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4 'glte WxtWM gaglfi: Ifeilras;aaij fftimtttig, owttibzx 4, 1903. M. M. MURDOCK, Editor. 7 THE NORTH POLE OUR BOUNDARY LINE. Next July Commander Peary will nave another Arctic expedition, the expenses of which will be paid by private contributions. His plan is to take a sufficient number of Esquimaux aboard his ship somewhere in the region of "Whale Sound, in northwestern Greenland, settle them at Cape Sabine, and there establish his base of supplies and force his way northward, ice conditions permitting, to winter quarters on the north shore of Grant Land, making caches along the route as he can. In February, 1905, as Eoon as it is light enough,- he proposes to start over the polar "pack" with a small party, followed by the main party. He hopes to cover the distance to the pole and back in 100 days, traveling at the rate of ten miles a day. He will use individual dog-drawn sledges with light loads. His land; base is 100 miles nearer the pole than is possible on any other route. The ice pack reaching toward the pole is more rigid than on the other side of the pole, and he will have beaten lines of communication and retreat In view of the fact that the North Pole is the only great geographical 'puzzle left unappropriated, and the further fact that it Is only a question of time when wo must annex Canada, the discovery of the North Pole holds more than a mere sentimental interest. - ANOTHER VIEW OF THE PENSION REPORT. The Eagle the other day. gave an editorial Imd synop tical review of Commissioner Ware's late report, in which the total cost of pensions and of the war up to the present as computed by statisticians, was given. That same re port shows that there were 2,901 fewer pensioners in the fiscal year 1902-03 than in its predecessor. There are still almost a million of them; and perhaps it is prema ture'to expect immediately a steadily diminishing pension list The Grand Army of the Republic asks a service pension for every veteran who arrives at the age of sixty two. This means 200,000 new pensions, as that number of surviving soldiers of the civil war is- still pensionless. Undoubtedly the service pension will be granted, al though the age limit may be greater than sixty-two. The old soldiers are now falling rapidly. Most of them must be in the. sixties and seventies; the very youngest hard on three-score. But as the old guard disappears the sol diers of the Spanish war will appear to take some of their places. Well, it pays for a nation to be generous to the men who fight for it The United States has paid nearly three billions for pensions. The annual pension charge, the mathematicians tell us, is $1.75 for every man, woman and child. In spite of the grumbling, do many of us re gret the money? CARTER HARRISON WISDOM. It is held by many politicians that civil service tends to party disintegration in that it curtails enthusiasm. Party reward should follow party victory and follow to those wlio bear the burthen and heat of the campaign. Patronage begets bosses and maintains machines, and bosses- and machines are necessary to effective organiza tion. But here comes the mayor of Chicago, who owes his position to the "push," declaring that "patronage is the bane of political life. If expenses could be kept down, I would not be sorry if the bridge tenders were placed on the civil lists. The old idea that patronage is political strength is defunct. The fewer jobs I have to give out the better satisfied I am. For every man I make glad by giving him a job three men are made sore, so where doe the gain come in?" AN ANARCHIST BLATHERSKITE ARRESTED. A few days ago John Turner, an English Anarchist, was arrested while addressing an audience made up very largely of the followers of Emma Goldman. He was arrested;- not by the New York authorities, but on a regular warrant served by federal officers. When the Anarchist speaker was put under arrest, his audience was inclined to rescue him by force, and a riot was threatened, but Emma Goldman sprang to the platform and succeeded in controlling her followers. Turner was taken from the hall followed only by the cheers of his audience and promises of support. The subject of his address- at the interrupted meeting was announced in the papers to be "The Trades-Unionism of the General Strike" whatever that may mean and while Lis impassioned denunciations of capitalism and the government kept his audience in an uproar, he does not appear to have been arrested for in cendiary utterances at this meeting, but because of evi dence previously gathered that he was an Anarchist of the kind whose admission to this country was forbidden in the amended immigration act passed at the last ses sion of congress. This act it will be recalled, added to the excluded classes epileptics and persons who have been insane within a specified period (usually five