or sis mules to one Sf these open carts and
pile on all the bags of rice or boxes of
bully beef they can make stick. Then away
they go, with one man to direct the cart
and three or 'four others to manage tho
mules, which are fastened to tbe axle of
the cart by long rope traces, and which
go almost where they please, so long as
they keep the general direction and stay
reasonably near to the road. As many as
nine mules have been hitched to one enrt.
The Japanese axe following tlie same
course with the Manohus that they pur
sued with the Coreans. They pay with
great liberality for everything they take.
it is expensive, but It li unquestionably
a wise policy. The result is manifest In
several ways. One of the most Important
things to tbe army Is that the things which
It needs and which are so often, hidden
away on tha approach of troops and very
dlmcult to obtain are easily had here. The
Chinese have shown from the first that
they were not afraid of the Japanese. They
have been about the town here aU the time
with their carts and mules, many of them
as busy as they could be about their old
vocations. When tha army undertook to
hire or buy carts and mules the quarter
masters had plenty of offers at once. The
price went skyward In long leaps, but that
seemed to make no difference to the army.
A mule that in ordinary times would fetch
a good price If he sold for sixty Mexican
dollars now brings from 175 to 200 yen '
Ithout any trouble or haggling, and a yen
la worth about 30 cents more than a Meal
can dollar. In ordinary times the hire of a
eart and three mules, with the services of
the certuian, Is only about M a day. The
Japanese have sent It up to fU er tlX and
even In some cases 16. Surely It will not
be from the thrifty cartmen who are profit
ing so enormously by the advent of the
Japnnese ttuxt comylaJnts will come here
after. To be sure, the Japanese pay In
their army notes, and already these notes
are at a considerable discount. In spite of
the stringent regulations Issued to enforce
their circulation, but at tha prices paid
fur everything the holders of the notes can
stand the discount and still make bugs
profits.
Chinese Traders at Aateasj.
The ehause from the Corean to the Man
churlao side of the Yalu Is very decided.
Thrift and enterprise mark the Manohurian,
as shtfUessneas had the Corean. Here are
saio Saturday.
houses well built and substantial, with
brick walls and solidly tiled roofs. Chu
liung Cheng and Antung are prosperous
looking towns. The streets are wide nnd
fairly clean, astonishingly so for Chinese
towns. . There are plenty of large build
ings, several of them approaching the dig
nity of magisterial yamens. The main
Street of Antung is lined on both sides
with, large, solid shops, each, with a spa
cious compound behind it, surrounded by
the customary Chinese living rooms. Even
the mud huts that flunk the business center
of the town show the more substantial
character of the Manchu. The spirit which
differentiates the Chinese from the Corean
Is manifest everywhere. The traditional
thrift of the Chinese traders Is shown In
tht manner In which their business goes on
su.adlly despite the military occupation of
their town. Even on the day when tho
Japanese entered Antung many of the shops
were open and the oil mills did not shut
down. Curious as tbe Chinese Is, he was
yet too much occupied with his business to
stop to look very long at the newcomers.
Antung Is a town of some 10,000 Inhabi
tants.' It lies along the north bank of the
Yalu, covering tho flat ground between
the water and tha hills for a distance of
two miles or more. A small stream di
vides It Into two parts, the western being
the main business center. The main stream
of the Yalu washes the Antung bank, and
there Is sufficient depth of water for
steamers drawing nearly ten feet. The
current la v.'ry swift and the navigation
difficult, for the channel Is tortuous, wind
ing In and out among' Innumerable sand
bars, with sharp turns and tricky shifts.
From the hills about WUu we could ses
Antung quite plainly on clear days, and
always there was a forest of Junk masts
In the river. The Junks now line all tha
bank in front of the town, and the river
front is a scene of great activity con
stantly. The junk men lost no time In
getting back to business after the battle.
They were up the river as far as Wlju on
the morning of May 2, and' the next day
were taking employment from the Japa
nese, shifting stores from the Corean side
'down to Antung.
