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The Sin Prrnnndn Nnneri pomp*nyiMr.,ton i,. c. Brand, i. t wiismi,

C 1> Mnbl.nd. X 11. 11111, \V. .1 Mum.k. k. Btraber, J. R Hay.ion. capitalStorfc, $88,000, of which Jisnn hn» beenpubscrlbed,

The Kltt« Press— Directors: V. H.Kltts, .1. A. Kltts, N. a. Andrews.Capital stock, 120,000, of whtrh $15,020has been subscribed.

Howies urn*, company— Directors: W.R.Howies, F. A. Howies, It. H. Howies.Capital stork, $75,000, of which $300 hasbeen subscribed.

INCORPORATIONS

PRISONER GIVESWOMANDIAMONDS

Recent Pocket Veto of Finance Secre-

tary's Report Regarded as Evi-

dence of Faction Politics

Among Employes

VALUABLE GEMS FOUND IN

PACKAGE

Police Believe They Were Stolen and

Will Try to Determine

Where They Came

From

LOS ANGELES HERALDny Tim iiimn.ncompanyPHANK O. IIM.AVSO.V rrr.Mcn)

HOIIT. ,11. YOST l'.lltorlnt MnnsfterS.It. I.AVI'.HTY RnaliM-MMfifin*rr

OLDEST MOIININO VPER INLOS ANOBJjES.

Poo»<lf<1 firt.2, IH7B Thirty-fourth trnr.

rtinmhcr of Commerce tinlliUno;.

\u25ba TKLBPHOMStVHiimMtPress U.iHonmThe raid.

'The only Democratic newspar«r In

Southern California receiving the fullAMoelnted Press reports.

*~NEWS KKUVICR—Member nf the A«-soclfttpd Press, receiving It*full report,averaging 2ri,flflo wofd» n .lv

EASTERN VORNI .1. P. McKlntii-.v.lot Potter building, New York; 811Jloyce biilldlng, Chlcngo, _

HATES OF*Bt;iJS(:FIIPTION WITHSUNDAY MAGAZINE:

Dally, by currier, per month $ .fi''Dally, by ini11, three months 1.9SDally, by mall, six months 1.90Dally, by mull, one year 7.80lunany Hern Id, hy mull,one year. . 2.MWeekly Herald, by mall, one yenr.. 1.00

Entered at postnfflce, Los Angeles. n»second-class matter.

THE HERALD IN SAN<rRANCIBCOAND OAKLAND—Los Angrloß nivlSouthern California visitor! to BunFrnnclnco nnd Oakland will find TheHerald on sale nt the news stand* in the

P-itiFranclnco ferry huilillni:and on thestreets In Oakland by Wheatlcy nnd byAmos News Co.

Population of Los Angeles. 251,364

Home more rain is threatening. L<isAngeles, nn sin da little mor(",

For the first time I,m Angi111 1 threat-ens to become a quitter.

Wouldn't "Thi Pli Girl" make ngreat hil as a theatrical venture?

Take Wilmington, ton. hut that's noexcuse for not taking San Pedro In,

And when Fiddler SchmltS returns itwillbe Up to him to plead not guilty,too.

L .3 Angeles quits, and the SouthernPacific wins its victory without an ef-fort

Don't weaken at the behest of theSouthern Pacific. Annex San Pedroanyhow.

Go to the big benefit for the ex-plosion sufferers. They need themoney.

Mayor Harper has notified bonds ofdepartments thai efficient service is eX.peeted from all city employes, and bsevere policy of dealing with formerfavorites may result in this and similarcases where the public's interest suf-fers.

Miss Qleason as secretary made tl<Mreport which suffered a pocket veto, andInformation having reached the mayorto ihis effect he sent for the youngwoman yesterday tolearn the facts firsthand.

One of the last official acts of retir-ing President Trueworthy was t.> sup-press a report which showed that MissQleason was no) responsible for thiserror, the blame being divided betweentWO other persons who happened to beadherents of the Lununis administra-tion.

