f JTT ...T,.- -,p THE OMAHA RTTXDAY BEE: "APRIL 12. 1P0S. ATM END OF THE RAINBOW Pic(ureiqne Features of Gold field as Seen at Close Rane. LURE OF THE YELLOW METAL ooooo2 It". t EVERY DOLLAR paid for a Kuppcnheitner garment, whatever its price, means the greatest clothes-value that dollar can buy. But every dollar you pay for a Kuppenheiiner Suit or Overcoat above a certain point, means multiplied value. To be clear: You can buy our Clothes for les than $20 or $25 and get good solid worth. 1 But we believe that you ought to pay at least $2.5. Not because the lower-priced garments are unworthy, but because the $25 will purchase so much more worth and wear than the difference in dollars represents. You'll find the clothier who has Kuppenheimer clothes a better-than-ordinary merchant. THE HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER CHICAGO ' NEW CLOTHING FIRM STARTS KfrtT-Swanson Company Leases Part ' of Webster-Sunderland Building;. BEADY FOR BUSINESS NEXT FALL Jean Snanson Organises at Strong; JLecal Company to Open Kcw ' f - Stare l the Hetall . Oiatrtat. . 'The Klng-Swanson company, a newly Organised clothing company, has leased the first floor of the Webster-Sunderland building- at Sixteenth and Howard streets and will refurnish the store at once and stock It with a. new and complete stock of men's and boys' clothing;. I ' Articles of incorporation have been filed ior ine company authorizing a capital stock of $150,000. John 'Swanson, formerly of the Berg". Swanson Clothing: company, and his associates, appear aa Incorporators. Associated with Mr. Samson as Incor porators are F. 8. King- of the firm of KJng-Oraham comrAny, manufacturers and Jobbers of men's furnishings and work clothing, Omaha and New York; A. O. llonson of Osceola, Neb., one of the most prominent merchants, bankers and capital ists .of central Nebraska; F. B. Howell of tha well .known law firm of Jefferls & Howell, 'and Al Swanson of Sioux City, formerly of Omsha, together with several thera whose names Mr. Swanson does not care to make known at present. Mr. Swan son announces that plans will be made at onto with the object In view of opening In the fall the most msgnlflcently furnished and conveniently equipped store devoted to the handling of popular priced garments for men, boys and children between Chi cago and San Francisco, and that the busi ness will be conducted tinder the firm same of King-Swanaon company. t During the past year Mr. Swanson has traveled extensively, making a close study . business conditions and methods, and In . The Knock-out Blow. The blow which knocked, out Corbett rss a revelation to the prize fighters. I'rom the earliest dsys of the ring the knock-out blow was aimed for the jaw, . the, temple or the jugular vein.' Stomach punches were thrown in to worry and weary the tighter, but If a scientific man lad told one of the old fighters that the most vulnerable spot was the region of the stomach, he'd have laughed at him for an Ignoramus. Dr. Pierce is bringing bone to the public a parallel fact; thai thi tVmacVls the most vulnerable organ out of Vhe pre ring as well as In it. Wa protect bur haH, throats, feet and lung, but t&oMKibKVue are utterly Indifferr nt to, until diseaAflnds the solar plexus and knocks usoutT Make vonr stomach. i n !. 1 1 1 "Un1 ,Ml strong hv tho uvrft, faLBicgC ''d!-riewjy;overyr v mica YyvSgiypnyjBi aTTe Mt. "Imlden Mixiical Discovery sure -weak stomach," Indigestion, or Jyspepsla, torpid liver, bad, thin and Im pure blood and other diseases of the or- . fans of digestion and nutrition. . j The "Golden Medical Discovery " has a pecific curativfc effect upon all mucous surface and hence cures catarrh, nu scatter where located or what stage it way Lave reached. In Nasal Catarrh It Is weJl to cleanse the passages wtth Dr. ISage's Catarrh ..Remedy fluid while using the "Discovery as a constitutional rem edy. H'hy the "Golden Modical Discov ery cures catarrhal diseasos, as of the ' stomach, bowels, bladder and other pelvis organs will be plain to you if you will read a booklet of extracts from the writ-. - lugs of eminent medical authorities, en dorsing lis iu?rrdienU aod explaining thu turative propertl. It Is mailed Srt on request. Address Dr. R.V. Pierce, Wuffalo, N. Y. This booklet gives all the tarred I erts entering luto Dr. Pierce's medicine from which It will be seen that they contain, not a drop of alcohol, pure, Viple-refinrd glycerine Doing ued I us mad. . Dr. Pierce's great thousand-page Illus trated Common tvinse Medical