years), snd Anarchists or persons who believe in the overthrow by force or violence of all government or the assassina tion of public officials. This definition, it will be observed, does not exclude philosophical Anarchists of the type of Count Tolstoi, who believe In the overthrow by reason of government by force. Unless Mr. Turner advocates the resort to force by the minority to overthrow government by the majority, his fanaticism is not prescribed by the new law. It cannot too often be said that all error is daugerless so long as truth is left free to combat it; but also that inciting men to murder as a means of destroy ing government is not error but crime. o THE'PEOPLE'S GRATITUDE DUE HIM. The Emporia Gazette says: "Governor Bailey 1ms di rected Attorney General Coleman to go to Kansas City. Kansas, and assist the county attorney to prosecute the boodlers. This action was taken Saturday night after the governor had heard both sides of the controversy. The boodlers and their friends of course wanted no outside interference end they managed to get a lot of weak-kneed 'good citizens' who didn't have the courage to turn down the petition to retain Gibson, and as a result the showing Gibson made before the governor was more than the real merits cf the case warranted. Gib?cn is one cf the beet attorneys at the Wyandotte bar. He is able os a prac titioner to take charge of the boodle cases, but h is to be investigated as one of the boodlers and he had about ear much business investigating the boodlers before the grand jury as Captain Kidd wruld have as one cf a board of bishops. "The public did nt know th" strength cf Gibson's pe tition, however, and could act know the pressure that was brought on Governor Bailey to do the wrong thing. But now that he has done the right thing, he deserves the gratitude of all ttic people. He has taken the fair and wise and manly" course. He has taken it in the face of political advice to the contrary. He has acted as a governor should act, and has justified the hopes of his friends and has confounded the suspicions of his enemies. The case is now checked up to the account of Attorney General Coleman. If an officer of Kansas ever had a great opportunity, he has it He can make a name for himself, if he is brave and wise, that may make him the inevitable candidate for governor cf the Republican party in 1906. Kansas is looking for a man' who will stand for honesty though the heavens fall; who will put his heart and soul into the fight for clean politics. If he mcceeds it will be because he believes that the people are behind him. All the forces of graft and iniquity will try to convince him that courage is useless. The thing for every honest citi zen to do who desires to make his private sentiment pub lic sentiment is to, write to Attorney General .Coleman and assure him that in his fight against bpodls and graft in Kansas honest citizens are with him and that they will be 'with him at the primaries and at the convention when he is attacked by the enemies his honesty makes. "The people of Kansas should rally to their public officers who are fighting corruption in office. The only way to make a clean state ic to make public sentiment favcring it. If men who have been abusing Governor Bailey, but who are now convinced that in this matter he has acted wisely and bravely, would write to him and thank him for setiding the attorney general to Wyandotte county, they would do their part towards making Kansas honest." A 3 If? 5fes?as THE "STARVATION ARMY." There are' a baker's dozen of students at Yale whom the other students Tacetioucly nickname the "Starvation army.-" These men, who are United States regulars, take it in good part, for they declare that ihey have a "soft time," with little or nothing to do but to attend to their diet exercises. These exercises, conducted by one of the professors, consists of taking just as little food each day as will sus, tain the body comfortably without recourse to the heavy fare of the ordinary man, while a careful watch of the results is kept by the instructor, Prof. Chittenden. One of the starvation thirteen, Horace Fletcher, has been living for a long time entirely on milk, maple sugar and a prepared kind of cereal. Of this he has eaten all he desires. It transpires that in spite of the demand for heavy exercise made on him he has kept up his weight and lost all desire for the heavier kjnds of food. The diet taken by Fisher proved entirely sufficient for a man weighing 165 pounds. To find out whether he could keep his weight on such diet he was subjected to a course of training in the Yale gymnasium which would have tried the endurance of the toughest blacksmith or shipwright The Yale boys may laugh at these experiments, but at least poor students who are obliged to struggle through college on light and what some would call insufficient diet will find nothing