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IMORE STRENGTH 1 I FOR OLD PEOPLE1 1 Mrs. Hutchison ? Eighty - One; Years Old?Uses No Other j Tonic but Vinol and Recom-j mends It to Friends. } ,k Greenville. S. C.?"It is with pleas-) ) ure 1 tell others of the great benefit* I have derived front Vinol for thei past several years. I am SI yearsi old and I find Vinol gives me (strength, a healthy appetite and) (overcomes nervous disorders. Vinol) j Ms the only tonic reconstructor I; j / have used for several years. I have) i J recommended it to a great many of?, ; ) my friends ami it has always proved! J , satisfactory."?Mrs. M. A. HUTCHI- ( \ SON, Greenville, S. C. ( J \ Such cases as the above are con-; j (stantly coming to our attention. If ; \ people in this vicinity onl> realized) (how Vfnol invigorates old people ' ' . wc would not be able to supply the \ ; demand. It is the tissue-building, curative* 'elements of the cods' livers, aided by the blood-making, strengthening properties of tonic iron contained in Vmol. that makes ii so successful , in building up strength for old ' (people, delicate children and for all } f run-down Conditions. Vinol is also ; ' a most successful remedy for chronic ) coughs, colds and bronchitis. Jf it) fails to benefit any one who tries it. > u return your money. O'Donnell's \ L?rwg Store, 904 F st n.w., Wash- ) ington. D. C. ( XOTK. You can get Vinol at I i other leading drug stores in Wash- ( f ington and at leading drug stores { J everywhere. ) > \ Pj 'li.-- >i<1 rc V.sj Sbculd Ku"?'.'' [|J PLAITING Neatly done In all Its branches. @ t? fVIPP CI r V ROY I j? AND ACCORDION ? The Latent Bo* Pleat S I RUCHINCiS I }^| HenistitehlnK?Pero KdRioK 1 L] Buttonholes made to order ? ril Uutton* made to order. S ^ Work Called for aud Delivered kg S nPPENHElMER'C j [f V/ Cor. 8th & E Sts. N.W. ^ | jgQcJSiaJEJBIE/BJSJSJSJSJSJEiSJE/B/BJBjB/B/SJSJKjB Wonram's Grown 5 nor Glory Is !'c hair If <Jrav or Rleir'ed It ran he restored ro i*? natural rolor without injury to iealiii or ?=^aXt> hy r'.p Imperial Hair Regenerator THE STANDARD IIATR OLOHINC. Tt ! absolutely liarml -.-=! An. shade prodiuM. To'ors are durable ar.d natural. When apilicd annot he do'f.-tid an.l !s ' naffert.d hy barbs. Sample .f your hair adored free. Imperial Chem>al Mfg. '*o.. 1*6 W. 23rd St.. N\ T. Sold and aopl'ed hy M C Whelan. Beautifying Homes at Small Cost -Let us talk orer with you plans for : redecorating the Interior of your home. 1 Our years of experience enables us to i offer helpful suggestions. Geo. Plitt Co., Inc., 1218 Connecticut Ave. ; "Old Fashions Please Me Best" Antique SILVERWARE REPAIRED and PLATED to look and serve as well as ever. JOHN A. GOTTSMANN & CO. i 150 Plerc it. M. 1035. 1 Undesirable Hair Removed | Z+ From face, neck aod arms by a wonderfal Z Zt new method. No needle*?no acids. X ZZ Brian Your Own Physician t ZX to investigate Treatment t 1 ZZ Positive Painless j ZZ Permanent Harmless | s Mart on Salon Cosmetiques | ?209-210 Kenoln Rids.. 11th aud Ca | IV,one f-.r appointment M. MSA. j s ZZ f a ml rr?-ctl?-iis "f all kind*. . Za si '.-laii.-ts ill ail skin diseases. |Z ' These trade-mark crisscross line* on every package PAI^X^X>UR For PASTrVwCwA BISCUIT NOWH^TOyxeEU-ED L'rtikt otherjifcds. V*3kjroi.ei?\r For book J FMWELLI RMINESTwitutswi. *. T.. ILL Grorc - ;.r <1 VIom, i -.n ave. and K at. J You're Wrong <J? -if you argue that ft\ \ ACUUM GLEAN| K \ MRS. while all right. Hi are too costly. We * 1H can sell you a de/wsJ pendable Suction ("leaner for as little National Electrical Supply Co., LADIES! DARKEN ynilR P.RAY HAIR w w ?