Newspaper Page Text
p- ? ! p) MINCE MEAT T*/ TALKS. Miss None Such ays that many of her friends use her Mince Meat for Cakes. Puddings and Cookies made from the recipes on the package. The Cakes are fruity, the Puddings rich, and the Cookieswell. they are so Rood that a batch of them don't last long. %T n none .mm HinceMt Is your kind of a Pure Food Product. A loc. 2-pie packaKe will convince you, as It has others. THE GROCER HAS IT. Merrell-Soule Co., Syracuse, N. Y. i IE. TALE'S HAIR Tlllif, .illfflJlM JL VU/JL\I JLVU For Children flirmdl A(dInnHlhs <kUUil^41 A UM U ABTISEIPTIC AMD HYGIENIC A HAIB 1NV1GORATOR?Just what lta name Implies. It supplies nourishment, tbe element* of growth, wblcb, when absorbed bj the hair, strengthens and beautifies It In tbe same way that Mp glorlflea tbe foliage of a tree. Kren when the follicles are seemingly dead. If the scalp Is massaged dally with Mme. Yale's Hair Tonic, a rigorous growth will be produced. It ha* honestly earned Its title of "the great hair grower." It stimulates tbe most stunted growth and makes the hair magnifli-ently health; and beautiful. MMK. YALE'S HAIR TONIC Is prlied equsllj by men snd women, particularly when the hair begins to weaken or fade. Cures baldness, grayness. apllttlng of the hair, dandruff and all diseases of the nair, scalp and beard. One application stops balr falling. A nursery requisite; no mother sbould neglect to use It for her boys and glrla; when the hair la made stron? In childhood It remains proof agalnat disease and retains Its vigor snd youthfulness throughout life. MMB. YALR'8 HAIR TONIC Is a colorless, fragrant, delightful hair dressing; neither sticky, gritty nor greasy; makes the hair soft, daffy and glossy. Contains no artificial coloring; would not soil the whitest hair; restores original color by Invigorating the scalp and re-establlahtng nermal circulation and proper dlatribution of the lire coloring matter. Beautiful hslr redeema the plalneat countenance, and any one can secure It by using line. Yale'a Hair Tonic. Now In 2 sixes: $1.00 slie for 79c.; 50c. alze for 38c. Madame Tile's ASSISTANT Here AO This Week. Mme. Yale's New York demonstrator will remain here all this week Id the Yale Section of oar Toilet Goods Department, main floor, where she *111 explain to the ladies all about tbe preparations made by Mme. Yale? fifty-Are different articles?so that ladies can find among tbe list just what tbey need. Ladles may consult with Mme. Yale's assistant without charge and tbe young ladv will aH#ikt you Id the Drotier selection of the remedies needed. Ask for a free copy of Mme. Yale's 96-page souvenir bo?k at onr Toilet Goods Department, given away free. Also mailed free to those living cut of tonu. Write for a copy. WE ARE MME. YALE'S WASHINGTON AGENTS. AND HAVE PERMANENTLY PLACED HER ENTIRE LINE IN Ol'R TOILET GOODS SECTION. WHERE LADIES CAN AT ALL TIMNS OBTAIN ANY OF THESE WELL-KNOWN PREPARATIONS WE SELL THE ENTIRE LINE AT SPECIAL CL'T PRICES. W V *THC BUSY CORNCft* V po22th.lt p - ? ==a Kills = I Bad Ji. Breath, Eat what you please. Drink what you please. Take Q. T. Tablets, and the breath odor will be destroyed. Not a breath perfurtie. but a breath purifier. AH'm NO SrRSTlTIIT* Ill 6c. at Drug. Confectionery and Cigar Stores. |H_J?10-3M.28 _____ -) $3 Gold Spring ^ Eyeglasses... 1 Have our Mr. Kinsman examine your eyes if you 11 ' J *' n Pirnn an K -1 I'-'" iiu > v v* vii an iuv a mai mtj* are troubling you, giving you those headaches, causing dizziness and nausea. Mr. Kinsman ? Ih an authority on optical matters. KINSMAN, EYESIGHT SPECIALIST. 908 F St. N. W. " fe4 d,tSu,40 ^ Have You Anything For 8al?P por a very amail mum Of mQney you can advertise In The 8t>|^ under "For C.U ? ' -? * raw iKTiwiinm^ ua IM Bur* of disposing of artids Th? vaiu* of wnlcL wUJ inn! Tb* cost of tlM ad by hundrgda. t L NEW YORK'S BIG DEB > * It is More Than Half That o the Nation. RICHEST CITY ON EARTI Expenses of the Municipality Thi Ytut $130,421,425. RELIC OF THE CLEBM01T British Ignorance and Thanksgivini Day?Alpha Delta Phi's Handsome New Chapter House. BY WILLIAM E. CURTIS. Special Correspondence of The Star and the Chic*) Kecord-llerald. NEW YORK. February 5, 1907. The interest-Deanng aeDt or tne city t New York Is more than half as large a that of the nation, and the taxpayers c the metropolis are paying almost as muc interest as the people of the United State: because their credit is not so good. Unci Sijm can sell his bonds at a premium wit 2 and 2^4 per cent interest, while Fatht Knickerbocker has to pay almost twice a much for the money he borrows. The interest-bearing debt of New Yor city January 31, 1907, was $500,123,874, an the annual interest charged is $20,7lW,8h0. The interest-bearing debt of the goverr nient of the United States January 31, liX>' was $'J22,020,5t:0, and the interest chars for this year will be $23,24S,0G4, only abot W "ill luyi mArn than that rvf Mott' VAr <P?