2 A THE OMAHA 8UNDAY F.EK: JANUARY -SI, 1015. FOUR MILLIONS SOUGHT IN BILLS Total of Appropriation Measure! So Tar Introduced Reacfaei-Thii riyure. BIG BULS A HE KOT YET IN (Krom a Staff Corrponlnt.) IJNOOI-N. Neb., Jan. . pclnl. Appropriation Mil Introduced In the house so far total M.IM.H and the "big four" th maintenance, salaries, claims and derv-ltnclca meaatir r yet to come, torrthr with what special apprw prlatlna bill arc Introduced durna; the two Irgl.tlatlvc .days romajnln for therrj. There are forty daya tor tha general ap propriation bill. . . . Total appropriation two yoara aco racbrd the utji of U,115.a, having been cut to thta flirore from a total of pro poaed exicndlturea amounting to about IIA.0QD.00O. . At the present It would aeern that the tkftTtncVat ar In a fair war to raual their last session's record. rmocratlc whifl horaca, however, are rushing to the firing line with hatchets out and rradv for business and they claim that ThD thri'.grt through, with. sum.o( the propeovt Appropriations there won't he enough left of them to even make soup of. Ift t Measures. Th money bills thus far sent up are as follows. 11. It. 11, Rein her- Women' r- foruuttvry I H. ft. Ji, Fries Survsy land at In- KtUlHhTlS .......... JI. K. z.1. Hotfmelelar Medical ixl!'ce tio.'i'Hsl II. 1U 45, Jiau-s Htat printing pUul H. it. Tlbbet Hegular unlrer- sit levy II li W, Mockett Jlcllef of the fcllnd II. H. uS. Jeary ltelmburse Iaiv- caxtcr county .' If. R. 67, Matteson-Unlverstly. eitanston In ' II. It. Mt, Morten l.liilativ ex- peusra J I. It. (II. Norton l;lalativ salaries 11. K. 1. Moreley lUtltef of Mrs. J5,10 ' J.800 1W.O0O w.m t.v iuu C5,4tO 20,001) 110,000 10,000 1 4,000 mono : 150 liS,0M 75,000 7B,ie w.000 nooo 0,000 . , ' aoft.ooo jv l. i.vta II. H. 142 UnydiT SWT at Ilast InK hospital .....i... II. IU Is), Tibbota-Tarrigatlon. sys tem II It. 164, Kbermun-Keltet of Joe Rife '. v IT. 11. 163, Cronln Mat aid brldg4 lovy 11. If 170, Orr Van UeusenRtat printing plant II. It. 171, Five Member Regular normal school levy .... II. rt. 1S1. AloHelwy Kxpense of Vhkeburg veterans II. It. 12. Aloseley Monument to John M. Thuyer If. It. IS!, Naylor-Palmer Hog I firn at Hlale fair II. H. lf NaykrJ-iitireHing lie ' uintaa ...,'..,.; ....... II. It l!, Suilth Wtate reforma tory .....t.i ' II. It. 1M. MearaaProloct Water) rlph'ts . II. H 192. Hs-llliel of fcarpy county II. It V. Dalbcv ileliel of lone1 a.ooo 8.01 Story , ,j SI1 H. R. SOI. TUtes irrigation ex periment ; isfiot II. It, 2Xi. Chambrr JJpif atat-. carHtol ' tSO.IM 11. n. ai, MojasifynHslief f ,Brt, .:. - Lmtroe .. 8,(110 H. It. Z. la Hsunty Improve ments at Curtis J W.0M If. It. J4 AnderMn Belief of Castile lvr, ,...M..t.:t..:...i. I 3i II. It IG4, Hornby-Fish breedln . print's ih..'i.i.iiu..i. - fQ.sot II. M. V. ItcynoJds Industrta!' v . eoniiplssl"" ;.... I WW 11. It TlheU Msrklo lnv-t 4 , tnlcrant trntl . .'. . 'I. II. li.,310, li'psk-rish .and game KX TottJs j.i;... iun, 1 MISS M'ADOO STARTS FOR ' FRANpED,6UR$!NQ NEW TOIVC Jan., SO.-jimonf tha pa seBger cn the , liner lisitnuv whloh ailed yesterday, was Miss Nona McAdoo., daughter of 'Pex-rctary of the Treanury llcAdoo. Mips MeAd.?o. Prn.ta engage in Ited Cros worl'in Prane. th will have wit a h cloee friend, MU Cthsr In nriiion. of WashUigUfOI Colonel V. M. liouHe. on of President Wileon'i close political advisers, , and Mr. House of thta city, will chaperon the youn women. Laol Fnoineer u 16 1 tiave been thinking that word from me would benefit those who may he uX ,f dink a 1 was before I began taking your Hwamp-Itoot, the great kidney, liver iind bladder remedy. I ant a locomotive engineer, employed on : th Tyrone 4c nearfieid Branch of itlie Pennsylvania. lUllroad. Three year ago I mi amict-i-d with kidney end bladder trouble eo Wd that I wit compelled to lay off duty frotn my engine end was