Adviser will tie teal free, paper-hound, for 21 one vint stamps, or cloth bound for 31 stamps, auidnu lit. fierce as above. Mir NEW YORK a few Instances seriously considered locat ing In other cities, but finally came to the conclusion that no other city from the Atlantic to the laciflc presented such possibilities for a modern, up-to-date, well organized and well conducted clothing busi ness as docs Omaha. The first floor of the Webster-Ssuderland building Is one of the most desirable store rooms In the city. It was formerly occu pied by O Donahoe Redmond. Normile company, a dry goods and furnishing house. The new clothing firm will have a good start from the first, owing to the wide acquaintance- of - Mr. Swanson with the trade In Omaha and over eaetern Nebraska. ' Another lease which was closed Saturday was that of Sunderland Brothera Coal Com pany, which has taken a ten-year lease oi a part of the Conservative bank building. The space leased includes the entire lower floor snd also that psrt of the main bank ing floor back of the bank, a total of over 5,800 square feet of floor space. The cost of alterations Is said to be not over 6,000. Fallarea Are Worth Studying-. "I have often thought," remarked an old commercial man, "that too much attention is given to successes and not sufficient to failures. "1 do not mean that we ought to brood over our failures, or exhibit ihem for the inspection of others, hut 'It certainly seems to iiih that If a man studies the cauea why lie or olher men have failed In anything they set out to do, many a useful lesson can be learned. "Most successful men are willing- to give explanations of their success In life, few If any of them are ever tempted to dwell upon the little slips and blunders that they, like the rest of the world, must have made on the road to success. Yet such a record would be invaluable to young aspirants. "It would not only teach them how to avoid failures, but would console them by showing how others failed before them, for the career of successful men has seldom been an unbroken succession of triumphs." Casseli's Magaslne. 1 .1. ., . BallalnaT Permits. Mike Duglnskl, Twenty-sixth and Kim streets, frame dwelling. SMO: J. A. Inahan Forty-fourth and Fort streets, frame dwell ing. 1600; Charles Ctruenlg, T went v. fourth street and Ames avenue, brick 'stsbles ll.lsjo; Henry Kreyborg. Twenty-seventh street and Dewey avenue, frame dwelling. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS. A. H. I.ee has gone to Rapid City. S. D.. to attend the live stock convention at that place. Mr. and Mrs. I- Williams of Columbus and Owen Meredith of O Ketll are at the 81 hilts. P. N. Stretslnger of Uolhenberg, Mr. snd Mrs. . Ward. H. H. 8chnelder of Sioux City are at the Henahaw. Mr. and Mrs. 1). if. Touxaltn. former Ne braskans, but now of Charleston. S. C. are Omaha visitors, guests at the Millard. J. H. McCarna of South Bend. J. B. Dun phy of Duluth, J. E. O'Brien of Tork and C. E. Smith of Beatrice are at tha Her Grand. William Waterman of Hay Springs, H. C. Rountree of Lincoln, C. U. Walter of Den ver and Fulton Jack of Beatrice are at the Murray. Miss Blanche Ramlelle of Hot Springs. A. B. Donaldson of Mt-rna. H. A. Kines. H. f. Bailey of Lincoln and J. K. Elderkin of Denver are at the Millard. A. K. Waltera and Kay Wood, prominent identified with the I'nion Stock yards In terests of Chicago and Souih Omaha, are In Omaha, guests at the faxton. Major and Mrs. Charles H. Noves and family will leave Monday for San An tonio. Tex., where Major Novea will re join his old regiment., the Nliuh infantry, after four years' absence on general ataff duty. Charles 8. Elgulter is confined to his apartments at Hie Merriam wilh a Sprained ankle .sustained In alighting from the train at the Burltntn.n deput 'lunula v when he was returning from Lincoln, where he ap peared beloia the supreme court. K. J. Coaies of Grand Island. R. C. Healy of Fremont, H. E. Crowley of Fort Worth. Dr. C. A. Koner, Uorge Baker. Dr. J. Lukens uf Tekamah. C. W. Shannon of Chadron. A. Uustafson of Iloldrege and 8. M. Curtis of York are at the Merchants. Lieutenant O. R. Mondlck and Harry J. Weeks of this year's graduating class of the West Point Military academy, are guests at the Schllts hotel. Lieutenant Weeks Is a noted athlete, bring a member of the All American foot ball team, and has been a participant in the Olympic games that won such successful renown at the recent Inter national tournaments in Athens, Greece. Rsr. If. C. Herring, former