|WV|V/W U1V1V 11IAII iiiab V A. V It AVI city. Within the last two years the debt c New York has been increased $S9,tiU8,31< and Its borrowing capacity, which und? its charter is It) per cent upon the assesse valuation of the real property of the cit: has been advanced $12,000,000 this yea which, i suppose, will be utilized prompt! by another loan. Such a loan is neede to carry out the comprehensive achemt for public improvements, particular! bridges, subways, waterworks, and oth? great undertakings which are necessary t meet the enormous growth in population. The increase in the wealth of the peopl and the value of the real estate has bee even more rapid than that of the debt c the population. The total valuation fc taxation of real estate for 11)07 is $5,800 U32.132, an advance of $400,504,542 iroi Its*;, which makes New York the riches city in the world except London, and doubt if there is much difference betwee thjm. Tuning tne population or ?ew iorK a 4,0U0,0(X), this gives every man, woman an child an average wealth of $1,450 in re: estate alone, without counting their stock: bonds, diamonds, silver plate, automobile! thousand-dollar dogs, ten-thousand-dolla sable coats, forty-thousand-dollar picture and other necessaries of life. This make the people of New York richer than thos of any other city in the world, nearly 2 per cent richer than the inhabitants c London. But great cities are expensive luxuriei and it will cost $130,421,425 to pay th expenses of the government of New Yor during the current year. The budget fo municipal purposes, which has Just bee prepared, appropriates that amount of mot ey, and it is $13,61<M>1'5 more than was es pended last year. It speaks well for ou metropolis that the largest item is for cdu canon. me seuuuu ueui IS lur uucicsi u the public debt. There Is an Increase in th provision for almost every department c the government. New York's Expenses. The following are the principal expense of our greatest city: , , Amouot. In Teas Education |25,620,361 $1,683,2! Interest 20.79J.8S0 2,340,8< Police 13,849,841 814,11 Redemption tity bonds 8,898,795 1,407,8( Fire department 0.S83.49r> 280.51 Street cleaning 8.2(18,257 286.72 Water supply 5,469,543 468,0C Charitable Institutions 3,707.819 311,7( Public charity 2.218.844 270.1( Hospitals 778,947 125,44 Total charities C.705.610- 707,31 Parks 2,057.86:! 270, M Public health 1,847,819 503,4J Election expenses 1,015,850 105,0( House of correction 1,000.059 94,35 ruuiic libraries i?,? Courts 1,227,150 115.1C Bridges 547,545 tfl,S? The mayor's office costs $70,500, -the boar of aldermen, $?'{3,702; the city treasurer office, $1,243,480. and the law departmen $083,000. The tax department costs $441,70i the civil service commission. $133,000, an "The City Record," an official daily pap? containing ordinances, advertisements an other announcements concerning the mi nicipality, costs $1,114,378. Greater New York, as you know, is d video into five boroughs, and each boroug has its separate organization with saveri executive departments in which are en ployed large numbers of men. It cos) $ii,570,S04 to support the Borough of Mar hattan, which is New York proper; $1,7!)5 13S> the Borough of Brooklyn; $1,333,050 th Bronx, which is the northern part of Mar hattan Island, formerly known as Harlerr $1,148,SOS the Borough of Queens, which 1 back of Brooklyn on Long Island, an $570,480 the BorOugh of Richmond, which I Staten Island. Whence the Clermont Started. It is interesting to know that the pit from which the "Clermont," Robert Fu ton's steamboat, started upon its men vnvacp nn t hp Hudson rivpr tn A bany on the morning of August 11, 180 Is atill standing. It belongs to the city < New York and is leased by John H. Slarii the steamboat man, who owns a large fle< of tugs, barges, excursion steamers an other craft, and does perhaps a larg< freight-trucking business by water than an other man. Some time ago Mr. Starin vei carefully removed the shed which she tered Robert Fulton and his friends on thi eventful day, and which served as a pa: senger station for the "Clermont" as lor as it was plying the Hudson. Every boai and timber was numbered and every na was carefully drawn. The whole affair w; carried down to Glen Is'.nnd, at the westei end of Long Island Sound, where Mr. Starl l.as pleasure grounds for summer excu sions. and was .?er up there just as It orig nally stood. It is now proposed to take apart again