El Paso Herald (El Paso, Tex.), Ed. 1, Tuesday, February 8, 1916 Page: 3 of 12
twelve pages : b&w ; page 23 x 17 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
EL PASO HERALD
Tuesday February 8 1916.
f
H
'h
X
A
-Y
)
CURK IS FDR STOR
SREflTEfl Iff
House Debates on Enlarg-
ing American Sea Forces;
To Speed Up Building.
Wa lnnKton D. C FVb. S In the
fiiii rnal naval debate of the session
i the house Monday speaker Champ
' laru took the floor and amid enthusi-
stic applause from both sides spoke
fur faster progress in increasing the
navi He didared that if 17-lnch guns
pii bPinir jtla' (1 on foreign ships the
I nitfd Stut. iluiuld liae them as well.
i thf b. -t guns attainable now or
hereafter.
"Tlip speaker knows" gaid represen-
itie Sutler Kcputillcan of the naval
i.mmiuee "th.it if we want things bet-
r in the naw we hae to pay the
$r! i- demand (i
If we will begin to build and take
tne money and push aside pnate con-
ji in tlon" Mr. Tiutler said "wo can
1 mid -'-' hlpn in two vears and put
i h. m to s. i if w- ran find the men to
i i .in th in
Ho not the English build a battle-
Kui) mucn more quiciwy man we uu.
a'k'il the speaker
1 es" ri plied representative Gard-
ner. Republican "but not so much nor
mar. quickly as is usually thought."
"I "im for the 22 ships. If necessary
n .! -Mil help raise the money" lnter-
ipi.d representative Hill of Connec-
ti nt Republican. He added however.
ih it before he voted to spend J600.O9O
e.iuip Hare Island navy yard for
ship building and add to the equipment
3 r N w York which was the point
i i der debate he would like to be as-
ii ( d that the Mare Island channel -was
w cp enough to carry the ship out from
hi ways.
Mnnn Approves President' Plan
it. publican leader 3Iann suggested
that the navy affairs committee might
speed up its work.
Heretofore theno has been no reason
f r speeding up the construction. But
row when an emergency exists I am
Sir. 'he speeding up will come" he
Di'i "It Is time for all of us to Join
li-nils for that which is to come.
I tx-lleve that the president is sln-
. r. ind patriotic in his utterances as
ii tr. possibilities of the future and
i nt we ought to aid him In preparing
our country for trouble which we hope
wi'l not come but which may come."
riOISEEH .SCHOOL TRUSTOR
is i)i:.i at MTTHsrroi.n
Ilainview.Texas. Feb. S. B. F. Smith
.1-.P 7". a pioneer of tho Llttlefleld sec-
i i.n is dead. He was one of the first
int.-es of the Llttlefleld school.
HEALTH OF WOMEN
WRECKED BY IGNORANCE
Avoid a Life of Misery and 111 '
.
Health By Using a Celebrated
Phvi
irjician's Favorite Pre
scription
For every disease or ailment of a
Womanly character no matter how re-
cent or long standing the one sure
reliable remedy of proved merit is Dr.
Pierce's Favorite Prescription.
omen should never experiment with
tinknown preparations; the risk is too
great Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescrip-
tion is prepared from nature's roots
.md herbs and does not contain a par-
ticle of alcohol or any narcotic.
Women are earnestly advised to take
it for irregular or painful periods back-
ache headache displacement catarrhal
condition hot flashes sallow com-
plexion and nervousness.
For girls about to enter womanhood
women about to become mothers and
for the changing days of middle age
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription
should always be on hand.
It's a temperance remedy that is ex-
tracted from roots -with pure glycerine
and its ingredients arc published on
wrapper.
Any medicine dealer can supply it in
either liquid or tablet form. The cost is
modest the restorative benefits truly
remarkable. Write Dr. Pierce In-
valids' Hotel Buffalo N. Y for free
confidential medical advice. Adv.
KNOW THTSEIiF!
