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1 ! THE ARIZONA KEPUBLIOAN, THURSDAY .MOKNINCJ, JULY PAGE THREE HI GREAT SALE 1 HE r 1 ne-Third Off on all of our WOMEN'S COATS, DRESSES, TAILORED SUITS, PETTICOATS, HOUSE DRESSES AND WAISTS. A universal discount covers our entire stock of up-to-date women's summer apparel, consisting of tlie very newest seasonable ratine coats, in novelty stripes, black and white checks, moire silks and brocades. Dresses of white voile, crepe, lingerie, niessa line, crepe meteor, white and all leading shades All Go in This Great Mill Outlet Sale at ne-Third Off We continue with hundreds of wonderful and timely bargains of reliable summer goods the lowest prices and the most extraordinary economies ever offered on Summer Merchandise. F7i fTFt airy Are here in a great variety of styles, the new round toe and low heel, sale price 45 Hosiery and Knit Underwear WHITE GAUZE LISLE - For women; extra fine, solo, high spliced heel, top, "5c value ; special HOSE double garter 14c CHILD'S SOX In white, tan, etc.; colored and tops; extra good lisle thread; 25c quality spec. WOMEN'S SILK HOSE In black, white, tan and cham pagne: resular 60c to 75c sell ers; garter top, etc; special CHILDREN'S HOSE In cither tan or black; sizes 5 to 10; ex tra irood bargain direct from the mills; genuine 15c values; special WOMEN'S HOSE Lisle thread in dark colors only, such as ox- blood, etc., worth 45c a pair; close out price is black, plain 12c 39c 9c I2kc 8c WOMEN'S HOSE Pure cotton thread in tan color onlv: all sizes and worth 15c a pair; special price .... WOMEN'S VESTS Wide and narrow rib, low neck, sleeveless, cool and comfortable, extra quality, worth 15c to 1 fin 20c; sale price IUC WOMEN'S UNION SUITS Fa mous "Set Snug" low neck, lace umbrella knee, or plain tight knee; sells everywhere 1 'irt for 75c; sale price 4uL LADIES' UNION SUITS All sizes, well made, umbrella knee, taped neck, lace trimmed bot toms, values to 45c; tg special 1 WOMEN'S VESTS Low neck, sleeveless, taped neck and arm holes ; values 10c and a splendid vest; at sale j price C BUY A New Suit AT THESE PRICES $13.50 TO $15.00 SUITS $ 9.35 $20.00 TO $25.00 SUITS $14.65 $27.50 TO $35.00 SUITS $18.75 $16.85 $25 All-wool Blue Serge Suits . Here's an absolutely all wool Washington blue serge in a cor rect model for young men, and a more conservative style for older men. Positively the great est value offered. Men's Odd Pants our stock is the largest and best assorted in Arizona. The Mill Outlet Sale Prices make the buying easy for you. Note these. $4.50 PANTS NOW $3.37 $5.00 PANTS NOW $3.75 $5.50 PANTS NOW $4.13 $6.00 PANTS NOW $4.50 $6.50 PANTS NOW $4.88 $7.00 PANTS NOW $5.25 $7.50 PANTS NOW $5.62 rewra w. mi luiMHMMmwiyK .mi mmw. Choice of A1 Shoes O ne-Foutth Off EXCEPT "RED CROSS" AND W. L. DOUGLAS 4- . Shoes of Every Kind for Jr Men, Women and Children This reduction plies t every slue in this stor- with the exception ,,f j. i,, aulas shoes for men, and 1 led Cross shoes for women. (Mir stork of shoes is complete, embracing every new style for men. women and children. Xotc the extra shoe specials. CHILDREN'S BAREFOOT SANDALS In tan only; all sizes now on hand. Sizes r, to s 59c pair Sizes S'L. to 11 65c pair Sizes 11'- to 75c pair Former values H 0c to WOMEN'S AND MISSES BAREFOOT SANDALS Very soft and pliable; the best iiality made; sizes 2 to 7 ; r A f sale price O 1 . -f V t Former valims aiul A Great Variety of Men's Serviceable Work Shoes S3 sn'aj MDaihorxd & Bro. Phoenix-Jlrizom ?219 EastWasbmgionS MEN'S FINE SHIRTS ONE-FOURTH OFF Choice of all fine shirts in our stock, which includes new stylish negligee and dress shirts of the highest character NOW ONE-FOURTH OFF. AN UNUSUALLY LARGE ASSORTMENT OF MEN'S NEGLIGEE GOLF SHIRTS in the latest patterns and fabrics, with and without French cuffs, former price $1.50 and $1.73; all must go now at, each 98c MEN'S MEDIUM AND LIGHT WEIGHT MIXED WORK SOX Seamless, J-f worth 10c; sale price, pair uv BOYS' BLUE AND BLUE PIN CHECKED BIBBED OVERALLS Just the thing for hot weather play, in sizes 7Zf from 6 to 11 LOVj Women's Corsets Most