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Show TUB I examiner Telephone Number! 284X la the di7 time call i call at Not 01 Slth street At alchu after T p. m, call up No. 5 Standard Building. ' Customs WedelL jjggMt to rant or eeli by fraeh and palatable ct rthlngatnew, Carrara. graceriea A Bona meet fine groceries I THE price anyone" ftse Imperial Restaurant la now mulppad to meet all demanda of tfiea-- it or alelgbing parti e. bauquete and noon lunch private eupera. Flrat ilaa ' ,1 price. reasonable Too can trade directly DS the Board," on o IB dal Weetern Union quotation direct from Nev York and Book on ipecula-tlo- o Chicago Exchanges. tree. Beat bank reference!. Cum-in- p Commiaalon company, Ogden Eectas building. branch, room 21 at Crockwella thin week. All at Crock wella until March 5 at At coat Musi reduce stock. yi. Hardwood charcoal at U. P. coal yard Phone by March 5. 119. The new dancing clasa for ladle and gentlemen will be organized at Conleya at 7:30 evening academy Monday . s'ykx-k- That of long-talk- $30 prize contest academy will take place Taetday evening. You muat be preeeut at Conley' it jrou want to take the prize. LETTER LIST. List of letters remaining In the poet dice at Ogden, Utah, February 2 1NL whlob if nut called fur in tw reek will be aent to the dead lette uflloe: LADIES LIST. Anderson, Matilda Hoine, Mrs. 0. E. Anderson, Mrs. Maflightand, A Ira Jo Burke, Miaa MaggiHIlderbmnd, Airs. Carria, Miaa Alice Sarah (I letters) JohnRop, Mrs. Carter, Mr. W. D. Johnson, Mrs. Em Coleman, Mra.F.M. Murphy, Airs. Dan Douglas. Mr. BirdlNiemann, Miaa Martha Eddy, Mrs. U. L. Forge, Alra. Anna Nagle, Mr. H. D. Laura 01en, Miss Mary Fitigersld, Mrs. Peterson, Alla Jen Frieae. Miaa Maude L. nle Fields, Miss Ogds Shurtllff, Air. Mati Gardner, Mrs. Bam Walker, Alies Linz Golden, Mrs F. R. Ellen Willis, Mrs. F. E. Thompson, Mrs. Mary. Thompson, Mn ' GENTLEMEN'S LIST. J. R. Murchle, George. Murdock. H. W. Alger, W. H. A bunder, Tom McNamara, John, Aih, 8. P. McKay, R. E. Awtin, Pete Merkel, Mr. Benson, Mr. Albln Mollon, Thos, Burnett, James Miller, John. McKeough, John Betti. B. 1L Muir, L. H. BGder, John F. MUet, run. , Pruu ftfdwell, Noir'den, Mark. Brown low, S. K. 0wen. w. H hirkc. John Allen. 5' . Hewel. Petersen, Johnnui Feme. W. A. 5 fIeX' fVuuuthank)re Cartir, W. D. Corey. Glenn Coffee. Due - Kyn demon. Charlie Rlnebold, John. Roes. L. Mike J. Coogan, C. L, Rogers, J. Cknady. L. E. William. Ctmnesa, George 8. Rofina, Decaro. Dolle, Ole . I. Schroeder, Henry Smith, Wm. D, Btlth, John IL Snell, Daniel. nsber.Fred Fhzimtrick, J. W. 8mith, E. H. Ororiiong. John Bcudder, Frank Guinea. T. H. Sholl, V. Ison. Works Smith, O. E. Enkine, W. W. ' Faddls, A. M. Fuller, Chaa. 8. fiuiteppe, Gulta Bill, Harry H. T. Hewer, a Walter F. IL (Hudson, Wm. P. R. Dl f J. Heinlin, Headen, J. W. F. W. nrla, John A. 'tinaon, John A. taw, 8. A. Jones. Clint Kellftz, Robert, fruepp, Jay. Itoaaille, .Stone, Samuel. 8chouten, J. Tastwoic, Milo. Milo. Thompson. Chaa Travel. R. W. Wilson, John L Wilcox, Walter. Wellington, B. F Walter. J. W. L Wray, G. A. Dustin, Mrs. Lilli C. Smith, ATIss Flor Jones. 'If is Evel Barlier, Wm. Bruner. Geo. Fisher, Rev. G. Felleman. John McCormick. Clift leaning, Budd. Mwi THOMAS H. DAVIS, Poatmaste ( at MCreadys J : Department Store New New New New Spring Hats. Spring Shirt Waists. Spring Skirts. Spring Neckwear. (Sfce At 161-1- Window) 63 26th Street, ONE-HAL- F BLOCK FROM UNION DEPOT. McCreadys NEVER UNDERSOLD. TI1E NATIVE RELIGION. But the chief Incident inthe simple faith of these Kaffirs i the existence snake-god- s Zungu, the already mentioned, and , which travels on his a head with his tail in the air, and the water-snak- e land-snake- sound of his swift approach can be beard from afar. The natives declare that sometime when they are paddling canoes ou tbs Kafue in their dug-ou- t Zungu will raise hie bead from the waters and lift out a man, who, of course, 1 never seen again. Zungu is supposed to be responsible for drought and thunder, and curio Italy enough, as