< * ? ? Look years younger! Use, j grandmother's recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur and nobody will know. | \ The use of Sage and Sulphur for) restoring faded, gray hair to its) natural color dates back to grand-/ mother's time. She used it to keep her hair beautifully dark, glossy \ and abundant. Whenever her hair ' fell out or took on that dull, faded 1 or streaked appearance, this sim- ] : pic mixture was applied with wonderful effect. J But brewing at home is inussy ) and out-of-date. Nowadays, by j asking at any drug store for a 50- i cent bottle of "Wyeth's Sage and ( ' Sulphur Compound" you will get ( this famous eld recipe, which can ' ke d?rvortrl?rl ttnnn O a-Artevi-a V Uv,/vwU?.v. IV? "tnun.1 l natural color and beauty to the [ hair and is splendid for dandruff, j dry, feverish, itchy scalp and fall- j tin* hair. f , A well known downtown drug- ' gist says it darkens the hair so ( j naturally and evenly that nobody) can tell it has been applied. You; simply dampen a sponge or soft 1 (brush with it and draw this through ) (your hair, taking one strand at a) time. By morning the gray liair) disappears, and alter another ap-( plication or two it becomes beauti-( fully dark, glossy and abundant. ( Experienced Advertisers Prefer The Star j j GOWNS IN NOVEL' t , BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE. Special Correspond -n'-e of Tlie Star. NEW YORK, January 19.?The news that the weaves of satin known as charmeuse and d'amour will bo in the first fashion for the warm weather unless something quite unusual happens will be welcome to all women. There is a fondness for satin that f ' ? | CHARMING GOWN MADE OP BLACK SATIN WITH WHITE COLLAR AND CUFFS AND WHITE CORD AND TASSELS. age cannot wither nor varieties of other fabrics stale. It has too many Bterling qualities to ever be out of the running. One may look askance at its being put to use for morning suits or used for winter street gowns covered with fur. Such usage is not choioe. Materials have a recognised value in the world of apparel, and each should be treated accordingly. No matter how much a dressmaker | loads a satin . frock with peltry, it i r>ovor? InnUc nilifo Qilltflhla fnp a Pnlrl J ' 1 FOR THE HOME ! Pettty Cues for Lineni. ' BY HELEN HOWE. The new skirt hangers are as pretty as they are attractive. The hangers Are very simple in construction, and any girl may make them and gave i money by doing: so. For each pair, two medium-sized safety pins, two small ivory rings and nine Inches of ribbon a little wider than the length of the safety pins are required. The ribbon Is cut into two equal lengths. One end Is stitched around the bar of the pin, the other to the ring. The ribbon can be decorated to suit one's fancy. Those that come made up are stamped for embroidery. But one could work an initial, decorate with stencil work, or apply a floral iiiuiii, tta our pic?vocu. One and one-half yards of ribbon at 20 tents a yard will make six pairs of hangers?30 cents. One dozen safety pins, 5 cents, and one dozen rings the same price. Materials for decoration will probably be another 10 cents, making the total cost 50 cents. As fairly firm linen or crash lends itself well for the purpose, stenciling is a fitting decoration. To make a napkin case take two pieces of linen twenty-six inches long and about eight wide. Bind all edges with white linen tape. Then arrange the strips to form a cross and lay in a square of cardboard where the strips cross. Stitch this in. to form a vase. Fold into a bag. but do not sew. Cut one end in flap shape and decorate It as fancy dictates. To make a doily case take four pieces of linen about twelve inches in diameter and two pieces of cardboard a little smaller. Stencil one piece of the linen or decorate as preferred and cover the cardboards, turning in the edges of the linen and overhanging. Make hinges of ribbon at the back and tie with white ribbons opposite. One ~m me kitchem . Jfrto pantry maiaxi Sandwiches. From a loaf of stale bread cut thin slices, then stamp out In two-Inch circles with a biscuit cutter. Melt one tablespoonfu! of butter in a saucepan, stir in one tablespoonful of flour and cook slowly for a moment, then add gradually one-half cup of thin cream or rich milk, stirring until smoothly