in th care of 1o doctors. However tltetr inedirjn dU r.ot benefit me. One day," I tetlo4 your advertisement, to send name and ed itress for a sample bottle of 'Swamp-Hoot M this time my trouble had reached' a herimie stese. I Bent for th SSmpiO ht tle pud In three dxys recvlved a small bottle of Swamp-Root, which I took ac--rording 'o directions, and by the tune 1 had taken the content. I could pas watef more freely. I wu en'ploased with my r''Ir',cnt that I sent my wife to the drug storo of W. II. 2IfUck. "Phillips.' buru, l'a.. and secured a one-collar bot tle. I continued taking '!. Kilmer's bwsmp-Iloot until I was "entirely cured. ow jd iicnever I feel aey paia or eoreaess . ulli'f Ulng expened to had watbr or (hard work, 1 take a' (l"e or two t K U;p-IUot. X cannot retomniend this remedy toe tilfc-tJn, especially to brctttcr eiiVlnoers who are more or less troubled lin their kidneys (more thaa any other cluns ot mea ) . - Tours truly. - . T. J. VAH rvrOTOC. Lju l!ncoln Ave.. , Tyrone, Pa. blate of Pennsylvania ( tc . County ot bluir f Pel squally appeared before me, a No tary lul'lic. T. J. Vaa Sooyoc, who telng duly sworn, doth depose and asy that th foregoing BtnU-ioent is true, bworn a-od ub.ribod tu before rue this 15th day uf July. A. D, Vx if. B. CALDliW'OOD. r.'otarr Public Lttr t Dr. X Haiti a Co, Treve Ukst (mtop lol VYU1 B In ft. id ten certs to Vr. . Kilmer at Co., !'li.l.uiUu. K. T., for a, eampl sl bot t It ill convlne anyone. VU will aisu reo;tvea bovkUt of valuable Infor xiuticn, t'lllug about the kidney and biaJaer.. s'h-r wriitng. be sre aiul iiicMtun th Cnjiat.a tr'unday Bee. Regu lar f'.'. ty-cciit end ouv-l"ilar ie butt'e fur anl at all drug aiore. fieicii Trades Federation Government Take lOVDON. Jsn. .-Th Oeneral rlc ra tion of Trade unions, la a deoiiment Is sued today regartlr the! high prloe of food In the Unfted 'Kingdom, reooramends cMefly tht the. British goVtrnrnent take ovsr all wheat auppllet, as hasten done by Germany. "The Urltlh farmer." the document reada, "wouia suffer no real' hardship or loss If the goTemment oomrtvanSeered the whole home grown and unmarketed wheat at 42 shilling (flO.yn a quarter,' and Im mediate action on these line would tend to moderate prices." . .. ; . . ' A committee of the Federation of Trades unions. In, a manifesto gfvsn out today regarding the high price of food, charge thi government with failure to PROPOSE NEW SEED BUREAU Representative Reiner Will Intro duce It Into the Honnie Thi Week." ' ,t FOOD COMMISSION . ACTS NOW (Prom a 6Uff Correspondent.) WNCOLN, Jan. 34. (Special.) On top of all the ether commission, bureau and special department which the atat of Nebraska new has attached to It gov ernment, it 1 proposed to create a new one which ahaU take oner a of seed analyses and enforce the lew against sell ing adulterated seeds. This will be provided for In a bill drawn up by Prof. Hopt of the state agricultural college, which Representative Belsner will Introduce the coming .week.-' The bill create the offloe of seed commissioner, appointive by the Board of University Regent. It appropriate H,000 from the state general fund to carry on the work of the bureau, but doe not specify what salary the sired commissioner shall draw, There I already a pur seed law on the statute books, whose enforcement is In the hand of the Food, Drug, Dairy and CHI commission. That commission main' tain a special seed bureau for testing the purity and the germinating, qualities of seeds. The bill about to be Introduced contain no Important features which are not already covered, the only material difference betrrg a to who shall adminic les the law. Standard of purity and germination to be required of commercial seed are fixed by the act, and fine ranging from fio to $500 are provided f or violation ' Some Senators Haven't Single Bill in Grist y ' (From a 8taff Correspondent) 13MC0LN, Jan. Hpeel!.)