will be shortly seen .for tornadoes. Belief in him extends nil over Barotseland, ns well aa Northern Rhodesia, and It is supposed that he' may be the Kaffir deification of the waterspouts which are frequent on the Zambesi. When Lewaaika contracts for the conveyance of European travelers on tbe Zambesi he always refuses liability for accidents from hippo or waterspout are waterspouts. Eut practically unknown In the Kafue. It Is certain that at one lime living men were offered to him, out this practice has bean discontinued, though it may be regarded as quite possible that certain Interesting facts are withheld from .the white men, especially by the witch-doctprwho have even more power than they have below the Zambesi. THE GREAT LAND SNAKE. But if Zungu be a bitter god to follow and not precisely a beautiful god to behold, when you happen to come across blm, he is a poor performer in destructiveness compared to tbe great land snake, whose coming may be heard from very far off, who walks on his head wllh his tall In the air, before whose breath man and beast, forest and kraal, are broken and laid In the dust. Mr. Lewis, after a short residence in the country, had no difficulty In identifying this interesting deity with the tornadoes which frequently pass over Kafueland, sweeping away everything that lies in their path, tearing through the forest so that avenues are cut sometimes a mile long and anything up to a hundred yards in width.-One can see the nir In swift circular motion before them, and what they pick up makes the head, the dust being swept into the air and forming the tall. There must be something very curious in the mind that has only these two uncoin passionate gods to contemplate in its religious meditation. But 1 this country the Kaffir Imagination runs to snake, like a drunken man's. Huge pythons abound. Tbe present writer has seen a python, fortunately dead, on (he Makabuslnear Salisbury, which measured twenty-sevefeet from tip to tail, and, has seen the skins of even larger snakes, but feet would in Kafueland twenty-seve- n be a moderate length. These have impressed themselves on the imagination of the people. Every hut and every grain bin has a clay python round IL colored black, white, and red in a peculiar design, which Air. Lewie says he cannot describe and cannot draw. There is also a snake inside each but Now, is this snake a totem? Mr. Lewis says it is. But are there any instances of a totem which is the devouring enemy of the tribe that worships him or it? When the railway arrives the Kaffirs will get some notion of a beneficent snake that runs on wheels. TttlNH AND LEPROSY. Most of the native customs can be paralleled from below the Zambesi, but In some matters there Is a curious diversity of practice. . For instance, some tribes slay a woman who bears twins; some also slay one or both of the offspring. Other tribes regard the lady as particularly lucky. Other tribes, again, slay their lepers, and others treat them with every mark of respect Leprosy Is terribly common, and Mr. Jonathan Hutchinson's belief that the disease Is caused by rating putrid fish finds strong confirmation. In all the tribe, the people dislike fresh fish, and never rat it unless they are reduced ta the unpalatable diet by hunger that is getting on toward starvation. .On the other hand. Air. Lewis ha known his canoe boys to make straight for the carcass of a barbel, a bream, of a carp, swollen or polychromatic, that Is floating on tbe river. Sometimes It was decayed to such an offensive degree that he refused to allow it in the boat, in which case the -- n : I ry of two terrible ; Kaffirs would tow it behind. When the camp was pit died ll.e fish would be put into a pul and Ihdlc.d, then pounded Into a pulp and mixed with the porridge of mealies or millet. Throiig'i-othe country fish is a favorite article of diet. ami. owing to the condition In which It I eaten, distance from a river la no drawback. But the government will soon have to think seriously about leprosy. It should be said that the people are well disposed. Indolent, improvident even more so thgn the South African natives and amenable to government. They are also exceedingly Immoral Only the most imerilng tribe, which rejoices In the name of Mashukulumbwe, is at times Inclined to give trouble. It is to be boiied that the manners, customs and faitb of a population which ha not yet lost touch with antiquity, and is new to civilization, will receive We more attention and description. should particularly like some further information about Zungu. t TAM, OGDEN, MONDAY MORNING FERRUARY arma 1M1. ' lywra;? 