thickened. Add about one-half of a teaspoonful of curry powder, the exact amount depending upon the kind used and the family taste, one teaspoonful of lemon juice and salt and paprika to taste. Stir into this one-half cup each of finely chopped cold cooked chicken and boiled ham, beat for a moment, then stand over boiling water. Saute the bread circles in a little hot butter. Make into sandwiches with a thick layer of filling and send at once to the table. TicVi anrl Snnohptti "Pi* One pound of '-old cooked fish, half a package of spaghetti, two cups of white sauce, two hard-cooked eggs, salt, pepper, lemon rind and chopped parsley to taste. Break the spaghetti; throw tt Into boiling salted water; boil for twenty minutes; drain. Free the fish from bones and break into flakes. Slice the hard-cooked eggs. In a fireproof dish place a layer of the spaghetti, over this a layer of fish; sprinkle in the seasonings, then a few slices of egg and a layer of white sauce. Repeat until the Ingredient* arc used; cover the top with cruinbs and bake. Game Panada. Ron some small game, sur-h as young pheasant 01 a partridge, until it is near Jiewi rY COMBINATIONS. day in the open. No matter hov strictly tailored a velvet coat suit maj be, it never looks right for a morn ing*s shopping. It is so much easier to choose th< materials for one's clothes if one wil abide by the rules which govern established taste. For, after all, ir clothes, as in manners, there Is an established creed, and no breakage of il by a smart set here or there change.' the primary rule. The really well ! dressed woman, as the really well mannered woman, does not break either. She stands behind fashion. Use Is Universal. There are so many ways in which satin can be worn in the winter that its use is universal and its acceptance by everybody makes it a continual profit for those who sell it. When novelties fail, merchants fall back on satin. Possibly this is the reason for the growing usage of it as the season advances. We do not look for novelties now. America will not probably risk them, and France will probably content herself with her ante-bellum output. On every side there is an epidemic of black satin promised. There is evidently plenty of it at hand, and women are not risking money in choosing it for spring gowns, as they know full well all its advantages and drawbacks. It is not probable that it will dangerously usurp the place of serge or thr incoming covert cloth for suits used for steady service, but it will be the first choice for house frocks intended to serve many occasions. You see, there is still talk of strfct economy in clothes. Whether or not the spring is to bring in a renewal of buying, it is difficult to tell; to judge by the way money ii spent on certain kinds of pleasures there seems to be enough of it to put ir circulation, but the business of buying clothes has been at a sad standstill, sc the expensive dressmakers complain Just why it has not been the opportunity for the "little dressmaker" is hard to tell, but she seems tcj be crying hare times as well as those whose annual expenses make one wonder how thej could risk them even in prosperouf times. Few women look well in unadornec black satin, so there Is a chance foi every one to try her hand at combining it with white In some artistic or satisfying way. Flowers Popular. It cannot be combined with color only a brilliant flower is permissible not a fabric. The flower is in the first fashion Never was there a time when blossoms, wreaths and bouquets played sc important a part in the scheme of dress i and a plain black satin frock can b< thrown into striking relief by the artistic placing of a colored satin rose Bright yellow is one of the choser colors, and deep red another, whil< bunches of thistle in different colon have been made fashionable by the glorj given and earned by the Highland regi ments in the fighting along the Yser. The sketch shows a black-and-white satin