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TURKEY A-PLENTY FOR ALL TO-DAY Belated Arrival of Birds from Texas Causes Drop in Prices. THANKSGIVING FINDS CITY PREPARED Charitable Institutions to Pro vide Abundance of Dinners for the Needy. when th? fin?* en-nherry was sold ,.,, ataMmt H ara? estimated that L -.rire: wou'd carry the city to "rSTanenimeusl,. A poll re d*yi ? th? **ct ?hat <,ver-*'t>ody. from *?*'*: ^?lstcr? i plutocrat to the m,?T?r?me would %ote -Yes.* Only t? ?iftrteV -as claimed by the dis oM ?!_Ur? of gloom a sandwich man ??ciSK. -?ha?no teeth ?sd ?*?; - | i better fed this S.L t'lrstriv"?.' than in many a day. A P So' Texas turkeys, held up en ?no .. ,nt. last moment to --d't?e lolldal I? town, and the pnce "?..,? tribe fel1 correspond , w . .'.??-. fro*' t*'"1 nuts w<>re __-? thsa erer. ?ad the rest of the fsd ?Ute ?V? bt\h*d ?..re??'-' -?r than last. "n?wr.towr. will b? tight in the rigor \\\\Toi - ,xcepl for lhe K;VtT .himei, but through the empty ????eM Fifth - ?*? "husse*. steered f,r'fr?m the-.r beaten tracks by the Sal u", Ar: t human wreck .? for a ?reni ng and a meal at Its u, -W ?rill stu ' -1 'I urch service, and ?Tan nther around a huge home table ? celeb.:.' ?n *** "P-*** " ?X,ch ?t ?. ? t. The railroad ur?in.ls ?f I ? ?tn?S8 crowds escaping ,nd ?_t?ring the city, including one nun who v? travel all day to eat din? ner In Montreal. Re Turkey Shortage. AMbffMag evo. w?h the Christ B?i ehi? 'y th? Air, might have passed off 'or its lae^eesser were It not for the Uck of pets to keep a-boiling on the itrwt ccn.???-. Kv.ry householder car J?t? "- bundles home, the ihoprr'.s were in excellent spirits and ?nl)' the provision men were out or ?orts, but with their ca>?h registers con ?iderabiy weightier. About the happiest urchins in the city to-dav will be the lads who re? member just what newspaper you read every morning and evening. Through 'the generosity of William Waldorf A.< tor, the newsboys who man ? their home at the Brace Memorial Newsboys' House will attack in extended order, a : menu incluiling German rolls, English cakes, Russian turnips. French dress? ing, Kalamazoo celery, Maine potatoes and Vermont turkey. In the evening they will have an old-fashioned New England celebration. Besides tho newshi-yt' d:nner, the Children's Aid Rocietv will serve meals at the Elizabeth llome for (?iris, through the help of Mrs. William Bay? ard CuUing; at the Fr.rty-fourth Btrsel Boys' Lodging, through Mrs. Cleveland H. Dodge's aid, and at the West Side Home with the help of W. Emlen Rossevelt. A Tempcance Plea. "Mr. Boozer!" calls a post*r In front of Salvation Army headqunrters, at 1 _0 Weel Fourteenth Street, "a number of your old friends will tell you how they defeated John Barleycorn, Thanksgiv i ing Day, at 10:30. 3 and 7 o'clock. Com? 1 an 1 hear Nickel Jack," it adds allur i ingly. "The rtee from a three-cent lodf* i ing-house to the sditOr*S chair! Other thrilling and hair-raising experience.-?! " Fifth Avenue 'busses r.nd motor trucks ??.?'11 be busy from daybreak gathering the city's flotsam and jetsam for these three meetings. A unique parade will s,tart from head? quarters at 2:30 p. m? and march to Union Square, to Twenty-third S and down Fifth Avenue to Fourteenth Street again. Among its feature- will | be a huge walking whiskey bottle. In the evening tho army will welcome WEDNESDAY, <\rn*j -Chirk (Trilumr NOVEMBER 24. 1915. I M?_B Victrola Mighty as Caruso Faultless as Melba Tender as Paderewskf Sweet as Mischa Elman Droll as Harry Lauder Martial as Sousa TK? Viertel* ? all artiat? sai su lartrtnatta matt \: ,?.