Read all about yourself vottr svstem.
the nhvsioloev of life anatomv. hviriene.
simple home cures etc in the "Common
ense .Medical Adviser" a book of 1008
- - c-J n. r u tv
pages Send to Doctor V. M. Pierce.
iSulialO JN. I. 3 dimes or 30 cents in
stamps for a doth-bound copy to pay
eart of wrapping and mailing only. I
'urniture in El
I Down and a SM- I
I Each Week WMlllH I
I We announce that we are now W!P$Sim i
I in position to sell yon the Best BBHHP I
Liberal Credit. Consolidating with the "Cash Fur-
niture Co." enabled us to almost double our stock of
Furniture Rugs and Stoves We want you to get
acquainted with our Liberal Terms and Low Prices.
Just to interest you Ave note one
EXTRA SPECIAL We offer you in a wide range
of Patterns Small Axminster Rugs. These are 18x36
and should sell for $1.25. You have choice CHS
Mail Orders Filled Promptly and Satisfactorily.
V t 1 1 fy ft HJRNBTUgiE
1 nyiiy COSVSPANY
BUY IT FROM Y0UNG"-BUY IT FOR LESS
105-107 S. Stanton
E TEETH
ITflCIEST
Nature Never Intended for
Plates to Be Used; Brush
Teeth Up and Down.
Sixty per cent of the diseases in the
country toda are caused by pyorrhea
directly resulting from improper care
of the teeth and too much care cannot
be eiertised in the care or the teeth.
Dr. J. Brow-nwell Rodgers. of the de-
partment of research of the pyorrho-
cide clinic of New- York city told KI
Pasoans Monday nisht in an instruc-
tive lecture at the Trinltv Methodist
church. The lecture was illustrated by
stereoptlcon slides showing the va-
rious stages of the disease and the
manner in which it may be treated and
prevented as diagnosed by the most
prominent dtntists of the country.
Oar vt f Teeth.
"Nature intended that you should uso
your own teeth to chew your food as
long as you lUe and a set of false
teeth which must be used following
the results of a case of pyorrhea Is not
t as efficient" said Dr. Rodgers. "One
prominent dentist of New York city
figured It out that a set of false teeth
were on an average from 1-6 to 1-10
as efficient In the chewing of food
as natural teet. In every mouth there
Is a certain number of germs and. In
fact no mouth is free from them which
may at any moment develop a severe
case of pyorrhea.
Clean Teeth ell.
"One of the greatest dangers and
one that should be guarded against is
to allow particles of food to accumu-
late between the teeth" declared Pr.
Rodgers. "In a short time the particle
begins to decompose and as It does
begin to decompose It comes into con-
tact with the fine tissues of the gums
which In time become inflamed and
then It Is only a matter of time until
the whole jawbone is destroyed unless
preventive measures are taken.
Ilruuli Up and Down.
"The teeth should bo cleaned thor-
oughly at least three times a day with
a sterilized brush and some good kind
of powder. Very few people really un-
derstand how to use a tooth brush and
consequently destroy the enamel on the
teeth. The proper manner Is to draw
the brush up and down the teeth care-
fully and not to just rub the fibers
across them as many people believe.
The brush should be sterilized by boil-
ing water dally and after the teeth
are cleaned each time the mouth should
be rinsed out by water into which a
small amount of salt has been placed
and which has the effect of cleaning
the mouth and teeth thoroughly.
Go To Dentist.
"Every person should go to the fam-
ily dentist at least once a month and
have all deposits cleaned off the teeth.
There have been cases come to the
Hnic In ew Yor city f ppi wh
Hpplarn that rnntlrlo ef thalp tooth
have been broken off after they have
been cleaned. This accumulation on tho
teeth produces bacteria and then later
tphoid or some other disease caused
by the teeth coming into contact with
unclean food."
QuentlonN Asked.
Following the lecture and tho show-
ing of the stereopticon slides Dr. Rod-
gers answered a number of questions
asked by persons in the audiences con-
cerning the care of the teeth. Pyor-
rohea he stated could be preented by
careful attention to the teeth and could
be cured when in the earlier stages
but after the first few months it is
practically incurable.
Felipe Is To Have a Home
After Sleeping In Alleys
AVhen Felipe Ortez a waif and an
orphan entered the court room of
1 county judge Adrian Pool Monday af-
i ternoon he had little Idea that before
the sun went down he would have a
place in tho home of J. O. Taylor of
the United States customs service.