frock worn by Elsie Ferguson The full skirted tunic, a tightly wrap ped waist, a white cord and tassel anc I a most unusual collar are the feature! | of the dress. I (Copyright, 181G.) NEEDLEWORKER. third of a yard of linen forty-eight Inches wide or one-half twenty-four inches will be required. Talcum powder boxes are more sightly if covered and a scrap of left-over linen made into a bag and lightly decorated will make a very attractive ! A NAPKIN CASE. cover. The bottom of the bag Is dou ble and fitted with a strip of cardboarc to form a base. The neck of the baii la drawn up with a ribbon run In am out of eyelet holes near the top. ly cooked, then remove the skin, pick al the meat from the bones and pound it ij a mortar with a little of the liquid h which it was boiled. Add while pound ing two large tablespoonfuls of flnel; sifted breadcrumbs, a pleasant season ing of salt and a grating of nutmeg When the ingredients have been wel blended and the meat Is pounded to ; perfectly smooth paste, put it Into i saucepan with a little more of th< liquid?Just sufficient to make the prep aratlon the consistency of good whit sauce?and simmer very gently for tei minutes. This panada will keep goo< for three or four days, and can b heated up, a few spoonfuls at a tim? just as required. Put a layer of toante< diced bread on a hot plate, pour a littl< of the panada over and serve. Braised Carrots. Cut the necessary amount of carrot in rounds about a half-Inch thick an< boil until almost tender. Drain and pu in a saucepan with two ounces of but ter, a dash of cayenne and salt to taste Allow this to simmer for half an hour adding a few drops of water occasion ally and shaking the pan frequently h prevent burning. Serve in a hot vege table dish and sprinkle over the to] some minced parsley. | THE DAILY MENU. BREAKFAST Grapefruit Cereal Country Scrapple Fried Applet Scones Coffee LUNCHEON Salmon Salad Bread and Butter Sandwiches Biscuits Preserves Tea DINNER Lentil Soup . Vral Cutlet Tomato Sauce Mashed Potatoes Spinacl Lettuce French Dressing Layer Cake Coffee SivS^r point | AMERICAN FASHIONS. | r BY LIELIAN E. YOUNG. Whenever you get wind of a rumor concerning a "radical change" in styles make up your mind that capricious | fashion is up to her old tricks?namely, . reversing the fashioning of everything i sho lnvs li?nrl? nn Tf fiklrta have been absurdly and uncomfortably narj row they are changed without warning I and replaced by extremely wide ones I like a bolt from the blue. Sleeves that ' were short and full are ripped from their moorings, and long, close-fitting ones take their place. If collars have been low they are sure to be discarded eventually ' for "chokers," while, as for the waist j line, it flickers dizzily at various points between the bust and hips iike a veritable TT BUTTONS IN BACK, IF YOU PLEASE. Mercury with every change of the season. One is convinced that the bayadere sash becomes one prodigiously, but beware of establishing any lasting affection for it, for more than likely a short six or eight weeks will find that same one belted under the arms. Fashion, like nature, will run her course, regardless of interference, and she knows we are all slaves to her willfulness. That j sentence is meant to prepare you for her j I latest whim?we are to have coats but. toning in back! It's quite true. Several | have been seen and are considered imj mensely "chic." nere is uuc inuauaLcu. i Belgian blue duvetyn is the material, 1 with trimmings of taupe fox. The coat is in the form of a Russian tunic, buttoning from neck to hem down the back. Deep slashes at either side of the front are bordered with soutache embroidery, and through these is run a girdle of satin to match the suiting, holding in the material across the front and hooking about the waist underneath the coat before It is buttoned. The skirt is high waisted and gathered j all around the belt. The model is extremely good for a development