and rebuild it at Jamestown f< the exposition this summer. Unconscious British Humor. The January number of the Oxford Magi zlne. which is a sort or semi-official orga of the university, contains some curiov editorials and communications. It appeal that some "blasted" Englishman amon the Dons at Oxford, who ought to take course in modern history, became ver indignant because the Rhode"? scholars an other American students were allowed t have religious services in the chapel < Christ Church College on Thanksgivin day last November. This learned pund evidently got that occasion mixed up I his powerful mind with the Fourth of Jul; for he denounced the university faculty i most vehement language' for permitting th celebration "with thanks to (Jod" of a vl< tory of the American rebels in the chap< nf n lovu! instirutirm liko t ivfn**H fi*v eilitor of the Oxford Magazine evidentl didn't know any better himself, because th protest was printed in good faith and witl' out comment in the December number, bi in the January number, being called t account by Prof. Goodwin of Harvard an other Americans in Oxford, he tries to pt himself right with his readers and solemnl points out to them that the America Thanksgiving day was inherited from Eng land, was observed long before the revc lution, and has no political '-slgniflcanc whatever. He explains what happened o the Fourth of July, 1776, for the informs * - ? ? ? * - huh ui me i4cuiuv3 ok uxioru u)a ome Ignorant classes, and reproves them b Hr?dark?a uri Kranlda K?a CtMi LAXATIVE BKOMO Quinine. ibe world wide CM and Grip remedy. muof? cause. Call for fa same. Ixtok for ilfnatore E. W. tirttt. Sc. f*7th-t? r saying: "It Is bad enough to be compelled to approve, or not publicly disapprove, of .every contemporary action of one's own government, but If. that compulsion Is to ' be made retrospective and to apply to action centuries old, then we are all rebels and traitors, and what a burden lies upon fthe consclenccs of our lecturers in modern history." f The editor then proceeds in a spirit of thorough loyalty to his gracious majesty. Edward VII, and the state and Church of England, to demonstrate that the American Thanksgiving day is not "a national festival held to celelyate the defeat of our arms. 1 Mark Twain never wrote anything funnier than this editorial. Every word is prompted by a conscientious desire to do Justice to all concerned. 8 _ The head master of the ancient "Charter noose cscnooi or ixjnaon nas recenuy aiea, and a window of stained glass has been promptly placed In the chapel to perpetuate his memory. Referring to the students who were under his care for more than f thirty years, the Inscription on the window reads: , "He fed them with a faithful and a true heart and ruled them prudently with g prayer." Finest of Fraternity Houses. Members of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity throughout the country will be interested to know that the New York Graduate Association will soon be able to offer them the hospitality of a new club house, now being erected at a cost of $266,000. It 50 will be ready for use next fall, and will surpass all other college fraternity buildings In dimensions, conveniences and luxuif rles. It stands nti 44th atroot hotwoon Kfh ^ avenue and 6th avenue, adjoining the . Lambs' Club, and on the same street with the Harvard and Yale clubs, h the New York Yacht Club, the City 3. Club, the St. Nicholas Club, the Racquet [e Club, the Bar Association, the Academy of h Medicine, and within a block of the Century and the Army and Navy clubs. This !r location is within easy walking distance of is the New York Central station on one side and" the new Pennsylvania terminal on the k other and only one block from the elevated and subway stations. " The building is thirty-five feet front by 100 feet deep, and eight stories high. The i- first two stories are designed for reception j rooms, dining rooms, library and other pub,' lie apartments. The third -floor is reserved lor ine iieaaquarters or me rraternity, lor meetings of the executive council and' the k use of Its offices, with a vault for its records and archives. The remaining five . stories are given up to fifty-eight bed rooms ' for the accommodation of resident and nony resident members of the fraternity, who will be cordially welcomed. The purpose a of the New York association has been to ^ provide a comfortable and attractive modr' em club house for the benefit of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity at large, and especially d a home for younger members who come :? to New York in search of livelihood and y fame. Many of these young men are In 'r narrow circumstances, and often they need ? companionship, encouragement and a friendly hand. A certain number of single le rooms will be reserved for members of the fraternity of that class, and thpv nhnuiri ir remember to take advantage of them. It ,r is a great thing for young men in a strange >" city to feel that a hospitable home is open n to them. The club house is intended for them. * The New York Association, which has n humble but comfortable quarters at 35 West 3.'5d street, within a few doors of the 18 Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, now has a memberd ship of about 500, representing every chapter of the fraternity and a large list of non*> resident members, whose dues are $10.a ?