Miss Pearl Oleason, secretary to theboard of dire lots of the public libraryin.lprincipal of the flnan 1.-partmen'

of the library, had an hour's conferenceWith Mayor Harper yesterday.

This move Is but another In the longpending controversy In the library,

With the nomtng of Directors Dock-welter and O'Melveny by Mayor Harpwrthe situation was changed somewhat,IMre, tor TrueWOrthy having been ratedas siding with the Lummls administra-tion, of which Dookweiler is also \u25a0strenuous supporter.

Miss Qleason, It Is said, has incurredthe enmity .•;' some of the Dockwellerappointees In the library, which enmityhas shown Itself in efforts to hamperher work. The most recent example hasbeen the Shifting of blame for the pay-ment twice of an order for books to aSan Francisco man through an allegodfaulty system of accounting.

Joe Markhnm was arrested severaldays ago In company with a woman.Hazel Bailey. Both were book, il on acharge of vagrancy, When searched.it the police station a fine diamondring was found In Markham's pocket.Yesterday the Bailey woman was re-leased. When she was leaving the sta-tion Markham asked permission togive the woman a package. Ills re-quesi was granted and a small paperbundle was handed her. When theBailey woman reached the corridorshe was stopped by detectives and thepackage opened. In it was found livediamond rings of a total value of about$160. The rings were turned over to theproperty clerk and the detectives arenow endeavoring to learn where Mnrk-ham obtained th. in, it is thought theymaj be part of the loot obtained Insome house robbery,

Through B small package handed to ndischarged woman prisoner by a manstill confined In the city jail, the po-lice have gained what they consider Ai lew to the pi !]'\u25a0\u25a0 rators of one andperhaps mote of lira recent robberiesin Los Angeles,

Hobsnn ought to be satisfied now;two more powerful warships arc or-dered built.

As an evidence of the prodigiouspresent demand for railway ties, and ofthe vastly greater future requirement,it is stated that the railways of thiscountry use 110,000,000 new ties everyyear, it is said that the PennsylvaniaRailroad company alone pays morethan $5,000,000 per year for ties.

An obvious need In Southern I'allfor-nla cultivation is greater variety ofproducts. The growing of citrus fruitshas been so attractive nnd so profit*able within recent y.ars that otherlines of land production have beengenerally overlooked, To use a familiarcountry saying, our farmers arc "put-

ting too many eggs in one basket."

The eucalyptus, for which we aroInd. bted to Australia, Is quite "athomo" In this climate. The varietiesthat have been tested here Ihardy, thriving from the sc.-.i. and re-quiring no artificial Irrigation or otherspecial .are after the first year. Thelong and dry summer of this region

does not affect them injuriously, astheir roots extend downward in thoearth a doei n feel or more In seekingmoisture.

Nowhere hi the United States nroconditions so favorable for the growthof trees suitable for ties as ttiey areIn southern California, Thla becausecertain varieties of the eucalyptus tret,which make ideal railway tics, grtrffhere with aStonllhlng rapidity and inground that is worthless for other pur«pose?.

A few months ago the Santa Ferailway company bought \u25a0 large tractof land In San Diego county for useln growing eucalyptus trees from whichto make railway ties. The purpose Isto l'l.'ii-t a. large acreage every year,and the work already is In progress.Tlio Pennsylvania Railway company,as announced, Is preparing to go ex-tensively into tree planting ns a meansof providing ties for the future, andother railway companies are likely tofollow (lie example.

AAA now departure by rortnin railwaycompanion rail! attention to a greatundeveloped resource, of Southern Call-fornln. Tnnt Is the growth of treessuitable for railway ties. It Is shownby statistics that the available timbersuitable for ties will bo exhausted Inthe not far distant future, and thereappears to be no hope of finding afit substitute for wood.

ANOTHF.R PROMISING RFSOURC.fi

The wonder is how Evelyn Thaw everhad time to do anything but pose forphotographs.