-Pentor tooathett, Henry, Pillar and Weeener haVo' more than dobe their share toward keeping down the amount of grist In the legislative mUL So far, and eighteen days of the twenty In which bill may be Introduced have elapsed, they ran plead "not 'f uflty" to the Introduction of a smgle ineaaure. ' '. ' t '! ft Whether they will iVialnUW their- t- markable ehowlng during 1 the next two legislative days I a i matter thai la locked entirely wlfhlh - ' respective conscience of thee attemeni Ihemselve. ' 4voht of Wayne oine 1 next on the honor'roU, avlng Introduced eut en hill, Buhrman, Bobertson. Hbenoer and Wink have Introduced but 'two- ecnh! Gates, noagland, Mattee. Wilson ef Frontier and Wllaon of Dodge have tr.row only three each Into the logtslatlv hopper. - Brofckley, Krumbaoh and ' Marshall answer' to four apiece. 'The rest range all the way up to Senator ' Bee!, 1 who alt at the top with thirteen1 hill andsr hi wing. . . . , The senate ha passed fourteen hill and ha Indefinitely - postponed seven, making It one out of three that- has ao far falvln by th wayside. The -total Dumber of bill Introduced la J.74. NEW SCHOOL CODE MAKES MOST VOLUMINOUS, POCUMEN'T v (From a Staff Correspondent. ) , , I4NCOlJ, Jan. M. tSpeclaU-iAnyons so doslting may secure a copy of the volmnjnoue school commission code, bill by forwarding th Deeesaary postage, 7 cents, to toe clerk of the house. The hill. wliIJi 4 Just, off tha presses. Is the largest en record.. Thore are II pa o( It and It weigh thirteen ounces. fiothool superintendonl gad ' school board n larg number ar aendtng for th bll as It vitally, atfecU their In terest. Tha hill comprlaea a complete revision et,U school law and several new Idea of ao .amendatory aatur ad vanood by th conualssloo. Th strictly nsw proposition are embodied In separata law, so that they may Und and fall 00 ttaoir own rcspecuv msrits, TREASURER HAIL PROPOSES ( ; ;T0 BUY IN WARRANTS (From fitXt Correspondent. ) TJNCOLN. Jan. J0.-tfSpecfal.)-J5tate Treasurer Ifall ha drafted a hill that will enable' bun to withdraw at any time at least 00 per rent 'of the atats'a money on deposit with hanks for th purpoee of taking tip stats and totinty warrant and to carry the latter a caxh. The bill will be Introduced In the hot is Tuesday or Wednesday hy Da foe of Johnson. TUa state treasurer eeee ao reason why the atat should pay heavy Intoieat on warrants when It ha th money with which to pay them. Th law a It I at present doe pot specifi cally permit ef withdrawing money on deposit for this purees. lira Oeere Cweety. BEATRICE. Neb.. Jan. 3a-(r)iecial.) At the annual meeting, ef the Odell Termer' Elevator meeting. dividend of per eeot was declared. T. W. Htano schek was elected president, and J. II. tfouiisTi treasurer. Tbs directors are: UTank Berish, Frank Beraa and Frank tiuUla. Mrs. tsar-ali K. Parish, an old resMent of th Cortland vicinity, died Friday at a local hospital, aged i years' old. Sua Is survived by three children. C. W. Uarvsy ha sold bl Interest ia th Bank of 1ymouth to Henry llelliger and C K. . NlapeL. Mr. Ilelllger bus been elected president and Mr. Nts pel., vice president, of the Institution. William Lueder and Mfra Anna Hereto, to well known, young people ot the tlatocla vicinity, were married yester day at the horn of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mr. John liereth at 'Clstouta. After ' a " brief wedding trip. - they m make their bume on a term near Clatoula. Asks British Over Food Supplies anticipate and organise against certain consequence of the war and urges quick and drastic remedial action to avert a situation which Is "becoming desperate." The committee guggert a better distri bution of Incoming ship at port other than liondon and Liverpool. Continuing It says: "Now that troubles have developed, the nbw YORK. Jsn. M.