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AS TO RIYER WATER Banid Purification Found to Take Place in Still Water Not r Investigations Being Made to Throw , Some Light on the Process. V^ronx The Journal Bureau, Room 45, Post Mutlding, WuaMngto*. Washington No\ 10The issue be tween Chicago ind S t Louis occasioned b j the opening of the Chicago drainage canal through which the sewage of Chi cago Is conducted to the Mississippi riv er \ia DesPiaines and Illinois ri\ers is based upon the condition In the minds of the people of S t Louis thit thert will arise effects detrimental to t he watei of the Mississippi ri\er a t that cits 1 he whole dispute centers theufoie about the old respect t h%oe transportation facilities and moot question a s to how long a distane, '" * I t is known from chemical analvsis and physical examination that a vaiving d e gree of purification tikes place in a tiver I n earlv davs this was thought to be due to aeration and the tumbling of water down mountain sides became the basis for poeth tvpification of puntv I he e \ perlments of the Massachxisetts state board of health have shown that aeiatlon has little or no effect upon the condition of organic mattei in waterthit is the organic matter is not assisted in its oxi datlon bv agitation in the air I twas also found that the highest degree of actn in oxidation processes is to be found n quiescent 01 stagnant waters I,t. e n be came cleai that self purification in a sluggish stream is fa, r more effective than In a swift currtan d that dims and ,. , . . . ^ , , * facturing interests which supply equip- upo the condition of watei in rivei chan nels The promulgation of these facts led to an entire change in the ideas concerning the distance necessaiv for stream purifl cation and it is now untleistood that no hard and fast rules can b e set for guid ance in determining the purif j ing power of any watercourse A rojal commission appointed t o inquire into the conditions of England s riv ers reporting to the Eng lish parliament in the early seventies held that no stream in the United Kingdom was Uufficientlj long to effect its own puriflca tion The familiar and oft quoted prin ciple is that a stream purifies itself in twenty miles but how this distance was ever determined o i who was responsible for its general acceptance is a matter of doubt certain it is that the statement is entirelj wrong in the majority of cases Pettenkoffer Hering Stearns and others have given formulae which are undoubted lv true for the rivers upon which these gentlemen worked but which can in n o wise be accepted for livers in general and it remains for the investigatoi to deter mine b y actual experiment the purifying power of each stream with which h e has to deal m Rapids. ?, The work of examination of the surface waters of the I nited States lecentlj in augurated in the division of hydrography of t he Lnited States geological survey in co operation with the various college lab oratories throughout the countrv will b e useful In the determination of the self purifving powers of manv of the Inter state rivers These results will be highly beneficial to the municipalities and co i porations which mav be looking toward the establishment of sewerage s j stems and purification works During the coming wintei it is expected that M O Leighton hjdrogapher of the geological survev will take u p this woik upon various rivers in Indiana and Illinois and will so far as possible extend this re- HCJ** , **** * *Vr~r ,Ue l ^ ttW _?_ ,!?-etn r , HAIR CULTURE n Mme. Yale Hair Tonic Manhood's, Womanhood's, Childhood's Pride, BEAUTIFUL HAIR Children and Madam Yale's More or the TALE HAIR TONIC is sold in 11 parts of the world than of any other prepa ration This Is because MADAME VALE, its manufacturer is everywhere recognised as the worlds sreat^it Specialist on DISEASES OK THE HAIIl AND SCALP Skill nnd reliabil ity of the manufacturer Is consldeied not the Ingenuity of the advertiser When life is InV the balance we consult lhe test phvslcian and when tre lifo of the hail is at stake we cannot afford to experiment with unknown hair piepa rations sinmlj because thev are cheap