-.?? you ik* acru?! loiaa t? tks r*-a?r?a-BtiJ mttfmt ?".a iairrum*nt?Jiit*. of tkj tror.?. 1? is tr.e ?emu?, tk* eumtme, tki Msury ?t rrcry ,o.., ,nd ?very uutrumcBt It i* Im ?usrer-.* musacAi lAitniBc?! t? ?il taimav^ The Victor Dealers Listed Below Will Give You Demonstration. Leading Places Where Victrolas and Records Are Sold Below 14th Street Ideal Music Co.2r> John St. Owens & Beers.81 Chambers St. Singer Bros.82 Bowery Jacob Mandel. 246 Bowery From 14th St. to 42d St. (Inclusive)? Globe Talking Machine Co.9 West 23d St. Chas. H. D.tson & Co.8. 10. 12 East 34th St. Ludwig Baurnann & Comp'y 8th Ave,. 35th to 36th St. James T. Coughlin.544 & 546 Eighth Av. Knabe Warerooms.5th Av. ?it 39th St. Michael Streamer.1 39 East 42d St. Pease Piano Co.128 West 42d St., near Broadway From 43d St. to 96th St. (Inclusive)? Mathuihek & Son Piano Co.Broadway cV 47th St. Bloomingdale Bros.59th & Lexington Ave. Sol Lazarus.216 East 59th St. Adolph H. Mayers.1983 Broadway, near 67th St. Fuller & Bagley.2106 Broadway, near 7 3rd St. I- Zion, Inc.2 300 Broadway, cor. 83rd St. M. J. Roth.3rd Ave. ?N 84th St. Henry Mielkc.1680 Second Ave., cor. 87th St. Above 96th Street F-manuel Blout.2799 Broadway TW ArUon.52 West I 16th St. Buckley-N-.wh-.il Co.5th Ave. ?** I 25 th St. Kranich & Bach.16 West 125th St. Albert Sichel.233 West 125th St f? L. Steers Co., Inc.3496 Broadway ?Uncx Talking Mtchine Co.312 West 145th St. f-pstnn tSi Berdy.2977 Third Ave., near 153rd Si L J. Rooney O*. . 1 45 I St. Nicholas Av., nei.r 1 H ,Tt\ St Brooklyn **l Nimm Ar Son, I niton St it Hoyt St. Subway Slat'n, B'klyn f-*P?l>.n & Berdy I 198 Fulton St.. near Bedford Ave. Pease Piano Co.34 F'latlmsh Av.-., Brooklyn B. Guy Warner Bedford Av-?. ?*< Hnlsey St.. Brooklyn Out of Town? J***?''. Lee4_4j M?,,? H.,u... i*,., r,2-S4 lUrti*?? A?., Wk.t? HsIm, N. Y wft A Son* Piano *Air. Co 74i Brood St , Newark, N. J Tiffany & Co. Pearls for Necklaces ?I TO-DAY MERITS NATION'S GREATEST THANKSGIVING By HENRI (LEWS. There ha? been no time since the United States became a nation .when our p??ple have had such cause for thanksgiving as they have this year. Our country Is. prosperous and our p???>ple happy. The g?xxl lord has favtired us with tremendous crops, which can be marketed at good price?. For both our fo??d sup plies and manufactured goods the world is our market, and will br. even If an unexpected peace should be declared. While we are feasting and thank? ing on Thursday let us all pray for the relief of the countless thousands of innocent women and children In Europe who are suffering trials un? told, through no fault of theirs. Commander Eva Booth home from her Western tour. Tere thousand of the needy ar.d poor : of the city will be cared for at the din? ner of the St. Andrew's onecen st .11.is, to be given at 31 West Eighth Street, ar.d 250 basket? filled with |.I ! things ?rill be lent to the sick, ami .r\ ' the old Chinese Theatre at f> and 7 1 Doyen Street the Rescue Society will -? rve dinner to l.Ouo men, women and children. Thi? evening will mark the thirty* Ballest?n? of the Bowery Mission,I 1 and the most striking of the fifty teeti? monies to be given is a letter from j Robert E. Hicks, who surrender? the authorities to ease his conscience. ? "Three years ago to-night," his let? tor reads, "I slept on sacks of nreste paper in William Street, New Y'.rk, homeless, friendless, without bope. It's ?i long story of transgression that ? . ?'-.