paMor of the First Congregational church of Omaha, but now general secretary of the Board or Home missions of the Congregational church, with headquarters in New York. Is an Omaha visitor for a few days. "I am here merely on a little mijuinni.i, w.ri this section," said Dr. Herring, "and shail remain but a day or two." BOSTON THIRTY HORSES DIE IN FIRE Dash Back Into Flames When Men Try to Rescue Them. LIVEKY BARN COMPLETE ,L0SS Early in the Morning; Blase Starts in South Omaha. Strnctare and it Is Burned to the Grsnnd. Thirty horses were burned to death In the livery barn of L. W. Rushing, Twenty fourth snd N streets. South Omaha, which with the Rushing coal yards, was destroyed by fire at a loss of from $15,000 to 20,000 early Saturday morning. Mr. Rushing car ried only about $6,000 Insurance and some of his customers who lost horses and rigs had insurance. The fire burned with fierce persistency and the family living over the barn had difficulty in escaping with their lives. In addition to the horses, a new automobile, which coat Mr. Rushing 11,300. was de stroyed. The loss of other vehicles and harnoss kept In the livery barn by physi cians for the most part was absolute. The origin of the fire Is not known, but is thought to have been from spontaneous combustion or slacking of coal. It was dis covered by Captain J. C. Trouton of the police force about 1:16 a. m.. By the time the firemen reached the barn the flames had gained a great headway. This, coupled with the fact that the building was frame, and burned readily, made the task of resls tence an. Impossible one. In the center of the barn were hay and coal to feed the flames. The scene of frightened horses dashing into the raging flames was a pitiful na. Martin Rethart. whose cottage to tha north of the barn was destroyed, had a team of horses In the barn which he rescued and he and other men tried to lead the rest of the horses out, bnt It was a vain effort. A few of the horses were driven out, but the majority tit her remained at their stalls or dashed back Into the mws of fire when led to the door. A small back door was opened and an attempt made to force the horses out there, but a number of them piled up against the door and died. PLEA FOR THEJIGHT-HOUR DAY Raymond Robins Addresses the Labor Mass Meeting; at Andltorlnm. About 1.500 people assembled at the Auditorium Friday evening to hear Ray mond Roblna ,of Chicago address the mass meeting of the fifth night of the labor revival league. Of this number fully one-fourth were women. Mr. Rob Ins spoke in advocacy of the eight-hour day for the workingman and dealt with the question from an economic and moral point of view. Departing somewhat from his subject, the speaker advocated that people of every nationality should be lu- i vlted to the citlsenshlp of this country. and under proper conditions he predicted that a civilization that would last for all time would be the result, as there u 1.0 limit to genius and power excVpt the limit of opportunity. Prior to the opening of the meeting by Chairman L. J. Qulnby a delegation from the Dahlman Democracy, headed by Mayor Jim, marched Into the hall and took acuta near the stage. Julius Meyer of the Mu sh tans' union of Omaha Introduced Ow;n Miller, national secretary of the American Federation ot Musicians, who spoke on the accomplishments of organised as com pared lo unorganised labor, dealing par ticularly with tha Musicians' union, which has grown from twenty-four local unions te 4 80 locale within a few years. Following the address of the evening by Mr. Robin a number of interesting moving pictures were shown. Illustrating the stone cutting industry in Sweden and pottery manufacture In Japan. The chairman announced the program for the labor revival meetlngiext week and on next Friday night the speaker at the Auditorium will be Miss Marguerite Haley, of Chicago, Orchestral musto and illustrated songa completed the program. Fandameninl ' Passions of Men and Women Revealed In the Wild Atmosphere of the Fnmons a Nevada Camp. Ooldfleid. Nevada, dlffera from the his tory of past mining camps only in the larger Inrush of fortune-seekers. In all other essentials It Is a repetition of the cenes and experiences of the two Virginia Cities, Last Chance Clulch, lsdvllle, Creede Snd Cripple Creek. A mrrespondent or the St. louls Republic draws typical pictures of Uoldrield as seen at the open ing of the year, from which the following specimens are taken: Like all Gaul, the population of Golrtfleld Is divided Into three