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Wouldn't YouLose a Leg for Her ? TALK Uow To Get Rid of a Dad Cough 1 poys I J nin-niu ncaacdr taat Will T Kaally Made g Caps ivlen s ana EXTRA .SPECIAL leginning Wednesday At the Worth 50,75c,$l LUTZ STORE Worth FOR 50,75c,$l CO T ON T1IEIH WAV TO NEW YORK OUR BUYERS STOPPED IX CHICAGO TO GATHER A FEW. OF THE PLUMS. THE FIRST NEWS WAS CAPS FOR MEN and IiOYS SIXTY NINE AND A HALF DOZEN BOUGHT. FROM KEITH AT A FRAC-m,Tr-Tn ivitii Til it f 4 TP.TM A I.S AHP1 RRAYF.R.' TvFTJSKY. 8FROE. CORDUROY AND FANCY MIXTURES. ALL GOOD STYLES. LIGHT AND DARK j COLORS. WE MUST SELL THIS LOT OF CAPS IN FOUR DAYS. If you have a bad cough or chest cold WlllCII I'l'fUHI'H 1.11 Vlplil til nnlm.r. ...,.,. dies, get from hii.v druggist KVi ounces ,of PinexMuO cents worth , pour into a I'u.i, ..i v.i- uuu on me uoixie Willi plain granulated sugar B.viup. tstart taking a toiispcKnifiil owrv hour or two. " In ti hours your cough will lie conquered or very nearly so. Kvcn whooping couch is greatly relieved in this way. ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC ARE' Ttrattft CONNECTED BY BELL ilVi? ftthf in tDUnue cvctcu 'wiutea.vJ''iiU directions with i'inex. lELEPHONt SYSTEM Ibis Fines and Sugar Syrup prepn- . ration takes right hold of a cough and i gives almost immediate relief. A luos- , ; ens the dry, hoarse or tight cough in a ', , V , , . way that is really remarkable. Also Universal telephone service unaet quickly heuls the inflamed membranes the leadership of President Tbeo, H. which accompany a .painful eopgh, and m t stops the formation of phlegm in the ; Vail of the American Telephone and throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending Telegraph (Company, has connected persistent loose cough. Excellent for the Atlantic witV the Pacific coast. SglSlS talstd New York, Washington, 'Boston and children like it. .. JekrlWBtand. one; thousand rtt down the coast front New York, talk- extract, rich in guaiacol, which is so ed with San Francisco today, JJtiSSSSE ask your ing the opening of the new Trans- druggist for "2 ounces of Pinex," do Continental line of .the" Bell System. T&J$&U:JiJfi& s The line -was opened by a talk 'be- Jy refunded goes with this preparation tween Dr. Sell, the Inventor of the 1" nex Co., Ft. Wayne, fad. telphone, and Mr. Thomas 1 Watson, NOT A CAP IN r m -m,Tir i tca tit IV TMo MOST OF THEM ARE 75c & SI SELLERS. DON'T U: 'ft1" tne talK '.om uNew V" i nr. hui u ' w President Theodore X. Vail, -who to TAKE OUR WORD FOR IT. SEE THE CAPS IN THE WINDOW. ON SALE WEDNESDAY FOR. . .... ... ... . -V. ............. e Second F o-r Specials Ladies Coats 1-2 Price $25.03 Coats size 34 to 44, $12.50 $22.50 Coats size 33 to 44, $11.25 $20.00 Coats size 34 to 44, $10.00 $10.00 Coats size 34 to 44, $9.00 $15.95 Coats size 34 to 44, $7.95 $12.50 Coats size 34 to 44, SS.25 $10.00 Coats size 34 to 46, $5.00 Ail SILK DRESSES HALF-PRICE Ladies Coats WORTH TO ?12.50 $3.98 Novelty materials and styles. Plaids,! checks, stripes and solid colors in the lighter shades. All siz es for ladies and misses. All Fur Sets HA LF PRICE Every piece of fur in the house iniisr move. We will not carry flieni over. Rim ing high grade furs at half is like getting two dollars f ( r c;ic. Choice of Any Ladies Suit $9.95 Values to $35. Sizes; Misses 14 to Ladies 42 BROWN MUSLIN a yard 5c Extra good yard wide soft finished nnWeached muslin, an Sl-3 value, round thread. Will bleach perfectly a yaid, He. LADIES HATS Almost Given Away $4.95 Hats 98c $7.48 Hats $1.98 $15 Hats $2.98 WINTER GOODS MUST GO WE DON'T WANT TO MAKE MONEY ON WINTER MERCHANDISE. NOW IS TO MAKE ROOM FOR THE NEW SPRING STOCKS NOW OUR IDEA ARRIVING. Toilet Goods Section $1.00 Hot Water Bottles - 49c 50c Household Rubber Gloves 19c 50c Pebecco Tooth Paste - 39c 10c Jap Rose Toilet Soap - 7c 25c Woodbetry's Facial Soap 19c 50clngrams Milkweed Cream 35c 25c Violet Rice Powder - - 15c 25c Peroxide Toilet Soap - 10c The New ROYAL SOCIETY PACKAGES Are Here Great scads of them. Anything you desire. By far the largest and best as sortment we have handle I. All sort'' f garments and fancy pieres. Prices L'5e to 1.00. $ his assistant, who sent and heard the ' the city, office and the mansion, but V. first telephone message at the time out onto the farm it stretches and 'of the exper.'ncaL In 18741. v Dr. Bell away up the mountain side, till an talked from New York and tMr (Wat- entlfe country may hold conversation son from San (Francisco. 