* ms down and over to B ? Island. To-night, alone in this ? ? botel In the country, I want a part in your services. To-day I am and publisher o' a magazine at a year." To Resume Bread Line. The Bowery Mission bread line, the f its kind in the country, was re- , ?umed at 1 o'clock thi% morning, and will continue until Easter. The mis- : ?ion ?Hll distribute 250 family baskets :. ng dinners for ten people rintendent John H. Wyburn of the' McAuley Wetes Street Mission wili basket? to about fifty married cmv.ru, and will also serve a dinner.] Edward S. Upton, for nine months an ant at the mission, will go to Montreal to eat dinner with his family to*night He expects by New Year's to i -??ting in the trenche? in Franc?.. The Hebra? Sheltering and Immi Soctety of America will have ? ? rations in New York, Boston, Bel re, Philadelphia and San Fran ? :-c?>. Here Adolph Lewieoha and Leon Bender? will speak. The Greater New York Philanthropic Society, Inc., will distribute food in bags and basket? ir.rm the old Chil 1 :rt Building, Third A ven in and Eleventh Street, end a dinner ?rill i ved at the main entrance of th? Ton.bs. At Ellis Island a special dinner will be ?erred the MO immigrants temp ? rarily d? tained there, and the day will ! ? 'tingly observed at the pruons, hospitals and city institutions. Clergymen Thankful America Has Peace Clergymen of this city asserted jot terday there was more to be thankful for at Ike present t.rne than el ???her pe?o i sines the Puritans ?ended. "What her? we to be thankful for?" repeeted Bishop Greer, when the ques? tion was pat t? i n by a reporter for The ? "Por ?-verything, I . . We should be thankful for md problem which we are facing to-day. I do not mean that I do not depr?cete the problems them? selves. But their solution adds to the ef life. Difficulties always spell opportunities for the human Blind which il the be-,t way to real progress." Dr. William T. Manning pointed out that one of the chiet reasons for Thanksgiving was the fact that as a nation then Is still time for us to from our satisfaction with mere BSeterial prosperity. "There is still time," added Dr. Man ning, "for us to fiee ourselves from the spiritually dangerous inditT? to the principles at stake in the war and te th? responsibility for moral leadership and fearless moral which rests upon us as the greatest of the neutral powers." 'I think we oucht te be thankful I (Xlutrrh Cttrra?iirr Jlrraa CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS Episcopal Prayer Hooks Hymnals, combination sets, 12.00, 5 1.00, 5-1 ?'ii and 15.00 the set Single Prayer Hooks. from ~s cents up to those !? srecial bindings; Sterling Sil? ver, 125.00, and i4kt. Gold, m 2 J.oo, Stamping or engrav? ing of mines or initials extra. ITS?WAY TO ASTOR PLAT TWO BIBLE H<>, SE?Nr.W TORK 'Oppn?li? Wan?m?k?r s > WANTED FOR JANUARY?? I u I ! >' furnished housckeep inj? apartment, not less than tWO heilroonis. helow 90th st.. fur one month. State prie..' und nnmher of rooms in an* iworlng. Qi Roo? 6W? Trfbwi ? BuiMlafs 11 have Mr. Wilson for Prei I? !'<-v. Dr. Joseph Silv? .. i ino-EL "We ougj to be thankful for being on tha d feneloe ar.d standing on our intern tional rights? in this time of turmo We should be thankful because the is an era of prosperity in sight. V should also be thankful for the lave headedness of the American citizei who laugh at jingoism rather than a prove of it. Above all, let us be than' ful that_ we are on the defensive y believe in preparedness." Dr. Christian F. Reisner gave foi reasons for being thankful. Becau: we have a level-headed Christian Pr?s r these dangerous times. B . many wealthy men are tindir the joy of serving their fellows. B cause religion is increasingly recoi nized as an aid for earthly efficient: and not merely a death-time insuranc Because poverty is lessening, huma happiness is increasing, friendship solider and pure love make? earl much like heaven. "I thank God for having kept my ni tion, America, out of war these ?ixtee months poet, -aid Dr. John Howat Meliah. "Grateful am I for the fsi that the nation has maintained ii r'ghts ar.d the rights of mankind witl out breaking friendship with any or of the belligerent powers. "1 owe gratitude to Someone fr giving me the chance to live in demi erotic Amr-rica, not in autocratic Asi or aristocratic Kurope. Here '?'