Perma nent baldness Is often the penalty paid for ucli rashness and false economy The BEST Is the CHPAPEST Pse only the genuine MAD AME YALE HAIR TONIC I t Is NOT A DYE, nnd MME ^ALE. as well as the whole medical fraternity warns the public against HAIR DIES They contain deadly POISONS which when as Imitated bv the scalp are retained in the ays torn to Its lasting injury, producing paralysis When a so called ' hail tonic ' changes the color of the hair as soon as applied it should be avoided lhe YALE HAIR TONIC restores the original color gradually, by stimulating the nerves o* the scalp and invigorating its " *'" " " minute blood vessels enabling the live coloiine order was given In spite of General TJribe- matter to be properly distributed The \AL11 TJribe s capitulation t o the government HAIR TONIC CUBESi BALDNESS, ORAYNESS foices, which occurred at Rio Frio, Co- DANDRUFF, ECZEMA and ALL DISEASES Or , _V7 ,* ^+K rpv. ^_i* THE HAIR AND SCALP stops hair falling in lombia, last month The receipt of this 24 hoars a marvelous hair grower, making the news, which is considered I n Colombian poorest hair luxuriant, long and beautiful a revolutionary circles here t o be a shame- dellgrhtful Hair Pressing, neither sticky nor SHlirr?^t^r5iSrapJ^^ Gem*al Vargas-Santos, noutr toe attendi thd e " and Hair Beautifler as refreshing to the hair as the dew to tha rose. s MM- E YAL.-J makes no charge for consultation by mail Write her concerning vour hair, explaining fully the condition of vour health and complexion an1 he will give you her ADVICE free and also mail yon postage prepaid, a complimentarv copy of her latest book, giving vpeclal attention to Physical Culture and Hvglene of the Hair Skin Complexion, etc Address MME M YALE 189 MICHIGAN BOULEVARD, CHICAGO Witt. Donaldson & Go.adIfto Are Madame Yale's Minneapolis agents They recommend the Yale goods in preference to every thing else made as they know their absolute Purity and high-class merit. Furthermore they give satisfaction to all Wm Donaldson & Co. always carry a full line of the Yale remedies, selling them at cut prices They will also present free to each caller at their famous Drug Depart ment a copj ot Madame Yale's Omde to Health end Beauty, a 96-page lithographed cover book that should be read by every woman l a ibi* ltr. Eemember. It's free. (THE GLASS BLOCK) b ! ! !" e ^ ?\ e search to the streams which at the present time are of great interest to the inhabi tants of the Mississippi \ alley 1 at THE CAR SHORTAGE^ The Demand for Cars Is Now 50,000 Short of the Supply. Chicago No v 10 The Record-Herald says The railroads are face to face with the greatest car and powei or engine shortage in their historv I t is estimated bv conservative and expert traffic men that the demand for cais to move the traf fic of the country which is being now of - feied foi transportation is fully 50 000 in excess of the supplv A s the weeks go by the shortage will undoubtedly inciease rather than decrease until it reaches a poi nt where e\eiy freight yard and every freight house in the country is blocked with traffic awaiting transportation facili ties S o bad has the situation become that a sudden peiiod of cold weather would almost paralvze the transportation facilities of the country Realizing the danger of this, traffic and operating men are using almost super human efforts to relieve the situation and aie hoping against hoph e f h m \? Ihe statistics regarding the movement of fi eight during the last two years are almost inconceivable They make the fol lowing showing Miles of railroad In the United M ites I onnage moved during 1901 . 