> year and who are entitled to all the facilities of the club whenever they visit New 8 York city. The accommodations are lim8 ited and have long been too limited for the demand, but the new club house will fur <? nish ample room. 'f Francis Lynde Stetson is the president; Charles E. Sprague, vice president; Louis P. Dodd, secretary, and Jefferson Clark, s. treasurer, whose address is 35 West 33d e street until August 1, when it will be~138 k West 44th street. ir m " NEW STEAMBOAT ROUTE. r Plans of Company to Take Passengers n to Norfolk, Va. e The syndicate of Washington and Norfolk 11 men who, It is stated, propose to establish a new line of steamers between this city, OA Point and Norfolk during the coming s spring, have not yet made their plans public, but are said to be endeavoring to see. cure steamers in the north for the service, jt The syndicate, It Is said, has not secured >s the steamers Connecticut and Boston, as {3 reported, but has purchased the big side!7 wheel steamer Dreamland of New York for w $00,000. It is also negotiating for the pur's chase of a large propeller steamer, Ihe J: name of which is not known, to run in ,2 connection with the Dreamland. iK Capt. John Casson, who Is to have the 13 management of the new company, was in ft this city a few days ago and when asked ^ by a Star reporter for information regard(0 ing his company stated that everything is >7 In good shape for the placing of the steam<5 ers on a route between this city and Nor-S folk. The new company, by the purchase t of the steamer River Queen, and the prop$ erty of the Independent Steamboat and <j Barge Company, secured the lease held by ;r that company on the pier in this city at d the foot of N street southwest, and will use it as a terminal here. The pier of the Mer^ j-ick Wrecking Company, at the upper end i_ of Norfolk harbor, has, according to report, h been secured as a terminus at Norfolk, and a landing place at Alexandria has also been i- leased, it is said. :s As soon as the nurehase of the DrMm. l- land is completed she will be taken to Baltimore, where she will be fitted with ie state rooms and made ready for service on i- the Washington-Norfolk route. She is a ?; big side-wheel boat, with a capacity of Is about 3,000 people on an excursion route, d What numbers she will be allowed to carry is under the inspection laws depends entirely on the number of state rooms she will have and on how many passengers she can provide with sleeping accommodations. The marine regulations will allow steamers on !r night routes the number of passengers their 1- sleeping quarters will accommodate, i- The Dreamland was built in 1878, and was known as the Republic. She was employed in the excursion business out of Philadel' phia for a number of years, when she was sold and under the name of Cape May was n pmnln\>d in riinnins- pxpnrsinns tn that ;t sort. Several years ago she again changed id hands, being purchased by parties operating ir the Dreamland resort. Coney Island. Again ly the name of the steamer was changed, and y as the Dreamland she appeared in New 1- York harbor and carried thousands of peril sons each summer to Coney Island. For the s- past year or two phe has been lying out of ig service at New York, and it is stated that d considerable work will have to be done on .1! her to fit her for the Chesapeake route if is she is brought here. n It is said that the new company will rein build the pit r here, and will erect new ofr flee buildings and a warehouse, but as yet i- no move looking to the improvement of the it property here has been made. The steamer >r River Queen, which was purchased from its Washington owners, is at Baltimore being overhauled. It is stated that about 110,000 win De expenuc.1 on ner, ana tnai sne will return to this city to engaga In the colored l" excursion b.slness during the coming sumn mer. ' T. . is ? ? "a Wedding at TJpp?r Marlboro. Special Oorrespondenee of The Star. a UPPER MARLBORO. Md., y February 7, 1907. d