Fight it out with the Southern Pa-cific. No laying down in the San Pe-dro consolidation.

"Who would have thought that T.osAneglos could be bluffed by the South-ern Pacific so < asily?

Los Angeles never has laid down yrt.Will It at the Southern Pacific's orders,and abandon San Pi Iro?

Berkeley should be content with heruniversity aid not try to monopolizeSacramento's excuse for being.

Los Angeles owes a duty to San Pe-dro which it cannot forego, even at theorders of the Southern Pacific.

Berkeley wants the capital. In caseIt is moved "illSacramento sti'l re-main on the map. and if 5... why?

It would be folly to wait on the gascompany's aiding the victims of therecent explosion: help them yourself.

The place to teach and to learn jour-nalism is in a newspaper office. Itmay be a littleold country weekly or agroat big city daily, and then the manmust be born a journalist or tho jobwill be hopelessly botched. Love yourjob or leave it. Unless the newspaperman love3printer's ink; unless he lovesthe music of the case: unless he lovesthe music of the press as it turns outthe history of yesterday, all the. col-logos In tho world will never make ajournalist of that man. Wishes do notfill the Amo nor turn plums intooranges, to borrow a thought fromGeorge Eliot, and neither willa man ln-t. tided for a blacksmith or a tailor moveopinion like Swift and Hazlitt. Ritchieand Oreeley, or gather news like theelder Bennett or Joseph Midill, or Jo-seph B.McCullaugh,

—Washington Post.

They are talking about founding acollege of Journalism in Missouri andCornell university pretends to graduatejournalists every year. Mr. JosephPulitzer gave some millions that wereto establish a school of journalism InNew York. I" you can turn out "jour-nalists" like gloves and grubbing hoes,slate pencils, trace chains, jack knivesand other articles necessary to domes-tic economy. It la a great thing for thonoblest of professions. Hut you can nomore make a journalist by hand thanyou can make a poet by hand. FrancisJeffrey, editor of the Edinburgh Re-view, and autocrat of Knglish letters Inhis day, wrote a most entertaining and,

very plausible essay, in which he tookthe position that Benjamin Franklin

1

would have been a very ordinary manif he had been licked into shape atHarvard college, and we do not be-lieve that Horace Oreeley would havebeen half the journalist he was had hebeen bred to the craft in a school ofjournalism.

JOURNALISTS MADE TO ORDER

The Cahuenga country is very nicefarming land, but as parts of Los An-geles—pause and think before votingon it.

&/?e Younger GenerationGEO. O. BAKER

"Oh, Carlo, how terrible! But couldyou not have waited to announce Ituntil the dressmaker had given mo mydress?"— llMotto per Rldere.

"My dear wife, Iam ruined."

The Union Pacific was chartered asan operating company, and it has suc-cessively served the purposes of a hold-ing company and a bank, as well as atransportation concern. Apparently Ithas now disposed of it-;Immense cashsurplus and is In the position of an In-vestment company. It owns the stocks.and the capitalists who sold them nowhave tho cash. Now nil this Is notnecessarily Illegal. But it will Inevita-bly leave a bad taste In the publicmouth, It willgiv.' aid and encour-agement to the agitation of govern-ment ownership of railroads, of whichHV. J. Bryan is the most distinguishedexponent -Wall Sin el Journal.

Morover, it appears that among theextraordinary stock investments madeby the Union Pacific were a number oflarge purchases from Mr. Harriman,Mr. Rogers and Mr. Stlllman, all threedirectors of the company. Those gen-tlemen, indeed, did not vote In theboard Of directors on the question ofthose purchases from themselves, andyet in a true sense the "dual" tran-saction Was again brought to the front,:is it was In the insurance investiga-tion, the "dual" transaction consistingof the directors in control acting at thesame time as buyers and sellers.