parts the he-sold-the-Mohawk-for-.tn division, the Hc-Was-a-MIlllnnalre-a-Tear-Ago club and the he'li-be-worth-millions- when-work-reopens con tingent. What little of the population docs not belong to one of the foregoing three grand divisions consists of some wage earning miners who can discover a pro text to strike oftener than a prospector can find a color In a pan; saloon keepers, so numerous that no one has ever taken the time to count them;' a sprinkling of merchants, who sell a 15-cent veil for $1 because of ' "freight charges," and some camp' followers looking for the golden crumbs by methods peculiar to the alkali country. These elements compose the most re-. markHblej mining camp known to history. It may be that It will prove the most re markable In point of production, hut to do that it will have to beat the I'iSfl.OOO.OOO mark set by the Comstock. and compared with that Uoldfleld production so far Is a white chip. It may prove the most remark able In point of permanence, but Uoldfleld In age Is in Its swaddling clothes. It may be the most remarkable In the number of Its overnight millionaires, but to prove It Ooldfleid will have to show more real and leaa stsge money. Not in these points, but in Its uncivilised civili sation. Its complexity of frontier life and strict modernity Is Ooldfleid in a class by Itself In the history metalliferous min ing -csmps. Goldfleld has a telephone system, but there Is no directory, because addresses change so fsst that It does not pay to print one. In its leading hotel you can get about any delicacy obtainable on Broad way, excellently cooked and scrVed In a carpeted dining room equipped with cus pidors. You. are requested to order wines by number, because most of the men who buy them don't know the names. Finn? II a ffles In Camp. The women wear FluTfy Ruffles hats and corduroy skirts. Y'our old-time mining camp gambler is there by hundreds, but the faro, craps and roulette dealers work under union labor rules, eight-hour shifts at l an hour. There are as many "rath skellers" as restaurants and more automo biles than mule teams. There Is not a two- story building on Broadway and the Flat iron building, Is a one-story frame saloon. The gun men have discarded the com panionable 4 Colts of the early day for the modern, but more effective, automatic. "Old Jim" Butler prospects In an imported automobile aiid mends a punctured tire with the hldt of a steer which he drops for the occaVlon with his revolver and then tosses the owner twice the value of the steer in gold. The water-wagon is a stern reality, resi dents paying 2H cents a gallon for Its con tents to bathe In. but consider water too expensive to drink. Surely the old and new,' the effete and primitive never wpre hashed together In such a bewildering mix ture as represents Goldfleld. Grab "takers to Millionaires. As nearly as can be determined the first capitalist to enter the Goldfield game was George Nixon, now United States senator from Nevada, who is said by his friends to have had about 20n,O0O when he became Interested In the new camp. The character of the ore deposits was audi as to give the poor man his chsnce. Streaks of fabulous rlchnesa-'were found near the sur face, the Combination mine having pro duced its purchase price. $75,000, before It was 100 feet deep. Few of the men making the original loca tions had money enough to tide them ovor the time required for even such ertsy pro duction as this. The result was numerous sales for ridiculously small prices. A few of the men who grub staked prospectors have shared in the later rewards, but their number la comparatively small. Among this number la George W'lngtield, who Is supposed to own share for share with Nixon In the tatter's mining interests. Wlngfleld had been a gambler with varying success at Wlnnemucca. Nev., and there had knlwn Nixon. The latter from a tele graph operator along the line of the South ern Pacific had developed Into a banker. When Jim Butler uncovered to the mining world the mineral possibilities of Tonopah. Wlngfleld decided to open a gambling house In the new camp and Nixon slaked him. From the first Wlngfleld prospered In Tonopah, and was one of the seven who grub staked the discoverers of the mines now rated aa the beet In Goldfleld. He aoon turned the Tonopah gambling house over to a manager and went to Goldfleld, took up claims on his own account, bought in terest In others and soon became one of the most Important factors in the Goldfield situation. Within two years of