At Mount Hlckey, the home of Mr. and ? Mrs. Franlr F. Carrlck, Seat Pleasant, this )f county, Monday morning last, their daughK ter, Miss Sadie A. Carrick, and M^. Fred11 erick Bennett Wright of Washington were P married. The ceremony occurred In the ri large parlor, which was decorated with ir ferns and Dotted Dlants. Six little Kirls and boys, bearing white ribbon, formed an aisle ;1 through which the bride entered with her ie father. Miss Helen Wright of Washington y was maid of honor. The groom was atie tended by Mr. Raymond Carrick of Washi ington. The ceremony was performed by it Rev. Father J. T. Gardiner, 8. J., of Bowie, o After luncheon Mr. and Mrs. Wright ded parted for a wedding trip to New Tork, it Niagara Falls and as far west as Oberlln, y Ohio. On their return they wiy reside'' In n Washina-tnn. " Five candidates for. the Naval Acad" emy who are preparing for entrance examinations In the spring walked to BalL* timore Sunday from Annapolis in order ? to win a wager of $50 made by some of y their fellows that they could not cover =? the distance, about thirty miles, in five hours. The quintet left Annapolis at r! 1:30 o'clock and, according to their story, 2 they arrived in the Monumental City at 6:35, five minutes behind the agreed Urn*. MEED M SPIRIT Episcopal Bishops Object to the <4* Plans for Jamestown. VIGOROUS PROTEST MADE "Greatest Military Spectacle Ever Seen"' Said to Be Bad Scheme. LIKELY TO STRIKE BAB CHORD | lucou^ruottb nuu tt wiuod Auawmvumu Just at This Time, Say the Dignitaries. BOSTON, Mass., February 7.?In view of the fact that the triennial meeting of the general convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church Is to be held this year at Jamestown, Va_, a number of Episcopal bishops have joined In formulating a protest against the alleged intention of the management of the Jamestown exposition to make that exposition "the greatest miliary spectacle the world has ever seen." This protest is signed by the bishops of New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Colorado, MichlrilrlohAmo Qnnth ParnHna Nnrth Pflr. olina, Western Michigan and Asheville and the bishop coadjutor of Nebraska. It has been forwarded to the exposition management. "In comimon with many others throughout the country," says the protest, "we have been surprised and shocked at the transformation of the program, which has now gone so far as only too fully to warrant the announcement which Is made that th^ exposition will be primarily a military and naval celebration. "We are confident that such a plan- as that now announced, is calculated to stir up the fever of military excitement and e*pAlt. nannfa a tlma nrkan to UUtliUU lit uui j/cv^ic av a IIIIIU n ucu inai. so precisely What we should all most earnestly co-operate to discourage, cannot command the approval of the serious and thoughtful citizens of the republic. A Discordant Note. "The primacy of these features, In our judgment, makes the present plart of the exposition discordant with the character of our own religious commemoration at Jamestown, incongruous with the historic event which is its occasion, unworthy of this peaceful American republic and a gross anachronism at a time when our own nation is to unite with the nations of the world in deliberations in behalf of the supplanting of the wrongs and vanities of war bv the rational and worthy methods of international justice. We solemnly protest against it." The signers of the protest are Bishops Francis Key Broofcs of Oklahoma and Indian Territory. Kllison Capers of South Carolina, Joseph Blount Cheshire of North Carolina, George D. Gillespie of Western Michigan. Junius M. Horner of Asheville, William N. McVicker of Rhode Island, William N. Niles of New Hampshire, Charles Sanford Olmstead of Colorado, Charles D. Williams of Michigan and Bishop Coadjutor Arthur L. Williams of Nebraska, and Bishop Charles E. Woodcock of Kentucky. Sweden's Representative. BERLIN, February 7.?Charles W. Kohlsaat, special commissioner of the Jamestown exposition, arrived here yesterday from Stockholm. He will call at the-war and navy uepurwnenis during me next lew days relative to German representation at the exposition, which already has been arranged. Germany will send two warships, In addition to the two already in American waters. The extent of the composition of the army detachments has not yet been settled. Just before leaving Stockholm Mr. Kohlsaat saw the Swedish minister of marine, who. In informing him that Prince William second son of the Crown Prince Regent Gustave, would go to Hampton Roads with sixty naval cadets on the new warship Fylgia for the Swedish week In September, explained that the regent