Never before, even In all the litera-ture of the Standard Oil, has thereever been spread upon the records suchan amazing exhjbit of financial con-centration HS was made in the two-dayproceedings at this Inquiry. Variousforms of legal procedure were gonethrough with, but the autocrat wasMr. Harriman, and the board of di-rectors and even the executive com-mittee simply recorded what he willed.Mr. Harrlman's will was shown by asch f Imperial railroad expansioncovering the whole country. Bast andwest the creation of a vast continentalsystem reaching from the Atlantic tothe Pacific, both north and south.

HARRIMAN'S IMPERIALISM

He would no more appreciate theabilityof his friend to do more than heis dolni than he would the actual dis-play of that ability, for If he has sense,and it is of such people we speak, liewill appreciate the fact that his hostdoes not depend upon ostentation andsuperfluity to make his guest's visitagreeable, but upon the simplicity ofthe welcome and thfe good taste withwhich it is adorned. We are led tothese thoughts by a little remark In anewspaper In these words. "Rememberthat when you i;,, visiting you becomea problem." If there were any prob-lem about It. it would be well that thovisitor stayed at home, and If, per-chance, ii should evolve, which oneshould not be too suspicious about, itwould be well If he folded Ins tent.Bui real visits are like going out intothe garden and making a bouquet; it isa harmony of color, form an 1 fra-grance, and everybody likes }h,- bou-quet, especially people who love andare sincere.— Ohio state journal.

True art always Impresses one thatthe artist didn't do as well as he might.His creation, as beautiful nnd Inspiringas it is, still gives witness of a forcethat Is not yet expressed. The beholderor listener is perfectly satisti.'rl because,if absolute perfection were attained, he

wouldn't enjoy it; he couldn't. Thisrule holds true in the ordinary experi-ence of entertaining a friend. There isa lack of extravagance that means sin-cerity, and there is the moderation ofhospitality that means a genuine wel-come. A guest who Is Inundated withgood things

—reallyan excess of. them—

knows they are no part of the friend'slife which he comes to share.

VISITING

When the river bed franchise grabwas iiiLob Angeles didn't quit. Whydo so now. when the harbor i; \u25a0

menaced?

Fiddler Sehmltz will Boon return tothe ciiy h' has s.j.j out, but no pearsof welcome are heard on the bre z afrom there,

RIDES PEDALLESS WHEELFOR LONG DISTANCE

COUNCIL SESSION LIVELY

The new i;\u25a0 iman n h hstng cheeredthe kaiser vigorously. Why not? Didnot he havi thu ivlchstag norder just for that purpo

Think twice I\u25a0 fore voting to take Inthe Cahuenga valley; but think onlyonce, an i thai favorably, before an-nexing San Pedro,

The \ iry lhl \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 Ihut the B1 ilonmi' I \u25a0 "'. An.l 1.. \u25a0

\u25a0•ly Into Itsho ds,

Who h ' h nether or not San Pe-dro "•

the sup on it? Why•'"I VOt' . : the Iuurl d

Speolnl to Tho Herald.VENICE, Fob. 19.—Sitting astrldo of

B pedalleas bicycle which he propelled!by running ;i few steps after after1 which he would lift up hla foet andcoast, W. W. Ferguson, 79 years oldand an Inmate of the Boldlers' home,attracted considerable attention onWind wind avenue this morning wherebe Stopped to rest after having navi-gated his steed in tho manner de-scribed from Bawtelle, a distance of al-mosl seven miles, Ferguson, coatlessand covered with perspiration, was im-mediately the center of an amused andInterested crowd to whom he readilyexplained the meaning of hU strangemanner of locomotion, He had, he said,been a sufferer from complicated rheu-

:matlsm that affected him most se-verely in the lower part of tho bodyand for years had been unable to bendhis knees, which necessitated bis hav-ing to use CrUtOhei 111 getting about.He said this way of traveling was 100slow to suit him and besides was wear-ing: on his arms, which caused him toresort to every means he could availbimsef of to find snmo substitute tot

:the crutches, eventually resulting Inacomrade suggesting the pedalless bloy-iI. , which on trial proved Just the trlok.Ferguson served during the clvl! warwith the Sixteenth New York regularsNOTES OF INTEREST

FROM CANAL CITY

Pasadena City Fathers Struggle withDispleasure of Property

OwnersBy Associated Press.