to laugh at Economy in food is just as much a virtue as anything else if not carried too far. CANADIAN MILITARY PREPARATIONS. The Canadians are arranging to increase their mili tary strength, doubtless with the intention of doing some thing dreadful to Great Britain or the United States, if all questions between these countries and Canada are not decided in favor of the latter in the future. The militia is to be increased to 45,000, and rifles and equipment are to be provided for 100,000 men. This is, of course, in addition to the British troops now stationed in Canada and the Provinces. With not quite six million people, Canada wants an army which is nearly as- large as the American army, which represents a population of perhaps 80,000,000. In connection with these wants, the following statement of the minister of militia, Sir Frederick Borden, regarding military funds, is of particular interest: "We owe a duty to Great Britain, and we have dis charged that duty in the past by being prepared to take care of our own territory. I insist upon this, and I have no hesitancy in saying it, that if the people of this coun try should see fit to expend money for military purposes or for purposes of defense, they shall have control of that money themselves, and shall not hand the money over to anybody, whether it be the London war office of the first lord of the admiralty, to spend for them." From all of which it appears that the Canadians are taking themselves very seriously, and are venturing to have aspirations which may lead them into serious diffi culties. 8 COCOA VERSUS THE COFFEE HABIT. We hear much of late about the extent of the cocoa habit in these parts. One authority says that one person out of every five in the larger cities has become a cocoa drinker. There are no means of verifying this statement or of oven knowing whether cocoa is used almost wholly as a substitute for coffee. The Spaniards, who discovered the cocoa bean, have unbounded faith in its efficacy. As an army beverage it has been used in all the more mqdern wars. There is a rich field for its cultivation in P.orto Rico and the Philippines. Cocoa is worth looking up. o THE WINE OF DAY. The sky is a drinking cup That was overturned of old. And it pours in the eyes of men Its wine of airy gold. We drink that wine all day Till the last drop is drained up And are lighted off to bed By the jewels in the cup. Richard Henry Stoddard. Topeka Herald: Colonel Murdock has coined the term Probuster to apply to the Kansas fellows who are against the machine. If the colonel will watch things a while he will observe that the machiaiss would .rather stand any thing else than these same Probusters probe. We are told every few days about some crank trying to reach the president Why not hire some cheap fellow to personate the president, clothe him in a bullet-proof suit, stick his pockets full of revolvers and then turn the assassins and cranks loose on him? Lawrence Gazette: Beaten by Wash burn! How would it do for the Jay hawkers to tackle the second nine of the Baldwin High school? Topeka Journal: IT. W. Grass is being talked of for the senate out in Rush county. Of course i'. Dumont Smith pre dicts that it will be a. short grass af fair. Topeka State Ledger: There are several rascals in different Kansas towns who need -a little hell, and they will be sure to receive it if they monkey with the editor of this paper. El Dorado Republican: Fifty different "degrees" are given by American col leges,, and yet half the graduates of these institutions can neither read, write nor spell correctly. ilcPhcrson Republican: In London there is a birth every forty secondhand a death every minute and a quarter. 7t yill take some years for this place to equal that record. Ottawa Herald: The fates are capri cious. Men on their way to battle have been stricken dead by lightning, and only last week a football team, traveling to a match game, was wrecked and mangled in a railroad collision. Hutchinson News: There were sixty live arrests for drunkenness and other offenses in Topeka within thirty-six liou offenses in Topeka within thirty-six hours. The real effect of the machine is most apparent in the capital city. Only this is the anti-machine machine. Arkansas City Traveler: A gentleman from Wichita, who is posted on racing, says the Wichita track is a mile long, all right, but he says Cresceus never stepped it in 1:9&. He says the time was nearer 2:06. If we were to mention the name of our informant it would create great surprise. Atchison Globe: An Atchison girl who was so homely ten days ago she would scare a locomotive, has become so hand some that women are beginning to dis like her, though she was generally ad mired before. Here is the recipe she prac ticed to reach this enviable stage: She stood on her toes and balanced forward and backward ten times every night, taking a deep breath each time. Every morning she stood In an open door and took twenty deep breaths without stop ping. Lawrence Journal: The death of Chief Keokuk, of the Sac arid Fox Indian., removes some of tne interesting charac ters of the west. In the latter part of the fifties his tribe was located in Kansas, anu it was in the years immediately suc ceeding that the treaty was negotiated, with the aid of a Kansas pioneer, by which the removal of the tribe was se cured. Chief lveokuk was very grateful for the assistance rendered at that time, and was one of the Indian leaders who has always commanded the respect of those with whom he dealt. Epigrams From the Novelists. CynicJfcm is merely the art of seeing things as they are instead of as they ought to be. Robert Hichens. It Is his sweetheart a man should be particular about. Once he settles down, it does not much matter whom he mar ries. J. Jr. Barrle. The man who looks well in evening dress lpoks well in anything. Robert Hichens. A person who can't argue is like a per son who can't chew; he swallows the facts of life unprepared for digestion. Sara Jeannette Duncan. It is .mostly the women who are the gamesters: the men only the cards. Thomas -Hardy. There are three thinges a woman ought to look straight as a dart, supple as a snake and proud as a tiger-lily. Elinor Glyn. To write a check is one thing, to have it honored ' depends on a variety of cir cumstances. Anthony Hope. A wise man reduces his affairs to a minimum and his interest in the affairs of his neighbors to less. Seton Marri man. Good finance is knowing how to utilize the fullness of other people's pockets without revealing the emptiness of one's own. Richard Bagot. There is no man so much at the mercy of his own vanity as he who enjoys a limited notoriety. Seton Mcrrimnn. We earn our life by labor, and then, if we spend as the gods design, we spend our life in love. Henry Harland. Never make friends with the devil, a monkey, or a boy. No man knows what they will do next. Rudyard Kipling. Husbands are like new boots you can't tell where they're going to pinch till it's too late to change 'em. E. Thorney croft Fowler. , Scientific Training in America. (From the Electric World and Engineer.) In a very interesting lecture delivered in L,ondon recently on Lord Bacon, Mr. Sid ney Lee expressed doubt whether a tem ple of science. such as Bacon Imagined in "The New Atlantis'' would ever come Into existence. At present the portraits were, Mr. Lee feared, not favorable for its emergence in England. It seemed more likely to come first to birth in Ger many or In America, where things of th mind received from the general public a consideration which was denied thorn in England. The experience of a recent visit to America had shown Mr. Lee that there was nothing In his own land to compare with the widespread eagerness among the youth of the United States to enjoy academic training. It was difficult for them at home, too. to realize even dimly the munificent Teadiness with which American legislatures responded to de mands made on their resources to supply th American people with fit endowment and equipment cf research. Now that the price of seats on the New York Stock Exchange has dropped from $80,000 to $32.Of) npiece, it is obvious that they aro within the reach cf any one who can save up $1,000 a week for just a year. o An intarurb&n troiley ear in Pennsylvania collided with a bear one night last week. His bearship was i knocked about forty feet but didn't appear much hurt, his feelings excepted. The Young Men of Today. (From the Philadelphia Inquirer.) The young men" of today are too finicky too much given to self-analyst, too self -pampering. Their shoes und necktie cost more each year than did th entire wardrobe of their graadiuther.. They feel a ser.sa of degradation in small beginnings and plodding, and they wait for success ready, made to come to them. There t not a young man fit the coun try who would Imitate Ben Franklin and march through the streets munching r loaf ot bread while looking for employ ment. He dared not. Indeed, bocausa so ciety has become also- finicky, and he j v ould b arrested as a tramp. The young man of today wants capita; Trusts and combines aed corporations ' distress him. He cannot b president or t a banK or judge of n court the first week h. is from school, and he foela lfk tin- fmcua Elf Puszler, that ha has "no I chanco." t Carrie Maticn. without paint, tight.