One of the jprlnclpal Industries of Antung
and this part of Manchuria la the produc
tion of beans. The farmers raise large
crops of them, which are sold to millers
In the town, who extract the oil and press
the residue Into) large cakes shaped like
grindstones, which are used for horse and
mule feed. Tbe oil Is a good lubricant It
goes ohlefly to Che Foo, There is alao a
considerable silk Industry here, the product
being very similar to the heavy pongee
known throughout the east as Che Foo silk.
Besides beans the farmers grow good crops
of corn, millet, wheat, barley and some
rice. Lying along the river now ta a large
quantity of timber, most of which looks to
be of old cut. It Is nearly all pine, roughly
squared Into heavy sticks, and a good part
of It seems to huvs been used at some
time as sills or frsmes for large build
ings. The Russluns had piled up a lot of
It In front of tbe building on the water
front used by General Kurokl for his head
quarters. They had also dug trenches
about the place which they had used, as
did General Kurokl. Three atsples, oil,
cotton goods and flour, seem to have formed
the principal Items of trade In the shops.
The oil was both Russian and American,
the oases I have seen being about equally
divided. The flour came largely from the
mlllu at Shanghai, and so did the eotton
goods, slthough American flour Is now
here In plenty and there are some good
stocks of American cottona
The difference between the Corean and
Munchurlan sides of the river, which Is so
marked In the appearance and character of
ths towns. Is Just as clearly defined In the
country. In Corea there seemed to be no
agricultural work whatever going on. We
HIGHEST QUAf-IIY, LOWEST PRICES
These re the two 'main features In
our Grocery.
Best I-aundry Snap Bennett's Oir
liargaln 8oap per bar.......... S b
$1.00 Worth "SA
H. Green Trad.
Ing Mumps with
three-pound can
Table tOkr
Byrup laSJW
$1.00 Worth "8. &
H." Green Trad
ing Stamps with
pound New York
Cream yi
Cheese uC
$1.00 Worth "8. &
H." Green Trad
ing Stamps with
three packages of
TJneeda ltin
Biscuits IOt
Canned Salmon
Specials.
$1.00 Worth "8. m
H." Green Trad
ing Btamps wlin
one puuna can of
Diamond H'j'Jrr" -Balmou
aSaSW nj!&
i.w worm o.
H." Green Trad
lug Siamps with
one-pouna can oi 'f W tVfJ
Three IStaronr IWijJ 1
Salmon 1 '
60c Worth "8. &
H." Green Trad
Ins; Siumns with
half pound can of 'I
Salmon...
$2.00 Worth "8. A !
U." Green Trad- '
lng Stamps with j-
pound puckage of
Sit tings OC
Boyal Banner " Be
Cigar ;
5t) for.-'P.-'
and 13.00 in "8.
St H." Green
' Trading Stamps.
Orest Five
25c
and 60c In "8.
ft H." Green
Trading Stamps.
CANDY DKPAHTMKST.
Fresh made, rich, delicious, vanilla
flavored Chocolate Creams On
per pound iw
Meats and Provisions
A frofh stock of nil kndn
of fresh meats, poultry and
provisions.
Fresh dressed spring
chickens, broilers, lb. 19c
Fresh dressed hens,
lb.! Ulc
Tot Roast of Beef
lb., 10c and ..80
Sugar Cured regular nams
and Bacon, lb ...... 12JC
Fresh Leaf Lard
lb 8C
8-lb. pails Silver Leaf
or Rex Lard . : 28o
5-lb. pails Silver Leaf
or Rex Lard ...480
10-lb. pails Uver Leaf
or Rex Lard
attributed this In large part to the fact
that the men throughout the country over
which the Japanese were operating were
working for them aa packers In preference
to tilling their fields ss tisual. On tbe Man
churlan side, however, there Is great ac
tivity In the fields. The farmers who have
lands on the Islands In the river, which
were between the two armies, so that they
could not be worked until after the battle,
were out with their plows promptly on the
Id of the month, and on the afternoon of
the Sd. when 1 rode along the river bank
beiwetn Antung and Chu LiangChong, I saw
many of the fields almost entirely plowed.