in velvet or any of the new covert weaves. ! aunt : panc/ he in iown/v^k*9 Honey-y y Btg. Q. B. Mwr Otto* r\jf Aunt Jen comes in v CURING TROUBLESOME LITTLE AILMENTS It is remarkable how many women will endure some slight ailment because they have not time or patience to take proper care of themselves. It is not always necessary to visit a doctor or a specialist; just a little common sense will do the work. For instance, watch a woman who has a corn or an ingrown toenail. At every step the muscles of her face contract just a little. A month of this wlil cause a good deep wrinkle. If you do not know a reliable chiropodist, treat your owit feet. Here is a good corn lotion: Salicylic acid, 1 gram; tincture of Cannabis Indica, gram; alcohol, 90 per cent, 1 gram; ether. G5 per cent, 2V& grams; collodion elastique, 5 grams. Apply the lotion with a camel's hair brush to the corn every night for a fortnight. On the fourteenth night soak the fcot in hot water for half an hour; then with a bit of clean old linen over the finger gently work around the sides of the corn and it will come out. Chilblains are most annoying wrinkle makers. If the chilblains have not broken open, but are in the incipient stage, soak them in the hottest water you can endure, and have this temperature raised by adding more boiling water : constantly from a teakettle. In fifteen ' minutes thrust the feet into ice-cold water, wipe gently with a soft towel and bathe with the following lotion: Alum, powdered, ounce; spirits of camphor, 1 drain; cucumbeh juice, 2 ounces. Chapped lips can spoil the contour of [ the entire face, {riving it a drawn exj pression. A pomade guaranteed to cure I this ailment is: Cocoa-butter. 10 grams; j castor oil, 3 grams; oil of birch, 2 drops; I extract of cashew, 1 gram; essence of ( star-anise, 4 drops. Apply three times 1 daily till a cure is effected. Chapped hands are extremely painful and should be cared for at once. If you do housework, wear rubber gloves whenever you put your hands in water, or kid gloves when sweeping, cleaning. | etc. Use this pomade for the hands, and if the gloves you wear in your work become saturated with It, all the better: Cocoa-butter, 1 ounce; oil of sweet almonds, 1 ounce; oxide of zinc, 1 dram; borax, 1 dram; oil of bergamot, 6 drops. Heat the cocoa-butter and oil of almonds in a double boiler, and when thoroughly blended add the zinc and borax; stir as it cools and add the oil of bergamot last. Styes are very annoying and If they become chronic are apt to draw the muscles of one side of the face, because their victim forces one eye to do most of the work. Avoid spices or stimulating foods, late hours and overexertion. - lij j uu ivci uiit ^uui^i nig tone internally one drop tincture of belladonna on a lump of sugar and bathe the eye with warm elder flower water, or apply this pomade: White vaseline, 8 grams: white precipitate, 10 centigrams; oil of birch, 10 centigrams. Draperies and Curtains. The newest curtain is an achievement, for it combines scrim and cretonne woven in one piece; thus ?.he curtain and its overdrape are all in one. The artistic results of this are to be appreciated, for even the most inexperienced home decorator can get good effects curtaining a window with this material and it is quite inexpensive, 50 cents a yard. The scrim forms the center curtains, of course, with the cretonne on the outside. From four and one-half to five yards are required for curtaining a window with a valance. Madras promises to be one of the most popular of the inexpensive materials used for curtains and door hangings. It comes in all colors and can be had as low as 25 cents a yard. Cretonne slip covers for furniture are an assured thing. This is chiefly aciow did you learn? they're just like mother's!" Jemim IKE FlO is ready mixed?sav< insures success to th Muffins, Waffles ?made in i Look for the brig . - - * mmpmn on wop wt ihm homy Rag lima's Buckwh rhite* packages. counted