-John R. Uv- oremment must move not teaUtlvely, as g0n. executive board member for Colo If the next century would do, but Imme-1 rado of tiM I'nlted Mine Workers of dlately. The proceedure of prise court America, who yesterday denounced con- must be expedited and all captured ships must be valued, manned and utilised by the atat for the purpose of transporting supplies purchased directly from the pro ducer, and such supplies must be placed en the market at prices to cover only the cost and distributive charges." STATE TO FIND MEN WORK Quinby Propose! Meaiare for Em ; ployment Bureau Managed by Appointees. FREE TRANSPORTATION TO JOB (From Staff Correspondent) .LINCOLN, Jan. . (Special.) A state labor employment bureau to solve the problem of the unemployed In Nebraaka is part of the contribution of Senator Quinby of Douglas to th legislative grist mill. ... Senator Quinby would make hi bureau appointive at the hands of the governor with at least one women, member, the other two being presumably of the mas culine extraction. It would be the duty of thi bureau to register every Nebraska cltlxen applying for. appointment, classifying him or her aa to trade, profession and qualification. After securing a Job for the applicant, the bureau Is to furnish him with trans portation to whatever part of the state It Is necessary for Mm to go In order to assume hi duties. If th bureau should secure a' Job and the applicant refuse to take wlliiout suf ficient reason, It Is empowered to file a vagrancy complaint. The decision of th board upon the sufficiency of such reason must be unanimous 'and, moreover, the applicant la further guarded In that he may have hi name stricken from the register at any time after thirty days' nntlaa. The senator from Douglaa would pro vide for the maintenance of the bureau through a surtax of one-tenth of one per cent to be levied .upon the full actual value of land In the 'state belonging to non-residents of the state. The bill makes the tax two-tenths of one per oent ir the first figure 1s not sufficient. 'The' board or bureau member are to receive $5 a day for actual time and 6 cent mileage. , The bill declare an emergency. ' . ' I Railroads Lose ; prst Bout on Bill (From a Staff CorrewpondenL) LINCOLN, Jan. S0.-(8pecial.) Mem-, ber ef the tower house took It a a Joke that they ahouM receive In their Satur day jnornlag mall a circular letter, signed by the attorney and official 'of various railroad, asking, them that they defeat it B, No. 7, 'by lloffmcister of Chase, forfelUrur. rIgbU-of-way where the rail road had done nothing In the. course of a year, toward .building track. The point of th alleged Joke rest In tha fact that the bill was recommended for. pasaag by. th committee of th whole in .the house, Friday afternoon, by a, vote of 77 to. 1L , It was not supposed to come up until next week. Th Cbas county reurcseptatlvo, however, "slipped one over" In securing aa earlier hearing. The. railroad men fought the hill hard In the standing committee, 'it Is directed at an eld right-of-way that the Burlington has held from Imperial to Holyoke, Colo., for the last twenty years without building. The bill applies, "however, In general way also. , Lahners Opposes : : Spinas Road Bill (From Staff Correspondent) LINCOLN, Jan. 30. (Special.) The bill of Senator Splrk of Saline, providing for a county road overseers will not have easy sailing when, the rowl committee report it out for passage Tuesday morn ing, for Senator Lahners of Thayer la laying for. It with a big long dirk. The. latter is all for docentralisstioa of authority' when It rorne to road work. Ills bill for a diviaiea of the present road district Into four with an overseer for each. 'which was on of hi pet meas ures, was killed by th commit tee. Ueooe Mr. 