Baek from the river the agricultural work
had not been so much delayed by the mili
tary operations, and already some of the
crops are showing above ground. This In a
thrift and enterprise of which the Corean
knows nothing. It Is an Indication of what
may be done In the way of trade if the war
results In such a settlement that theso
towns are really opened to commercial ac
tivity. Yougaiuvbo'a Raaslan Settlement.
Fifteen miles down the river 'from An
tung, and on the south bank, lies the place
called Yongampho, of which much has been
written and little known. Here was the
headquarters of the Russian company
which Obtained the celebrated timber con
cession, believed by the Japanese generally
to have been merely a clonk for political
schemes. A flvs-mlnute look about the place
reveals something of the extent of the Rus
sian plana. Close up under the hills that Ho
directly on the river bank stands a row of
solid brick and stone houses, Intended for
residences, of officials. They are all on the
flat ground, only a few feet above the
water nlh Ud' but ,0 screened by the
ouia as 10 oe quite out or sight even from
passing vessels, except sueh as come close
In. From well out In the river three or
four buildings are visible, one of which Is
the huge shed Intended for a sawmill. This
Is built of corrugated Iron, sides and roof,
and would cover machinery enough to work
up all. the logs in Cores In a short "me.
iialf a mile baok of the row of residenoes
there Is a long, substantial building, which
was erected as a barracks for tbe Russian
garrison sent out to guard the "timber
concession." It was a fine, commodious
barracks, with plenty of large windows
and several huge fireplaces, very necessary
adjuncts to any building lu this country
If the tenant means to be comfortable dur
ing the winter. Behind this building was
a long wooden stable, floored with heavy
planking and partitioned off into roomy
stalls for ths horses. It was thej only
wooden building in the concession, all tho
others being of brick and stone, with either
tiled or corrugated Iron roofs. Tha bricks
were mode la kilns only a little further
Inland, there being apparently plenty of
good brick clay at hand. There is, too,
one smaller wooden building, s structure
that looks as If It might have been In
tended for a Jail, but was, so the Japanese
say, a magaalne for stores. It Is built of
heavy square timbers, dove-tailed at the
ends snd without windows.
Tbe native village at Tung Am Pho Is a
curious mixture of Chinese and Corean.
The streets are wide aud reasonably clean,
the huts partly Chinese and partly Corean,
mostly of nvid with thatched routs. A few
have iron rc ore. The Village was manifestly
built undrr Ruasien supervision, for the
streets are straight, which Is possible with
Chinese but out of the question with Co
reans. All these buildings Russian. Chi
nese and Corean stand on what was land
under cultivation, mostly In hoe, Judging
from the dikes that cut It up Into small
fields. There are plenty of fine hills near
by) In fact, they form screens all around
the place, and tbe Russlsns seem to have
chosea ths Oats- for building because of
WVVMMe)MWa'VeVV
eeeeesjee yvv
...
r
SoSurdoy, tho Iroat Joy at lennott's
Out-of-town visitors very heartily invited to mnke this great store their headquarters.
Everything possible for their necoimnodntion and comfort always at its best nt Bennett's.
Music by Kaufman's Orchestra Saturday evening, 7:30 till 10:00.
Bargains in new, clean, fresh, sweet merchandise. Not a cents worth otherwise. This
clothing sale is a sensational opportunity for everybody.
BOYSJ-OAN HANDLE A IlUMjlfKI) MOKE UHinilT SCHOOL BOYS. THE BEST
BUSINESS INDUCEMENT FOR AN AMBITIOUS HOY. See the Ad man, Saturday a. m.