for in the fact that the linen for the slip covers, popular for so many years, came from Coutral, Belgium, now practically wiped off the map. as the weavers show little inclination to resume their labors. The cretonne covers were introduced at the height of this fabric's popularity, and now they bid fair to supplant the linen covers as an institution in this particular feature of home decoration. The new hand-block printed vel\*ets ai*e the last word in imported elegance in these fabrics. There are in them color values and harmonies rarely obtained, except when applied direct by an artist, for the blending of tints and tones suggests tne sortening sweep of the painter's brush at times, so imperceptibly does one melt into the other. Most are Watteau patterns, yet, looking- at them, one can well believe that Dame Nature's wonderful harmonies have suggested the artiste principles underlying- their designs, for one of the autumnal intensities is xipon a creamy, ivory background that gives a beautiful balance. A White Elephant Sale. Just now when the usual charity sales are in order, here is a novel method by which a goodly sum may be raised in a short time. For one or more afternoons have on sale all the good-looking articles which friends will donate?things in the way of furniture, bric-a-brac or even clothing. Not a rummage sale?far from it?but a "white elephant" sale. Have about 200 small copies made of the following verses and send them to all Interested in the charity. The little verses will explain the nature of the sale, and the out-of-date articles will begin to pour in. What to one has long been a "white elephant" in their possession will for a small amount become a treasure to another. The White Elephant Sale. W3;en Noah rall^Mj the animals Tn onm? witliin f hi. ark They all walked in most willingly They thought It quite a lark. But, one poor old white elephant Was left out In the- cold, And Mrs. Noah testified He afterward was eoid. ?0 selling old white elephant* Became at once the fad. And though It was quite lucrative. It did seem rather sad. But the Day Nursery* ladles Took advantage of the craze. Decidlog by this method t*ome money they would raise. "If everybody dooe 14 Why not try it." said a few. And straightway all agreed to this It seemed like something new. Of concerto, fairs and festivals We have had them all galore Indeed, some first-class people Had called them quite a bore. Bver since the days of Noah Comes the name we all apply To any household treasure Which the sight of makes us cry. It has ceased to give us pleasure (You know how 'tis yourself); We call the thing "white elephant" And store it on a shelf. Now, from the shelves we've gathered Our elep ants ao white. And are selling at a bargain From morning until night. There are vases, books and pictures: There are lamps with lovely shades. We can please the merry masculines And gratify the maids. Come early If you're coming And so avoid tb?; rush; We'll have police to guard the door And thereby save a crush. Each thing you'll fiud a rarity. Well worth t e price you pay; So come and help our charity To stand the wintry day. Note?('^Substitute hero the name of the charity to t>e benefited. Lentil Soap. Pick over and wash one cupful of lentils, so&k three hours, and put them on to cook in one quart of boiling water. Let them cook very slowly until soft, and the water reduced onehalf. Rub through a strainer, add one pint of milk and when boiling thicken with one tablespoonful of flour cooked in a tablespoonful of butter. Season with paprika, salt and a little sugar and serve with croutons. To Clean Enamel ware. Add two tablespoonfuls of soda to four quarts of water. Immerse the discolored utensils in the water and boll for half an hour; then scour them, using some of the soda water and a stiff brush. If the stains are persistent boil a second time, and use sand with the soda water for the second scouring. UR a ts time and e inexperienced. , Griddle Cakes a minute! rht red package. rib kv to got M Family ieat flour Ask for it 73 of 0 5 Clean-Swee I 1. Women's and Misses i Coats 2. Women's and Misses Coats 3. Women's and Miss J $29.50 Coats 4. Women's and Miss $24.50 Fur-trimme 5. Women's Exclusive Suits 6. Women's $2.98 Silk ft. 7. Women's $1.98 to $2.. 