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ft or- Stock- T We don't Just "scratch" the prices- Ciif Oeep. Oar are moving fast. (0) ICDJ A CD) yA MS Ladies' Skirts $2.50 Skirts ...$1.25 2.75 Skirts... 1-50 4.50 Skirts 2.50 WHITE DRESS SKIRTS $1.25 Skirts... $ -75 1.50 Sikrts 90 1.75 Skirts 1-35 2.00 Skirts. 1-45 2.50 Skirts 1-60 3.25 Skirts 2.00 CHAMPAGNE SKIRTS $4.00 Skirts $2.00 4.25 Skirts ,. 3.00 SEE WINDOW DISPLAY. Silk Gossamer Capes full length, splendid protection for evening wear, cardinal, old Hose, cream and black. $12.75 Capes $4.90 Cravenette Capes full length. $18.50 Capes ........... $9.50 LADIES' GLOVES SHOULDER LENGTH KID GLOVES in black, all sizes. $3.50 Gloves : .'$2.90 a pair Pink Bath Mats 75c. quality . 50c. BROKEN LOTS OF WHITE KID GLOVES Two and four button lengths. Sizes: 5, 6, 7, 7, 7. $1.50 Gloves 90c. a pair Taffeta Lining black, navy, white, cream and grey. 15c. quality . 6c. a yard LADIES White Shirt Waists at after inventory priees. All good, desirable styles, mostly Lingerie. $1.25 Waists .'. 80c. 1.50 Waists .95c. 2.00 Waists $1.40 2.25 Waists 1.60 2.75 Waists 1.90 3.75 Waists.... 2.90 SEE WINDOW DISPLAY. COLORED SHIRT WAISTS Values up to $2.00 at 50c. each. N.S LIMITED. "The Store with a Money Back Policy." Warren's Stock Foundations 10$. quality . 5c each 12c. quality, 3 for 25c. INFANTS' AND CHILDREN'S UNDER VESTS. Infants' silk and wool vests, ex tra fine. $1.50 vests at .....90c. Children's extra fine India Gauze Vests, 50c. and 55c. quality. ... .35c. each ART DENIM All colors, yard wide. 25c. quality .. 20c. a yard PI B n QBPBBBJIB mjm M R R H- 1LJS U B Id I 1 HOSE Coyne Furniture Go. SOLE AGENTS. , GOOD GARDE ' A good hose is as necessary to the household as a good cook ing stove. Life is a drudgery without either. We lead in both ar ticles just as we do in all other household articles. 5-Ply Hose, $8.50, 50 Feet ' It is called "SUCCESS" and is the best in the market today. Try it out for yourself. Other grades from $5.00 to $12.00 for 50 feet. ! W. W. Dimond ct Co., Ltd. 53-57 King St.. Honolulu. 1 Vv' 1 . SECRETARY TATT AND FAMILY. IAN SOLVEWI I Made in Honolulu. RS Mm GULi '1064 Fort St. ASBESTOS TABLE COVERS J. HOPP & CO., 18S King Street, in the Lcwcrs & CooKe BIdg.. have a new line of nicely made ASBESTOS TABLE COVERS, an article which will protect the top of your polished round dining table. 4 r HAVE YOU NOTICED Vflv that new Two-Eyelet Oxford Tie in our window? IT'S BRAND NEW. PRICE ?4.00. Made by E. P. Eeed & Co. This shoe has all the right qualitie; it i soft, Patent Colt Skin, with Me dium Extension Edge, plain pointed toe with slight Swing. Wide silk rib bon laces. Style No. 332. MANUFACTURERS' SHOE COMPANY, LTD. 1051 FORT STREET P. O. BOX 469 PHONE 2S2 J. ABADIE, Proprietor. Ladies and Gents Washing Done First-class. Gloves and Ostrich Feathers. Wool and Silk Made Cleaner by a New French Process. cxisonaDie. uive Us a Trial. ' : : : ' PHONE 1491 A58 BERET ANIA ST. THE WILCOX LUAU WAS GREAT SUCCESS A pleasant and well-attended luau was given yesterday In Notley Hall by Princess Theresa Laanul Wilcox and the! members of the Royal Dancing Club. The event was in honor of. the birth day of Robert W. "Wilcox. The guests partook of Hawaiian deli cacies at three long tables, waited on by a bevy of pretty girls. Early in the afternoon the Hawaiian band was in attendance, and later music was furnished by a quintet club. Dancing was indulged in all through the afternoon and a lively terpsicho rean session was held inf the evening. Among the guests wre Ella Wheeler Wilcox and husband, who declared that she enjoyed herself hugely and scribbled an ode to a baked sweet po tato between courses. The ladies of the club were dressed in light blue and wore maile and ilima leis, and a button bearing the photo graph of Queen Kapiolani, after viora the club is named. Blue silk badges worn by them bore the words, "Kulia i ka Nuu." The hall was tastefully decorated with American and Hawaiian flags, and at one end was a portrait of the late Robert N. Wilcox, flanked by por traits of Queens Kapiolani and Liliuo kalani. A large number of well-known people had been invited to the luau, of whom a great many were present. The Royal Dancing Club, which numbers eighty-seven members, will now take its summer vacation. . RETURNED BY ALAMEDA. .Miss V. McGregor, dimmer for B.J. Ehlers & Co. returned by