Sheet Pictures
Sheet Pictures
Great Sheet Picture Sale
$4.00 Photogravures s nn
Our price 0
$1.60 Colored Photogravures f
Our price . JC
$2.95 Etchings, Engravings, Colored and
Uncolored Photogravures n
Our price 1U
Pictures, 15x20 f
i in colors lvC
Photo Colors and Pla- tfS
tinettes, 16x202
for 25 Cents.
And II in "S. & H."
Green Trading Stamps.
These are marvelous bargains, and
must see them.
Big display In Sixteenth street
dow, south.
win-
Great Book Sale
SATURDAY
The richest fiction in
beautiful binding?, good pa
per, clean, clear aTi
type Saturday linjl"
45o and kUKJJIJ
Your Eyes
They need our attention, and
the attention we give them is
not surpassed by any practical
optician in the West. We'll fit
your eyes with perfect-fitting
glasses at lower prices than are
possible by an exclusive opti
cian. ' -' .
I
That fact. The concealment of the, town is
complete from all points except the river
directly In front of It. and thence only a
small part can be seen. It Is a scattering
place, the buildings standing, far apart,
with many vacant lots among them.
. Disputed Timber Concessions.
Piled here and there among the buildings
are great stacks of timber. Nearly all, of
this timber Is old, us Is that at Antung,
and much pf it shows it has been used,
some of it for a long time. Manifestly
It was not cut by the Russians, and the
business done by the company under Its
timber concession was not working up the
Corean forests, whatever else It may have
been. The timber seems to have been
floated down the Talu from its upper
reaches, and the company may have found
It more profitable to buy such timber than
to attempt to get out new for Itself. There
were no hills In sight from the neighbor
hood of Tongampho which showed tim
ber worth the labor of working. These
huge squared logs are a valuable asset to
the Japanese, who have put sawyers at
work already, to rip them up Into planks
and boards. A great many thousands of
railroad sleepers can be cut out of these
timbers,' whether for the narrow gauge
roads of Japan and the one tbe Japanese
are now hurrying through Corea or for
the five-foot road the Russians have built
In Manchuria, and which the Japanese
hope to find serviceable to them before the
summer Is much older.
Nothing seems to have been done by the
Russians at Tongampho, except the
erection of these buildings and the col
lection of these plies of timber. The
top of a steep hill Just back of the row
of residences was levelled off and a sort
of fort prepared there, but that was the
only defensive enterprise undertaken of
which any trace remains. The Japanese
now have a signal station there, with
various meteorological instruments to de
termine the velocity of the wind and the
amount of rainfall. The Russians evacu
ated the place early In April and the Japa
nese came In three weeks later. A great
transformation has been wrought by the
Coreans and the Chinese In the Interval.
Every floor had been ripped up from resi
dence, office, barracks and stable. Some of
the roofs had been taken away and the
wooden siding of the stable as far up as a
tall man can reach had been torn down
and carted off. leaving only the roof nnd
the upper part of the sides, supported
by tbe uprights. Every window In the
place had either been smashed to little
pieces or carried bodily away. Even the
sashes were taken out.
The Japanese have replaced them all by
tacking strips of thin cotton cloth to the
walls to cover the apertures. For floors the
Japanese have either levelled up tbe earth
or laid down rough boards. One building
had been fired by tbe natives and only the
walls were left. The others are all habit
able, with the temporary repairs made by
the Japanese, snd are now used for offices,
storehouses or barracks.- The old barrack
serves the purpose for which It was erected,
except that It shelters Japanese Instead of
Russian soldiers. The swamlll shed Is plied
high with bags of rice and barley and
boxes of meat and pickles. The little tram
track which helped the Russians to run
their timbers about from pile to pile now
carries Urucks losded with stores for the
Japarese army. The newcomers have dug
wells and put up acetylene lights, prepar
ing to be as comfortsbls as may be and to
stay a long time. Already there la talk that
under the new Japanese protectorate the
Coreans will cancel the Russian concession,
and no dividends are likely to be paid by
the tlmter company,
Baa, bat Not a Oee4 Port.