5 ili a...j.r Aa VrF T j..... I 1 f I Good Liquors. Good Treatment. j a . SUM VKIIE KIBE While it is generally known that in Undo Sam's new Philippine possessions there are eighty odd tribes, each with its own peculiarities and speaking a distinct dialect few are aware uf the fact that among these peoples there is a tribe belonging to the white race. But n fact as peculiar as it Is true the Butanes, inhabit iug the interior and the mountainous regions of Mindoro, are the descendants of n white race of people, who came u the Filipino shores about 230 years ago- - This peculiar tribe was visited by the writer in 19ij when he crossed tbe island of Mindoro as special correspondent of the Alauilm Critic. Contrary to what many have been lod to believe, the tribe Is not entirely composed of white people, for many of them are black and many brown, the latter color predominating in the tribe; but there ta a sufficient number of white men, women and children seen to convince even the most skeptical that these trjbespeople are the descendants of n white race. Unlike the other Fllipiuo tribes, the Batanra have n history handed down to them by their forefathers, and rhta they readily divulge to any one in whom what they place confidence. From they themselves claim, and from the best information obtainable through the Christian people living in the count towns, they are the descendants of the crew of a targe British ship which was wrecked along the coast of Mindoro some two centuries and n half ago. Tbe unfortunate sailors tn6k to the interior of the Island, where they met a wild tribe, unknown In thoeo days, but called .by modern ethnologists the Magu-ianeThe natives did not molest the new arrivals, but accepted them Into the tribe. The whites intermarried with the women of the Magtilanra and nearly all the children resulting from such unions proved white, the white men's blood predominating for a number. of years. But with the passing white away of each generation the strain grew weaker and the brown or block again became most prominent The selection of the white strain was assisted by tbe retirement of the white men and their dusky wives to villages of their own. They thus soon became a distinct tribe, to whom the Maguianra gave the name of Uataues strangers. This was the origin of the Batane, who have increased until they now number about 5000 souls. The language spoken by the Batanra ta as peculiar ns the story of their origin. It 1s n grammarless tongue, and whoily devoid of signs or symbols. It own much to the tongue of the Magulanes, but seems to be in reality a mixture of the Tagalog and Ylsayan dialects, permeated with English and Spanish words. The Batane have a weird religions belief of their own, to which they are fanatically devoted. At certain times of the year they hold feasts and dances for the sole purpose of appeasing the evil spirits. The women are not allowed to take part in these celebra- s. tion. A docile and submissive people, the Batanra are easily governed by a chief who has general authority over the one presiding tribe, and by over each village or settlement. They regard our government aa a great military or fighting machine, under the control of a general, to whom they refer as the great general. They hare a deadly fear of soldiers, and no armed man wearing uniform can approach them. The Batanra themselves are armed only with the bow and arrow and the spear, with which they do all their hunting. They live