'Lahners ha th added motive of vengeance. -; . Th senator from Thayer, If necessary, will stand for ft county road overseer, but he wont to see th pro poaed salary of that official cut from ft.aw to S00 and th traveling expense eliminated. CITY SUPERINTENDENTS HOLD SESSION AT YORK , TOHK. Neb.. Jan. 8. IHivkri lsrv.- Nebraska Asaociatipn of City Superin tendotita, held It second session y actor -day. morning, between tw tbirty, superintendent ot city school were present A banquet waj.acrved. to me vuuior ar, T o ciocx.. last eveuituv. The last meeting wa held Saturday morning. when th officer for th en- suing year wer eleoted. The following were among the speaker yesterdajr: Ku. rerrnteudenu Weterhoua of Fremont, i-atea or Lexington, Clark of Pawnee aty, Price of O'Neill, Craig- of Central City, Cavtnea of Fairbury. L K. w urn- ford, former superintendent of the high ecnooi at lit at rice. BREAKS NOSE. WRIST AND KNEECAP IN FALL SirWARD, Ken.. Jan. X -(Special.)-. J-red Biaiu Of v t lea Tel down an ele vator shaft at Grand Island, yesterday and broke tU ftoas, hi wrlat and kaee cap . UetMutsaeat Orders. WASHINGTON. Jan. .- fiJal TeU egram ) Wsrd IL Wilhehn was ar Winied rural Utter earricy at Jtoewcu r-ontli Ik't. The city National Bank of Omaha tiaa beMii appointed a rewrrve S'-t.t for th Ural Netlimel Itank of Knulewood, 111., mid tlw t-lmt National bank eg Unculu lor I lie S. oil's l.lurt Nailonal liunK ot Nebraafcs. 'Jlie puHtolf ice vie Bergdorff, MiIHieri-an .ounty. South lhtk.Xit. has bevtt dlacon tiuuril; mail til Aahlcy, M. D. (MINING BOSSES OWN THE CORONERS LaVion Sayi All Verdicta Bat Tw in Cast of Death in Favor of Colorado Fuel and Iron. HE LAMBASTS B0CKEFELLER ditkns in Colorado mining camp In hi testimony befor the Federal Industrial Relations commission and sharply ar raigned John D, Rockefeller' Jr., for his alleged failure to Inform himself a to conditions there, continued his testimony today. "There Is no social life In the camps." Mr, Lawson said. "The companies own all tli houses, ground, schools, churches and stores. Comptefe despotism exist In the mining camps." Mr. Lsiwson read Into tha record a long list of th various accident In coal mine and a list of th men killed by violence In the Colorado mining camps In 1OT.3. This was done, he said, so that the com mission might know how many widow and fatherless children there were In Col orado). "And they get an average of $108.40 If the father and husband I killed," he said:' "What can they do In life with tW.IOT What chance have they got?" Men worked in the mines, the witness said, because they were forced, not be cause they wanted oL Company Own Coroners. "If they complain. It is down the can yon for theirs." he said; "And If the man who does work is hurt, h I taken to a company hospital. If h die a company coroner conduct th Inquest over the body a Ion; a I can remem ber, only two verdict unfavorable to the Colorado Fuel and Iron company have been found and I think the company furnlshe the cemeteries. The coroners have a habit of giving a verdict of sui cide or death flue to carelessness. One coroner wrote In a oertaln case that the victim of an accident had 'do relative and few friend. " No coal miner, Mr. Lawaon said, ha ever shirked hi duty in protecting life and th Interest of tha operators. Com pany detectives, and gunmen constantly spied on th men to . tee that they1 did not get together. Thi applied to th Itampe where there were no unions. Zn union camps. Mr. Laws on testified, con dition were entirely different. Th. University of , Colorado, he said, had promised the United Mine Workers of America that it wouid extend It work Into the ooal camp so that the men might have an opportunity to educate. In the non-union camp there was occa sionally a dance, the witness aald, but no other amusement or recreations. Rockefeller and rnlone. Mr. Lew son called