of Sweden had strong personal and political interest in Dringing xogeiner ai Jamestown as many Swedish-Americans as possible, so as to Increase the national feeling as distinguished from the Scandinavian sentiment. The prince regent of Sweden is making active arrangements to have a copy of tne Ericsson statue at Stockholm, heroic size, made for erection perhaps at Jamestown. Illinois at Jamestown Show. SPRINGFIELD, 111., February 7?The house committee on appropriations yesterday cut down the proposed additional appropriation of $25,009 for the Illinois building and exhibit at the Jamestown exposition to $5,000, and with this amendment reported tne Din wnn a tavorauie recommendation. As the matter now stands the state will have a building there costing $12,500. About $5,0C0 will be* spent on interior decorations and furnishings and a small sum will be allowed for an historical exhibit, chiefly of Lincoln relics. LAKE STEAMEBS IN FORT. Battled With Ice and Wind for Thirty-Six Hours. CHICAGO, Febbruary ".?After battling for thirty-six hours with ice and wind six miles off the mouth of the Chicago harbor the steamers City of Racine and Iowa reached port last night with a combined list of fifty passengers. They had been rescued by the tug Morford, which broke the ice from around the boats and opened a lane by which they entered the river and discharged their wearied passengers. The Iowa left Milwaukee Monday night and the City of Racine departed from Grand Haven at the same time. Both boats were due at Chicago Tuesday morning. On board the Iowa there were three women and two children, but most of the passengers were men. As there was an ample supply of food on the boats there was no actual discomfort. VISCOUNT GOSCHEN DEAD. Was First Lord of British Admiralty for Five Years. LONDON, February 7.?Right Hon, George Joachim Goschen (Viscount Goschen) died suddenly this morning at his residence, Seacox Heath, Hawkhurst, of heart failure. His death was quite unexpected. Viscount Goschen, who was bprn in 1831, had a distinguished public career. He was chancellor of the exchequer In Lord Salisbury's second administration and afterward was first lieutenant of admiralty, serving fn this position for five years. Leesburg and Vicinity. Spooial Correspondence of The St?r. LEESBURG, Va., February 0, 1906. Miss Nettie Gibbons, daughter of Mr. William Gibbons of Leesburg, was married in Washington, D. C-, Tuesday to Mr. Lee B. King of that city. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Mr. Sealy. They will reside in Washington. Robert Kearns, who last Saturday night, it is charged, assaulted and cut about the head William Cockerille at a dance at the former's home n?ar here, was today examined by Magistrate Joseph L. Wright and adjudged to appear before the grand jury at the convening of court next Monday. n.earns is represented By Attorneys Alexander & Alexander. The ladles of 8t James Episcopal Church of this town held a tea at the rectory Tuesday evening for the benefit of the choir of that church. * Three deaths occurred within ten days in Floyd county, Va., in the family of John A. Beckner. The father, mother and one son were all attacked by pneumonia. The son, aged ten years, died ten days ago. Five days later the father, John A. Beckner, died and yesterday he was followed by his wife. ill tun Mumiiiiiimi/i I Lan&b 420=26 SeventI ? I 1/1 r\i j Tomorrow With E: | Dress Goods ;; It's the last remnant sale of D consideration. It's clearance?clea !! of Plain and Fancy Mohair, Figur ;; tiste, Cashmere, Plaids, Panama, up to 6 yards. A few Cream Fabri 1! These Dress Goods remnants sold f 39c. Yd Such kinds as Colored Taffeta, 11 Liberty Satin and Peau de Cygne. We expect to break all sellin !! it's the best assortment of remnani jjRenniiniainitsofGi :: Worth 25c. to 50c Yom will find amomg Voiles, Repps, Batiste, Mi ;: ings, Silk arad Cottom Org^ Remnants. 9 Sy^c. and ioc. Light and Dark !Colored Outing Cloth, ' x> f Boys' Norfolk and I J Tlhree=p5ece Suits, 11 of fancy cassimere and navy blu? cheviot; some half wool, some all wool; .. 'sizes 3, 4 and 5. Worth $2-30 to $3.30, :: SLM. ... ________ ; At $11,119 a Pair ;; Scotch Lace Certains ! | that sold at $1.75 to $2.25. 2 and 3 pairs .. of a pattern. Lot price, per pair, $1.19. :: Silk Certains, former prices $6 to $8, artistic colorings, pair, :: $1.98. 25 Remnants of FLOOR OILCLOTH " that sold for 30c. and 35c. square yard? " ' choice- colorings?lengths up n T tA 9 vanla Cfn^ntnl il ll 11 J*9 A wptt.ai iui x' II- n y ,, day, square yard :: 4 ROLLS OF MATTING .. 3 Japanese, 1 China, that sold for 30c. .. yard. We want to close'them out in one day, hence the bar- ?