the' S. ' S. Alameda from a two months' absence spent among the wholesale millinery establishments of the mainland. Miss McGregor brings back many new ideas for her season's work, as well as many cases of pattern hats, higl; art millinery novelties, etc. Messrs. Ehlers & Co. will hold their spring opening next Thursday and fol lowing days and if last season is any eriterion to go by, they will no doubt have a record attendance. TUESDAY NIGHT THE ORPHEUM SHU EPS As announced in the Advertiser yes terday morning, the engagement of Frank Cooley and his company at the Orpheum closes on Tuesday night, next. The company has made an-unusually long stay, having been here for three months, but Manager Elteford, who handles the show's Coast interests, has booked it for several weeks In the Coast cities and it is therefore neces sary that it return as soon as possible. Tomorrow night is to be presented "A Daughter of Dixie," which was played one night at the Hawaiian Opera House and one night at the Orpheum and which many people prd nounced the prettiest play of the sea son. It is a dramatization of Henry Blossom's novel, "Checkers." Tuesday nightk "The Scout's Revenge" is to be repeated. This is another of the sea son's successes, having been played during the first week of the engage ment. It is a very strong and exciting melodrama. Many of the matinee patrons have expressed a desire to see "The Man from Mexico," and Manager Cooley has decided to put hi an extra matinee t Tuesday afternoon, when this funn'est of all farces will be the bill. As there will be no other professional dramatic attraction here for several weeks, packed houses should be the rule at these last performances. . . SIGNS OF SPRING. The Alameda brought to Silva's Tog gery an assortment of Hart, Schaffner and Marx clothing as a harbinger of spring. Mr. Silva did not expect his goods to arrive until about the first of March and was agreeably surprised when he received his advices on Friday that the goods were on board. The de mand for light shades in the celebrated Hart, Sehaffner and Marx clothing has been rather large during the past month and as there is none of this season's styles in town Silva, is fortunate in being the first to get the goods. The assortment includes all shapes and con ditions and the Toggery force will be able to fit anyone, but there are no two suits alike. (Unsweetened) is pure cow's milk, evaporated and sterilized. It is as rich as cream, and is delicious with fruits and berries, as well as with coffee, tea and chocolate. It is unequalled for cooking purposes, as it is very rich in Butter Fat. Best thing for Chowder and Biscuit Making. Sold by all Grocers. THEO H. DAVIES & CO LTD. Distributors. 1 ! CROCKERY DEPARTMENT OF LEWIS & CO., Ltd. HOUSEHOLD EMPORIUM. - Tea and Coffee Cups,' Saucers, Dinner, Side and Dessert Plates, Fruit Dishes, Casseroles, Covered Dishes, foi Bowls, Platters, Cream and Sugar Jugs, Sauce Boats. Also FINE TABLE GLASSWARE. EmOvyis Sl &ompny9 ULtct CROCKERY AND GLASSWARE. 169 King Street, Telephone 240. Two women chanced to meet on a streetcar in Chicago. "Why, how do you do, Mrs! Thompson !" exclaimed one of them. "I called at your house one day last week, and there was nobody home." We've moved, Mrs. Giles," said the other. "Didn't you know that?" "No. When did. you move?" "About two weeks ago. We got tired of living in all the noise and bustle, and we went away out in the suburbs." "What direction?" "Northwest." "And where are you located now?" "It's a new neighborhood, Mrs. Giles, and I can't describe it exactly, but if I had a map? of the city here I could show you. We live just about half an inch outside of the city limits. When Wiberforce lived at Marden Hall, in Surrev, he enter tained freely, often having such statesmen as Ryder, Burke, and Pitt as his guests.. On one such occasion Pitt and Ryder had a rather heated political discussion that lasted far into the' night. The next morning, while awaiting breakfast, the host took Ryder around his garden. The early-rising Pitt had been before' them. In a flower bed they detected something which was not a flower. "It proved," said Wilberforce, "to be a. portion of Ryder's old hat, which Pitt had planted in the soil near the geraniums." - Jones Does your wife ever go through your pockets wen you are asleep? Smith Yes; she seems to think that I am an all-night bank. Town Topics.