the time Wlngfleld had gone to Tonopah to open a gambling house on Nixon's stake the partners were rated aa mult l-mllllona ires. There were a few others whose meteoric careers from grub stakers to millionaire followed about the same general course, but for the most part the men who made Goldfield In the first Instance were poor. The place burned with fever of gold ai probably no other camp ever had. Sane men from the ordinary centers of business breathed the air a day and became para noia cs. As la the "days of old, the days of gold, the days of '49." men who, before their arrival, would have considered $10,000 a fortune, kicked such opportunities out of their path In their frensled i.aate for a million. Nobody talked In leas than seven figures. Whereas previous camps had had but one atrong Inspiration to madness the chance of actually striking good mines Goldfield had two, the actual gold dis coveries and the frensy of speculation that was sweeping over the entire country when Goldfield began to attract attention. While the prospectors and the practical mining men came In unprecedented numbers the stock gamblers, men who never had any Intention of trying to acquire or develop any mine other than the vast and appar ently bottomless "sucker" mine of the east. The proportion of legitimate mining op erations to flim-flam pure and alrnple- was not greater than about one In twenty. There were come-ona by the millions gorged with money, and there waa an army of "brokers" In, Goldfield perfectly capable of I caring for them. Fleecing; the East. A mining Jtodt exchange as opened and Instantly waa turned Into a gambling house for play In storks. So heavy was this play that the overflow went Into Main street and formed a "curb"-market, - Trite" east ? GRAND Mondivy At the Union Outfitting Co. SOUVENIRS IVIUSIC FLOWERS A HWDSOME SOl'VEMR Will sale all next solid oak dresser. with I'rencli bevel plate mirrors, three larae easy sliding drawers, best of cotv et ruction, SI 2 . r. 0 vnluv-. opening g25 nale "price. . Iron Beds We are proud of our Iron bed values aa they are the best In the city and prlcew are away down. For opening week wo offer you a sub- Htantiat iron bed, enameled In a high grade enamel: regular $3.50 values, opening sale price 225 We Make the Terms To Suit You 1s became' Infected and orders poured Into Ooldfleid at such a rate that In many ln stancea brokers had to close their places of business for days to catch up. School girls worked before and after school at $1 an hour folding and addressing advertising matter for the east. Nobody talked or dreamed anything but stocks. Merchants who had occasion to pass the exchange or curbwould stop long enough to make $J0O or $;:oo. Women caught the fever and played boldly. The boy who sold you the dally paper and the one who blacked your shoes were stock speculators. One nowsboy made $12,000 in a few weeks and went away to school. The pthers are still selling papers and blacking boots. It must be borne in mind that these con ditions were the result of the inflow of eastern money In deep and wide golden rivers. Printing presses were run day and night In the effort to keep up with the de mand for stock certificates. They were shipped out in bales In exchange for the money of the east. All that was neces sary to sell stock was to give It the stump of the Ooldfleid district, and that magical name did the rem. In every direction for miles from the center of the legitimate mineral belt all OSWS Parlor Stills I 1 lleacease II IlbOdVId RH the suits are easily worth $2i. 00. but for the f I t I J W Special i week. ave Attended Our and Found Thousands more should many kinds of good goods si -e iui utAi vuiinuuao, ALL DAMAGED GOODS MUST BE SOLD! and we propose to let our patrons profit by this SALE CHANCE of which wo have taken every legitimate advantage possible to minimize our loss. It will do vou good to see our values and SEE THEM GO. UMBRELLAS Fine carved ivory, gold ajad silver mounted, adjustable handles, from $5.00 to $75.00, now selling- at $2.50 to $25.00. Most exquisite designs and at tractive prices you ever saw. STERLING TOILET AND MANICURE SETS Of all combinations and number of pieces, 50 to 75 sets of them left, from $5.00 to $75.00, at just half price. These rare bargains cannot last -very long we want toclose-them all ouferteht auick and get ready for our new stock. ofranifrii I HI H J1VI0 u B SPRING OPENING? Be Given lo All Callers at 'THE STORE THAT'S SQUARE All OVER" Special sale all thU week' In our