PASADENA, Feb. 19.— city coun-ceilccil session was livened up a bit this ,morning by a debate between the prop- |erty owners on Los Robles avenue and |the councilman, and another debate be- itween the property owners on Oakland javenue and the lame body. Tho for-mer Were pulling for paving of theirthoroughfare and the latter were like- |wise doing the same. The former won ;and the latter lost.

Protestants to Los Robles paving oh- 1

peeted to narrowing their street topave, or to pavinga portion or all until jall water pipes were laid. The objec- |tion was Interposed In the form of a |

petition signed by a hundred names, iThe object was sustained. The city •

engineer was given the protest to cer- ;tify Ifthe frontage signed was a ma-jority,and iffound to be such the work,on the avenue willbo delayed for six.months. j

The Oakland avenue matter came InIthe form of a protest to letting bids

for the work on the avenue, and the!protest was overruled. Four bids wore,opened and the contract was awarded, jAndrew Hollowny receiving the award IOn a bid of $14,812.60. I

\u25a0• « »

Amid «hout« for T.lnrnin find Ornnt

ithe Tlepubllcana of Southern Cnllfornla'mnrcti',l to Hi.- polio in November last

'under the Phrltorltiff folds of Old Glory

r;.,, r*s; ts«lr hnllofji for every a*""*

nnd friend of the Southern Pacificirnilrond, from povrrnnr down.

They did this knowinglyand prempdl-

III tntodly, for never In the history of this. state were the mnchlnntlons of the,rallrortd machine m open, notorious And

efolLOU Angelea RcptlbllCßTM, as a rule,. "voted 'er atralßht," without batting an

eye, nnd yet they knew, -without 1\u25a0 shadow of doubt, thnt In Voting for theiiblicnn nominees for the legislature

ithey v"te sending to Sacramento i

!delegation that would be compelled tobetray its trust ami deliver over to thecorporations the. dearest hopes and ln-terrMs of this great city.

They knew, long In advance, that theOwens river enterprise and the prob-able annexation of Ban Pedro would benmong the most Important questionsthai would be submitted to the generalassembly. They knew that In voting

the Republican ticket they were vot-ing for the representatives of the very

noles that are sleeplessly fightingthe public Interests of Los Angeles.

ln one or two noteworthy Instances,

where the corporations were apprehen-sive of the non-partisan strength, al-leged Democrats were put up by thoSouthern Pacific railroad and the Re-

publicans rallied to them, just theline.

Today the poopi> of Los Angeles arereaping the consequences.

Honorable citizens who were sent toSacramento to present bills looking to

the merger with San Pedro have beenmet with Insults by the Southern Pa-cific's assembly nnd driven out of thestate capital by the agents of the rail-

roads.President S. A. Butler of the consoli-

dation commission, himself a leadingRepublican, paints this picture:

•A» die matter Nttinil*no nrr helplessln Hie power of the Southern Pacific,What we lire koliiiv to do ationt It. I(lnii't lino«. We nrc .-ill to blame forthis deplorable condition. We Hit Idlyby while the rullronil lunchI niiiit-lii!itc«men for office :in<l then wo enn'thurry too flint to the poll* to roie for• lu-iii. Ian illawiiNtcil nml mil fiHhnineilof Hi.- preilkanicnt (he people of (oll-forntn ore In."

Ah. ye.=: And The Herald warnedand pleaded with our people

—to no

avail:We have been driven by the Southern

Pacific railroad and Us assembly to thepoint of abandoning one of the great-

est hopes of Los Angeles— the annexa-tion of San Pedro.