1 084,000 000 I sthnated tonnage of 1902 1 100 000 0O0 Spent foi new equipment 1901 $200 000,000 I stimated for new equipment 1902 250 000 000 Number of freight cars in service 1 liKlues In service 1 stimated output freights cars J 001 I stimated output freight cars 1H From the fi eight traffic of 1901 the railroads received about $1,000,000,000 and fI om the carrying of 600 000 000 passengers about $360 000 000 These figures will be greatly exceeded this ea The manu 1 e5-ieit5vl ment used by railroads have been wholly .h Adults use Hair Tonic. unablned to keep pace with the growing demas DOWN PETTICOAT LANE The Lord Mayor's Precession Goes Through the Heart of the Ghetto. London No v 10To-day for the first time in the history of London the lord mayor s procession traversed the unfash ionable thoroughfare of Petticoat lane in the heart o i the ghetto, in recognition of t he Jewish ancestry of Sir Marcus "Sam uel the new lord major Jewish London especially celebrated the event The poorest inhabitants of Whitechapel and Houndsditch were banquetted a t the ex pense of their wealthier coreligionists Sev e n richly decorated floats and fifteen bands representing crack regiments t o gether with the city officials and the Lon don guilds made up a goodly pageant A unique feature was a float representative of the Anglo Japanese alliance surmount ed b v the arms of both countries and sur rounded by a guard of Japanese and Brit ish blue jackets The procession left the Guild hall a t 11 traversed the prin cipal streets of the old cltv of London to the law courts where according to cus tom the lord major was formally pre sented to the lord chief justice and was sworn in DEGENERATE NOBILITY A Scandal m London That Has Ex patriated a Peer. London Nov 10 It is impossible to l g nore entirelj the startling evidence of de g e lerac v in high places which is the talk of all London I t is a matter blacker and more exten sive than the Cleveland street scandal, and involves names of wider than Eng lish reputation S o abhorrent is the sto r j so widespread aie its ramifications that it has been decided to keep most of the fads secret and so avoid to some ex tent a gieat national disgrace and the pollution of the publ ic mind Justice will therefore b e onlv partiallj executed and in its place will be substituted an unofficial decree of banishment which will expatri ate at least one prominent peer wm*0ZLJ$2imBmjm^ l . * - ^ ** * XOSDAJ. EVENING, W W Jermaije J e traffie c a rTe s arig. for mo ra ec r ..-....*-.pg^ y coniBieute a t A ancu.id., m m ive is- no * i P.o f e"st pXh1t N o less than thirtv persons already have been identified with tms infamous coterie Thev are neany all men of advanced vears wealthy and members of aristo cratic families Bernard Fraser a son of General Praser, a member of the Bachelors' and other swell clubs pleaded guilty o n several counts and was sentenced to ten years at penal sen itude Arthur Thorold, a neph e w of the late Bishop Thorold a tutor a t Eton made the same plea and was sen tenced to five vears The judge thanked the British naval captain who furnished the evidence which led to the exposure b j intercepting letters addressed to t he members of the crew of his vessel The member of the nobility involved is one of the peers created by Gladstone H e was formerly a member of parliament and at that time was legarded a s the hand somest man in the house of commons H e has held high office and married the daughter of one of the wealthiest families in the world H e is also rich in his own right This matter assumed such ominous shape that according to the current ver sion in clubland it was brought to the at tention of the king His majesty's deci sion was that the offending peer who Is now ill must leave England as soon as he is able to travel, never to return NO PEACE IN COLOMBIA The Government May Murder Sur rendered Revolutionists. San Jose Costa Rica Nov 10 The Co lombian dispatches state that General argas Santos received advices t o the e f feet that notwithstanding the proposals of the Columbian government made through its representative here Colombia purposed limiting the decree of amnestj General Vargas-Santos thereupon refused to accept such a proposition and decided to withdraw from the conference which, he considers futile A t the same time the military director of the Colombian revolution learned that the Colombian government had issued or ders to General Tovar t o imprison the re volutionary general tence him t o dea t"hw without mercv T*his fu l violatlo n 0 sued orders t o the revolutionary army to continues its warfare Will be found an excellent remedy for sick headache Carter s Little Liver Pills Thousands of letters