?.i think ou- own thoughts and ?pooh 01 own minds freely. What we de SI people is the expression of puu.ic opir ion, .whether right or wrong. Wilson to Celebrate Day at Dinner with Mrs. Gal Washington, Nov. 24. Thonhsgirin aril] be quietly observe?! In w to-morrow, all departments of the gol ting eloseol In many of th ? r. ice? 4vi:: thi President's Thanksgivm -.mation. 'I he plans of President Wilson ar ? ? ? uncertain. 1!'- had not eon pletod his annual BtOSSOM to I'ongre to-night, and probably will t'nish it tr now morning. He will have Thar.ki. riving dinner with Mrs. Norman Got ? , and his family. It was sai to be doubtful v r ??? would dim ich a renn?t. including a thirty flre-poond turk.-y fattened for the or . Trimble, Clerk of th ? . aril] be prepared st the Whit House. Hotels, Happy, Provide Thanksgiving Feature' The holiday spirit is flooding the bi? New York hotels, too. In n numbe special decoration? for Thanksgivini and special plans for interior i t.mi? have been outlined, and from thi low, ?. moid te the proprietors them selve* the idea that the goeets mus bo made especially happy for tc-dnj prevails. ' .rge C. Boldt, at the Waldorf-As torio, has arranged a Theohagivinf, week. A bam built inside the grill room, opened Tuesday, marked the be ginning. All y-terday cranberr) bubbled in the kitchens; on? thousand turkeys are ready to pleas? the inner man, and 2.">0 dozen- bunchei of celery are ready for consumption or the i ??'? day. In the kitchens of the Vanderbili Hotel Jean Kicrocho was busily direc' ing the serving of dinner when !.? ?S ?eon. "We shall have ze dinnerr won d' rful," said he, emphasizing als r marks with a small tin measuring cup he held in hin hand. "Ze ?peerit ? Znnksgiving. he is een ze food, A: . we have prepare ze dinnair like ic peo? ple get in ze home, only more so." At the Ritii-Carlton a special musical progreoMBS in the new Crystal Boon has been nrrang.-d. At the Hotel lie? Alpin the fifteen hundred employes an feu on turkey and cranberries at th? expense of the hotel. A celebration wa. held last night in the grillroom, when. Miss Wilma Wynn gave a special feet ore dance. Brer** table was filled at the Plaz;; Grill last night, where special mu-.i and special dances by Mr. Durant am Miss Hawkecworth marked the of Thanks-giving Kve. Pierre Lafargi chef of the Piaza, has prepared an obi fashioned dinner for to-day. The Hotel Ht. Regis has had Boill* the ehl ''. i r. ? are S meal whir' ..ill tempt Mrs. Gait and th? !'?? . .-? their old room?, a mu.sii-al programme appropr:;.' the teflSO> in- bien arranged. Page Finds Pumpkin Pies Like a Drink in Loadon ii; ca? i ? tmt B Loadoi . . None of the Amer Iran elahl or BOCieties hero plan tc hold any spec:.''