the commission' attoptlon to a statement which he said was made by John D. Rockefeller, Jr., April , 1914. In which Mr. Rockefeller was quoted a saying that th Colorado Fuel and Iron company would never recognise the United Mine Worker of America and that It was ft fight to the finish. "Two week after that, to the day, cam Ludlow,". Mr. Lawaon said. "I do not know whether there was any connection between these two things. I hope not A man Ilk Mr. Rockefeller should be care ful of th thing' he says, however. The wltnoaa discussed th payment of workmen In script, redeemable for merchandise at company stores, and th employment of eheck welghmen, who ar paid by th miner to see that th com pany doe not cheat the men In weigh ing coal on the tlple. There was a law in Colorado, Mr. Lawsoa aald. providing for tha check welghmen; In spit ot that the law wa frequently violated by the operator. When 'the welghmen ar elected, he . continued, . th oompanie "nee to It that aafmen from their vlewpont ar chosen. ... Mr. Lawson thought It was a mistake on th part of organised labor to re elect union official whp had been con victed of violence or th aie ot dynamite. Capital- Punishment Doomed in S. Dakota ' PIBRRB, & D. Jan. (& Spc4al Tele gram.) No more capital puntebmcnttfor South Dakota la forecasted by the Vote of JI to 18 In the senat this afternoon, adopting th hill repealing1 the oapltsU punishment provision of the statute. A the house pslsaad ft Ilk hill several day aeo, 1L is puw morviy uwvvcr ui muunw j msnt of on . bill or th outer to. max It a matter of law as Governor Byrne endorsed that' policy In hi msssags te th legislature. A resolution, presented wn the house by Solera of Minnehaha, seeks te place the stat IntltuUons under control of the Stat Board of Chaiitle and eorrentlon I ta the penitentiary the Insane seytur aod th reform school to be under control of on board, all other Institutions- to he under control of another board which hall contain from five to nine member. , OXLT ONB "BROJttO 4ri"f IXB." To get the: genuine, call for full name. Laxative Hromo Quinine, Look tor. signa ture of E W, Grove. Cures a cold la oa day. 25 cent. s , CONFIDENCE 1L1S BUILT Ol-R PRACTICR An EstaUisKcd Practice. auch aa our can only ba built when patient bave confidence In oar ability-, w do Just aa wa advertlae la otbar worda our patleata are tree-ted riebt and aend their frlendi. , rAlNXKhS EXTRACTION IV VITAUZtU.AlR. Taffs Dental Rooms J5IT IKH'GLAS hiTTlEET, THOMPSON, BBLDEN S CQ Monday 5000 Remnants of Dress Goods and Silks at Less Than Half Usual Cost Our January Clearance Sale has left us with quantities of remnants from one yard to full dress lengths, lengths for misses1 and children's dresses, great quantities of skirt and waist lengths. MONDAY These will be sold without regard to original cost or value. The few items below selected at random will give you some idea of the extraordinary reductions. There will be thousands to choose from: ' ALL SILK . CREAM CREPE DE CHINE, 40 inches wide, $2.25 quality; 5-yard rem- &a qq riant for ..aj ALL SILK BLACK CREPE .DE CHINE 40 inches wide, $2.50 quality; 4 5 yards in remnant for ...$4i78 ALL-WOOL BLACK AND WHITE PIN STRIPE Charming fabric for one- jnece gowns; 7y2 yards in remnant for. $2.19 IMPORTED ALL-WOOL BENGALINE . ' . "42-inch wide ; , ' . , $L00 quality; in the new wisteria color; 5 yards in ; ffo oq remnant for, . . . $ First Showing , We announce for Monday our first showing pf new white gooda tfor the spring and summer of 1915, comprising the newest creations. in plain and embroidered fabrics; plain , and embroidered voiles and crepes are still very popular, while plain and embroidered or. gandies have- beefl added to the leading fabrics. We had the good fortune to secure ft beautiful line of French embroidered goods, . which will soon be scarce. . ; We