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A o > Ramie: Linen 36-inch, the heavy, soft, desirable kind, perfectlty fast color, unmussable, all the best colors, . pink, old Tose, Copenhagen, brownilavender, navy. and a number. of, the .other w:anted colors, 385c yard,' 27.INCH LINENS—Fine weave, a pretty, smooth material, ' perfectly fosi color, good assortment of colors, > 25c yard, . : . WHITE WASH CORDUROY. is pon- ular for ladies and childmen's goats: heavy, “wide wale, 2.supgrior; quality, $1 yard. ‘ COTTON: PONGEE—36-inch, a fine *._showing ~ofplain and 'fancy:stripes, suitable for dresses, waists or:ghirt- ing, a nice, cool, soft material for cummer, looks and feels like silk, 150 yard. SR GN RIPPUETTE—Great stuff for chil dren’s summer ‘suits and Tompers, a fine showing of stripes @nd:checks to choose from, 15c. yard, N ' .TRY A BOX OF “PREIOSA” None better made. It's ‘& “regular 15c package. Special, 10e. ; We. carry all makes ‘of Talcum in a | variéty: of perfumes—Colgate’s, Eiudnut,; Babcock’s, Stork, etc. | AGENTS FOR MCOALL PATTERNS, the 'best pattern sold at ‘any price. 10c and 15c, - ) 3 i + McCall Magazines for August, Sc, £ — | today aplies- to all records affecting ~i| creasing protection at law. DR. SHEPARD DEAD, .. " Passes Away ke iR 3 ‘ashington, - July; 8.—Federal bot- learned with regrey of the death on the night of July 4, in South; Car- olina, of Dr. Charles Upham Shepard, who won the sobriguet of “Father of “the Tea Industry” in America because he was the only man who. succeeded in ‘growing, tea on a .large scale in this “eountry for the commercial. market, 1&:, Shepard . died on his. estafe, the fnehurst Tea Farm, at Summerville, %r . 'His funeral will be held in \ Brooklyn, N. Y. ' S . Dr. Shepard was born at New, Ha: _vem, Cpnn., October 6, , 1943, 'His. father was Dr. Charles Upham Shepr _ard, a noted geologist, who . became ‘professor of chemistry at ‘Charleston, 3. 8. C., medical college, and thus the son became identified early with South Carolina, * He was educated at An- dover and Yale, then studied medicine © at Gottingen university, Germany, making a specialty of ~physiglogical ‘ ¢hemistry. 3 ! A DISAPPEARING GUN To. Bé Placed Upon United Siates Submarines, ' Washington, July 8.—A thrge-inch, disappearing gun for submarines has been perfected by the navy ordnance biireau, Secretary Daniels. announced yesterday and in the future, all Am- erican under-water, craft will be eguipped with such weapons for sur- face fighting. - 4 ¢ Mr. Paniels said every test had re- eulted satisfactorily and .that within ten days the gun and its carriage would be sent from the ordnance fag- tory here to New.York for mounting on, the new subrharine M-1 under cone struction at the Electric Boat com- pany’s plant. No navy in the world "has a better weapon of the kind than: the ordnance bureau has evolved ac cotding to the sec % ING TODAY. Newspapers Insist mo Dubious Articles Appear in Columns liams, Director of the School of Jour- nalism ‘on the Pulitzer foundation in Columbia, University, at the Interna- tional Press Congress, Panama-Paci- flc Exposition, today said. on “The ag follows: ¢ ‘“The American advertisement *in the past ‘half century has made an advance greater tham in all its history before through the pressure of public opinion, the increased vigilance of the American ican newspaper and the higher stand- ards of the solicitor and advertiser. Criticism of the weight and influence of the advertisement in the American newspaper today overlooks this ad- vance, and forgets the greater weight and influence of the advertisement in past proyerty-stricken days of the newspaper and the higher |stand- newspapers when leading' newspa- pers freely’ accepted ments which the' worst would not print today, and Horace .Greely pub- licly wrangled over official advertis- ‘ing which' carrfed with it = palitical stibservience. - The moral advance of the advertisement began with . the futile attempts to exclude lottery not- ices three quarters of a-century ago, only successful when our leading newspapers took up the fight. Thraugh a steadily improving newspaper prac- tice, public reform and more stringent laws, exclusion.or censorship once ap- plied only/to ithe lottery, has widened to medical, financial, ' commercial, The largest share of this advance has comes in this century and steadily spreads with every year. Any man who' will compadre American adver- tisements with those of the English, French, German and other European newspapers. will find that our press and our public, not apart, but togeth- er, has raised the moral standards of our newspapers to a level nowhere else maintained. © Much ‘demanded and practiced here has never even been attempted elsewhere. Truth More Enforced. “Truth in the advertisement is more and more enforced under a so- cial. law which in all jurisprudence, age by age, imposes heavier penalties and wider sanctions on all written agreements which affect value. - So forgery, once a narrow and specific crime, protecting -seal and signature, payments. The buyer has an in- The same social law will bring the newspaper, the advertigser and his agent to a more exact account. his has been first re- quired fere in'"America because the American public has ‘been the first, BUSINESS HONESTY| San Francisco, July 8.