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Just Received 200 pieces unbleached domestic that is worth 10c. Special tomor- — row 3 C 500 pieces white linon, W«/ — value, special tomorrow.. f All Broken Lots of Goods Left From Our Gigantic Carnival Sale Greatly Reduced for Quick Selling It will positively pay the economical shopper to be on hand early tomorrow morning. We have just closed the most successful sale we have ever held and consequently have many broken assortments of goods. These goods have been marked regardless of profit. They must be sold. Remember these are not damaged or last season’s styles, BUT ALL NEW, THIS SEASON’S. Some of the lots are very small. You must be on hand early if you want the choice pick Ladies’ and Misses $3.00 Ladies’ Pongee Dresses, Ladies Linen Dresses, $lO Ladies’ Lingerie Dresses, Ladies’ Allover Lace Prin- Messaline Silk Dresses, Lace Net and Allover Em- Gingham Dresses $1.48. Worth $5.00, at $2.98. Values, for $5.48. $7.50 to $8.50, for $3.98. cess Dresses $9.98. Worth $l5, for $7.98. broidery Dresses $14.98. We have about 150 Ladies one-piece pongee dresses, in Here's a snhp-50 pure linen one- A big assortment, a few of each kind. 25 splendidly made allover lace dress- 50 ladies’ Messaline silk Princess Some dresses in this lot sold for $4O, for ladies and misses, in solid colors tan, bine, pink and white. Splendid piece dresses, lace yokes and trimmed $7.50, $8 and $8.50 values Princess „ k . ♦* ' . e . , • . . ... .. - , u ™ and stripes. This lot is composed of , f elegantly embroideries of the same color lingerie dresses, in all colors. These beautiful patterns. Some dresses dresses, in dots, plaids and stripes; not a one worth less than $27.50. $2.25, $2.50 and $3 dresses. While b . as goods of body of dress. Your garments are splendid value at orig- m this lot sold for. $25. not one worth regular $l5 values, priced special for There are 30 of these dresses left, they last your choice for 4 r.i i.ew choice of any of the lot Q inalprices. Your choice less than $16.50. While QQQ quick selling Monday. "W QQ Your choice of this 4 A Oft onl - v they last., while they last. Monday while they last. Ob *7O they last your choice.. ObwO Your choice < b»7O ] o t while they last... " TiIJO Ladies’ Wash Skirts Greatly $5.00 Panama Skirts at Panama and Voile Skirts at Voile Skirts, Worth, $lO.OO. WOMEN’S PETTICOATS. $2 00 Heatherbloom Skirts $4.00 Heatherbloom or Near Reduced ' s2 ’ 9B ’ • •„ , aSacri,i “', „ for $5.98. $1 oo Heatherblcom Skirts ' (nr 9 8c Silk Skirts $1.98. ~ . ... , , . _ .... sample skirts, made of excellent I .Uv nvaliici Uivi.ni OMI lo TOT ooC. » ♦T? L'r h’ reg $Va Ue PaDam “ ’ t( ,n material and ‘rimmed with braids. Beautiful voile skirts, made in the fop 65C. The most satisfactorv wearing skirts -r? f & ™ h b,ue ’ black and brown > full Pitted . They are all cut in the latest style ’a‘est models, trimmed with satin earth f n gizM ' with hea<v em . Fots of th!!e WhUe the? ll!t your skirt and Tibbon trimmed. You will and are worth $7, $lO and $l5. We bands and plaited some of which Just received 500 women’s Heather- An colofs well raade with embroid . broiderv ’ ri , tfle and duetruffl „ worth lots ox these. While they last your ... . c np „; n i have made a big special of these. have tunic effect. Not a skirt in the bloom skirts, full sizes, well made, all . H .. . ... — broidery rutfle an dustrutfle, worth choice of any of them at 4 AQ like these skirts. Spec.al O Oft Yonr choice Mon s av P up lot worth less than $lO. EQQ solors. Special during rU ' flC ' fU " S ' ful| y B P ecial durin « 1 Oft $2.48, $1.98 and * during this sale ** from $3.98 to ... Oa“O Sale price Monday.-.... UaVO this sale OOC values, during this sale.. this sale ib wO $6.00 Taffeta Skirts $2.48. Children’s Wash Dresses. Children's Gingham Dresses. Children's Lawn Dresses. $ ' a " d hR?" Sh ' rt ' $2 and Y^ao?''**' 3 ' 818 white china silk Shirtwaists > w — imi.ib.’M. ,oraBc ' Worth $3.50. at $1.48. Me have about 400 all silk petticoats, Made of good fancy percales and Made of best quality ginghams, solid , ~ Another shipment of these beautiful About 20 styles of our $2 and $2.25 -.v i alj colors, well made, the best value ginghams, piped with solid colors. colors, stripes and plaids, $2 and '' vJ, lawn shirtwaists, worth $1 and $1.25, | lingerie shirtwaists are on sale to- I d,ist rocehed, white < hina si k 1 in the qty for the price. AO Regular $1 values, special $2.50 va.ues, special dur- Q Qa has been received. Beautiful pat- I morrow. These are positively the I T '“” ls > 10 loBe OHt quick we have I A Monday special during this sale 057 C ing this sale. OOC choice of a large .Mort- |gg L >| O best value ever offered for QQ _ made them a big special 44g ment dunng this sale... 48 C the pric . Your choice... for this sale *.W "" ' —l— ■ * —————— N..