up-to-date line of corsets we are placing on sale at tS cents each; regular value $1.00t and made of batiste trimmed with lace, heavy hose supporters; deep hip and medium bust; sale price 6a Cents u EDUCATORS 10 HEAR THE ORATORIO "CREATION" Arrangements Perfected for Al Fresco Musical Production (Special to The Republican) S.M.T b.KH CITY, July 2. Spe cial arrangements have been made by the Ftah executive committee of the X. E. A. for an al fresco performance of the oratorio "Creation," by the I'niversity of Ftah Musical society, under direction of Prof. Squire Coop. The soejet has achieved more than a local reputation for its singing of "Creation"' and "The Messiah." The executive committee was gratified, therefore, to b able to announce a performance of "Creation" on the beautiful university campus the eve ning of July 10. With Ftah's leading singers in the principal roles and other notable ar tists in the chorus and with the ac companiment of a special augmented orchestra of trained musicians, the furthcoming' production ef "Creation" i is looked forward to as a notevvorthy event by the people of this city and is expected tr furnish a treat to the thousands of X. E. A. convention vis itors. Ten thousand persons heard the oratorio sung on the greensward of the mountain bench, where the uni versity is situated, last year and it is expected that this rendition will be heard by three times that number. Salt Lake City is gaily decorated, awaiting the coming of the X. K. A. visitors. The convention opens July 3. 1. V. Springer, general secretary, and E. T. Fairchild, president of the Xational Education association, are already here and have opened the official headquarters at the Hotel Ftah The registration office and the school exhibit in the Keith Mercantile building on South Main street, near Hroaduay, are in readiness. In con nection with the registration office, an emergency hospital has been es tablished. Visitors taken suddenly ill or feeling indisposed will be cared for there. o A DENVER MARRIAGE' MADE IN PHOENIX The Contracting Parties On the Way to the Colorado City. Have You Drinking Husbands? Are you worn out and discour aged trying to get them sober and keep them that way? Do they promise they "ill stop and then go out and get drung again? Do you realize they do not tleeeive themselves be- ause they are willful, but because they are poisoned with alcohol and cannot resist the craving for drink? You wives of drinking men can have sober husbands and sons if you will send them to the Xeal Institute. The Xeal Drink Habit Treatment is a safe, sure, vegetable remedy that will remove the craving for drink in three days, without the use of hypodermic injections and restore your husband or son to sobriety and usefulness. Call at the Xeal Institute, 1337 West Jefferson St., Phoenix. Ariz., and talk it over. Get proof and refer ences, or write or phone for book of information. Phone 173."!. Advertisement. Manages are made in heaven, some one has said but there will be a manage in Denver next Tuesday which was made in Phoenix, but then some people think that Phoenix is heaven. The high contracting parties will be a pretty Phoenix girl. Miss Zelma Loretta Eandis and Arthur Spaulding of Denver who spent the winter ami this much of the summer in the city. He left on Tuesday morning on an Overland automobile tour to Denver and in the evening the bride-to-be accompanied by a sister left on a visit with relatives in Denver. The relatives of the young woman, here not even the sister, saw anything more than a coincidence in these journeys, but just before his depart ure, Spaulding confessed to a friend the details of the arrangement, Miss Land is to a friend of hers, admitted that this was the most momentous trip of her life and she believed it would have the hapipest ending. She will arrive at Denver today and if Spaulding had his way, he would reach that city simultaneously thus shattering all automobile, long dis tance records. o UTILIZING GRAVITY. Man ton dock) What are you row ing with that trunk in the bow of the boat for, Pat? Pat Sure, an' if it was in the