—Talcott Wil- Public and the Advertisement,” in part. employment ‘and' immoral advertising.' advertise- | In the accompanying ilustration s shown .a scene at-the funeral'of Lieu- tenant R. A. J. Warneford, the daring British ‘aviator who was, killed while trying out-a“new.air craft. + England sang the praises of Warnefqrd when, ‘in a monoplane he maneuvered over @ great Zeppelin'of the German army and destroved. if. It was shortly aft- England Pays Homage to Warneford, Daring Air Man Who Wrecked Zeppelin er this that England was shocked at the news of his déath. The occasion of‘the funeéral of Lieutenant Warne- fory “Was marked by an unusuad pub- lic{demonstration. GRAND STRATEGY OF PROHIBITION FIGHT Outlined by Hobson to Delegates | at Anti-Saloon Convention Atlantic City, N. J., July 8.—Rich- (mond Pearson Hobson, of ‘Alabama; ‘one of the authors of the Joint Res- olution on national prahibition whick gave rise to a stirring debate and as its laws and its newspapers show, to see that the advertisement, which began as the tool of trade, has become the weapon 'of democratic institutions. The voluntary recruiting of England has,been won through the advertise- ment. The industrial reorganization of English society for war has em- ploved the same means. The adver- tisement here has become the one medium through which all causes can command’ all publicity. News, opin- ion and advertising make the news- paper. = News comes of events. It is created by them. Editorial opin- ion is'born of news. In every issue, it moves with the news as its text. The editorial is representative of those Wwho read the newspaper, led and ex- pressed by those who conduct it, at one leading and serving their public. No dally newspaper c¢an or should be far ahead of its public or of the news. The advertisement is the open ground on which causes, trades, cor- porations, charities and churches can reach all the public at all times, and educate it. Every year sees in this field a larger expenditure, a wider appeal and a more general use of the advertisement to this end. . As the state remits taxation on church and school, 80 the newspaper should give free publiclty to these and like ob- jects, but only as the state remits taxes, where there is no commercial return. As the state does not sup- port or aid the aggressive growth of these agencles so these agencies, causes and corporations should open- ly fight their battles in the advers tisement, a freer, more efficient, mora manly and more honest method than begging publicity, getting it by influ- ence or aintaining a lobby. ‘Writing Become Calling. “Advertising under this great change is to become of: increasing importance. Its writing has become a calling. Its business is yearly show- ing 'higher standards, and never dis- played more business honesty. The moral censorship of the advertise- ment will rise and grow more vigor- ous. The use of the advertisement to bring all causes and pleas before the tribundl of the people will grow. Churches, education, causes, corpor- ations must turn to this agency or the public will turn from them. The newspaper must keep its columns worthy of this new task and remem- ber that all free = publicity which should pay is an unjust tax on the publicity which pays. The advertiser must understand that every dublous advertisement decreases the cash value of every other advertisement. s a deceptive disegse— KIDNEY 506 v ana TROUBLE don’t koow it. If you want good results you can maké no mistake by using Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy. At druggists In fitty cent and dollar sizes. Sam- ple size bottle by Parcel Post, also pam- phlet telling vou about it. ~Address Dr. Kil- mer & Co.. Binghamton, N. Y., and enclose ten cents, also mention the New Britain Dally Herald close vote at the last session of Con- gress, proposed in an address before the national Anti-Saloon League con- vention today that the resolution should be brought up again on De- cember 21, next, just a year, lacking one day, from the date of its previous consideration. The former Alabama congressman outlined in this connec- tion. “The Grand - Strategy of th: Fight” and the anti-saloon forces should follow in the “Great Liquor War.” As part of an educational campaign, Mr. Hobson publicly urged that Presi- dent Wilson ‘‘be formally requested to practice total abstinance, as an ex- ample and fo banish all intoxicating liquors from the White House, and Lo establish temperance in the ' Civil Service like that practiced by rail~ roads and other businesses.” Anti-Alcohol Conference. That the scope of the war be world- wide, he suggested a petition te Con- gress for a special appropriation for an international anti-alcohol confer- ence as soon as peace in Europe was restored. Among the numerous points he rais- ed in questions of strategy, he urged “the = enfranchisement of ‘women everywhere;” incorporation of church- es and all varities of Christian . or- ganizations bodily -into the anti-sa- loon campaign; a special effort to se- cure the full co-operation of the bus- iness world; and the incorporation of a joint national