Into Felipe's 12 years have been
crowded experiences that few children
have suffered. Born in Riverside Cal.
the son of a naturalized Mexican Felipe
found himself a few weekB ago in
Torreon an orphan and abandoned. His
I father met a violent death at the hands
of another Mexican. Then his mother
ran awav with a Carranza soldier.
leaving him to shift for himself. Felipe
is briuht and a very likable boy and
he fell in with Carranza. soldiers who
brougnt him to Juarez and he came
to El Paso.
It was not all sunshine on this side.
however for it was hard to fret things
to eat and there was no place to sleep
pircnt in drv rood boxeB in alleys.
In
""ne - manner he got hold of a blanket
ana TrBp'eu1n"" th. hnre.
sought his couch among the boxes
HB rase came up Monday afternoon.
Mrs Taylor. whoJiad become Interested
m the bov offered him a home and
0?a?f)l1 !lte"ted the offer n behalf
?aso and on wmivmf ' i
lECIFIHin IE
RHTIPSI
Discovered Unearthed and
Removed From Egypt
By Americans.
New York Feb. S. The tomb of Per-
neb the favorite of a great Memphis
king has been brought block by block I
over'the 532' esele I
over the "'o ei''a"" r ". f"-
ietr.eaheraenjustleas U s oou near t'h'J
L sten Pyramid" for thousanus
famous btep ijramia ior mousanas
of years. i
Thn Metropolitan museum of art may
now boast it has something the like of
which cannot be seen anywhere in any
other museum.
The labor involved In transporting
it and erecting it in New York would
hae been impossiDie even ior tno
wealth of the Metropolitan if it
if it had
urn i
not been for the generosity of Edward
S. Harkness.
Tomb line From Sand.
The discovery of the tomb buried in
the sand its excavation by the expedi-
tion sent out by the museum began in
April 1913 and its trans-shipment by
two steamers from Cairo five months
later form a romance in itself. Scores
of natives were engaged for the work.
Every evening from Sakkara. a train
of twenty camels started for a railroad
across the valley each camel carrying
a block of stone packed in a box. From
there they reached Cairo where they
were shipped for New York. 1'pon ar-
rival at the museum the limestone
blocks had to be treated chemically for
many months to enable them to resist
damp air.
Courtyard In Tomb.
In the museum as the visitor enters
through the guarding columns the
little courts ard before the tomb he
sees a facade of smooth stone eighteen
feet high pierced by a great recessed
doorway and flanked by two wings. At
both sides of the entrance large painted
figures of Terneb hao been canred In
low relief in the stone. He is repre-
sented with one foot advanced grasp-
ing his staff exactly as he must have
entered his own palace in Memphis.
From the distinctive arched nose and
firm mouth there can be tittle doubt
that it is a portrait of the man him-
self. In one hand he carries the strip
of folded linen that served the noble
Kgyptian as a handkerchief and as a
method of waving flies away from his
nrlstocratic countenance. The lintel
stone over the doorway bears on a
scroll his title and name "Perneb. Sole
Companion of the King and Lord Cham-
berlain." A Real Convenient Tomb.
The wing on the right of the court-
yard has a portal opening Into a small
chamber deep in the midst of the thick
IUI1UI Ui H 11UIII W 1111-11 lllCIt 1 Ull CA1.
through a large cedar door which for-
merly led to one of the sunken ave-
nues of the Sakkara cemetery. In the
opposite wing fs an offering chamber
entered from the courtyard but sealed
from the brilliantly decorated statue
room which Is the main chamber of
the tomb. The masonry between them
has a small square hole high up toward
the roof. Through this opening the
spirit of Perneb was supposed to smell
the odors of the food left by the priests
in the adjoining room whenever he left
his sarcophagus hidden in a closed
chamber at the end of a stone-filled
shaft fifty-five feet underground.
At the end of the statue room there
stood in ancient times painted cedar
statues of Perneb and his wife "the
Royal Acquaintance." The marauders )
who broke into the tomb ages ago In i
search of treasure must have used the I
sacred figures irreverently for fire- i
wood for their camp. - nee only a bat- I
tered head and an arm and a foot of
.. . .. . '
carvea woou nave Deen iouna.