chiefly on the proceeds of hunting and fishing, and fur vegetable diet eat the camotee, a ant of wild ;weet potato. Their village and houses are peculiar. The villages are built several miles apart, and the bouses, too, are built by fhemselvra. They are set high up on poles, about fifteen feet from the ground, and are without sided, consisting only of floor and a thatched roof to keep nut min and rain The people are entirely without household goods or furniture, eating and sleeping on the flour. The houses are constructed without nulls, and are held together by tough vines, obtained in the forests. Like nil native tribes, the Batanra are very fond of jewelry, which U worn n great deni, especially by the women, who possess many valuable bracelets ns well as necklaces of colored bends. Their girls are married when quite young. Some are sold when only n few months old, the purchaser, being required to work for the girl's parents for several months. The Butanes are a very peaceful tribe, and a foreigner can pass through their country in perfect safety. A bodyguard is furnished the stranger, and couriers are sent ahead to Inform of his coming. At each tbe assemble village the tribrapeople around the chief headquarters and eye tbe stranger and his belongings with the greatest curiosity. He in turn finds the natives extremely interesting. for he sera among the black and brown faces many that are red or white. The young girls seem to show their white blood more than the men of the tribe. Many of those seen on the trip had brown, red or fair bair, with a complexion white at marble. The interior of Mindoro ta practicalbeen ly the same today ns it has through the ages. To cross the Island one must follow a rough and winding trail over lofty mountains, ready to yield their mineral wealth, through densely wooded forests whose valuable timber only awaits the chopper's ax, and for nflles the path Is red with Iron ore. still undisturbed by the miner's pick. Tbe country 1s thus quite as Interest Ing to the promoter a Its native tribe, with their strain of Euroiean Morsl. to the ethnologlKt. sub-chief- s, sub-chlc- Ninety-Fiv- e " fiat cor-irctl- o 2bth St, Near Union Depot, v : 113, I HAVE EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL COMMERCIAL ELECTRIC CO. t Good Time y. 1 1 II 111 I j STANLEYS. W. A. Scudder, Guaranteed. Proprietor. 3 . Phone Bids. lll'HH't I H IWi STEVENS, manager. SZT9 Washington Ava 0 vf T yf OGDEN'S FINEST CAFE . THE PALSTAfF Open Day and Night. & Pattison, Prop's. ILeedom $2.95 W. H. WRIGHT THE SENATE :: I cost to dress that small boy of s and, at the same time, giving you o;ir assurance that he will be dressed ' Tbe south window this morning is lull of those new Russian blouse suits and These suits are for Hie boys from 21 Norfolk suits. to 8 years of age. Brown mixtures and grey mixtures predominate, because theyre the real smart colors for boys this year. Throw aside household duties for an hour or so, today, and come to our store and see these new Boy's Suits at THOSE LITE MEN ij I it will e ! ut London. Feb. M, In a former article we detailed what Mr. Frank had .to tell of the mineral wealth and agricultural potentialities of the Kafue bead, where bo has resided for eight years. Our present article will be more interesting tu the sociologist than to the man of merchandise. As our representative listened to Mr. Lewis' stories of natural woudera, of lepers and of snake worship, it seemed as if someone were reading aloud a page from one of Mr. Rider Haggard' unused notebooks. Prosperous and pleasant as the country is. it has Its elements of terror. There are Urge tracts of furest land, and tn the depth of them the Kaffir imagine spirits tu dwell that are even more dangerous to humanity than the Mandoro of or .the unknown god whose priest is the Al'limo of Maubeleland. And the smooth waters of the riier Kafue are dreadful to the imagination of these simple people. STRANGE NATURAL FEATURES. But even Euroiieuus. however casuistical and sophisticated they ntay be. can scarcely