8. Women's and Misses Skirts JSj 9. Girls' $5.98 and $6.91 10. Girls' 69c All-wool Si 11. Girls' $1.00 and $1.29 j 12. Girls' $7.98 Serge Dr I 13. Children's $4.98 Clotl 14.- Children's $5.98 Clotl 15. Bunches of Flowers, i ] i 16. Trimmed Hats, worth ? a* n v 17. $3.UU to f&.uu neaay 18. $1.98 to $2.98 Ostrich colors 19. $3.00 to $5.00 Stylish 20. Children's $1.49 Rea 21. Women's 50c Muslin | 22. Women's 75c Muslin 23. 39c DeBevoise and M 24. $1.00 Percale House Make 25. 39c Underwear, of a trimmed 26. 98c to $1.29 Underwe 27. $1.00 Sateen and Peri * 28. $1.50 Trade Mark Co 29. $1.25 and $2.49 Duel 30. $1.49 Flannelette Ni, i 31. $25.00 Axminster Ru, 32. $16.50 Brussels Rugs, 33. $4.00 Alex. Smith & by 63 inches J 34. $2.50 Alex. Smith & j RJ by 54 inches 135. Thirty Small Size Rug Brussels, Velvet ar Choice . 36. Twenty-yard Rolls of 37. Twenty-yard Rolls of 38. 89c Alex. Smith & Sc yard 39. 50c Bleached Muslin 40. 14c Bleached Muslin 41. 80c White Bedspread 42. 12c Heavy Turkish 1 43. 20c Large Huck Tow< 44. $1.50 Silkoline Cover 45. $3.00 Tapestry Portie 46. 60c Cotton Blankets, | >1 at An~ M m tr 7i/t <rici ccf iacu j mi/ic 1 48. 20c White Bureau So 49. Women's $1.50 Woo Comfy Slippers . . 50. Women's $3.50 to $5 51. Boys' $2.00 Gun MeU 52. Women's $2.50 to $5 and Slippers 5 53. Women's $2.50 to $3 54. Women's $3.50 to $5 55. Children's $2.00 Play 56. Boys' $2.50 Cloth Su\ 57. Boys' $4 and $5 Oven 58. Boys' 50c and 75c Km 59. Boys' $1 and $1.25 W 60. Boys' 25c Madras and 61. Boys' 50c Percale andf 62. Boys' 50c Rompers am 63. Boys' 50c Knickerboc Afon'c CA?? Ivar <r< vii ?J> wv en v v v m ?? 65. Men's $1.00 Wool and derwear 5 66. Men's 69c Percale Shi 67. Men's $1.25 and $1.51 68. Men's $3.00 and $3.50 69. Men's 50c Flannelette ! 70. Men's $1 and $1.25 Pa 71. Women's 29c and 39c 72. Women's 50c Full Fas ings, pair j 73. Women's 59c Union Si n r Best ip Bargains m ? a 1 f f C 111 $14.0U anu $5.75 ' $15 and $19.50 $8.50 es' $24.50 and $12.85 es' $19.50 and d Suits $11.75 $40.00 to $80.00 $25.00 tessaline Petticoats .$1.25 29 Lingerie Waists .$1.39 ' $7.98 Separate $2.98 ( Cloth Coats $3.45 ** veater Coats 43c if 1 Wash Dresses 82c 11 esses $3.75 If i Coats (2 to 6 years) $2.39 |j, I Coats (2 to 6 years) $3.40 f ?Second floor. vorth up to 75c 5c up to $2.00, for 29c .M.nipnr Hats 49c i i Plumes, black and 59c'||| Trimmed Hats... .$1.49 ||| dy-to-wear Hats 25c III ?Third Floor. K| Nightgowns 31c El Nightgowns 48c III odel Brassieres 22c |j| Dresses, Mendel's |J| 48c fj imbric, embroidery 22c ar, of nainsook 75c ctdine Petticoats 45c rsets, all sizes 85c iling Fleece Kimonos 79c || ghtgowns 98c jj ?Third Floor. II gs, 9 by 12 feet. . .$14.85 9 by 12 feet $11.65 Sons' Rugs, size 36 $2.39 Sons' Rugs, size 27 $1.55 :s (27 by 54 inches) J id Wilton Velvet. 95 c China Mattings. ? $3.69 Jap Matting $4.35 ms' Brussels Carpet 59c Bed Sheets 27c Pillowcases 81 2C rs, neat patterns 63c rowels SVzc ds, extra heavy. .. .I4V2C ed Comforts 95c res, pair $1.98 good size 41c Damask, yard 25c arts 12V2C \ ?Fourth Floor. 11 Felt Juliets and 59c Shoes, pair $2.29 il Blucher Shoes. . .$1.00 Satin High Shoes $1.29 Low Shoes, pair. . .$1.00 ? Tan Shoes $1.69 Shoes, pair $1.29 ?Third IToor. its $1.95 :oats $2.35 icker Pants 37c 'ash Suits 55c ' Percale Blouses. .. .18c si Madras Blouses. . . .29c [ / Bell Brand Blouses. 39c I ker Pants 29c -?First Floor. ts and Drawers 35c f Wool-fleeced Un 59c I rts 45c 5 > Shirts 89c 11 Silk Shirts f1.95 II Night Robes 35c 11 ijamas 79c II Silk Stockings, pair .18c II hioned Silk Stock- || 29 c || tits, of ribbed cotton. 39c ft rot Floor. II K ?1 '