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5 p.m. st w ' Britain ter. any part of the city 85 Cents a Month. for paper to be sent by mall in_advance, 60 Cents a Month, $7.00 & year. sr profitable advertising medium In ty. Circulation books and press pom open to advertisers. Il be found on sale at Hota- d, 42nd St. and Broad- [ N k City; Board Walk, lantio City and Hartford depot. TELEPH D : ONE CALLS. RNING ON THE LIGHT. Britain’s Chamber of Com- renders a service to the entire pt Connect;qm when it brings attentlg\ of the people a con- existing in.the state legislature, sthing which needs remedying. me tHE 1661 ¢hamber calls at- i thf\}lcfe that bills intro- by menbérs ‘during sessions of Gislntur‘é\"fl;:e not printed so that nterested may be provided with In order that this condition © altered, the , New Britain ber of Commerce at the last ses- It its state . organization peti- flie/ maln body to adopt a reso- | callifig ‘for a change in the 5. nosw.aursued by the Legisla- As a result of this petition the ‘hamber of Commerce is now at on the draft of a bill to be pre- at the next General Assembly State of bdnneqtlcut, a bill pro- | for the printing and distribu- £ all petitions, resolutions, and troduced at each session of the ture. re are few states in the union to- hose legislative bodies fail to e those interested with copies s introduced by members of the ture. These copies may be se- tmany days in advance so that hite time can be devoted to their In this way bills with so- “joker” attachments seldom, if et through. Good Government hds that the people vitally inter- lin legislation should have some “of what is going on. Pitlless ity has been decried; but pub- lhas saved the nation, and pub- an and will save tne individual If li::gn are allowed to smuggle hrough 'the General Assembly iheéticut, hiding the real identi- kuch pills under the cloak of fic- titles, who knows but that some ébflré%t politician might sell out tire works? ' As the New Brit- amhber of Commerce wisely out, tha citizens of Connecticut ji be “informed and given an op- ity to know and study all pe- k, billsp'and resolutions of pro- logialdfion, in'b¥der that those ed, ,who desire, may appear heard, for or against, the pas- bt the same.” Ibledging itself to labor for o in the present method of doing , for the printing of these doc- ts “sufociently in advance of the when hearings are to be held,” tate Chamber of Commerce de- credit for working 1n the in- of the people. The New Brit- hamber of Commaerce is to be tulated for taking the initiative s matter. There can be but one objection to the proposal and the cost of printing. But if te of Connecticut is so poverty 4n that it cannot furnish a few 61 copies of its proposed legis- [ measures, then it is time the klature went out of business. Yet, ost of printing shouw not count ially when it is considered that bublicity given to these proppued may prevent great loss of time money ‘to lhe'ltfl.te for the rea- ‘aat members of the General As- bly will know meore clearly what are voting on ‘and, if needs be, ly have an opportunity to prac- ecconomy, As it is now, eveu bers of the T.egislature cannot in advance printed coples of pro- d bills. Voting, for the = most s tHeYerore dviie in the dark, OW OrOEY 5L things proposed by New Britain Chamber of Com- be would, | ,‘ méasure, throw on alight.f 144 a hen mo%fl kiss their little chil- good byegin the morning and file them 1off to school it is but | and rightobthat these mothers some assufange that their loved are not g0ing to be - brought charred and burned as a result relessness on the part of fire in- plors, or because school authori- falled to make proper provision #afety. The schoolhouse fire in 0y, Massachusetts, which re- in the desgriiction of twenty rlS Yestof 3‘)“ evidence of {1 'l Deglect, sometimes con- by public' éMcipls. . . From .a report of the catastrophe the following description is given of the ramshackle fire-trap at Peabody: “It was an old three-story structure of brick; with a wooden interior. There Were -no fire escapes on the build- ing.” | That sentence practically tells the whole story. 'An old three-story structure of ‘brick with a wooden in- terior burns like a paper box when conflagration starts,. When there are no fire escapes on such buildings the chances of the inmates getting out in the event of fire are materially lessened. And yet how many of these old -three-story structures with wooden interiors and no fire escapes are scattered throughout the country and are being used as school- houses? As there was a revo- lution in theater construc- tion after the horrible Iroquois fire in Chicago, there should also be a campaign waged against old school- houses after this appaling Peabody disaster. The moans of those inno- cent little children who perished ves- terday should not be in vain. Their little brothers and sisters throughout the nation should be granted immun- ity from such danger. The mothers and fathers of little school children should be spared the anxiety and mayhap the grief that is ever liable to befall them when old three-story