Painted Flgnren on AVall.
Row after row of painted figures of
men and birds and beasts encircle this
apartment which was dimly lighted
by the Egyptian sun through a slit in
the thick wall. At one time these walls
must have blazed with brilliant color.
The male figures in red the women in J
$7
and an astonishing amount of color re
mains. In spite of the ravages of forty-
five centuries. The scenes represent
processions of men and women bearing
rift to the tombs oxen and enpEe.
vegetables and great jars. Another
shows the priests washing the offer-
ings and presenting them to the dead
nobleman. A large figure of Perneb
occupies one wall and kneeling at his
feet are his wife son-in-law and his
son. very small In size to represent
their relation to the head of the house.
Finger l'rlntn In Mnrtnr.
Albert 31. Lythgoe the archaeologist
in charge of the Egyptian collection
pointed out some of the casual traces
left by the Egyptian workmen during
its construction. At the back of the
walls for example the mortar bore th
hardened imprints of the fingers of the
laborers as distinctly as on the day the
stones were places In position. North
of the tomb a mass of dried paint was
discovered burled where the painters
had thrown it
The archaeologist also brought to
New Tork a part of a pottery basin
marked with the workman's rough
tally and a handful of nutshells found
under the plaster and mud flooding of
the offering chamber the remains of
a workman's lunch eaten on the dav
he was laying the tlimr or that part of
the tomb.
Tomb In Plundered.
Seeral generations after the tomb
was put to use. according to Mr. Eyth-
goe the tomb was visited by plunderers
who cleared tho burial shaft of the
stones and boulders with which it had
been choked and broke Into the burial
'hamber deep underground. Smashing
open the sarcophagus they stripped the
mummy of Its rich ornaments and scat-
tered about the floor the pottery ves-
sels containing food and drink and th
C'anopic jars of limestone with which
the mumfny usually set us housekeep-
ing in the cellar of his tomb.
When political disruption fell on the
kingdom at the end of the sixth dynasty
the drifting desert Rands covered it
until it was lost to view. Later great
heaps of rubbish were piled over it. It
was thus saed from the destruction
that fell to many others at the hands
of the kings and nobles from the middle
kingdom on who found them a con-
venient quarry to obtain blocks for
their own tombs which were ravaged
in turn by their descendants.
The Tomb Uiirnrthed.
In 1907 tho expedition of the 3Ietro-
politan Jluseum of Art attacked the
mound which hid Perneh's tomb and
after tutting away one side of it dis
covered the roor ot tne tornD.
Tiirougn a noie in ine stones directly .
over the statue chamber the explorers
dropped into the room which was
fnnnl In hp lmlf filled TL'lth a.jn - '
found to be hair filled with sand. As
the walls of the tomb seemed in such
condition th.it it could never be opened
to the public. Sir Gaston Maspero. director-general
of antiquities at Cairo
gave consent to its purchase by the
Metropolitan Museum of Art.
SITE PURCHASED FOR NEW
SUNSET HEIGHTS APARTMENT
The Coldwell Realty company com-
pleted a real estate sale on Jfonday
which will eventually give to El Paso
another apartment house.
The property Is on West 3lissourI
street being lots 43 and 41 in block
13 Sunset Heights. The consideration
was $::7.'i0 and was sold by M. Freui'-n-tlial
of Las Ci uces. N. 31. to Jack Dawc-
doff of El Paso.
Mr Dawedoff states that It is pro-
posed to build eventually a ten apart-
ment house upon this site the apart-
ments to have three and four rooms.
L PflSD IS EAST
PLACEEU1S
"Barefoot Gene" Tells How
to Discriminate Between
Bum and Worthy Tramp.
"Barefoot Gene" "VVillard warns El
Pasoans to make life so mlberable for
th. nr0fpsinnal bohn that ho im i.