1 instantly, however distant one see tlon may 'be from the other. Pres. Vail aaja that the work is not Hone, that before the teleDhono ivori- jfS spending the winter at Jekyll-dsland.t,. :.h Js the tag, la than ,tliat on Mecoawna, Bwuc.u, bululng- or rebuilding, of r;on- APRON CHECKS 5c a yard A new lot of staple check Gingham, standard width fast colors, green, brown, blue and black and white ( hecks, on sale ic. f San iFran'-jisco, a distance of 4,400 . miles. (President Wilson was switch i, ed onto the line from (Washington p and in addfresseH the enthusiastic af u'iing at i3an Francisco in praise Sj of "iae , development of the Trans f Continental line, later talking to tDr, I Bell in (New York. S, Ulayor Ctirley of Boston was awitch 1 ed on and he talked with a number jg of prominent citizens, among theai y Major iHIgginson of .Boston and El !mer J. iBHbs, president of the iBos t;ton chamber of commerce. While the conversations n-.e be- 1 ing held 1,550 men were posted alons tilts rcute of fae Hue across the con tinent 10 guara against auuuen siui ma g; or accidents. tfn New York, among tnose seated I' U the ta.blo with Ir Hell were Mayor ' Mitchell, -V. 'X. 'Bethel, senior vice president of 'the American Telephone and Telegraph Company and John J. ! Ca.-ty, chief engineer. I In San Francisco President G. Mc- I'.Farlaad, 'Mr. Thomas Watson, iPresl j dent I.Moore of the Panama (I'acifij f Exposition, Mayor Rolph -and Chair- man Scott sat at the table" white there was a large attendance of prominent citizens and officials.' ' j. .Mayor aiitchell ia his statement f said : "I feel that you and a can 8 lioin In congratulating the officials q - - - tg j and engineers of the telephone com pany whose genius and 'work ' have made iossible this new trans-continental means, of. 'communication." J. J, ICarty, chief engineer Ameri can Telephone and Telegraph Com pany, mado the following statement: "This greatest of telephone lines, w'aich today has "been dedicated to the voice of the public must always be distinguished 'because through its copper wires the voice of the Chief Magistrate of this nation has for the first time in our history 'been .trans mitted from the seat of government at Washington- westward thirty-six hundred miles to the shores of the Pacific. Over this line the voice of President Wilson was carried with magic speed across rivors and plains i and mountains, instantly reaching ISan i Francisco, -where in clear tones It ' spoke hlB message of congratulations ; to men of achievement, i; We are filled with grateful feelings j that Alexander Graham Bell and j Thomas A -Watson have tqday talked to eaich other, over this now 'historic line. Mr. (Bell was the first to con ceive of the true method and appa ratus for transmitting speech elec 1 trically and IMr. Watson, following ' exactly directions given to him iby !l)r. iBell, constructed, with his own hands, the first telephone. Bell was the iirnt a.uong men to taDt by the electric telephone and Watson Tvas I the first to hear. It's the accomplishment of an IVm erican Institution, conducted in the jAxerican way, with initiative, with zeal, with courage and foresignt mat Is given to the American people in the construction of a trans-continental telephone line within a generation of its discovery of the telephone. It's 'but forty years' ago that the first sentence was rarried over fne wire of the the experimenters Dr. Graham .Bell and Thomas Watson and .vet within a few days men will have talked to each other across a con tinent as easily as though Bitting to gether he same room. America leads the world in tele Vhcn. The telephone Is not only In the future. .The American Telephone and Tlegraph Company has shown an account -of its stewardship and the American people can consider the fu ture -with satisfaction saying to the telephone workers of the Boll system "Well Done' HIGH COURT ANNULS A UNION LAW (Continued from Pags One.) ployer has the constitutional right to insist that the employe shall refrain from affiliation with the union dur ing the term of employment." Compares Employment to Contract. "And having accepted employment on these terms, the man is still free to join the union when the period oi employment et.;ires; or, if employed