>o rain. For Friday only, >)/. ? roll. <*/*. O V . --A LOT OF REMNANTS OF ;: STRIPED TAPESTRY that sold for 29c. a yard, suitable for draperies?lengths from 1V& ti f= ? to 3 yards. Special for Friday, I ,n)lC. yard 'rSB RUNNING INTO A BAN: CUTTING THROUGH DRIFTS. Difficulty of Keeping Open the North- ' ' western Railway Lines. Just at the moment when the reports to the Interstate commerce commission of the fuel famine In the northwest were getting to be more satisfactory, the news of a fresh blizzard reaching as far east as Chicago makes it likely that ail'the North Dakota railroads that have been opened at such an expense of work and money will be closed again and some of the com- 1 munities along the line of the Soo. the i Great Northern and the Northwestern will be worse cut ofT than ever. i A number of photographs have been re- i ceived by the interstate commerce commis- ' sion in the last week from both the Great l Northern and the Soo showing some of the i difficulties in track clearing that are being i ~ STUCK IN A DBIFT contended with. There have been scores | d of telegrams received from all the small I towns In the Isolated parts of North Dakota c saying that they were either out or almost t out of fuel, and In some cases that they j were ont of fuel and provisions also. The messages were sometimes sent to the inter- i state commerce commission direct, and t many of them to Senator Hansbrough. 1 They all prayed for immediate relief. The t only tiling that tho commission could do t was to repeat the messages to the railroads t N ? WtfH I 1 'M Ulllllllimilll lurgh & i Street. 417-25 E Our Clearance itra Price-Cutting All A Sacrificed as N ress Goods before inventory?so form* ranee is our goal?hence these extrao ed and Plain All-wool Challies, Nun': Mixtures Checks etc. Nenrlv all cnl cs in the lot. Get first pick. Wortl from the piece as high as 6oc. All at, , for Remnants Worth up to $1.00 1 Peau de Cygne, Pongee and Chiffon These lengths run from I to 10 yards g records with this lot, and you will es ts we've offered during this clearance 3>lored and What at 12%Co Lengl the lot Plain and Novelty S HiidrfliS- (fnjn!ljji11-iF>fli 1P>S mm#** SSHIl ~11 u\?jjW?W9 *4-^ U U U arodies, Plaid Suiting, Paris! Remnants. 50c. and 75c. Wool Eiderdown, 25c. Warm Bed Covering SINGLE OR COT-SIZE * SILKOLINE COMFORT, Pilled with pure wliite lartiinlzcd cotton; covered with a substan- * tial grade of silkoline; were , bought to sell at 8!)c. Special.. ' FULL-SIZE ] 51LKOL1NE COMFORT, Scroll quilting; filled with pure white cotton; full assortment of t colors and combinations; $1.1!? 1 grade * 1 FULL-SIZE, EXTRA HEAVY, \ SILKOLINE-COVERED * COMFORT. Some are plain on one side, others are duplex; tilled with best processed cotton; oriental or floral designs; fl.S9 II value SC%> Discount oo Horse B The Blankets ransre in nrice frnrr $3-5? to $2500. NOTTINGHAM BED SETS that sold .as high as $2.00- each, including shams?ecru only?about t ten ot them left?very pretty /*,(3 ? designs. Special for Friday, c set f "I"M I I _ ? SHfe,- | t . a Orb reS&J r 3 0 '-&" J a c <j K ON" KEN MANE HILL. eompiainea 01 ana urge tnem to renewed efforts ii> opening the lines. Some of the * divisions of the Soo were temporarily ? abandoned and some of the telegrams of I complaint said that there had not been a freight train through some of the little * towns In anywhere from a week to a a month. * The railroad officials all through have been insisting that they were doing all they could, but that the physical difficulties were too great to be immediately overcome. The pictures that have been sent in are a many of them eloquent testimonials to the I difficulties the railroads ha>'e been fighting, c Some of them are plain fields of snaw, and J state by way of expVmation that there is a ' station or a cut or snow fences or some- t thing of the sort underneath. Others are more explicit in detail, and show the big ^ rotary plows throwing up clouds of snow c as they fought their why through the ( f ? f' Jphij t h o ON KENMANE B3U. ? ft IriftH. Others showed stations, signal ^ >osts and telegraph poles burled almost ., lut of sight and others in half light showed he cavernous passages cut through station _ arcls. 11 Two of the photographs are given here rlth showing snow plows on the Boo line ** kicking their way through the drifts on Ceninane Hill, where a relief train waa O rying to force its way to a little town six een miles off, where t&ey had been out of si >otb fuel and provisions for a week. jt, I -H-fc Mlllllllilll I ! 1 MI ! ! 