" cuyw0i3fber?h0a1taathtem1 &
Paso is one of the best tramp towns of
hu ""'tht." according toP"Barefoo
?ew" whoso Permanent Place of abode
is up n Cnelsea- )las3 ani who haa
aCnuired a national remitatlnn no -
barefoot hiker haIng tramped bare
footed in practical! every state from
the
M Lawrence river to the Rio
Grande and thousands of miles bevontl
"I heard of IH Paso long before I
got within a thousand miles of the
. ... 1nIli . . . - r-
' twnaru. .rroiessionat bums
" nv duiccucu in escaping ine
ciry cnain gang ana tnoir number is
a considerable one speak highly of
the hospitality of El Paso. During the
time that I hao knocked about tho
great southwest. I have heard El Paso
spoken of as 'the bum's paradise' and
after making a sociological survey of
the city I am led to the conclusion that
the good reople of El Paso pamper pro-
fessional tramps more than Is proper
for the best interests of society."
"Barefoot Gene" arrived in El Paso
in a "sidedoor Pullman" over the El
Paso and Southwestern. Ho boarded
the train near Hachita New Mexico
and found 11 free train riders
there ahead of him. 'The whole bunch
was El Paso bound and nearly every
man had visited the city before and
they were praising the town In grand
style" he said.
"The sole ambition of the majority
of the fellows as far as I was able to
ascertain was to 'tank up' and 'take
things easy' in El Paso for awhile.
There were but two men In this party
who were really looking for work. One
of these had been working in the minea
in New Mexico but had been laid off
because of work slacking up-
"The good people of El Paso make
the Identical mistake that tho people
of the rest of the country make" points
out WHIard. "They fall to draw tho
line sharply between the 'want works'
and the 'won't works' quite fre-
quently it is hard to distinguish the dif-
ference and In this modern day of
rush people do not take the time to
thoroughly investigate the applicant
for assistance. The fellow who calls at
your back door and asks for something
to eat and doesn't offer to give some-
thing in return for it is in nine cases
out of ten a professional bum and you
do your duty to society in shooing him
along. The man who calls at your back
door and asks for something to eat and
insists upon doing some work about the
premises in payment for the food you
give him is In nine cases out of ten an
honest man out of work. The test is
one ve-y easily applied and I hope from
now on every El Pasoan will apply it
with determination."
GEN. ORTEGA'S WIDOW IS
WITNESS IN THEFT CASE
On tho charge of theft by bailee of
$9100 Mexican trold. Alelandro Montoya
was held to tho grand jury under JIJOO
by Justice J. JL Deaver following ms
preliminary hearing. The evidence was
at once taken to the grand Jury.
Ferminia Ortega widow of Gen.
Torlbio Ortega the complaining wit-
ness testified that she had turned J9100
in Mexican $10 gold pieces over to
Montoya in ovemuer. or tnis amount
she ! St ack 11"0. she testified
When she asked for the remainder she
sa'd. Montoya told her he had been
robbed.
Tn
The state introduced in evidence a
note alleged to have been given by
Montoya in part payment for lots 5 and
6 block L Payne's addition amount
being 1600. The note was dated
August 16. 1915. and was marked
"Paid. R. E Harris."
THREE BICYCLES STOLEN
MONDAY; APARTMENT ROBBED
A bicycle was stolen from the Em
porium dry goods store Tuesday
morning While It was standing in
front of the store at the corner of
Rroadway and Overland street. A bicy-
cle was also stolen from A. Arvate
who lUes at 80' East Overland street
Monday night. V R. Wright also re-
ported the theft of a bicycle from the
business district
Burglars entered the apartment of
J Y. Fraser at the Corrington flats
on North Oregon street Slonday night
about 11 o'clocgk. They took an over-
coat from the living room.
A suit of clothes was stolen from the
tent of Pvt John Furst. at the Sixth I
infantry camp In Camp Cotton Monday
afternoon. Pvt. Furst was absent
when the tent was entered.
EL PASO ASKS CANCELATION
OF $34250 BOND ISSUE
At a meeting of the East El Paso
improvement distiict members held at
the Brewery garden 3Ionday night a
petition was drawn for presentation to
the city council asking that the bond
issue for J34.250 which was voted in
the East El Paso improvement district
for street improelncnt vork be can-
celed. The petition states that In the future
the improvement work will bo done
under contract directly with the con-
tractors and not through the city.