encounter some of tbe natural features of. the country without surprise. - Imagine n lake, for instance, 'whose water ta of a deep indigo color and whose aides are vertical. It Is oval in shape and two miles or more across at its greatest line of measurement Its depth has never been sounded. The water teem with fish the ordinary fish of South Africa. But the natives will not touch this fish, because, they say, human bodies have been cast into the lako. This is a singular fact, for they are great of fish, and dead human bodies are cast Into the Kafue as a'pro-titlatooffering lu Zungu. the great water snake. It is probable that at no distant date this indigo lake was regarded aa a sacred plat. Tbe natives say that it is inhabited by a water rhinoceros (which would seem to be n contradiction in terms) and that the beast is very savage. Many white men have sought it without success; and they have been unable to even prove the current hypothesis that the water rhino is n stray hippopotamus of unuHual ferocity. This story may be the foundation of Mr. Haggard's great crocodile. There is another lake that rises and falls with the river miles away. . FAC . Patrick. Jd, Uehttg. B. of Snakt . Wbllney, Carl. ' Warner Electro Magnetic Inst Kingsbury, Chaa. Ktantz, Then. 7, John O. Kraukett, Mr. the Land Worshippers. Alssh-onala- Career A Bona eell the cheapest and the hlgheat grade good. jgn-tj- j mod of KlMSm MORNING EXAMINER, 0 $f4ft & SONS CO. Clothing Store. and political scandal." and all ihe '.niscraliln froth and bubble of democracy are ihe worst uen onstratioii n nation can give of 23. An avtive Feb. and Belgrade, to govern . and the further tlie envenomed campaign sgaim.1 Prince tmigarlaini sweep these thing from Ferdinand of Bulgaria ba been tar- their Uf the higher they win ried on unremittingly for tome mouth stand public In the world' estimation. If past in certain Bofiute journal, and evidence of (he same lalciitared hos- they want att example of what domestic revolution brings in its wake they tility are to be met witli in many circles which profess Macedonian revolu- have mil got far to look. tionary sympathies. The motive govFORTUNES SPENT IN FRUIT. erning these demonstrations of are not always identical. To the party In Bulgaria What the Dessert of the Wealthy Costa tbe prim has always been a disagreeThem, able personality, too ambitious to allow himself to be handled aa a forIn some of the very expensive Loneign tool, too cautloua to let himself don reKiaurante you can order a spebe snared by bis ambition. And sin. e the day. nine month aeo, when he cial dessert that will cost you anyquietly bowed the Zankoffiai out of thing front 25 to $250. These desserts will consist of daintoffice their sentiments toward him have naturally displayed no improve- ies in the way of fruit, for which it la ment. In Servta Prince Ferdinand not too much to say that the greater does not tack platonic enemies, and pari of Hie world has been ransacked have tu provide. certain Belgrade newspaper! Peculiar apples from Zanzibar, lookmore than once escorted him in Imaginary flights from his principality. ing rather like tnrnips; pears. In In this esae It is probably more ns strongly resembling oranges, prince of Bulgarin than aa Ferdinand from Northern Africa; grapes from ot Coburg that "he becomes n target Ettgitah lint houses; end Australia will for unfriendly comment. But amjng must likely be represented by tbe Eifthe agents and supporters of the Mace- fel Tower pineapple. donian revolutionary committees, at Of all fruits, Zanzibar apples are any rate that section which is swayed probably the rarest. Dozens of trees by tfis counsel of ltarta Sorafoff, hos- together will only bear a few of these tility to the prince Is tbe immediate apples, and the time for picking them outcome of a. political aim whlrh does has to be carefully selected; they must not harmonise with hla recognition aa be gathered just a ntonih before they sovereign of an extended Bulgaria. would ripen, otherwise they will very This wing of the revolutionary go bad. movement ta being worked in the in- quickly These apples have been sold In this ambitious terests of a few at $100 apiece, and, of course, individuals, who see ti.cnuelreh knot country have to be specially ordered, for no of head at the of court) collectively, fruiterer would ever dream uf keeping that Balkan mirage, an autonomous them in stock. al Macedonia. What that ungcographl-cCustard apples are another expensexpression would be like tu actual ive luxury. They ran be purchased at existence one may faintly Imagine prices ranging from three shillings to from the condition of Servta today not the Servta seen unsympathetically five pounds earb, according to quality, according tu those whose Judgthrough foreign glasses, hut sa depict- and, ed in the columns of its naihmai press ment in such matters ta considered to a country loaded with financial em- be absolutely correct, must be eaten barrassments, confronted with dan- with pepper and salt. Two of tbe most fashionable fruits with party .engers. and cumbrances. The divinity which does In the winter months are muscat not. In Balkan regions. eQectively grapes and strawberries, and until the hedge a king would be even more con- end of January the tatter are beyond spicuously absent from the entourage the reach of men of moderate means. while the aanse A gentleman not king since went of a governor-genera- l, is into a fruiterer's In Reof rwpfldence and ;Mf elticli nee-fr- i tor tbe c'op cnl of indu-ttigent street and offered $230 to the imd commenal enterpiiw wuulu mauager if he could provide enough he wholly lackS- K would re strawberries for five people that evenand a naii nil ing. to fad a coat of -- b lei this new BilrMi state, but The manager undertook to deliyer tbe other elements of nationality Ute fruit within seven hours, and then read-11- '. nit present themselves sj promptly proceeded to wire to forty different fruit gardens within thirty THE GREAT ALTERNATIVES. miles of London for strawberries. Tbe problem of working ont a happ Seventeen gardens provided the retrouBalkan Issuo for the amount of strawberries (the required soluble is capable, perhaps, o' two twenty-threnot being able maining tions. each aiming at aravlng back tbe to produce a single one), and by half-pas- t invidious increep of foreign Interfer six evening the fruit was deot apherra of livered atthat cost enc. with its after-tid- e of nearly 10s lid for lstetfic and influence occupations. each strawberry. tbe On ta to quicken and reorganise There are several persons In London resources of the Ottoman Empire by whose weekly hill for grapes nt this methods more aitually western than season run to never les lhan $100. Inirlgura of certain They pay twenty shillings per pound tile Interested power, and to give IL If for the best muscat grapes, sod rethat were possible, administrative ma- ceive at lensi utree pounds per day. chinery capable of working smoothly At n dinner party given some time and profitably at a distance from hrad-q- - ago nt Marlborough House tbe bill for n after. The other la to roly on grapes amounted to $223, whilst the strengthened Bulgaria, ubder a cost of each apple nt the royal table dynasty, with a was exactly five shillings. measure of commercial, prosIt is, however, by no means the most and powthe stability perity, to supply or wealthy people wbo distinguished In ta so which lacking er of resistance in frulL There is. for fortunes spend dithe Balkan Peninsula. One these bootmaker living a retired Instance, vergent political sime ihe Turkophll near Brlxton who was informed by a and the Bulgarphil part company, hut that pears from Algiers have the fundamental Idea of each ta to es- friend a pleasant flavor. distinctly faca or governing tablish from tbe worries of misRelieved sufficiently tor In southeastern fcurope incldcntAl to bis ied and solvent fits and other cares bootmaker strong and had retired the calling, to hold its place against the forward time to attention to such delicate pay movements of neighboring empires. and