stern, wouldn't I be rowin' uphill all the time? An' this way I'm rowin' downhill all the time. Yale Record. o Hire a little Salesman at The Re publican office. A Want Ad will see more customers than you can. MANY FRIENDS MOURN CARL BRADY Whose Death Occured After Long Ill ness Yesterday Morning. Mrs. Carl Praly died yesterday morning at s : K at the f.imily resi dence, 71J .North Fourth street, of tubercular meningitis. The funeral Will take place from St. Mary's Catholic church on Saturday morning at eight o'clock. been in ill health find it was for re 's is that she came ago from Georgia, Her condition im- Mrs. Jirady hail for several vears , lief from tubercuh lure eight years her native state. proved and live years ago she was married. Though still far from robust, it W;is thought that she might live to n ripe age. .r kite as last Saturday she enjoyed her usual health but that time symptoms of the fatal disease manifested themselves and a few hours later the worst was feared. originally arrangements were made for holding the funeral on Friday but it was postponed in order that a brother might arrive in the city. Mrs. Brady had made many friends during her resilience in the city who share the grief of the bereaved husband. o NOTES FROM LABOR WORLD picsidont of the Xational Federation Cloth Weavers of America, has been iTu-tnl over his grave in Xew Ledfoi-.l. Mass. Fniied States Consul General John L. Griffiths of London believes that tio nioie f ;"i : nt agency than the veriinient labor exchange lias ev or b en devised in England to relieve the c-'ngestion of labor by securing ' r it a more even db trib-.ition. Coal miners are already preparing lor the joint conference next year to make a new wane scale for the com petitive states. Ohio miners have de clared for payment on the mine-run system, for a six hour day and a working week of five days. The Kingston, nt., branch of the KIPLING LAUREATE IS QUEEN'S'CHOICE Upholsterers employed in Cincin nati furniture factories have formed a union. The United States employs 7.r00, ofto persons in its 27r,,ooo mills and factories. The salary of Joseph Weber, presi dent of the American Federation of Musicians, has been raised to $o,000 a ear. The annual convention of the In ternational Steel and Copper Plate Printers' union will be held next month in Chicago. Cornelius J. Ford, named by Presi dent Wilson for the position of gov ernment printer, is president of the Xew Jersey Federation of Labor. W. D. Hubcr, for many years a vice president of the American Fed eration of Lbur, celebrated his six t'f th birthday recently at his home in India na polis. The American Federation of Labor is inclined to be jubilant over the fact that for the first time in its history its membership now exceeds the i!,ono.ooo mark. The Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen has voted in Liver of admitting to membership all employes in the operation of electric locomotives. A handsome monument to the memory of the late Matthew J, Hart, Journeyman Stone Cutters of Xorth America was organized in limn, ami since that time the wage scale has been advanced from $U per day of tin hours to $1 per day of eight hours, without resort to strike. . Salt Lake City is preparing to en tenaiii the annual convention ,,f the Amalgamated Association of Steel and Eioctri Railway Employes of Amer ica, which is to meet in that city for a five days' session during the first week of September. The members of the Fnited Broth erhood of Carpenters and Joiners and c? the Amalgamated Society of Car penters and Joiners are about to vote on a "plan of solidification." which it is hoped will dispose of a juris dictional question which has caused much annoyance in years past. The labor party Af South Africa, which is based upon the principles of socialism, like the labor parties in othrr countries. is reported to b" making rapid progress in politics. At the present time the party has one member in the senate, five in the lower branch of parliament, several in the Transvaal state legislature, and numerous others holding offices in the municipal governments. The vote