We have been driven by the SouthernPacific railroad to accept an Increasedtax nf $100,000 \u25a0' year on the buildingof

our Owens river water aqueduct by alaw Increasing the pay of daylaborersto that of skilled mechanics.

We are now in the shadow of a com-ing law to put al' harbors under a state

commission that will be appointed by

the Southern Pacific railroad.We are driven by the Southern Pa-

cific railroad's assembly to help pay the

city of San Francisco a state appro-priation of $3,000,000 for an alleged

world's fair that may never happen.

And every enterprise in which Los

Angeles Is interested has been or is tobc strangled at Sacramento, at the be-hest of the Southern Pacific railroad,

which seeks to still further own andenslave this goodly land.

We are even threatened with a lawsuspending the city charter of Los An-

los until tho corporations can es-tablish all i>: \u25a0 tracks and franchises

they want and cannot now receive

without a measure of adequate com-pensation,

Even the Sacramento Union, a Re-publlcan organ at the state capital,confesses tho shame of the situationin an editorial headed "Make Call'fornlu r

"For forty yenrN rullfornln him beeniipolltli-til<lrg>i-iiil<-iu-vof (he SouthernlI'M. Hl.' l-oiiipniiy. II In mi hiill. IIiilioulilnot be no, ml Ihere In un ne<>cn-Nlty for ItN lii-liik nil It is miii in \u25a0.

Miry,imm to Hi.- protection of the largeini.risis ulilcli tin- Southern I'nclOc

1-Ollipiin)II-Ollipiin)re|iroHt>nlN, that It mlioiili! hrImi. The Ihliiu needful la to drive to theini.pli-aw iiwhole an opportunity iiiex-

i,n-.si,n-.s llivlr vlotvN mill to make Ihoavlinn<-IVI-<llve."

Which is all absolutely true, hutwhich tho Union fiercely helped to make

MAY NOT DEMOCRACY HOPR ?

Any old ticket ha has the Repub-

lican md can be stamped with OldGlory l>y tho Southern Pacific railroadand many lU'l'Ulilli-unn fall over them-stives voting iiInto placu and power, IfWalter I'arker hart been nominated forGovernor .ii ihi lust state Itepubllcan

convention all the probabllltk'B wouldhave been favorable to his election bya large majority.

i'un'i wo think -a llttlo hli? Milßtwo go on foruver handing over to iticSouthern Pacific rullroud and its alliedtlio great ttute of California, to bo gov-..orned and directed by tS, 11. Harrlinunfrom New York city? Have we no moresiati i I\u25a0

Now \u25a0 t'l bu Iil'iit a moment andthink Iiover.

VENICE, Feb. 19.—Encouraged by'

the success attending their road repair-lngIIng activities of last Wednesday, tbeiladles who constituted the workers will:tomorrow morning return to the scene

'of their labors and resume tho work of

',

lmprovement.IImprovement. A score or more recruits jhave been added to the original party!and among these are Included many of jthe most prominently Identified womenof this section. The start will be madefrom the Abbot Klnney compnny's office J,on windward avenue at 9 o'clock withautomobiles and vehicles of other de-scription to bo furnlHhed by local busi-ness men. \u25a0\u25a0} ,

«-m»Lady's Maid—What do you say to my !

mistress' portrait?Footman— H'm! Not content with i

painting herself, she also lets herself rbc painted by others.— Wiener Kleiner-wiUblatt.

He— Arflyou fond of college sports?Sho— Not very. I really like the

steady students best.— Hoston Tran-mTlpt.

LOS ANGEI.ES HERALD: WEDNESDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 20. 1907.

SHAKEUP DUE INPUBLIC LIBRARY

MAYOR HARPER CONFERS WITHMISS GLEASON

6

l'lllio Mauiuuts can 1 so to MamieBmltn's party tomorrow?

Urit. Weeda-iiardly. Vuu know you r»wuriiiu mourning.

Ttllle—Well, mamma, her party Is go-4U* tU to ktU» UiMUIUg.