from people who have used them prove this fact Try them you are too busy to bring your want The Journal, call up No 9, either line and The Journal will accommodate jou by taking your ad over the 'phone If you will kindly call in and pay for same at your earliest convenience it will greatly facilitate the handling of these small amounts Change In Time on the Milwaukee Road. The fast mail for Hastings, Red Wing, Rochester, Winona, La Crosse and Mil waukee now leaves Minneapolis 2.20 c m. t L%^c?de TJribe-Uribe, r l "- - -'",! , f faithfthr decde *r t TO SAVE THE TIMBER / A Texas Company Will Practice For estry on a Million Acres. Comon-Sense Precautions to Avoid Waste of the Valuable Material. tn 1 nt eta rr0r et ^'^^^^'^WBiiWWPMPiiP "s.* -^WPRMfmajp JPMipB^PWW k ? From The Journal Bureau, Boon* 4S, Pern BuiUiing, Washington. Washington Nov 10 Poiestry on a huger scale than has ever been attempted before in this country bv a private cor poiation will be practiced in southeast Texas when the Kirby Lumber company puts into use the working plan for its lands to b e prepared by the bureau of forestry The lumbeiing operations of the Kirby company are probably the largest in the world Thev extend ovei a tract of a million and a quarter acres of pine lands which contain about 80 p er cent of all the long leaf pine of Texasa vast single body of virgin forest reaching out over sevpn counties and uninterrupted except for the clearings around the villages and farms which it incloses This great foi est is estimated to have contained uncutand the estimate is lowsix and a quarter billion merchant able feet of lumber board measure The cuttings already made amount t o onlj a s wih mlc d d 198 000 1,500 000 40 000 small percentage of what the great foi est originally contained The company operates 17 mills which now make a n annual cut of 250 000 000 feet board measure and supports a popu lation of 15 000 people Since the forest is mature and is heli e d rather than harmed by the culling of the larg er trees the ai rual cut is to be increased to 400 - 000,00) feet In addition to the trees used for lumber which are cut down to as low a diameter as 12 inches 7 000 000 ties are being cut out of the forest from trees, be tween D and 12 inches in diametei t o fill a contract with the Santa F e raihoad I t is just because its operations are on such a large scale that the Kirby company has decided it must protect itself b y adopting home sjstem of forestry Large as its holdings are unless they are prop er ly managed and protected they must sonei or later be exhausted Even if the obligations to the 15 000 people dependent for a living on the lum berlng opeiations should be ignored the investment made in mills and equipment is too great to imperil by exhausting the tuoVr supph Toiestrj receives little encouragement wren t he profits o l lumbering are small the markets po or and the operations con ducteJ with difficulty but on the Kirby tract these conditionb are reversed The company ib making a high profit o n its tim )e the demand for lumber is excel lent ana lumbeiing operations ate made eve^dmgV easy bv the lay of the land and tha condition of the forest The lands are in Jasper Sabine, Hardin Newton St Augustine Angeline and Tyler coun ties and were bought with an eye to sim plify ing and cheapening lumber opera tions The labor supply is steady and a railroad luns thiough the forest from north to south 70 000 80 000 Last winter Overton W Pi ice assistant chief and Thomas H Sheirard field a s sistant of the bureau of forestry made a pieliminarv examination of the lands a t the company s lequest and returned a re port stating the lines along which forestry might be piacticed with profit in the Kir by company s forest The company a c eppted the report and asked that a com ple te working plan be made The task of preparing this working plan will begin Nov 15 and will be in charge of M i Sherrard who is a n expert o n southern pines Thiitj men established In three camps will make the measure ments and gathei t he nguies on which the plan must be based Several problems must b e worked out whose solution will b e of value wherever