1 : Bro. I ighth Street. :: Sal? Ends i; ronrtH I I ever Before. ;= :r cost or wortli is not taken into \) rdinary bargains in good lengths * > Veiling, Ba- mggg T ors. Lengths W J i coming for. iL X yard x i of Silks ! Yd." | Taffeta?a few lengths of Black !I tablish a new buying record, for sale. :: eWsislh Goodsf hs 2 to 8 Yards. ; ilk Moiasselime; Pongee, ;; c Eolierairee, Lianeim Suit= :: [Issue and Dotted Swiss. ;; Remnants. " 37J/2C. Scotch Flannel, I<q>c. j: * ?s at New Prices. :: 11-4 FULL-SIZE J WHITE WOOL BLANKET, I Material from which this blanket is X nade is the best; in appearance you A vould Judge it to be worth at least + >5.00. Our regular price ?; -5 <Q T las been $4.69. Now, for Friday V 1-4 FULL-SIZE ALL-WOOL ? WHTTF RT.AKk'FT T No cotton whatever In warp or filling: he weight Is r> lbs.; a regular Ulan- . tet; long, staple wool used In the inanu lacture. A few of them up yl /f> ' " eft to close out at the J) rery special price of ^ " [ 1-4 FULL-SIZE WHITE CALI FORNIA WOOL BLANKET, II Jade from high-class, best-selected Call 'ornia wool; soft, fine finish, woven to ' vear; every pair guaranteed; shrunken; " vide silk binding; blue, /TT/TK " >Ink and yellow borders; (ILUJ) j j >6.00 value Bankets and Lap Robes. ; i $1.50 to $5.00?the Robes from j j TWENTY-THREE DOOR ! rAINfcLb I hat Bold from 75c. to $1.25 each?white , , * ind Arabian?plain and col- a /r*. rod goods. Some are Irish ZjUU)? ? loint. Special for Friday, each. < ? :-I"M MM I I "I1 --^3 NO IMPROVEMENT. Occident Bulletin for Three Months Ending September 30, 1906. Accident bulletin No. 21, which has just >een issued by the interstate commerce commission, for the three montl* endtac September 30, 1006, shows the tot#l nun>er of casualties to passengers and em)loyes while on duty to have been 10,850, is against 10,937 reported In the prectdln? hree months, making an increase of 2.U13. The number of passengers and employe* i- *?i? * * ?? tuKu ui nam auciaems was -Ui, as against 94 reported in the preceding tliree months -an increase of 73. The. total number of collisions and derallnents in the quarter now under review was ? ,672 (1,891 collisions and 1,781 derailments), if which 269 collisions and 201 derailments ? iffected passenger trains. The damage to :ars, engines and roadway by these accllents amounted to $2,932,760. The totals continue large. In some few letaiis there are small decreases from th? corresponding quarter one year ago, but n general there is no improvement. The lumber of passengers killed in train aedlents (52 in this quarter) is large, though t Includes the results of only three jiarlcularly notable cases?one collision and wo derailments. The number of employes killed in routing and uncoupling cars and engines was II, being an Increase of 13 over those retorted killed in the last quarter. The most disastrous accident reported tn he present bulletin was a collision ... .< .en i passenger train and a freight, killing 7 persons. Charge Against Saloon Proprietor. Joseph Lane, a saloon proprietor at 1st md I streets southeast, was charged in th? ^ollce Court today -with selling liquor on Sunday. When arraigned he demanded a ury trial. The hearing was therefore ..-oninued Indefinitely. Lane's arrest followed the arrest of ?e?- * ?ral colored men last Sunday near that :orner for being "perambulating barm." )ne of the men, the police say, lias )>e?a getting his supplies from I.ane's p'.ac*. 3ergt. Ryon appears as the prosei/u'.ing vitness. lATARRirGR0WIH6 LESS. ~ )ue to the Use of Hyomei. Cures witnout stomach Dosing. Inquiry at the local drug stores shows tint tfca ale of remedies for catarrh baa deerrss?d *ny inch to tlx last rear. Some medlclncs wblofc re re former); bought a gross at a time are now orchased In half-dozen lota, and are rare!/ calM nr. There la one notable exception to this de<~reaa> i Mle, and that la Hyomel. Tills reined/ Is, tm ict, responsible for the decrease In s*le atf atarrt medlclnea, as It has made so m;r.j ran* f catarrhal troablea that natorally there Is icaak >as demand tor remedies tor that dlsesse. People who bare been trying different medicine* w catarrh durhig many years were lndccid ts egtn the dm of Byomel by Henry Etidi' tad 1. 'DoojmII's guarantee that the remedy would coat ?thtog onleee cured. Much to their lurprl**, they rand that Byomel did what It claimed (If It 4id at, they eoold not aell It Kdtr tbl* (otnalM)^ ad thay aooo became ardent advocate* of the aaa ! Byomel. There la *a dleagiaaatla etomach doting with yomel; It la need by being breathed through f tat pocket Inhaler. Ae complete outfit eoata bag te dollar, extra bottlea. If needed, fifty cents. With ereey Byomel outfit Henry Brana and t. " glre their mum] guarantee that aar will ha nfaaiil aalaaa the tfaatmeat rana* i hat yea raa ae rlah at ell la bujlag thla mkhla nai?, *