. Thanksgiving ceiebrn ties to-morrow. The member? of th? -'a?T will be the guest.4 o: PoCS St a dinner which will b. vry informal. The American Ar !.; bave a turkey, b t il ? tih'ful whether pumpkin pie trill ? bis menu. Americans probably would fa i t recognize English pumpkin pie as then favorite piece de resistance on Thanksgiving. Since h? has been hor. Ambassador Page has had three, ?Jl o: the same brand. Invariably they have ? of liquid consistency, and th? y had to be taken as a drink with the if a spoon. SUFFRAGE THANKS ARE GIVEN EARLY So Grateful Defeat Wasn't Any Worse, Women Celebrate Day In Advance. The suffragists were ?o thankful they couldn't wait for Thanksgiving but had their t-irkey and cranberry sauce yes teniav. More than 200 gathered in the lunch room of the Woman BoffrogS party at SB* Past Thirty-fourth Streer. a! noOD, to give thanks that the suf? frage defeat on Election Day was no Worse than it was. Miss Mary Garrett Hay opened the feast with a little speech, but the celebration was mostly m the turkey. There were homemade mince pies, contributed by proud ora? tors an I eompoigfl ergonlsere, ?rl - pleasure in thi? oonortunity to exhibit -. rainine pi "We got over 500.000 votes," said M? Bo**, "and that is more than the i cd votes that Rave us suffrage ?n ten Western states. We mus? all he wry thankful that there are ?o BBOO| hrood-OjUldod men in New York ? -here will lie more the ere have a referendum." ?? Fhant fol '" erlod Dr. Aooe Hop i . ? ? of the National I lean W ' I* '' .'ion. "Thi . -roer of my life. I ii-oi to ge out ami ?hoot my own Thank?! ? I g torhep when I was a g:rl .; m,, Bi|,., and it tested tine, but I know as much then as I do now; I didn't have so much to be thankful for. This year's turkey will taste bct ter than any I ever bad before hoCOOSS . : v. .-ir ?-.as heaped hleaaiog? upon ? tljr, Didn't we win a nnl 1,?? ...... -" His soffrogs outlook mi ? ? ?. ' l.r ightei " -.? ever, shook h??r hend j*j when Thanksgiving WOS BSO*> ,,f mince pie this country , ? bomble pie thi- year "I coot BOS ?Ot ?S have any? thing to t.. grotefol for. ?~e hese le I four - go, and the w??r is still going on abroad. I StB Battpmed of America and ih? par! II ha? i abroa.I We have I" ????? very - ? led, ?holly commercial am! With Il n!. \S .- had a irri-Ml opportunity and we f,,ile,l iiMetly to Ihkc BOJ con Structiv? action." A?fDREW CARNEGIE CARNEGIE. 80. SAYS WORLD IS BETTER - In Good Health. Ironmaster Will Celebrate Birthday To-day with Golf. "Say to the reporter? who usually call on my birthday that all goe? well with me. Dr. (iarmany marvel? at the .plendid return to health which ? summer on the Maine coast ha? wrought. "The world grows better ?nd we ar?* soon to see blessed peace restored, and a world court established, when, in the v .ir.ls ef Hums: " 'Man to man the world o'er Shall brothers be for a' that.'" Andrew Carnegie will he eighty years eld to-day, hut this meagre statement was all that rennrters got yesterday in t !:ice of the usual merry birthday as ssTT.blage. His secretary denied, how- ' ever, that the philanthropist was In poor health. "He beat me at golf yesterday," he said, "an?l this morning he spent play? ing clock urolf in the back yard. He is perfectly happy and the most optimis? tic person in New York City. Last summer when he wanted to go fishing and the captains wer? afraid of rouizi weather, he would always say there vure no storms for him. I think that expresses his whole attitude toward life." The Carnegie Institute of Technol? ogy in Pittsburgh yesterday seUbreted the birthday anniversary with exer cises at which Dr. Henry D. Pritchett. presisliTTt of the Csrnegi? Foundation for th? Advancement of Teaching, said: "The most noteworthy thing about Mr. CerBSgie'l preaching of the doc? trine ef consecration of wealth is ?he tact that his practice has squared with his preaehiag. The great bulk ef his accumulations, nearly S-ino,0Oi),0OO. h;.s been turned becH by him to th?