at will, then at any time upon sim ply quitting the employment. And If bound by his own agreement to refrain from joining the union dur ing a stated period of employment, he is in no different situation from that which is" net essarily incident to contracts in general. For constitutional freedom of con tract does not mean that party is to be. as free after making the con tract, as before; ho is not free to break it without accountability. Freedom of contract,1 in the very nature of the thing, can be enjoyed cnly by being exercised; and each particular exercise of it involves making an engagement which, if ful filled, prevented for the time any inconsistent course of conduct." USED MAILS TO ' DEFRAUD IS CHARGE (Continued from Page One-) SO months, at which time the bond was Btipposed to mature, and tne purchaser receive the face of tne bond. ' . ,' - Under, other provisions of the con tract, the purchaser of the bond might become eligible to borrow the face of the .bond, when one year s payment of monthly instalbnents had been wade whether in advance or by tl)e month. This was Hhe attractive feature; euick loans, at a low rate of interest, and repayment in monthly install- mients This and tne goiu uuu feature, to which was added tne representations and assurance of a cuick loan were the attractive feat ures. Failure Tto make the loans lettj the money in the hands of the com pany as their profits. It is similar in principle as the Jackson Loan & Trust company, tried out here some two years ago. A NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION. I "Knocker" is one of the most vivid, luminous words in the American language. . , ' at is not In the dictionaries yet, but it will be, because there is no ether word that has such a compre-j bensive meaning. ... In every neighborhood there is a woman "knocker." She hasn't a good word to say for anybody around her. She is the woman who hides behind 1ier curtain andpeeps out as Mrs. So end So goes past wearing her new hat, and she afterrrars describes it as a 'ingut. .... . t . f ' This is just a Tommy Atkins In , leg ho would never have seen the France having his first watei since pretty French nurse, he was wounded, aided, by a Frencn j There is no information as to nurse. The Tommy ftad his leg j w hether the situation developed fur shot, off and he was sent to a tlieor, and since the British censon hospital. ' Now he is healed, and he . would not pass the names of the seems just as happy as he was when pair any one ' can build his own he had two legs. Had he not lost a romance. nlfles the little faults of the neigh bors; gives wings to gossip; makes venomous flings at the character ot the . young women of the) neigh bor hood, and wonders why she ia not as well liked as other women in the But no one loves a woman ''knocker." . . In every office, store or shop there is a "knocker." You can always find him among the ones who have not succeeded, the ones yet at the foot of the ladder, for one of tho surest things in the world is that a "knoCkcr" never clim'tra very high. He sees men with less ability and less experience than himself jumped over his head to places of trust and) profit, and he "knocks" all the "hard er at that seeming Injustice. In the eyes of the chronic "knock er" the owner of the business is a four-flusher" who owes his success solely to luck. "Luck" is a word tjiat many things to tne "KnocKer. n explains to him why the man young er, less able, less experienced than he was, advanced beyond him. Remember thls young man Just starting out in life ,a "knocker" never reached a high" .place In any business or, profession. If you have a disposition, to think and to say unpleasant things about your employer and your associates, divest yourself of that fault today. Tear it out. of your character and throw it from yon forever. W long as you hold to that habit of thought it will be a drag to you, holding you back and down. No man can say mean things about another without the other hearing at least Borne ot them. "Knocks" travel on tho wind like thistledown. Resolve to quit "knocking" this year. .Kansas City Star. Don't lot us make Imaginary evils, when we know we have so many real explains ones to encounter. Goldsmith Have The Leader delivered. 45c mo. Just ecei The Latest in ved JOII STETSON Novelty Hats v m. Weinberger fhe Xcum i ff Quality 120 West Oklahoma