IISTOKICAI.JtOMANCKS.Johnny— Papa, did Columbua reaily Uu-cover America?Pupa— Johnny, I'm afraid your* tak-

Lu* liiuw*bUtoriol ouvuiit too wtrtoualjr.

lib: WAS Wish..

Mrs. J!i;naon -Now, Tommy, If Mr*.Wlkkhoi) glv*« you a piece of cake be•ure to say "Thank you. ma'am."

Tommy— What's the u»eT Hint uevergive* you Mijrmat,

WOMAN UKK.Neighbor's Boy—Mister Thompson, pop

Rays won't you lend him your morningpaper?

Mr. Thompson— Tell your pop thatafter my wife has cut out all the bar-lfuln mis. there la only about h:ilfa pugsof It li-ft.

NO FRKK LIBRARY ABOUT HIM.Harry -Kay pop. give me a nickel to

buy a story book,Pop Do Ilook like Andrew Carnegie?

Willie—Say, pop. what's tact?Ilia Pop- Tact is what a man lack*

wheii he Blurts to talk about tiia mother'sfine cooking Just alter his wife turnpicked up the stove lifter by the hot•ad.

Why nut tak" the capita] to SunFrnncli and !>.> (lone iii, it? SunFrancisco pgi-hih to i. 1 i.-\ <- that she isthe whole siut. , nh(j no dm s tho legls-laturo,

lttlfl l:ir.|.-i

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111

In It* advanced and chronic formNasal Catarrh Is the recognized sourceof other diseases. Having stood thetest of continued suoottuiful use, Ely'sCream Balm is recognized aa v specificfor membranal diseases In the nasalpassages. It Ih not drying, (loeM notproduce sneezing. Price, BO cents atdruggists or by mall. Ely Brothers. 66Warren street. New York.

Give up prejudice and try It.Messrs. Ely Brothers— have been

afflicted with catarrh for twenty yearsItmade me »o weak Ithought Ihadconsumption. Igot one bottle of Ely*Cream Balm and In three days the dis-charge stopped, It ls the beat medi-cine Ihave used for catarrh.

FRANKB.KINDUCSPWat'rutiL-rtu, CaL

*\£ff* BqstohDryGoods Sroftc "'"-.'{ \

"\u25a0"""ZM-liJti* SOOTH BROADWAY!

" " " *"V

Many entirely new designs in unison's crepepaper napkins at 25c a hundred; sold nearlyeverywhere at 45c. Dcnnison's crepe paper lunchsets—ldozen napkins, a dozen doylies and a42x72-lnch table cover for 25c.

Stationery Department, Facing Elevators

IJnderpriced ReddingInThis store Blankets are sold for what they real-lyare

—no cotton- mixed goods sold as all wool.

Heavy fleeced whiteblankets, J Fine White Wool Blankets,German finished soft and fluf-! soft and thick, with red, bluefy;eleven-quarter size; special- ! or pink borders, ten-quarterlypriced at $3.00 a pair. \ size, $4.50 a pair

—a dollar un-

Ten-quarter white blankets, \- der actual worth.95 per cent wool, in pink or ; Eleven-quarter blankets ofblue borders, reduced from $ extra heavy white wool, withto $3.95 a pair. pink or blue borders ;$6.50 val-Heavy soft white wool blan- ,

ues> now $5 a pair,kets ineleven-quarter size, with ,double stitched silk binding, , /2x78-inch lambswool corn-cut from $6 to $4.50. forts

-Sllk on one Slde

-sateen on

72x78-inch comforters made the other, $10.50; really $12.50of one sheet of fine white cot- and $15 values; pink, blue, redton, covered with pretty floral j or yellow

-printed silkolines with 6-inch Down-filled comforters, cov-silk facing, specially priced at ! ered with best French sateen,$4.00. ] $5, $6, $7. —Third Floor

J

f^^ Prompt l-*ree Delivery

\^-^^*>»* On i/CT We have an ex-

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