lumbering is piacticed in the long-leaf pine belt The most impoitant of these is the fire problem The first necessity in planning for fmther ciops on lumbered lands is to piotect those lands from fires which kill the leproduction Light fires repeatedly bum ovei the forest floor m the long leaf foiest and while they do n o damage to the Urge trees all the young growth is killed lhe lire problem biiefly stated is whethei it is best to attempt to protect all the forest o i t o limit the pro tection to cut-over areas Since the long leaf pine in five yt-ars attains a size large enough to protect itself from any but the severest fires it is piobable that the ss tern of fire protection will applv onlj' t o lands cut over within the last five years The cutting of trees for railroad ties brings up for settlement a matter of in terest not onlj to the Kirby company but to every tie company in the countrj O n the Kirby lands trees between nine and twelve inches in diameter are used for ties and trees above twelve inches are cut mto saw timber The question has been raised b the bureau whether it would be better to allow all the trees twelve inches and under to grow into the more valuable saw timber and get the ties out of the tops of the larger trees A great deal of measuring and calculating will have to be done t o settler this point Ladles Traveling Alone Agree that for comfort convenience uni form courtesy of employes and perfection of service there is no road like the famous North-Western and sen- Facts, Not Fancies. To da} is a day of facts the theories of centuries ha\e been overthrown by facts developed with a very few years Malthus insisted, that the worlds in crease in population would outrun the means of subsistence ' but the facts are different There is to-day an average of $108 in the banks foi every man woman and child in the country, and if our en tire wealth were divided, each inhabitant would be worth about $2,000 With these figures there is every reason to believe that golden grain belt beer will soon be in general use throughout the countrv As its advantages and self-apparent the onl thing to prevent its constant use is the cost and that is now taken care of by gen eral prosperity ni +vtc The Chicago Great Western Railway Now runs through cars from Minneapolis and St Paul to Austin, Mason City and Fort Dodge, shortest and best line For further information applv to L C Rains agent corner Nicollet avenue and Fifth street, Minneapolis Have You Ever Noticed That our most successful busi ness men were the heaviest users of the Telephone, both for local and long distance work ? Think It Over. 30,000 Subscribers. 2,000 Toll Stations. A DISTANCE . TElEPHOWt THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL. NORTHWESTERN TELEPHONE EXCHANGE COMPANY. A Dainty Bit toEat At demonstration ol * Armour's Extract of Beef. Marvelous Sale of Fine Furs Intensely InterestlngSale el Velvets The fame of our velvets gots hand-in-hand with the fame of our silks and this sale is of the same importance as the others that have made this silk store what it isthe best known one in the Northwest for reliability and low prices. Do not miss this event The prices are but for the day. The velvets are for about every purpose and the savings are right along the whole line. * TOrf* fo^our $1 Crjoise silk velvet, blaek m v9\* and colors, one of the best values in the Twin Oitjgg at thvee regular price ^ * "fl H| ffe r 9 I - - " Croisu e velvet, our $1.50dgrade. ^i 4t^O ^O 9 mmmm^iM Croise silk velvet has a beauti ful close pile. mdj "yQ/lor^ our $2 25 black German 9 mm M 9 Croise silk costume velvet, 25 inches Wide, pure silk face tf%A Bgf for our $3, 27-inch black, Ger ^AianrQI man Croise costume velvet, close fill, short nap and a splendid black. ftO Oft ^ 9MIVO and has a close pilea . maX't ^)1 ^ 9 I B O *P Worrell's best dye, a quality that in appearance is equal to a Lyons velvet for gowns, waists and trimmings. Startling Sale of Silk Petticoats No sale like it has ever been% in this city. The most superb col lection ever shown here at the most positive reductions. 500 styles, no two alike. $5.00 Petticoats $3.49 $8.50 Petticoats $5.63 $15 00 Petticoats... .