Tongampho has succeeded Chlnnampo al
ready as the base for the First army. It Is
Continued on Fifth Page)
PBLLOW SALE
01.60 Pillows for 95c Each
100 Pillows, full 3i lbs. in weight, filled with good live
feathers covered with different colored art denim; a pil
low that can be used for porch or bed use and is
cheap at $1.50, special for Saturday, each
Two cases ladies' fast bhick cotton hose, high spliced heel,
reinforced sole, elastic tops the quality always sold for
15c and 18c. Our price for Saturday, ift
only, pair -Illu
Clean-up of boys' Egyptian ribbed underwear, all styles of
undershirts and drawers, full regular made goods, values
up to 40c Saturday we sell them at, Ott
per garment faOG
EXTRA SPECIAL NECKWEAR SALE FOR SATURDAY
Collar tops, turnover collars, collar tabs and other wash
able summer neckwear. All this season's stylish ifg
colors, values as high as 45c, Saturday, each. ....... IUG
Big sale on washable yoke collars for Saturday. White
yoke collars with white, black, pink or blue stitching, the
latest thing this season for shirt waists or dress QCf-a,
waists. Values up to 50c, Saturday, each faWu
DRESSES FOR LITTLE BOYS AND GIRLS
REGULAR SKLLISd PRICE THREE HISDHED OP TOTEM
you
$1.00, f 1.25,
fl.50, $1.75,
$1.98, $2.25,
$2.50, $2.75,
$3.00, $3.50,
t no u nn
ALL
TO BE
SOLD
s5.oo uonday at
Photographic Developing and
Finishing.
Don't worry about the developing or the finishing of
your pictures. Bring your plates to our camera man. He
knows just how to bring out the best in photographic de
velopment and finish, and you will hardly see the cost
Everything In Photographic Accessories. Way
Down Prices.
r
"lUcClure'sls
Justly famous
for its short
stories."
ClmtUni.
Ltadtr,
MCCLUKE'5
MAGAZINE
for August contains a charm
ing new story of child life by
Frances Hodgson Burnett
author of "Little Lord Fauntlcroy." It is illustrated
with beautiful pictures in colors by Jessie Willcox
Smith, America's foremost artist of child life.
FICTION NUWBER
Henry Wallace Phillips i An
other Red Saunden " itory. The
Li Angtlts Exprm ttyt " there never
w.i anything breezier or funnier
than this swful hero." Sixtorn hu
morous drawings by A. B. Frost.
Utj R. S. Andrews t "A West
Point Regulation." Charming love
farce. Beautifully illustrated.
James Hopper "The Coming
of the Maestri." A powerful ro
mance by new writer. Picturet
by Thomas Fogarty.
Lincoln Steffens
who wrote "The Shame of the Cities," hat another article in the .
August McCiure'. on "The Enemies of the Republic." He calls
It " Illinois : A Triumph of Public Opinion."
PICTURES IN COLORS
I. cMs asapy. 11.00 a vf.
Qt McClurc't Irom your nw
dcsltr. any McClurs f art or Ihs
The Above and all other leading magazines will be found on the
news counters at
Matthews, 122 South 15th Street
'Phone
Bee Want Ads
95c
ARE
"The high
tide mark in
periodical lit
arature."
Bctttn
O. Henry i "A Tempered Wind in
Wall Street. " G.y, l.ughable, witty
snd wise. The best story by this
new humorist.
Alice Brown t "A Winter's
Courtship." The highest type of
the real wholesome American love
story. Illustrated.
Samuel - HopKlne Adams t
"King Coal." An eiciting story
of . crow, . panther, snd . baby.
Eight pictures in colors by Reginald
Birch.
pubilihtrs. Tht B S McClurs
C'.mpiny 4-l'l Katt Twlr
Thud Btftit. Nw York. N. Y.
3m.
Produce Resuts
69c
s