— -—— . . ■ Kimonos and Dressing Sacks Ladies’Long Kimonos. Children s Rompers 19c. I mrnv Boys’Pants and Shirtwaists, Special in Boys’Linen Suits. Lace Curtains. $1 Values, 15c and 25c. I- I, 'Just received, 200 children’s romp- ALL MIL LI Nt K I 50c VaIUCS 19c tOr 48C. About 50 lad.es’ long kimonos left. <s. made of good material, tans and JUL VdlUCb, IDL. Boys’linen suits, in solid brown, blue _ A ’ 35c kimonos, made of good lawn, in They are made of excellent material, blues, regular 35c values. Fora Trimmed Of Untrim- Another big shipment of shirtwaists and tan; also in stripes and cheeks, ? beautiful patterns, on sale 4 and were our $l, $1.50 and $3 sellers. quick clearance take your 4 Q Hied Hat», Flowers, B nd pants for the boys. The regular worth from $I to $3. Special for eev g ' v b f( | r ‘ sl k Q tlie entire week at ***** To close them out they are 4Q— choice for *W V etc., at a reduction Of 50c kind on ante tomorrow 4 _ this big event from 48c AO cial tomorrow only 1, ,i~.o<nn. 9K. marked at $1.48, 69c and “**** about one-half. A9C upto * bTW 1a 50c dressing sacques, 25c. Better grades, worth 75c, for 29c. * OT — • AU $2 curtains for 78c. $3.00 Lace Curtains $1.48. Bed Spreads. Parasol Special. Children’s Parasols, Worth Suissene Silk 29c. Ladies’and Misses’Oxfords Hair Goods Special. Kaufman’s is noted for big bargains About 75 of those sample parasols Up to $l.OO. 25c. ’ at a Bargain. I t We have too many h.gb grade lace in bed spreadB We have a better ]eft Abou k 50 pieces of Suissent silk, in X"il curtains. Tey are in ecru, wle line now than ever before. They are early tomorrow; thev won’t last long Just received, 250 children's para dots - Btr ipes and figures, all colors; 1 $5 to $7, special MfcwwO and fancy figured patterns, not a one k d just half tomorrow. $1 at this price. In fancy colors with sols, bought at a big sacrifice on j«rt ™ rth regularly 50c a yard, while it $2.00 values fof $1.48 in this lot worth !ess £ valneB and values go in long and short handUs _ of the maker foA "“‘ 9 Cho “’’ 'alues for $1.98 than $3 pair. Tomorrow this sale at wOC Your choice i VOC Monday special. Choice.. SCC yard $4.00 values for $2.98 onlv .-...Z3ft| . • . 1J KAUFMAN’S DEPARTMENT STORE TRY TO STEM TIDE OF RACE PREJUDICE Graduates and Faculty of Ob erlin College Try to Make Negroes' Way Easier. ARE BARRED FROM TEAMS Literary Societies Also Close Doors on Blacks—Boarding Houses Follow Suit. Cleveland, 0., April 30. —Graduates of Oberlin college in Ohio and beyond its borders are discussing means of stem ming the tide of race prejudice that has invaded their alma mater recently. Though negro‘students are admitted to classes on equal terms they are prac-l tic ally barred this year from various other student activities. As a result i letters of protest are pouring into the college town by the score. Indignation UNION MEA T COMPANY Beef and Pork Paokero Lard Refinars and Oampcund Makara UNION STOCK YARDS San Antonio, • • Texas SUNDAY, KAUFMAN'S MONDAY SPECIALS OF MERIT meetings are being held by graduates throughout the state. College literary societies which pro fess to be open to membetship without j distinction of race or color have lately । issued the edict against the negro. Choirs in churches whose history is a. real part of that of the college are] turning a deaf ear to the application ofl the negro singer. College boarding 1 houses no longer will allow the negro to eat at the same table with the white, man. Cannot “Make" the Team. Tn athletics conditions are much the same. A negro may try for any of the teams, but he finds it hard to land a place. The track team management has issued an ultimatum to the negro stu dents to the effect that, when the team goes to Columbus this spring, negro ath letes w-ill have to find their own hotel quarters and shift for themselves. For years track teams have had to put up, it is said, with accommodations at inferior hotels on account of the ne gro. But this state of affairs will exist no longer. The negro student can make the track team hereafter, but the rules are made so stringent he would much prefer not to take any part in Oberlin athletics. It is the same in baseball and foot ball, according to college instructors. Negroes are not actually bar.ed from the teams, but they might as well be, it is