associatien for con- stitutional prohibition. $5,000,000 Prohibition War Loan, | He suggésted that the mentioned . association should be specially author- | ized 'to issue ‘‘a ‘mational prohibition l war loan of $5,000,000 to be under- written by friends of temperance and to be guaranteed with provision for interest and sinking funds by the va- rious churches.” Further, Mr. Hobson would author- ize the association “to make over- tures for liquor’s capitulation, in- quiring as to liquor’s terms for com- plete surrender and reporting to general convention to be called by them if any reasonable grounds of sui- render are reached. This effort wil thereafter eliminate all pleas of any desire for confiscation or for injus- tice to individuals. If liquor refuses to capitulate on reasonable terms, the Joint beard to proceed with the plans for its annihilation without mercy, granting no quarter.” Refers To Program. In conclusion he referred to program that might be adopted 1n case the Jaint Resolution for a na- tional prohibition amendment should be defeated upon its reappearance next winter. Hp said: “If the vote is unfavorable proce- dure to be as follows: “The question of the inherent and constitutianal right of the sisterhood of states to pass upon this amend ment and the plain constitutiona! duty of Congress to submit it, is to ! the | any national convention in | be eligible who does not make a sim- 1 be' paramount issue in all-fiture na- tional elections for . Conggess, ' ‘the Senate and the Presidency; and mo member of ~Congress who voted against the resolution to be congid- ered qualified for election, Wor ' any candidate for the House or Senat: who fails to give in advance solema public pledge of his endorsement’of this paramount issue. 2 “No candidate for any caunty state convention or for delggate 1916 or si0, to ilar pledge and no candidate for dele: considered eligible who will niot plédge himself in advance to make this issug paramount in-determining the plat- form and choosing the nominees of such convention MR. MORGAN’S SON ON HONEYMON ON DAY OF SHOOTING Junius Spencer Morgan, son of J. Pierpont Morgan, his honevmoon trip immediately that it was known that his father's in- juries, inflicted by Frank Holt, who later ended his life in the Mineola jail, were not serious. Mr. Morgan recently married ‘Miss Louise Con- verse. When he heard of the shoot- ing of his father he at once hurried to his bedside. The accompanying renewed the only | e 5 photegrdph of young Mr. Morgan was takeh on the day of the recent Yale- Haryard boat races at New London, Conn,, which he attended with his father. EX-GOV. PATTERSON URGES DRY NATION National Prohibition Proper Way t0 Deal With Liquor Trafiic Atlantic City, N. J., July 8.—Form- er Governor Malcolm R. Paterson, of Tennessee, who was one of the speai- ers at today's session of the nation- al Anti-Saloon League convention, urged that national prohibition was the proper way to deal with the li- quor guestion, \ | '"“The case against the Liquor tra- fic hés been made out,” he said. “The witncsses, who testify, conform | to every legal requirement of credibil- ity; . theéy are intelligent, have tha means of information and are willing ONLY SIXTEEN, QAL VERY SicK | Tells How She Was Made | Well by LydiaE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. La.—*I take pleasure in writing these lines to express my grati- tude to you. I am only 16 years old and N work in a tobacco 3 factory. I have 4 been a very sick girl but I have improved New Orleans, and feeling a thousand times better.” ~Miss' AMELIA JAQUILLARD, 3961 Te- houpitoulas St., New Orleans, La. St. Clair, Pa. — “My mother was slarmed because I was troubled with suppression and had pains in my back and side, and severe headaches. Ihad pimples on my face, my complexion was sallow, my sleep was disturbed, I had nervous' spells, was very tired and had no embition. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- ! etable Compound has worked like a charm in my case and has regulated me. I worked in a mill among hundreds of gitls and have recommended your medi- cine to many of them.”’—Miss ESTELLA MAGUIRE, 110 Thwing St., St. Clair, Pa. There is nothing that teaches more than experience. Therefore, such let- ters from girls who have suffered and were restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound should be alesson to others. The same remedy is within reach of all. | If you want special advice write to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confl~ | dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will | be opened, read and cnswered by a woman and held in strict confidence, From' July 9 to Noon Fridays. JULY “ Fashionable Fabrics SPECIA IN FINE SII Reduced in Thursday morning we offer special markdownsg some of our most desirable silks, so shat selections can gowns, suits and waists at prices a perior goods are entitled to command. in which women who want classy si $1.50 TAFFETAS $1.20 Taffetas, in both’ check and stripe patterns, strictly up-to- date and very handsome. Choice of colors, Regular $1.50 quality, selling at $1.29 a yard. BuaUK SILK SPECIALS. First there is black satin messaline, 35 inches wide, 89c