The committee which has the petition
in charge is composed of R. E. Harris
Joe Dunne Ed Held and C. R. Brown-
lie. EDITOR OF MUSICAL COURIER
TO MEET MUSICIANS FEB. 22
Musicians of El Paso will meet one
iof the leading musical criticsand pub-
llsheis in the United States on Febru-
ary 2-' when Leonard Liebling editor
of the Musical Courier one of the lead-
ing weekly musical publications in the
country comes here
T. E. Shelton the El Paso correspon-
dent for this publication has been no-
tified of his coming by 3Ir. Liebling'a
secretary. While here Mr. Liebling will
meet the musical students and musl-
cans of the city haTing arranged
through Mr. Shelton for 30 minute con-
ferences during the day he Is here. II0
will be at the Paso del Norte hotel.
C1TV AVILI. SCOlin MEAT
MARKCTS LIKE IlASEli it.
Meat markets will be scored like
baseball games in the future by the
city health department. The inspec-
tors of the department will keep scoro
on tne markets grading eacn ior clean
liness. protection of meat from flies
handling of meat use or clean aprons
and coats by butchers and everything
.... . .i - . .'.
eise wnicn win muicaie trie relative de
gree of cleanliness or tho local meat
markets.
The restaurants have been graded in
this way for a number of months and
the bakeries are also to be inspected
and scored by the health department
beginning next week.
CORRECT STATIONERY.
At reasonable prices. Buy "English
Lawn" 25c the pound. El Paso Hook
Co. Mills BIdg. "It's Handy." Phono
CCS. AdV.
Nothing so delicious as Sulzberger's
Jlajestic Ham and Bacon "Dellclously
Different" prepared in your favorite
way. A av.
II you mint smote Duy cigars. If yon
want the most heat for your money buy
our coal R C Semple successor to
Southwestern Fuel Co. Phono 531.
Adr
I Corner Mca Aienue and Son
M 9&$ HP"
Tlhe Next T
PREPARATORY to razing the building now occupied by the Men's Cloth-
ing Furnishings and Shoes so that the contractors can start work on our
new six story reinforced concrete building soon to be erected we are offering
extra good values in the men's furnishing goods section in order to reduce the
stocks to the lowest possible level before moving half the stock on our main
floor to the section formerly occupied by the women's knit underwear and
the other half across the street to the old Bazaar stand at 310 San Antonio St.
TLt will pay you well to investigate these offerings:
MEN'S GREY WOOL SHIRTS With Q T
attached collai. Best $1 grades at each 3''
MEN'S WOOL SHIRTS In grey or tan. Collar
attached style. $1.50 values (gs-n Q
at each ' SILAS'
MEN'S WOOL SHIRTS Tan or grey. Cheap
at $2.50. Choose at each. 20
MEN'S WOOL SHIRTS Grey or tan. These are
the kind we sell regularly at $3.00. They are
offered now fSSCD ff"fc
at each. Z.5U
BROKEN LINES OF WOOL SHIRTS All col-
ors. Values up as high as $3.00 -n ffJO)
at your choice. $ & D
MEN'S SWEATER COATS. VESTS JERSEYS
AND KNITTED CAPS To effect a complete
heratCWe0ffer 1"4 OH
MEN'S SHIRTS AND DRAWERS Broken lines
of heavy weight ribbed and fleeced garments.
Choose at a
garment
MEN'S LARGE SIZE
HANDKERCHIEFS In
white only. ' '
Each at
25c
MEN'S LINEN INITIAL HAND-
KERCHIEFS Broken lines to
close at 3 for 50c nJJH&ir'
or each at &j'C
MEN'S LINEN INITIAL HAND-
KERCHIEFS In broken lines.
These we offer at 2 for 55c
each
at
28c
See the Advance Spring
Styles Im ManKattasi
SMpfts For Men
TTIIEY show the new checked and broad srrinnrl
& Our Manhattan Shirts tins season are sure to please men of good taste
Silk shirts are $5.00 fo $10.00. Our $5.00 line of silk shirts is the best to
ever offered. At $1.50 to $2.50 we show madras and woven cloth shirts with
soft or stiff cuffs. We are better prepared this season than ever before to
take care of your sleeve lengths. Complete lines of 32 33 34 35 and 36 sleeves
If you should desire any other length Ave will alter them free of charge Collar
sizes 13 1-2 to 20. 0 '
GLOI1E TROUSER SEAT UNION SUITS tf Q
3'4 to 50. In lisle. $1.50; silk lisle at a suit ty
MEN'S BALBRIUGAN UNDERWEAR With long or
short sleeves; regular or stout
Sizes 31 to 50 at a garment
Motice of ChMgfes
ILocatioin of Departments
TpHE Rug and Drapery Department formerly on Second Floor in San
Antonio Street Annex has moved into our New Mesa Avenue Annex
on the Second Floor.