structures with wooden interiors are pressed into use as schoolhouses. This is the day of enlightenment, the day of improvement. There are more children going to school now than ever before in the history of this nation, and they should not be housed in buildings that may prove to be flery graves. A thorough official in- vestigation of the fire at Peabody should be instituted, and the respon- sibility for the loss of life fixed so that the entire nation may take heed. There are too many of these poorly constructed schoolhouses, for the most part not having the proper fire precautions. THE DOCTRINE OF MALTHUS. It was but natural that a sensation grew out of the New York college professor's proposal to compel mar- ried men to pay to the state a heavier tax than bachelors. The argument had always 'been the other way ‘round. But bringing to life the old “Malthusian theory” that population tends to increase faster than the means of support, the professor would discourage any attempt to further the doctrines of one Theodore Roosevelt, sometime President of the United States and always the enemy of race suicide. The professor struck the true chord when he admitted his views to be of no particular import- ance because people would not take them seriously, or allow such a sys- tem of taxation as he proposed to be put in working order. And, as the people would never allow married men to be taxed any heavier than their brother bachelors, so they would never allow the poor unfortunates who remain single to bear a greater burden of taxation than those who seek connubial bliss. As a matter of fact, the professor need advocate no such radical doctrine inasmuch as the present day economic situation is tak- ing care of the marriage mart. Men of today are not prone to marry as readily as did their ancestors. Be- cause of the so-called high cost of living the young men of 1915 always “stop, look and listen,” before enter- ing the sacred state of matrimony. The old theory of ‘two living cheaper than one’ has been badly shattered during the last ten or twelve yvears. Knowing all this, the state has no right to make the burden of the mar- ried men any heavier by taxing them more than those who lead lives of single blessedness. Neither should the state tax bachelors. For mar- riage is always determined by the in- dividuals interested and no state laws should ever compel men to xfiarry, or prevent them from marrying. Men are married because they have so chosen. Likewise men are bachelors because of their own actions. Men marry for happiness. When they are not sure of attaining that happi- ness they remain unmarried, thus leading themselves to believe they are enjoying a certain amount of joy,— freedom. To make any of these peo- ple change their mode of living would be to force unhappiness upon the scene, and when that condition prevails the state has plotted against itself. There . are always many methods by which. to provide revenue for the state without putting a pre- mium either on matrimony or bachelorhood. Therein the doctrine of Malthus fails. FACTS AND FANCIES, Lieutenant Fay and his accomplices in the conspiracy to blow up ships used in the munitions export trade are better representatives of German impudence than of German efficiency. There is urgent need that this con- spiracy be broken up and that the criminals engaged in it be brought to book. They are making territory of the United States the base of hostile operations against Germany's enemlés ‘in ‘& ‘way'that seriously compromises our neutrality, If we fail to use due diligence to put a stop to the opera- tions of these persons, it is conceiv- able that we may have damage bills to pay. Apart from that, the affront to the nation and to its people is one not to be overlooked.—New York Times. Japan, with an area the size of Il- linios, feeds from its own resources a population almost half as large as that of the whole United States. What Japan can do, America can do. We have not more than scratched the sur- face of our possible economic re- sources. There are many times more acres on this earth untouched by the plow as have yet been brought under cultivation, and with a larger world even in India, is a thing of the past that can never recur—New Mail. The man who wrote “I Didn’t Raise My Boy to Be a Soldier” is busy ex- prine—that is, at whatever price is necessary to pay for a big enough army and navy to enforce peace. Also, he is not a pro-German. As an ad- vocate of preparedness he utters neat epigram, which expresses a great takes a punch at Mike Gibbons or Packy McFarland. The full beauty of the illustration is not fully ex- pressed, however, Neither do Mike Gibbons and Packey McFarland ever take a punch at each other. =~ What a peaceful world it would be if all the nations were prepared for war on the same basis these two experts prepare for pugilism! — Brooklyn Standard Union. Can he live up to his parentage and live down his antecedents? This is ‘the question that asks itself in the case of the waif once known as “John Doe number 104" who steps into the name and heritage of Finley J. Shep- hard, Jr.,, Mr, and Mrs. Shephard, of course, are taking a chance, but they are willing to “match with des- tiny,” to defy cold-blooded eugenic theory and by sedulous training and the influence of the right environ- ment strive to strike out whatever la- tent taint of ill may smoulder in ‘the blood. The lad’s carreer may yet put to shame that of many a scion born to the purple and the-silver spoon who is allowed the primrose path of least resistance that has of- ten turned the spoiled child into the prodigal son—a wastrel who under- writes his parents’ heartbreak—Phil- adelphia Ledger. We suppose that the bluebird the suffragists have in mind is not really the familiar member of the thrush | family, but the bluebird of happiness described so beautifully in Maeter- linck’s fairy play which everybody ought to see. But we wonder wheth- | er the thought was a bappy one. Ii | will be remembered that Tyltyl and Mytl in their search for happiness | visited the Land of Memory, the | Palace of Night, the Palace of Hap- piness and the Kingdom of the Fu- ture, thinking vainly they would see the bluebird only to find it at last in their own home. Will the ballott bring to woman a greater happiness | or open up to her a wider sphere of usefulness and influence than she now finds in her own home? Has not the bluebird really been there all | the time, its song unheard, its form unrecognized 7—S8pringfield © Republi- ean: Avarice and Envy. (Wall Street Journal.) Premising that nobody has been seriously hurt in the present specula- tion in war and other stocks, and that a large number of people have been benefited, having in fact graduated from gamblers to speculators, and from speculators to investors, it may still be said that there are two moral effects of such activity, each unde- sirable. The first of these is the passion of avarice so widely aroused. It is not in human nature to watch other people make easy money without developing a desire to share in the Pactolian flood. /The desire to secure wealth ing, but is one of the commonest frailties &f human nature. Its con- sequence in stock speculation is that favorable developments upon which it advanced, a new crop of gamblers, through less agents, buy into the exhausted move- ment at the top. Obviously, a purchase, whether made on margin or paid for outright, may be an investment, a risky specu- lation, or the merest gamble, accord- ing to the motive of the purchaser. The injury to the public mind is in the widespread unintelligent avarice great stock movements engender, and the way the feeling tends to merge into another one of the greatest social consequence. That feeling is envy. It is en- gendered by the contemplation of wealth even when it is honestly ac- quired, and still more by reports of accumulations not to be defended without casuistry. It is this feeling of envy which largely creates unrest in labor, violence through organiza- tions like the International Workers of the World, and false teaching by the socialist element, which is sup- plied with a new crop of rhetorical examples. 1t is largely this passion which dic- tates destructive legislation, as, for in- stance, the cotton future law, or the La Follette seamen’s law. Wall street, particularly as it represents legiti- mate, useful and necessary finance, becomes a universal target. Popular newspapers play down to the passions of their readers. When they can no longer appeal to their avarice they can obtain wide acceptance by appealing to their envy. No remedy is here suggested, and none is possible so long as human nature is what it is.” Large and sud- den profits are made in other things than stocks, and speculation is part of any free market. The primal pas- sions of the heart are not to be cured by legislation. The press and the pul- pit can do something, and the indi- vidual, starting with himself, can do everything. \ population than ever before famine, York | plaining he is in favor of prepared- | ness for war. He wants peace at any | o truth as far as it goes: “Nobody ever | without working for it is demoraliz- | after a market has discounted the petty | reputable | WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to the Herald Office. Haverhill Of Today. (Haverhill Gazette.) Nine hundred Lithuanians reside within our borders, 700 Poles, 1,600 | Italians, 2,450 Greeks, 5,500 French, 10,000 Irish, 2,300 Jewish, 500 Ar- menians, 25,000 Amcricans and 1,000 of scattering nationalities. The vaults of our savings banks contain deposits of $13,000,000, not including deposits in savings departments of national banks, trust companies or postal sav- | ings. Over 76 per cent. of the more than 10,000 registered voters own their homes. ~ The total valuation of the shoe industry alone is over $36,- 000,000 with an annual wage roll of | $16,000,000. Our 32 public_ schools | with their 225 teachers and 7,000 pu- pils and a strong parochial school sys- tem tells the story of our education progress and—over all, crowning all —the spires of half a hundred church- es point to the skies. What a contrast to the original settlement! The crude Haverhill of 1640 has become one of the indus- trial centers of the world. It is of little avail to babble anniversary sen- timent. The utterances of the pio- neers were marked by that discretion of speech which Bacon says is “more than eloquence.” They were doers of deeds, not dreamers of dreams. Theirs was a serious task and those Who performed it had a full sense of their great responsibilities. Our duty today is to recognize the obliga- tions laid upon us by the past to which our civilization owes such pro- gress as it makes.” It will be a poor citizen who does not, with searching honesty, examine his heart today to find If it beats with a stern resolve equal to theirs of the first settlement. Not merely to love the republic with honor, but to pay for its preservation, if need arise—to pay such a price as they ungrudgingly paid. O. of C. Presidents. (Rockville Leader.) The Connecticut Chamber of Com- merce, in placing at its head for the ensuing year Charles A. Pease of Hartford, has named a worthy and well qualified successor to President Frank H. Johnston, who has made one of the most successful presidents the state body has had. Both the retir- ing and incoming presidents are en- terprising and energetic ‘“business men, who have an abundance of public spirit and civie pride and of a type that cannot fail to inspire confidence and get re- sults, Our best wishes to Frank Johnston, who will take his place in the ranks. Whether president or private, he’s a hustler and will be seen, and heard, and his influence will be felt all about the state. To Presi- dent Pease, greetings! Those who know you best are satisfied that you'll keep the C. of C. on the move and maintain the high standard of your predecessor. Efficiency has Dbeen one of your mottoes and has been {llustrated in your entire business ca- reer. And we feel satisfied that your administration as president of the C. of C. of Connecticut will be efficient and effective. In other words, it will be a successful administration. Bad Advice to Women With a Little Money. (Bridgeport Farmer.) The magazines seem to be quite gererally slipping into a practice more doubtful than the best news- papers permit themselves. Many of them have established so- called “Investment hints,” or “Guide to Investors,” or something under a similar name, which are merely so | many columns of touting for Wall street. While couched in the lan- guage of caution, most of these | “hints” are guide boards that direct the unwary into the realm of endless securities, upon the jssue of which speculation thrives, The Ladies’ Home Journal, which is | rather free from this sort of offense, has a lapse, in its October number. | Its kind words are addressed to “The woman who inherits some money,”, who is “sorely puzzled as to | how and where to invest it."” | A woman who inherits money finds | it Invested as a rule, or in the savings | bank, and there is little reason why she should be puzzled, and little occa- | sion for special investment guiding ! for this group of women. But there would be little harm in | selecting ‘“women who have just in- | herited a little money,” if the advice | were sound, which it is not. Here | it 1s: “The safest investment for a woman | i= to put her money into a savings bank. This will pay her from three to four per cent. “The next safest Investment is a | first—not a second—mortgage. That i will pay her from four and a half to | five per cent. “The third safest investment is a | tond. That will pay her from four to | six per cent.” Money in savings banks is safe, money on good first mortgage is safe, but money in ‘“a bond!" There is the yub. All this sort of thing ends up with the bond. It is pretty nearly criminal to advise a woman who has inherited a little money, and who is puzzled what to do with it to invest in a bond, especially when the advice is followed by a representation that the return will be larger, and a decla- ration of the dangers of investments in stock. Stocks says our contemporary, are doubtful because of the possibility of fiuctuation. Then too, a stock may stop paying dividends. Again you cannot always sell the stock. But bonds are doubtful, not because of .a possibility of fluctuation, but be- cause, like stock, they are almost cer- tain to do so. Again, a bond will not stop paying divid-nds, but it does stop paying Interest, Which is exactly the same thing. You cannot always sell Darents Should nv_V this Splendid Remedy Simple Laxative Compound Helps to Correct Consti- pation in Children. ‘With all children there are times when the bowels fail to act naturally and it becomes necessary for the par- ents to administer a remedy. Cathar- used as these agents afford only tem- porary relief while their violent action shocks the system unduly. Mrs. Eva F. Gaff, 517 10th St.,, Washington, D. C., says that her little girl, Marie, had been subject to constipation, and that she found Dr. Caldwall’'s Syrup Pepsin the best remedy because of its mild- ress, and now always keeps a bottle of it in the house, Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is a compound of simple laxative herbs, free from opiates or narcotic drugs of any kind, and is an ideal remedy for children because of its mild action and positive effect. Its use tends to strengthen the impaired bowel attion and restore normal regularity. It is important that parents should know of a dependable remedy with no unpleasant after effects, griping | | tics and purgatives should never be or T strain. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin costs only fifty cents a bottle and can be procured at any drug store. To obtain a trial bottle, free of charge, write to Dr, W. B. Caldwell, 454 Washington St., ‘Monticello, II1, a share of stock, but neither can you always sell a bond. The modern bond, it may be added, frequently carries every evil and un- certainty carried by stock, even to an enormous amount of water. To ad- vise women who have inherited a little money to invest in “a bond,” which is what the advice under con- sideration amounts to, is to invite her to sacrifice that little. Some bonds are good investments, but no woman unfamiliar with invest- ments should put her money into bonds except upon reliable advice of .those who know the character of the particular bond. Heard at Hackettstown, N. J. (Newark News.) “Where you going, all dressed up?" “Qver to Danville to a wedding.” “Who's getting married ?” “Old Bill Onions. Know him?” “Sure I know him. Bill Onions that live on the Henshaw place?” “No, he rents the Jones farm.” “Big stout fellow?” “I'd call him rather slim.” “Sort of bald?” “I don’t think so. Had lots of hair last time I saw him.” ‘“Cross-eyed, like?” “Not so you could notice.” “Got a son by his first wife, about thirteen years old ?—tall, skinny boy with funny teeth?” “No, Bill's never been married be- fore.” “I guess I know him, though I wouldn’t be sure. Who’s he marry- ing?” “Tom Garden’s widow. maybe?"” “Little bit of a woman with red hair?” * “Gosh, no; she weighs 200 and her hair's black as coal “Drives a Ford car, doesn’t she?” “I reckon not. I reckon she never rode in an automobile in her life.” “Well, glve 'em my regards. They'll probably remember me.” Know her, Memento. Narrowly Partisan critics of the President were once more rebuked, not by the President but by the facts in the case, when Germany, acting through Ambassador von Bernstorff, backed down in the Arabic case last bought three bales at 10 cents a pound, rather more than the quota- tion then prevailing. One bale he gave to a cotton promotion organi- zation in New York—Ilosing his $50. Another was sold for charity in Okla- homa—and another $50 was lost. The third, it is said, has just been dis- posed of by the president at exactly the purchase price. The net result is that the president is “out” $100. Who got the monev? The South? The hard-pressed cotton planters? The South did not profit by the “buy-a-bale movement. It is doubt- ful whether such a promotion scheme could have been carried out in any other country. Witness the depressed cotton market, the alarmed growers, the solicitous statesmen and the un- certain brokers. Recall the propos- als for government aid. These re- jected—and wisely—the “buy-a-bale" plan was evolved, and for some rea- son became immediately popular. Men in public life, according to their station, responsibility or political needs, bought one or more bales, By buying a bale the purchaser was strengthening business, North and South; he was keeping his money at home, but what was more attractive, the inevitable rise in the cotton mar- ket would assure him a reasonable profit. It was plain that no one could lose. The “buy-a-bale” plan has come and gone. The South has managed to worry through the winter and finds itself with another big crop on its hands. There {s something ridicu- lous in the memory of the bale dis- tribution plan, especially when re- sults are compared with predictions. There is also a moral to be drawn, although morals are of little benefit in politics. The point to be remem- bered is that emotional action for re- lef rarely gets anywhere. If it does, results are not commensurate with expenditures. Thus it was with the “buy-a-bale” movement. Thus it may be with trade merchant marine or other proposals to meet the needs of a day. In the business of gov- ernment as in the government of business, emotion and theory gener- ally should have the strict practical examination. month. In what amounts to a re- pudiation of the sinking of the Arabic, the German Ambassador accepts the principle of compensation for Amer- ican lives lost on the Arabic. So far 80 good—and it is a more than totable diplomatic victory for Mr. Lansing and Mr. Wilson. The fact remains, however, that the Arabic is only one of several cases pending between this government and Germany. The fol- lowing dates must not be lost sight of: February 10, 1915, when Ambas- sador Gerard was Instructed from Washington to inform the German government that we could not assent to the German declaration of a war zone about the British Isles and to warn the German government that a “critical situation” would arise if Germany destroyed an American mer- chant vessel or caused the death of an American citizens, May 7, 1915, when the Lusitania was torpedoed and sunk Wwithout warning by German submarines off Ola Head, Kinsale Ireland, and 1,153 lives were lost, among them 115 Americans, May 10, 1915. when the German forelgn office, through the German ambassador at Washington, expressed “deepest sympathy” with the United States because of the loss of American citizens, and when the verdict of the Irish coroner’s jury at Kinsale on the Lusitania disaster charged the Ger- man emperor and high German offi- cials with murder. May 13, 1915, when President Wil- son, acting through the state depart- ment, called on Germany “to make reparation so far as reparation is pos- sible for injuries without measure,” and informed the German govern- ment that the United States would not | omit any word or act necessary to the performance of its sacred duty of maintaining the rights of its citizens. | If individuals in Germany or else- where think that the people of the | United States have forzotten this se- quence of events, it is hizh time that the misconception were corrected. Now that the Arabic case seems to have been settled. what about the Lusitania? “Buy A Bale of Cotton” Plan. (Indianapolis News.) The “buy-a-bale-of-cotton” pro- moter, who enjoyed such wide popu- larity about a vear ago, is now said to be in rather bad standing with those who invested their money for the benefit of the South. A Wash- ington dispatch narrates the experi- ence of the president. Mr. Wilson | | bladder, LUTHER LEAGUE FESTIVAL, At the Swedish Lutheran church last night under the auspices of the Luther league the annual harvest fes- tival was held. The event proved a success In every way. Professor Ger- hard Alexis, the organist, and the Misses Adeline Ohman and Miidren Swanson favored with musical num- bers. Professor Alexis and Filmore Ohman played piano solos and duets and Miss Mary Johnson delivered a recitation. Rev. Dr. 8. G. Ohman de- livered a short address and a social hour followed, light refreshments being served. —_—mm KEEPS KIDNEYS ACTIVE WITH A GLASS OF SALTS Must flush yo_ur Kidneys occasionally if you eat meat regu- larly. Noted authority tells what causes Backache and Bladder weakness. No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poi- sons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, head- aches, liver trouble, nervousness, con- stipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, disorders come from slug- gish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, {rregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scald- ing, get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to ac- tivity, also neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irrita- tion, thus bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive and can- not injure; makes a delightful effer- A New York Coat and Suik Manufacturer Needed the Ready - Gash - Our spot cash offer was excupted at a big discount, therefore we are ablg to offer the greatest values of the sear son at our Coat and Suit Dept. Sats urday. Never before such values h becn offered in the height of the season coats for Women, Misses and Children Suits In Women's and Misses’ model Hundreds to choose from, Values tha will move them quick, so come af early in the day SATURDAY as poss sible. ‘ WOMEN’'S AND MISSES' OCOATS. Arablan Lamb Coats, priced $12.9 and $15.00, ¥ Corduroy 4 5 $20.00 All-Wool Heavy Cloth Coats, Iw plain and fancy weaves, priced $5.98, $7.98, $9.98 to $25.00. Plush Coats, priced $20, $25, $29, to $39. 5 Coats, priced $9.98 CHILDREN’'S COATS. Priced $3.98, $4.98, $5.98 to B each, Fit out the youngsters for the winter now, MISSES' SUITS, Broad cloths and fancy mixtures, that are smart priced $15.00 each. WOMEN'S SUITS, Saturday priced $12.9% to $30.00, NEW WAISTS AND BLOUSES., vescent lithia-water drink which all regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and the blood pure, thereby avold- ing serious kidney compliostiens, Lingeries, 97c to $2.98 each, Crepe de Chines, $1.98, $2.98, $3.98 each. 1 BOUDOIR CAPS. Twelve dozen of the daintiest Bou- doir caps you ever saw. $1.50 ang $1.00 values, Saturday, 49c each, Choose now your Holiday Gifts. MEN'S FINE LINEN HANDKER. CHIEFS, t Special 19¢ and 3 for 50c, these are 26c value: A SALE OF GUIMPES, Saturday prices 49¢c and 98c each. Emb. Organdies, laces and net, with sleeves and sleeveless. WOMEN'S GLOVES White Washable Cape Gloves, $1.50 value, Saturday, $1.29 pair. Tan and Ivory Washable Cape Gloves $1.25 values, Saturday, $1.00' pair. . AT STATIONERY DEPT. FOR SAT- URDAY ONLY, 3 1 pound Kara linen, 1%¢, 25 envelopes at 8c package. valué SILK GIRDLES. Regular 69c values, special Satury day, 49¢ each. BLANKETS AND COMFORTABLES, Large selection in Big range of prices to suit all D. McMILLAN 99-201-203 MAIN STREFT If you ha;e eczema, ringworm or other itching, burning, raw or pimply skin eruption, tr;o'l:uhol ! Ointment and Resinol Soap and see how quickly the itching stops and the trouble disappears, even in severe, stubborn cases, z Resinol Ointment and Resinol plmples and stop loss of hair. Sold by all