> tiunli?*, to he used in the cause of human bet? terment He is to-day a man of moder ete fortune." ' ROOT CHIEF TENET OF TAFT'S CREED Defence, Tariff and Party Success, Ex-President's Other Issues. OUT OF POLITICAL RACE FOR GOOD Preparedness Called Too Big a Question To Be Partisan Democratic Split Serious. 'B? T>>t--..s ? "T ' T*.l>u-? ] Rochester, N. Y.. Nov. 24 "1 b? live Elihu Root I? the best equipped man for the Presidency." As he struggled into his overeo?t with one hand and clapped on his hat with th? other, William Howard Taft ? put him?elf squarely on .ecord to-day. in the matter of his party'? selection to lead the fight of 1916. The ex-President made it plain that ?o far a? he could wield intluer.ee with i out taking an active part in the cam? paign he would be for Root from now on. "I am for Root, for preparedness for peace, for a new tari?? and for R?pu'o l'can success." said Mr. Taft. "The??' I are the planks of my private platform I am out of political campaigns -not only this one, but all of them -for . ever." Root "Best F??uipp?T*d." "But you have some preference as to the candidate who will lead the Re? publican fight Burton, Weeks, Root or Hughes?" ho was asked "Yes, I am for Root," he replied. "I believe he is the best equipped man in the coiintrv for the Presidency, and 1 have said so ever since I had the first opportunity to judge of his qualifica? tions. There is no uncertainty about my attitude. I have expressed my ??pinion of Mr. Root every time I have had ?v chance, and I latead to express it as often as I can. I believe he i*> the best man in sight." "Do you think he could enlist Progressiv ?apport "" "I don't know anything ?bout the Progressive? ar..! I don't want to," answered Mr. Tuft. "But, remember, that there an- PrOgrOBStTS g? B?rsl? WithoBt Progressives, just as there ar? generals without arm;. ? "I am a believer in preparedness, und I have beer, and will be. That does not mean the Wilson kind of preperedness, necessarily, al'hough the President's programme has its sup? porter?. There are many people who D?li?es in a big army, and probably just as many who believe that a big navy is the solution of the problem." ' WIIKXthe ? ? Army mule and the Xav\ goat meet on the grid? iron Saturday it will be an occasion you will remember, and remember with complete satisfac? tion if you rule to the Polo Groundi by the St. Nicholas orj.Soventh Avenue lines of the Wih clvenue dus OPENS SCHOOLS TO END HYPHEN Bureau of Naturalization to Ex? tend Education of Aliens. ? Kr tu The Trlt.una Uurasu I Washtigtoii. Nov. 24. The Bureau of Naturalization of tho Department of Labor has undertaken the task of try? ing to "eliminate the hyphen" by en? listing the cooperation of four hundred cities and town? In a nation-wide move? ment for the education and Am?rican? isation of candidatos for citizenship. It u the plan of the bureau, through the coAperatiea of the public school?, "to chunge that portion of the alien body now in a condition of helpless de? pendence or mere self-maintenance to the state of productive capacity which is the birthright of all American citi regardlees of their origin or birth." The Bureau of Naturaliza!ion will communicate with all applicant? for citizenship in the l"r " ?. and obtain th?' opening of elsei I them. The wire? of all pet?l - nat? uralisation will else be sdeteed te at 1i r..l .school for the reason that they derive citizenship arhen their husbands obtain their riral pap? ??:iuse, ich instruction will m it I the family to lie? es aaiei i The records of the Bureau ef Kate* relisstion show that sine? tue com? mencement ?if the school ?rear, en 0? toiler 1, notification? BSV? '?? ?nt te approximately 40,000 declarant?, petitioners and 15,000 wire? 0 ers, anil each day hundreds are added to the list. 2S5 Stern Brothers 4?nJmJ43rJSi?mv?. Wc//^/Uie Men's Clothing Section \ MOST EXCEPTIONAL SALE ON THF. THIRD FLOOR, FOR FRIDAY & SATURDAY Men's Sack Suits and Overcoat at ?22.50 THF SUITS arc in fancy and rif.it mixtures, wor? steds, rlit". iots. llssi miT' B, ImV* Illi'di'ls. vullli quarter *- i I tc lined, two mid three button coots; lises .il tu 1*8, stunts in? cluded. Value ltS.00 THE OVERCOATS er* In blick and Oxford mixt *******- with velvet or self i .?liars ; full sil!? Of quar? ter silk liiu-d: ?miser?, a ti\e and extremo models; ?ill hand tailor, d : value .--.30.00. Men's Sack Suits and Overcoats at $18.50 THE SUITS irr in two and three button model-,, of che riots and cossimereej B?S4BS $4 tu M chest, stouts included; sctnsl value I 15. 00 THF. OVERCOATS in single and douhle-brcast ed styles of fancy and heather mixtures; mostly quarter silk lined; all new models; actual value $25.00 Full Dresi and Tuxedo Suits, $25.00 to I5.0Q Men's Furnishing Dept. Located at the Sixth Avenue Kntrance; ( ..tup?ete assortments of Neckwear. Shirts. Pajamas. Silk Dress Mufflers and Reefers, Silk Suspenders, Smoking Jackets, Dressing (?owns. Hath and House Hohes. suitable for Christmas tri its. arc beim: shown. Men's Fine Silk Neckwear at ?T.?c, 68c and $1.00 each Shirt- at |1.50 to 7.50 Pajamas at 95c to 10.00 Night Shirt-. ")0cto 7.."i0 Sweaters, $2.95 t.? 15.00 Steamer and Traveling Kuji-. at $5.00 to 30.00 Hath and House Rob?-. - at $2.95 to 6540 Smoking JacJceta, - at 1500 t<> 2&50 Men's Hat Department FOR FRIPAI \M) SATJ BPAY \ SPECIAL SALE <>F tfPTS Austrian Velour Hats ! Smart Derby Hats. in black, brown and gr?cn, at ?47S extra quality, at $2.25 The Upholstery Section An advantageous purchase of Holiday Lctther Articles for Home Decoration, will tie offered To morrow, AT CLEARING PRICES, \> FOLLOWS Leather Skins Leather Cushion Slips embossed and hand painted; ' <*mbosM?d and hand Minted i Regular Value if"7..30 Regular \'alu>- fS.7l at $3.75 Leather Mats at 16.00 Felt College Scarfs embossed and lined; \al. 75c ! Regular Valu?- -SI.75 at 30c at $2.25 Also 3000 Tapestry and Damask Cushion Squares Values 1.1c to -i**!.00 each, at 25ct 35c, 15c_r65c Blankets. Comfortables. .Muslin Sheets, Pillow and Bolster (lases To-morrow, on the Second Floor,the following special values will be offered, presenting an opportunity to eeenre n ?* sonabl? Hid ('ovrings, at unii-u-illy low prices. White Blankets \**+.** -,r f_* jH? . , ,., , - Double size. - f*"2?, ?'??'?) pink and blue borders ... ... ?C, nil 7 7". Fxtra large size. fwVUUi <?<?' Colored Blankets .Jacquard design?, at $1?96, 2.4", (Doubles./.- ' I'laid effects, 82.00, $.95 Comfortables (Double Size) Figured Silkoline. floral designs, plain borders, at $2.25 Silk Mull, plain borders, lambs' wool filling. at .$3.95 Printed Satin, floral d'sign-. and plain borders, at (5.50 Muslin ' Single Three-quarter Don!.le Fxtra Large Sheet- 148c, 60c 66c, 70c 75c, 96c 85e, L05 Pillow Ca-e*. lie to 17?- ' Rol-ter CfMCS, 30c to 10c In the Book Section On the Main Floor, a number of three-quarter morocco Holiday Book- at ?S.IOO Autmiraphrd hy the author; regularly 00.00 Four ?ni a Tour in Finland *ff| *s*bt. an,i EHi.ii.ih fftoeissfen Califurilia. The WbaderfuJ - - fly K'ltvinMarkhnm The Cham ofthfl \ntiqu<?Ry Rnht.and EHtabttkShaekletots A Limited F.iliiion of Mother Goote, lllitsfrnttd l,y Arthur Rnrkh.im in rnlor?; Regular prii?- "rl.i.00 ?t $6.00 I 3E ?i