quality, a fine black, special at 63c a yard, Then there is black satin messaline, 35 inches wide $1.00 quality at $8c a yard. Bither one of these can be recom- mended - for service and prices are surely low. to spéak the truth. THey are Science, Experience, and Réligion. Alcosol Poison to Body. “Science, without bias, cold, accur- ate, calculating, testifies. that alcohor is a poison to the. body. “Experience comes, and sets befora our view an'inept, sullen, moaning, straggling, ~unhappy = procession of ' victims 0 long that it would almosi réach "across (he continent so sad that it would move a stone to plt)‘.l She shows the dry husks of hope in- sanity ‘and sudden death, disease, want, waste and bloody ecrime. “Religion comes and delivers her testimony. ‘She relates how hearts have been hardened to her' eternal truths she exhibits rents in the gar ment of ustice and bloody smears, mercy fleeing before hate, passion in flame, and love with a broken wing. No False Testimony. “There has been no false testimony delivered; there has been no exag: geration, no contradiction among these witnesses.' Mr. Patterson discussed state rights. The duty of government he said, was ' to surround the citizen with . gooa environment, to dig np pit falls in his path to make it easy as possible for the citizen to do right, as hard as possible to do wrong. “This is the highest attribute of sovereignty. The efforts of our goy: ernment to suppress the lottery o stamp out polygamy; to destroy hu- man slavery to prevent the use of narcotics; to eradicate the diseases of cattle to preserve the public health, to give the people pure food, were all in harmony with the purpose of ils creation, and to maintain the Liquor traffic is a position of its power. Suate Rghts for Safety. “It is not surprising that the liguox traffic would seize uppn states right. for safoety. In the past when a town cf county proposed to outlaw the saloon. this cunning malefactor sought 1o stay the local sentiment my telling the people that it would favor state pro. hibition, when it knew tha state ac- tion was remote or impossible. “When the sentiment for state pro- | hibition grew until i+ threatened to overwhelm the traffic it then sought delay until the government should act—and now when the tide has rush- ed on until it has reached the walls of the capitcl—phe traffic would sweep it back with the broom of stalss rights. Broadly National Question, “Stripped of all technicalily—ths question is a broadly national one—— and the government alone can solve it. If ‘a lottery conducted in oniy one state is a proper subject for na. tional authority—and the sale of nar- cotics which zaffect a comparatively small number of the people, who deny the same authority over the liguor traffic. “The doctrine of states rights as | a defence to human wrong and the violation of the conscience of civ- lization was buried forever under the.apple tree at Appomatox.” BARS EXPORT OF GOLD. France Takes Precautionary Measure Upon Advice of Ribot. Paris, July 8, 6:04 a. m.—A decree has been published prohibiting the export of gold except by the Bank of France. This precautionary measure is taken at the suggestion of Minister of Finance Ribot. It has been found that gold which has been exported has not been destined always for a neutral | country in settlement of accounts. A | free outflow might result in a danger- | ous traffic, according to M. Ribot. | The amount of gold in the Bank of France has been increased 13,500,000 francs this, week as the result of the appeal made by the government that the gold supply of the country be ex- changed for bank notes. OFFERS FOR SUGGESTIONS, Cash considerations will be paid to employees of Landers, Frary & Clark for the best suggestions for devices for saving in the manufacturing of goods. Notices to this effect have been posted at the plant and fifteen per cent. of the saving will be given as good deal lower It s a cle Iks will be benefi $2 CHIFFON This is an all which is much i n season—printed all cloth of the most ler both light and, exceedingly han can buy $2 yard. $2.00 FOU We offer Foulard 42 regular $2 q $1.20. It is an and one that 5 o at this very 10w Dage-Allen HARTFORD FOR | 4 00 Salon and B e n 98 o Atlantic City, N. ! address on “The e in the Paeific thw W. Leonard of sates to the natd the Anti-SBaloon women had 4o com| @one. The 1916, passed a 1o a vote of the ‘be voted upon No Lad undoubtedly pass by ¢ majority. A bill legislature pro hibition to go into 1916. Thus, by ¢ ments and st vill go into effect “Washington also should be done. ‘Women “In this conn tion or agency'is praise than the Temperance Union, was being done. on the sub; 0 tion, the memb were tireless in crganized their ,‘:; town, city and b claimed that the' P ton would its death blow. the efforts put fo Christian . Tem| scientific teaching ot alcohol on the | introduced intp ¢ public school enactment. All seif-sacrificing U. for their chise was granted have tl Washington, ticles in eastern from residents in claring that wo failure and that, Wi ‘had. themselves by ba they would return refusing to grant given right. Votes of “There is no. d that the state rot have been been for the work of the women. ! ™ * S t