-, or furbelows in the play ef "Tea Nights la a Bar Room." juit as her natural self, they say, makes a pretty tough looking old heroine. If plagiarism is to be rnade a statutory crime, as is in- timated. the penitentiaries cf this ccu-tr wiJl be crcvi3d i with editor.., preachers and beck writtrs. Commissioner Ware estimates that the:e will be a : drop of $1,7X,00 in i'uc reason r0lj 3c.t veer. J " Reflections cf an Old Maid. (From the Chicago Tribune.) I've sen yoan women spend tbr mcnths' tlioe and hundreds of ihlr fath er's mowy in getting a trousseau for lb purpose of marrying a 99-ccot young man. I A Ju2 as lief promise to obey a aus as to prwai to lore satf honor him It's as easy to do oae as iht other, and sometimes a great deal easier. Many a widow marries a second hus band In order to get ren with th? f-s. Marryng In baste Is no worse than any ..hr kmd 4 raaxryisg. Brijbaj Tovwg vims merely a man who had tec ooeortualty. Shawnee Quill. Last night a lodger In one of the room ing houses in the city got out of bed to find c window- sash to place In a win dow, as the wind was chilly. He lighted the lamp and hunted around and seeing an object about the size of a sash, he seized it, but the thing weighed about forty pounds. Curious to k now what it was, be raised a canvas covering it, and was startled to confront a hideous fae brightly chalked on the entire side of it. There were several more standing against the wall. The fellow replaced the lamp, blew out the light and jumped in bed. wondering if Banquo's ghost was real, anyhow, or had he gotten into Wllkle Collins haunted house, Apache Review. There has .been a great deal of cotton raised in our community this year. But we have heard several farmers say next year they would only raise what their f family could pick. Apache will not al- i low the negro to live there, consequently ! we have to pay one dollar per hundred to have it picked, while farmers living in the vicinity, of towns where the negro is allowed to live get their cotton picked for 50 to 60 cents per hundred. AVe no tice the merchants of Apache are none too good to take the negro's money, even offering them bargains. Why not allow them to live there, as there would be that many more to feed and clothe, and It would be a great help and saving to the farmer? - Cleveland Triangle. A strange chain of circumstances is brought to the attention of the Triangle by the marriage yesterday of David B. Holler and Miss Lizzie Taylor. In June of last year T. D. Latham and Miss Georgia AVhaples acted In the capacity of groomsman and bridesmaid at the mar riage of R. E. Bridwell and Miss Mertie Baldwin; two hours afterward the for mer couple were married and Frank Woollard and Miss Florence Rice stood up with them. A year later these two young people were united in marriage and Mr. Holler and Miss Taylor filled the places of best man and bridesmaid. Now as a culmination of the chain, the latter couple have become man and wife. Now, the question is: Will the charm continue to hold good? Only the future can tell. Perry Republican. Gus Brown, a Dane, who has been employed during the past nine months in Mulhall, was before the police court this morning, charged with drunkenness and resisting an officer. He became bois terous on the train en route here from Mulhall and was insulting ladles and doing other malicious acts. The conduc tor wired ahead for officers to take the man from the train here at this place, and when the train pulled In Offi cers Phillips and RIeder entered the car and placed him under arrest. The fel low, crazed with drink, struck and kick ed at the officers and fought like a mad man. It was quite a task to drag him to the fire department house, where a wagon was ordered and he was hauled to the city jail. Brown is a naturalized citizen, his parents still residing In Den mark. He was fined $lo and costs for his unlawful acts and he refused to pay the bill and was taken to jail to "lay out" the amount. He had a ticket to Kansas City, and was en route there when ar rested. Brown is an intelligent looking Yon Yonson. and would probably be quite a respectable fellow if he would cut drink from his list of mineral waters. Then ho has many things to learn yet before he becomes a real good American citizen, one of which is to speak th" English language well and another to be governed by local and national cus toms. Because he had observed a few men intoxicated about the hotels ard were not arrested he had concluded that ho could go out on a "high lonesome and paint, red over the. ladies In the roll ing palace cars and no attention would be paid to it. It is amusing to wptch the effect upon some people of too mucU freedom. Especially is this true of th peasantry of coniinental countries when they come to America the desire imme diately seizes them to take possession of everything and to run everything their own way regardless of the customs which have maintained since we have become a nation. Brown is a sick soul today, because he has defied all that the re.ii and genuine American considersa deflanc" of law and order and common decency The American woman will be protected from such continental misfits. Cestos Reporter. The usual large nunrncr of country peo ple were in town Saturday afternoon last. The hitch-chains were filled with teams, the principal