of the party has been increasing very rapidly in the larger cities. FRANKLIN AS A PURIST. Used His Influence Vigorously Against New Words. the letter which caused it to be mis taken so constantly for an T But it was to certain words and con structions that he paid his respects with special vigor and venom. There, according to him, had come to be em ployed in America during his official residence abroad. This, it may be said in passing, had extended from 1776 to 17S5. ''During: my late residence in France," he wrote, "I find that several . . . new words have been introduced into our parliamentary language; for example, I find a verb from the sub stantive 'notice,' . . another verb from the substantive 'advocate,' anoth re verb from the substantive 'progress,' the most awkward and abominable word of the three . . . The word 'op posed,' though not a new word, I find used in a new manner, as 'the gentle men who are opposed to the measure'; to which I have also myself always been opposed." If you should happen to be of my opinion with respect to these innovations, you will use your authority in reprobating them." It is manifest that Webster did not happen to be of Franklin's opinion. Harper's Magazine. AN IMPORTANT POSTSCRIPT William H. Taft, when lie was pre sident, never overlooked an oppor tunity for a joke. In the closing months of his administration, Henry L. Stimson, then secretary of war, wrote Mr. Taft a very urgent re quest that he give a friend of Stim son a certain federal position. Mr. Taft wrote to Stimson as fol lows: "My Dear Stimson: I am sorry I cannot do anything for your friend in response to your letter of today. I would like to accommodate you, but it is impossible. Sincerely yours, "William H. Taft.'"' Under that he wrote: "Turn over." Then Mr. Stimson read on the i other side of the paper: j "I couldn't do it today because I gave the fellow the job yesterday." The Popular Magazine. 0 GREAT CLIMAX. Did the in "You bet gallery hit face with a play have a happy end it did. Some one in t In the villain square in tin tomato." Houston Poss . Rudyard Kipling. The question of who will succeed Alfred Austin as poet laureate is just now a very interesting one in England. Queen Mary favors Rod yard Kipling, and so does King George. The Unionist party un doubtedly would support his can didacy, but Premier Asquith holds the general Liberal view that Kipling is too pronounced a partisan for the office, - - The tendency for words to pass from one part of speech into smother, so gen eral in our speech, was once hard for many to accept as justifiable, and doubtless still remains hard for some. Few things have been more provoca tive of criticism both at home and ?. broad in the consideration of real or supposed Americanisms. How little the principle was understood by even the most intelligent and acute men of past generations has a remarkable ex emplification in the case of Franklin. His ever-active mind was little likely to overlook the subject of language. It is not perhaps to his discredit that he shared In the notions about it which prevailed among the men of his gen eration. Here, at any rate, failed him the robust common sense which en -aided him to detect the frequent falla cies proclaimed. The practice of con verting nouns into verbs, at least cer tain nouns, much disturbed him. Ho died in April, 17!0. Four months pre vious to that event he wrote a letter to Noah Webster on this very point. Throughout it he showed himself the most thoroughgoing of conservatives in various ways. He avowed his hostility to the practice, which was coming into general use, of no longer capitalizing the initial letter of nouns. He objected also to the form "s" which had begun to displace entirely the other form of STOI$ H Don't GiveYSur p r Children " iirK' rjivtf$i$ Deliciouslu Cold .Safe Water incooier orAutomatic Refrigerator This fooler is "built-in" forms part of wall be tween iee and food elinmbers takes no extra ie. You can use spring water or fill with your regular eity water. Makes it taste delightfully cool and fresh and keeps it safe. Special sale now at McK EE'S