promptly proceeded to orTbe third Ideal, of maintaining a matters, der from his fruiterers some of these weak Turkey and a weak Bulgaria pears, which he found would cost him alongside of a feeble Servia and an ar- ten shillings each. or ta the what that tificial Macedonia-fHI weekly hill for these delicacies autonomy" agitation would realty now amounts to $20, whilst muscat Bellead to is not s solution of the and pineapples nt $3 apiece tran problem; It merely a half- grapesbis fruit bill In the week up to bring realization of a largthe to house way $200 just $2,500 n year in fruit alone. extended Austria. an and Russia er Curiously enough, except lu the matSsrafoff and some of his of fruit, he lives in a very moderate ter fondare and prospective competitor comfortable, style. though ly expecting to play uie part of a Kata fruitTbe manacer ot a George In a new principality, but they erer's establishment in the West end have not the essential unit of nationalInformed tbe writer that lots of peoity to build on. If their future subjects fruit in tbe are of Greek or Serb or Bnlgar race ple wbo tee to see what Just will it window buy have Independent they already way these In their near neighborhood, it tastes like, and In this called by the and require no new elate machinery to samplers, as they are source of be act up on Utelr behalf;- - If they are trade, are a considerable fruit- no one people, but a medley of races profit to many of the hlghtass of have centuries that will cheerfully and the "Thes samplers failed to blend, a n will not keep them to- spend five shillings on an spple or name Macedonia eatof the to experience enjoy pear gether. BULGARIA'S SAFEGUARD. ing such a luxury. I was recently axeured that Sarafon and bis party were at heart reauy well The value of the American mule. affected towards Prince Ferdinand and In the arrregate of his assessment, le his dynasty, but is I knew that my in- 1217.000.000, not Inclusive of hie value formant was a contributor to two Bul- as a kicker Denver News. garian papers conspicuous for Uteir abuse of the prince I did not allow the (Town ropier) statement to carry very much weight. Jagglet The liking for terrapin is T.' prince is the chief guarantee ftn said to be an acquired taste. the stability and indeppoden of the Waaglee That's a no for of the wise country, and the ier Bulgarians rec- provefon of nature. Terrapin now 1100 a dozen. ognize this fact intrfgua. 0 eft eft 0 2425 Wash.Ave Respect $! 4 BBBBIBDBBBBBBnBIMBHHBEMBnKIBBfl Dont Miss Putnams DISTURBEBJALKWS ima-pacf- GREAT HAT SALE ly I That is now taking place at the OLD STAND, 2345 Washington avenue ill-w- ill over-saddl- Now is your opportunity to get an Hat at a price that will up-to-d- ate please you. Call and examine and you can't help making hay while the sun shines. PUTNAM CLOTHING HOUSE ' t 2345 Washington Avenue. TOLLERS LA MODE LEADERS IN FINE MILLINERY We have REMOVED thla week 2411 Washington Avenuo. to Elegant Parlor Over Nye'a 8lor MASSAGE ed SHAMPOOING. FACIAL TREATMENT, MANICURING, manta by AppelntmanL Private Treat well-know- n r' THE VIRGINIA al c; - Cor.24th and Adams Ave, Afferdo trane.'ento end permanent boarders splendid accommodations nd excellent table centrally located beard at rates of $1.60 to 1340 daily. long-lsbor- MRS. FERRIS, Proprietor. e Semi-Orient- al flrmly-ratallish- Phene SWEEPING REDUCTIONS!!! IN WINTER MILLINERY MUST BE CLOSED OUT AT ONCE To Make Room for Spring Styles. ed Call Early for Bargains. prace-be-gcttl- eelf-cotn- si 1 232 K. MISS SPURGEON 2410 WASHINGTON AVENUE. "watch our windows" Thie Week Clearance Sale on STEIN-BLOC- K CLOTHING MANHATTAN SHIRTS and All Kinds of OVERCOATS A. KUHN 23SS WASHINGTON BRO.. AVENUE. well-know- high-price- broin-er-lan- ds inter-dwelli- ) d The Proof of Quality The pleasing taste the satisfying and healthful effects of the tender young leaves of cnat-of-ar- Diri-'yalt- cis Is what commends this high grade Japan Tea to those seeking the best. Full weight packages. Ask your grocer. IJKIESECOImporters. J |