streets had constant throngs, going every way. some talking crops, others politics, while a few wer talking Dowie and his doings in New York City, and one old fellow was heard to remark that he thought Dowie was a very poor converter of sinners, for when he had Sister Nation before him, instead of firing her out in darkness, he ought to have stuck to her like gluue and molasses, and converted her on the spot, that it would have been a feather i his divine cap that even the "vile news paper fiends'' couldn't deprive him of. A farmer had a rather ancient specimen of a rooster in his hand which he was trying to sell to a socialistic gentleman, who was inclined to be foxy about the price asked, and argued upon tha actual cost of production ami the prevailing price of rooster feathers, bones and tough meat, and in their bantering the word "profit" was bandied about, and the So cialist thinking ft referred to the rooster In question, said, derisively: "Prophet! Prophet! Patrlarcu. you mean!" pointing to the fowl. "You okl dealers In tough old roosters' flesh woukl ntirop value Into rotten egg Hke stocks In trusts and them." "So I -would." honestly repli- d the roosler-nokler. "for, from present re ports of the papers there la a smell of rottenness brewing that wlH smother thit of rotten eggs, and I don' like to se th old relialrte rotten-egg lose Its uso as an instrumrat of throwing mud and Hplf. I am for tha good old custom ' Th Socialist lauphd and said. "Come anl take something with nw." Frederick Enterprise. Frederick's matrimonial word vrr broken by a double elopement Tuesday evening when Harrison aiwsrds and Mis Jennie Field, together - with Lata. Fi4d and her cousta left for Vernon, where tney are said u have twen mar ried the next oay. ine nw tprte an sisters '! lived with their parents. tw!v man northwest of town In town ship 1. scuth. rang . v.-here they ar highly respected. The yoaar people art all just about of age. and seem to bare taken Uds xastbod of aaaertJns their la dependecre. Mr. Field, father cf the yong ladle, was in wrwn yesterday and minced no wnrds in showtnr hi pleas ure at the marrtege of Ms UabUr to Mr Edwards. It is expected thft tlv sire's ar.gcr vrilt be softened and tht both yovag ooaptes win sufce thair benaes aear the ladles' nnrente. 1 criri THJS STATE'S LARGEST AND MOST POPULAR STORE. On Special Sale Today 200 Medallion Plaques. Made with bronze mat, chain hangers and glass '3 covered, round 'shapes of colonial groupes and liliputian assorted subjects; worth twen- J 1 2c 4 ty-five cents. Special today, each WINFIELD & HODGSON Wholesale and Retail Hay Feed, Grain and Coal Will Make Prices That Wii! Draw the Trade Office Over 318 East Dougias Avenue Wareroom Corner Handley and Pearl Streets West Side Phones-New 484 and S?S8 INFIELD & HODGSON Art Garlands Are the Old est and Best ard Coal H eaters on the Flarket. 1 H I STORE For Sale at the MOUCK HARDWARE 116 E. Douglas Avenue I ft ONLY BOIL IN WATER TEN Mi NOES ARNE ALL BOTCHERS AND GROCERS IkiUOualitvCHILI CON C -J Li Eszt-a -tvrB EtEog osbo sjeko is h--m CANNEL COAL Just received, ioo tons of high-grade eastern Cannel Coal, the best grate coal on earth. Will be aold at the low (, price of S6.25 per ton delivered. Burns like hickory wood and more lasting than any soft coal. Schwartz Lumber and Coal Co. i61 West Douglas Telephone 193 $ 'BREVITY IS Til?: HOTL OF WIT." CiOOD W IFE, YOl NEED LACE CURTAIN i- i SreaALSTOMY Artliur Puo Gorman fcops t r-1 b tLe suiUi south on the race (fees lion; heme bis abuse cf RcoeveiL Elijah I traveled in a chariot cf Ore. Elijah III makes i his trips in a private car with buffet accessory. Where Disgsncs Was FocIIch, Frro the Besto Transcript.) ratter-Yea have heanJ f Diagrams S tee alut vcjta a tasters, smretaag for an hoess. man? Hr PoUr W?kt fo. b! Hanst u:en r not to be fountl on th street at aigfct; they zre at home vri'.h their fajsl- An fr.tsrnatisr.a!. Conference. Prom Pwc I Trd OKcaatl-Ilar. 3txx IT4lftoa. one 5k ot b3fct t prwkse te r-.jur.trjr as til one taw seen it- - ilrm. Hotit "WTiy. jrr SorA&lp. I dWnt besin to apes-t9efet tt Ul I aaw the otbKS- . i East snd West- j Frosa Ufa.) j Mm Eswjw Fr3k7, I ommizxs I as sarvnattf. I Twrfe. oC mmzt. w , Mvtr nm t e HanktBeed t mm. Jlrs. SWk 1 Uat rmt "VTby wt Wot j brr we Ur-nt pi Hfce Oid rriesd untfl i we set to lawnr thexa- j Nottingham Lace Curtains 18 pairs, border of fancy Rococo work, fish net center woven in contrast to border, overlocked stitched edges; sizes no incbe long, 4m 54 inches wide. This is a good $2.25 Jhl n number. Per pair ra v A Swell Curtain This is a good $4 value, extra long, 3 1-2 yards in length, 61 inches wide, beautiru! pattern, rich border, combination lace cficct pan- Ja Q neled with open spray work. Jhf I A Per pair, today TORNADO SELLERS OF EVERYTHING. HATTHORX 80XS 34 EKCAKTJX.B CO. JU SCAiTr iXMJ3LA3 AVE. THE ! 8 US,