asserted. The boys make it em barrassing for their negro team-mates at every opportunity. Literary Societies Bar Them. The literary societies of the college have taken the most decided stand in TOMORROW IS BARGAIN DAY HERE i the race question. Alpha Zeta, Phi Del | ta aud Phi Kappa Pi, three of the men’s literary organizations, have barred ne ■ groes from their enrollment lists. This । action was taken a few weeks ago. Recently the rising tide of prejudice ] has flowed into some of the classrooms, j-lu one of the Bible study courses so ] pronounced was the feeling that sepa -1 rate sections had to be organized, with the white men students in one division ] aud the negroes in another. Then the I boarding house keepers yielded to racial ; prejudice, it is said, with the result 1 that negroes can no longer sleep aud eat uuder the same roof with white men. . Officers of the college alumni all over the country and leading educators lookj i upon this move of the Oberlin under-1 graduates with disfavor. The ostracism of the negro is not sanctioned by the faculty. Professors are up in arms be cause of the attitude of the students. Some of the professors call the mark ed prejudicial attitude against the negro in Oberlin evidence of bow race antipa thy is growing in all the colleges of the country. Then, toby it is said, the feel ing is shifting from the south to the' north more and more, and that the ulti matum of Oberlin’s students is but add ed proof of this. An article which appeared in the March number of the Oberlin Alumni magazine by Prof. L. E. Lord, editor of the periodical, states that inasmuch as the literary societies of the college had slammed the door of admission in] his face, the negro was obliged to or-1 gauize a society of his own. Causes Trouble in Hotels. This negro society has its own pro grams and debates as do the white stu-j dents’ organization. “The presence of negroes on the track] team has caused difficulty in securing the proper hotel accommodations for the . white men. It is said that last year], the track team voluntarily went to a . third class hotel because of its negro jj members. “The manager of the track team of-' ] fered to go with the negroes to any] hotel in Columbus which would receive', them, but the negroes refused to go to। j Columbus at all unless the whole team', could be accommodated. Notice has ; now been served on the* negroes thath they will have to shift for themselves! < at Columbus, the management paying j < the * j ( SAN ANTONIO LIGHT AND GAZETTE AMERICANS IN LONDON ACTIVE Many Receive Invitations to Attend the Court Ball to Oc cur Early In June. PREPARE F*o R ROOSEVELT Duchess of Marlborough Wil Be Hostess at Large Dinner Party to the Colonel. London, April 30.—There are bril liant times ahead for the American col only. The first state ball will be given by the king early in June, before the court’s departure for Windsor castle for the Ascot race week. The second ball will be held early in June. The invitations are limited to 2300 for each ball, and the lord chamberlain has been compelled to notify many American applicants that presentation at court is neceesary before an invita tion to a court ball" is possible. Eng- Victim of Drink Needs Orrine Drink cunningly destroys the will power, and while a drunkard wants to do what you tell him, he wants a thous and times more the drink that he craves. Medical treatment is neces sary. Orrine will destroy the desire /or liquor so that the drink will not bo missed and restores the patient to health. The remedy is thoroughly scientific and is so uniformly successful that it is sold «with a registered guarantee to refund your money if it fails to effect a cure. Booklet “How to Cure Drunk enness.’’ free on request. The Orrine Co., 935 Orrine Bldg.. Washington. D. C. Sold in this city by A. M. Fischer and the Bexar Drug Co. THE FASTEST GROWING DEPART MENT STORE IN THE SOUTH. I lish women who have not attended the courts regularly for the last three years ; have been ruthlessly cut out of the j list. 1 Among Americans outside of peer । esses receiving invitations are Mrs. J. ,J. Astor. Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. I Drexel, Mrs. J. H. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. ! Waldorf Astor, Mrs. Paul Phipps, Mrs. I Michael Grace. Mr. and Mrs. Bradley Martin, Mrs. Moore, Mrs. Harold Bar ing, Mrs. Graham Miller and Mrs. Pot ter Palmer. Glittering Jewel Show. A state ball is a notable function for the extravagant display of jewels i representing a fabulous fortune, and it I is an open secret that many nervous I dowagers wear imitation duplicates of their famous family ornaments. Even Mrs. Bradley Martin’s collection of French crown jewels is not considered too heavy to wear on such occasions. The queen wears the wonderful Culli nan in her corsage, suspended from het neck by a thin chain of small stones. But nothing worn by the queen or even in the American colony can bd compar ed to the jewels worn by the Marchion ess Lomdondery, although the pearls worn byi the Duchess of Marlborough are more magnificent than the queen’s, and Mrs. Martin takes the palm where rubies are concerned. / The Duchess of Marlborough will en tertain Col. Roosevelt at a large din ner party given at Sunderland house. Most of England’s distinguished states men and the pick of the smart world will be present. The dinner will be followed by a reception. The duchess has recovered her health, and looks pretty and animated. She is no longer worried about the health of her son. Lord Iver. Sunderland house will be the scene of several important functions this sea son, including a ball during Aseot week. This burst of entertaining on the part of the duchess is due to the advice of her mother in-law, the Mar < hioneas of Blandford, who has stood by the duchess during all of her trou bles. The marchioness wants the duch ess to take an important place in tiie social and public life. Mrs. Palmer to Retire. This season will be memorable as witnessing the last attempt of Mrs. Potter Palmer to scale the dizziest heights of the social ladder, She has intimated to her friends that, at th* end of this season, she will shake the dust of London from her feet forever and make her gorgeous apartments in Paris her headquarters in the future. Her greatest ambition has been to en tertain royalty in her house. American girls are due to have a particularly active season. It is a fair assumption that Miss Ethel Roosevelt will be the most sought after girl in town. A scramble has already begun among American hostesses anxious to secure dates for her entertainment. Miss Jeanne Crocker, the California heiress, will come in for great atten tion. A new American debutante is Cecilia Webster Fox, of Philadelphia. She is handsome, and is likely to cause a sen sation among the young peers and eldest sons of peers. Then there is Miss Harman, of Mil ford, Pike county, Miss'ouri. She has many friends in the American colony. Another hostess is Mrs. Walter Far well, who will take a town house.— Washington Post. “Pa. what has become of all the buccaneers f ” “Probably, Wilfred, they’ve turned into auctioneers.” Q Q Q DRIVES OUT BLOOD HUMORS When we see persons with soft, smooth blo °^n’JT® aad healthy ' that the cuticl « I® being nourished by the circulation. But when the unhealthy humor the effect is shown by definitely marked skin disease such as Eczema etc V™ % these Imaes, ana th. ttuJSXS r blooa purifiers. It cleanses the blood of every particle of ennehes the circulation and causes it to supply healthful tissues. Then the skin become, soft and clear Local ~ by reducing the in XX“b ! ? h * ci ” :ulation andthe eruption will b. no nearer well whm U ,eft hnnwr * a^no’X Lt vJr i lS niakes healthy skins and B s £ , Pure bicod. Book on Skin Diseases free to aU who write and request it. 2 raE SWffy BPECDFIQ ATLANTA, QA. MAY 1, 1910. Just Received 200 pieces seersucker, all colors, sold all over the city for 12 l-2c, special tomorrow K w 300 pieces ginghams, all new pat terns, worth 10c yard. Spe- W cial tomorrow ■ w COR. S. FLORES & DOLOROSA STS. Opposite Southern Hotetf COURTS DIVORCED WIFE American Musician Finds Woman From Whom He Separated Good Company. Berlin. April 30.—The matrimonial affairs of Arthur M. Abell, a prominent American musician residing in Berlin, provide a pendant to the Jorn affair. Abell and his wife lived'happily to gether for a long period, but a year or so ago coolness and differences arose. They agreed to abandon marital rela tions for the period of a year, but con tinued to live under the same roof. After a year they concluded that sepa ration was advisable, and agreed to a divorce, Abell chivalrously taking the blame. • No sooner was the decree granted than Abell and his ex wife began to as sociate as good friends. This goes on all the time. Abell lunches dailv with his ex-wife, for he likes her cooking, anil daily she exerts all her culinary arts to please her ex-husband. Once or twice a week they spend the evening together at a theater or restaurant. They frequently meet at friends’ houses and talk like good friends. They have one daughter, who is an expert dancer. 7