$10.00 $20.00 Petticoats. $25.00 Pettioats. $35.00 Petticoats . Plain and fancy silks, the latest styles of the season. Every skirt a specimen of fine skirt making, the sample of the best maker of petticoats in the land. The sav ings range from $1 25 Dn the very lowest to $13 a*d more on the best. LATEST FASHION NEWS (W ritten Expressly for Goodfellows ) New "iork No r 6 1002Entire black suit* are very fashionable this vear as are also black gowns enlivened FASHINON- l touches of white Bhie Is also a prime favorite ABLE COLORS as it combines well w lthall sorts of trimmings Sev eral shades of brown are stylish particular^ a new reddish brown Green is also worn a good deal bv smart women Gowns of these shades are trimmed fith lighter col ored broadcloth or velvet Sometimes black velvet or black broadcloth is used Instead Both phones If85. Goodfellow Dry Goods Co., Mow Seventh and Nicollet Av. Liniment TIMETRIED 25cas VALUE PROVED Remarkable Reductions. Astonishing Savings* a r v T Goodfellow's ^ o n e r bl $1-7 5 black an colore d o r ou r Velour du Nord, a perfect blac o $'''' r 75' ^* 32-inc h black inc n black Velveteenk , held ,$15.00 $17.50 $22.00 Bottle ack, - NOVEMBER 10, 1902. CEO. D. BAYTON. J. B. MBSHER. GEO. LOUDON. SHkLaaders of tho Korthwost. Mow at Seventh & Nioollo t /A sale withou* precedent in fur-selling history of Minneapolisthe finest'of fur garments price-cut to the quick at the beginning of your season. Not an exeeption is madeevery fine sf*al and Persian lamb jacket in this store is included. Good furs must be sold early if at all. The prolonged mild weather forces us to take advantage of these first colder days The savings are $25 to $75 The seal skins are the real Alaska skins, not Lobos or Copper Island brands You may not know the difference, but we do, and Guarantee them all Genuine Ataskas* Do not delay coming. Stocks of fine furs are necessarily limited bale opens Tuesday morning at 8:30. ^ifiR Two Alaska seal jackets, sizes 9lvU 34 and 38, 20 inches long, box front, tight-fitting back, high storm collar, absolutely guaranteed, regular price $225, saving $60. i&'f d R Alaska seal jacket, size 36, 22 9*9 inches long, box front, fitted back, cuff sleeves, high storm collar regular price $250, saving $55. ti^OOBm Alaska seal jacket, size 36, 24 ^MMO inches long, box front, fitted back, high storm collar, cuff sleeves, abso lutely guaranteed regular price $300, saving $75.00. $350 and cuffs of Chinchilla or Baum Marten regular price $425, saving $75. H# - amm%M\M fine Leipsig dyed skins sizes 36 and 38, 21 inches long, cuff sleeves, storm collar, box front, fitted back, regularly saving $22 50. PRICES FOR TUESDAY ONLY. silk face on the colored gowns. These contrasting cloth or velvet trimmings are Introduced Into the collar cuffs and vest and to these are added lace and braid trimmings and fancj buttons To be abreast of the times this season a hat must be picturesque The big flat shapes and low arrangements of the trim mings carry out this idea most beautifully Rough beavers with big PICTURESQUE flappy brims or huge vel vet chapeaut, are HEADGEAR wreathed with long plumes very much after THE style of the old Gains bourough portraits Long HENRY BROS. STEAM DYE HOUSE. Qeaeral dry Cleaners and Dyrs THE AYLIHT STORE. Alaska Seal Blouse Jacket, very best quality, collar, front ^ 4 "%% ^- Tuesday-only price for a high P N - H %9 grade black Velveteen the of Worrell dye, guaranteed absolutely fast color. for black and colored velveteen, our $1 00 grade, 24 inches wide, suitable for costumes, wraps, trimmings. lor our 85c black velveteen, 23 inches wide, fine value {fca A is the Tuesday-only price for a 9 - " O *F black moire Paon velvet, a bright and lustrous quality. ^ 4 4 A for our $1.25 black and colored 9 - - i " hollow-cut cord velvet, a silky finish all the popular colors of the season. j*#k-^ for our $1.00 black and colored hol- DwC low-cut vehet cord, one of the much used fabrics of ihe season. SmOrf* *o 69c 0f I s roy, in brown, cadet, green and pur ple only a limited quantity, but we will sell all we have on hand. Persian Lamb Jacket of r ou r 807tSST?H ^ 5 c 27-inch whipcord cordu- Dress Goods Basket Canvas Suiting. JK)-in.f tan, brown, green, gray and maroon, a $1.25, 4^4 A A value, for 9 WW Heavy Suitings that may be made up without lining, 54-in., in gray, brown, d* 4 C A green, mixed, at..M* Ww Black Dress GoodsA splendid array of the most popu lar suitings of the season Camel's Hair, hop-sacking. Unfinished Worsteds Cheviots, Venetians Granites, Canvas Cloths... Blankets. Extra large twilled cotton blank ets, 11-4, warm and fleecy, white, l^V ^ large, 12-4, the best blanket of the kind made, ^lA 7 9valu Cotton Blankets, unusually i2c, $1.9 8 value, pair..'tftl THING plumes have been the success of the blgb class millinerv during the past summer ane they will be exceedingly popular this winter with well dressed women as their price precludes their ever becoming common Shaded plumes are the very latest fad, and most ef fective they are Foi every day wear smaller hats and toques of all sorts are ot course brought into play These hats are trimmed and draped elaboratelv with velvet, heavv lace velvet flowers velvet fruitthe new French idea and all sorts of jet gilt and steel cabochons and ornaments as well as huge rosettes of satin or velvet, with fancy centers Do you rtnt to hlr help? D J you wan to buy a homel Do you vat to rent a room? Do you wal to sell your horse? Do you waat to get a boarding plate ? Do you want to sell your business' Do you want to buy a farm? Do you want to sell vour piano? Do you want to rent your house? Du you want to buy a store? IT J0VRHA1 WANTS BRIMS "BIZ" ' SI. 1 Toweis - Warranted e makes no difference what you want, read and use the Want Ad Columns of , The Journal each day and your wants will be satisfied. $95 36, box front, fitted back, new cuff sleeve high storm collar, regular price $150 sav ing $55 ti^ 4 A R Persian Lamb Jackets of the V mmm%3 best quality skins, 22 in. long, sizes 36 and 40, high storm collar, cuff sleeves, regular pjice $175 saving $50. ti* 4j A C Persian Lamb Jacket, size 38, ^ F mmm%3 made of the best skins, 22 inches long, mink collar, cuffs, sleeves and front, regular price $175, saving $50 tf* 4^C Broadtail Jackets, 20 inches H^ - - * J long collar, front and cuffs of Baum Marten or dark natural Eastern mink, beautiful garments regular price $225 saving $50. ^ 4j B5 Two Blouse Jackets of the fin 9 I ' v est broadtail, beautiful, all black novelties regular price, $250 saving $75. ^ g% JE" 4U Finest Broadtail Blouse Jacket, 9a9U with collar, revere, front and cuffs of chinchifla size 36, one of the best garments of the kind in the .Northwest, regu lar price $325 saving $75. **- *9* McCaii Patterns {Show you how to save in the use ot materials, and cost only 10c and 15c. Persian Lamb Jacket of best quality skins, 20 inches long, size iff 5NewLinens. Items for Tuesday at re markably low prices. s of special purchases teat's too good to keep. Bleached Damask, 72 in. wide, choice patterns, CEA 85c value OwU Loom Damask, cream, 60 inches wide, onlyfive C p pieces, 65c value *lrWw Scarfs Hemstitched, with pretty drawn work, 20x48, only ten dozen, 75c value, Ep Napkins New_ patterms,_ and sizes,alwaysd^A sold at $3 the doz/ f A C linen 18x36 at(None Three mpre cases of our famous $2.25 value Silkoline Comfort ers that we are selling: so many of size 72x84, filled with pure white cotton, fl^ 4 at wholesale) Comforters. zephyr tied, only H* mm M MM An extra good Comforter, cov ered with the best sateen, hand somely made, 84x90. inches, a $4.00 {fe Q O R grade vOifitl RIPANS The simplest remedy for Indigestion, coBsUpa- *-, tlon, blliousnens and the many ailments arising ^M from a disordered stomach, liver or bowels Is Rlpans Tabules They have accomplished won- ^ den, and their timely aid removes njj*"}** . of calling A physician for many little Ills that be et mankind They go straight to the seat of the trouble, relieve the distress, cleanse and cure the affected parts, and'give the system a general ton ing up The Five Cent packettoenough for an or dlnary occasion. The family Iwttle, cents, con Ulns a suppljr tor * year. All druggists MU thess. Hiim^ ^"-Balcony. Gicepur value m9 C * \ ! 1 1 \ I j ! V B |