are opening our white goods season with special prices on the following: Long c cloths, Nainsopk, . Dimities, Underwear Crepes, Damoselle Cloth, Phantom Cloth, Ayesla Cloth and Oyama Cloth; Repp Suiting, Flaxons, Checks and Stripes. -lbroidered Crepes, Voiles, Neigeux, Organdies for 19115 45-Inch Embroidered Organdies, $2.25 and $2.75 a yard. 40-Inch Embroidered Voiles, $1.25, $L50, $L75 and $2.50 yd. 40-Incli Embroidered Crepes, $1.50 and $2.00 a yard.' i 40-Inch' E.mbrold.ered Neigeux, $1.25, $1.75 and $2.00 a yard, 42-Inch. Plain Neijgeux, 75c and $1.00 a yard. ' ' 42-Inch Plain Voiles, 25c, 50c, 75c; $1.00 and $1.25 a yard. 45Jnch Plain Organdies, 50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50 yd. Extra Special for Monday Only , . Tussette Nainsook 20q 44-Inch' Tirssette Nain , ( Book $2.00 bolt of 10 - .yards...; ' .'. ' Long Cloth 17c 36-Inch Long Cloth $135 a bolt of 12 yards. ' 20c1 36-InfH, Long Cloth $2.25 a bolt of 12 yards. 25c ; 42-Inch Long." Cloth $2.75 a bolt of 12 yards. 30c 45-Inch . Long Cloth $3.00 a bolt of 12 yards. - . i . ... ii- MAf and ALFALFA ALWAYS ON HAND nAV GTORACE CAPACITY 1000 TONO V.9 Cay, Sell ni Hhs? To rafcsrrrrii n baVWUlMUEaW Typovyritorpi maj aaaka jom waai X t $1 and Up Per Month J Central Typswritsr ExcJssni .... . Inc. i 807-809 Sooth 17th. - rfeOB Voug; 4121. : - w4aatt-t4aaaitvt SPOT PROOF FOULARD New Cope blue, best $1.25 quality; 8-yard rem- C9 QQ nant for ,y-ia0 BLACK IMPORTED POPLIN All-wool, 42-inoh and $L25 quality; beautiful fabric for 'aeparate akirts, deep, rich black; 4 yards in t9 ftQ remnant for. . . . jpUa BLACK SILK AND WOOL CREPE 42-inch, . $2.00 quality ; ty yards in 9 QQ remnant for ... . VO ALL-WOQL PIN STRIPE NOVELTY New blue with Ln stripes of,black; 7 yards in fo 'oj remnant for V" J't of .New:: White. "t r v-,- ;.jJla 40c 44-Inch Tussette Nain- sook $2.50 a bolt of 10 ' yards'. Damoselle Cloth 30c 42-Inch Damoselle Cloth $3.00 a bolt of 12 yards. 30c 40-Inch Phantom Cloth (2.50 a bolt of 10 yards. Checked and Striped Flaxon All 25c Checked'and Striped Flaxons . . ; 15c a yard 4. LII Pcis!$-rC2!l cr Address tt KichoiMjiioMASA, I Pfccca Eolj. 523JKEB. Bee readers are too intelligent to overlook the opportunities in theWtnt ad" col- umnsv They're Vorth while, reading. ALL SILK FIGURED CREPE DE CHINE . 40 Inches wide, new taupe gray with dainty colored figure, . $2.50 quality; 6l2 yards 'in (4 qq remnant for. . . . f TfaaO ALL-WOOL CREPOLA 42-inch $1.25 quality, in the. neW" sand shade; iVi yards in do q remnant for. . . . y aw 1 V BLACK ALL-WOOL FRENCH SERGE 42-inch, r $.125 quality; ( ' 2Y4 ; yards in i nn remnant for. . . . vl07 ALL-WOOL CANTON CREPE 40-inch, $1.00 quality, new army blue; 4 yards in tf no remnant for.... vI0 Good Plain Nainsook 30c 40-Inch Ayesla Nain sook, $2.50 a bolt of 10 yards. 30c 40-Inch Japanese . Nainsook, $2.50 a bolt of 10 yards. . 35c 44-Inch Sea Island Nainsook, $3.75 a bolt of .12 yards. Persian Lawn 25c 32-Inch Persian Lawn at .. . . 20c a yard 85c 32-Inch Persian Lawn at . . . 30c a yard 50c S2-Inch Persian Lawn at. . .. . 35c a yard Checked Dimities 30c 32-Inch Checked Dim ities , , ,25c a yard 50c 32-Inch Checked Dim ities . . .35c a yard have been used to adrantss rn tha treatment of Asth ma, Diabetes, Kid ney aOmenta, Rhea matiam, Narroua ne, Conatipatloo and Biliouaoam Each remedy is pre pared for the relief of a aeparata and distinct ailment Warner Safe Kern- atUea have been standard for 37 year. If yen ar afflicted with any of the disease, we will aend a aampU tra. or you may procure full sue package from your druggist Following ar the remedies: I-Wots UJm . far Ska riaaswi sarfUrsr ikaWlLM t-WaWi Sals RUmW Utmtir tlO -WWl iuft DtaWlHBMMSy (Ul 4 Winwr'i Smf Hmrwtm AO. aa HjtO a.Warar'a Sais .tsjia fasjiSr .Ta s-WaWi Sai rda) Jk Warner's Safe Retnediea Co, Dept i Kohcaar,M.T. l: m