upholstered goods depart ment. As a special we offer you a handsome three piece parlor utt with frames "of mahogany finish, very taste, fully carved and upholstered over soft and guaranteed springs, the upholstering is Imported velours of a fancy fltrure. This Is an extra special offer, as the suits are easily worth $2i.O0. but for the opening sale we offer them at the low price of 3 Ream Complete Outfits QKQ EH Terms $6 Cash; $4 Minthly M"U.UU The Biggest snd Best Three-Room Outfit Offer in the City A Handsome Present Given With Every Sale On a $10 sale a handsome framed ftlcture. On a $25 sale a handsome parlnr table. On a $f0 sale- a beautiful rocker. On a $75 sale an elegant Morris chair. On a $100 sale an upholstered couch. A FEW SPECIALS FOR OPEN1X1 WEEK. (5.00 Sanitary Couches, guaranteed special $3.75 11.25 Dining; Room Chairs, wood Beat, special , yj) $3.00 Parlor Tables, highly polished. special 81.59 $1.50 Kitchen Tables, white top, special $1.10 $7.60 Kitchen Safes, golden finish. special XKOX rOM TIE BED AMD OOX.D UIOX. - jjii m. the ground was taken up, and each claim called a mine. The belief was carefully nourished In the east that the ore In the Ooldfleid district lay In one great hori zontal body, and that all that was neces sary to develop a mine was to sink a shaft from 150 to 200 feet. Elements sf Fraad. The Important question was not where a mine might reasonably be expected to be found, but where a pioce of land could be located close enough to use the name of Goldfleld. Desert and mountain were cap italized rrgardlepa of mine prospects, and hundreds of locations were floated on which there was and is no more prospect of gold being found than there Is of locating a sec ond Florence mine in Herald Sauare. But this was not the greatest element of fraud that attached to the wildcat operations of the boom days in the new camp. Mark Twain on Prohibition. "Crossing the Atlantic with Mark Twain last summer," said a Woman's Christian Temperance union woman. "I aked his opinion of the prohibition law. His reply was very characteristic, very humorous. " 'I sm a friend of temperance, and want it to succeed,' he said, 'hut I don't think prohibition is practical. The Germans, vou see, prevent It. lxok at them. I am so'rrv to learn that they have Just Invented a $4.75 y pi ion come for we are offering rare and astonishing val that there is something here for every one. Many A CHANCE YOU WON'T GET OFTEN, IF EVER AGAIN! EBONYHundreds of pieces and sets for men, women and children, from 10c a piece npi CLOCKS Gold, bronze, copper and wood of every kind, for home, office and travel ing1 purposes, from $1.00 to $100.00, aV half price DON'T OVERLOOK IT I I I' U 0 & Chiffoniers A remarknhln value. y.,n will have to admit. It I; built of solid oak ami h rivi large, roomy dnnv.-i -The construct Inn i of (;.,. very best, ami tr t Ifihed In a beautiful t;o,lr-.. oak, come ami cet nO, one. Opening sale l-rJ price Extension Tables Be sure and see our biff line r.f exten sion tables, the biKKCRt anil bent values in the i llv. T week we offer you a large IJ-tnclt In a beautiful golden oak and IX- tends to a feet. A regular $8.00 value, special sale price 495 VAII Goods Delivered in Plain Unlettered Wagons method of making brandy out of stiwdur!. Now what chance will prohibition hv.- when a man can take a rip saw snrt c . out and get drunk with a fence rail? VpI Is the good of prohibition if a man Is :.- to make brandy smashes out of the shHir I- on his roof, or if ho can get d llritim lu mens by drinking tho legs off the kltrheri chairs?' " Serious Lacerations and wounds are healed without da user of blood poisoning by Bucklen's Arnica Halve, the healing, wonder. 2ic. For silo Beaton Drug Co. What 'a tha I'sef An old darky in Alabama called across the fence to his neighbor's son, who goes to school at the Atlanta university: "Look hyar, boy, you goes to school, don't yer?" "Ves, sir," replied the boy. "Ueuln" eddycashun, ain't yer?" "Yes, sir." "larnlir 'rlthmetlc and figgerin' on a slate, eh?" "Yes, sir." "Well, It don't take two whole days to make an hour, do it?' "Why, no," exclaimed the bov. 'You was gotn' to bring that hatchet back in an hour, wasn't yer? And It's been two whole dsys since you borrowed It' JeOW. at." t,,e of yUT udycashun ?U. f, ,to r,,1 whole year an' dn ,v.t!"uho.w 11 ,ak to '"teh bach dat hatchet ?"-Phiiadelphia Ledger. i sigs as. JiyiS.p l1 reat Fire Sale sTs n b& iXCJBssBOi ucs m so. folks aro p(fj The Busy Jewelers Wcstf 20 Douglas St. i