Art Department formerly on Main Floor has moved into the New Mesa
Avenue Annex on Second Floor.
The Women's Knit Underwear Department formerly located in Third
Aisle on the Main Floor has been moved
into Center Aisle on Main Floor.
Watch our ads daily for notice of further
changes in location of departments.
Antonio Street j
Private
urm
MEN'S 'WHITE SHIRTS-Sizes
1 62 up. Values to $1.50. To
close out each
at
MEN'S SOFT CUFF SHIRTS-
Sizes I6J4 up- Values to $2.00.
To close quickly your yg
choice at t
MEN'S STIFF BOSOM WHITE
SHIRTS-Sizes W2 up. Values
to $1.50. While they
last each at
25c
MEN'S COLLAR ATTACHED SHIRTS In fancy design
only. The $1.00 kind at each.
ONE-PIECE
regular I OU
at a pair.
ONE-PIECE
light weight
out a pair
and hood tor
$1.50 values
karat gold
SILK
plain
3 for 50c or
MEN'S NAINSOOK AND CAM-
BRIC HANDKERCHIEFS Some
"seconds" in the lot. Specially
fed' 12 for 39c
MEN'S GLOVES In Mocha
cape kid chamois and suede.
Values to $2.00. To close
. a Par QQ
MEN'S LINED GLOVES AND
MITTS The kind that retail for
or
$1.00. offered
at each
Emery SMrts
Paijs&Hiaas and
NEW SPRING LINES OF
"EMERY" GUARANTEED
SHIRTS In the newet stripes
checks and dots; colors for men
of good taste. Priced at
$1.50
and
NEW ARRIVALS IN PAJAMAS
Neat stripes with silk frog
fasteners. A pair
at $1.50 and
L00
drawers.
c
Ilrnnch Exchange 330 0.
stiinffs
Move!
'fife
85c
PAJAMAS-In light wefgnts.
The
values
PAJAMAS-Made of light weight
3ui5C!ic ana maaras Stripes. $AJ) ig(
and $230 values at a pair 8
MEN'S DRAWERS Odds and tads of
mens
drawers. To close them
at
OUTING FLANNEL NIGHT SHIRTS They sell
regularly at 50c Choose - q
now at each only CJ& ? C
OUTING FLANNEL NIGHT SHIRTS 54 and
60 inches long and 66 inches long with pockets
the out doors sleeper.
at each.
MEN'S FIBRE SILK HOSE Broken lines.
in
heho green purple. Burgundy and Cpf
cadet blue only. A pair at ZUC
ONE-PIECE COLLAR BUTTONS Kiements 14
filled wear. Special at
20c
each at
c
offnnfo o .
Also
Underwear
MEN'S NIGHT SHIRTS-New
arrivals. Numerous cloths and
styles. Sizes 14 to 20; also hos-
pital siz. Priced ti OO
at each. 50c to l'U
GLOBE TROUSER SEAT
UNION SUITS With long or
short sleeves; 3-4 or ankle
lengths also stouts. They are
in white or ecru T! OO
cotton. A suit at 25 &'
ill mm
SEA ISLAND UNDERWEAR Long or short sleeve.
alt.o athletic style. Drawers in stouts S(Tr
regulars or knee lengths. A garment at C C
MEN'S -EOXFORD" UNDERWEAR Bal- Tfc
briggan or Sea Island. None better at 'LJ'G
s
Im 4hie
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Slater, H. D. El Paso Herald (El Paso, Tex.), Ed. 1, Tuesday, February 8, 1916, newspaper, February 8, 1916; El Paso, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth137519/m1/3/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .