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EQJ »Rf i'z‘ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, "OCTOBER 26, 1916. HERALD Promrietors. ued dsity (5 at Herald ost Office at Matter. tered st the a8 Second Cl il fverca by car M HERALD|; PUBLISHING COMPANTY. inday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., i urch St New Britslm to any part of the otty | ing among \Sents a Month. er to pe sent by mail, sce, 60 Cents a Montn Iv profitabla advertising the city. Circula room alwavs open rourc on saj Sy laatic City Har and TELEP exs Orice medmum 1t books and prees | agversigers o at_Fota- 88 ana Broad- | of Walk, Dot at- MUST BE will the that ht ms in er of C hould command tion o y good citizen tain. 1 friend 1 dire rs of tain Ct bpose is witl wity Org tior present ke mone ith which to Ecadvork: ampaign of [ L meeting tom “ommer: gathering the N impaign DONE. the at of Ne New Ty more than one rrow ce w 4 - on happened, things it n saw men g and practic: a second ckh legiance. ‘When all or Europe, Yo Hughes ask a count want 2 Old men 1y presents i for Young 4 been throusg terness in i should sét. Young ip at ter than has seen m raised in America were the other framed an answer have any suffer, and as one event after Young ever o back to give the the ally hoice in these thing: with the ung ed last night: ry does and old ts answer America is h two yea land, a America, ts own been - en take the So X, in ~vhich an appeal was sent to | Will be those Wwho must the city inclined That rent for been »lized. ay the ad. Th's organization, if ts work boo, whiehn. must v-hich in to care for the Hy in a city of Britain is now hber ident lhere with of res is something the wrong re here is something wrong with New ain. that organization have not made people What Oy ttle fleet around the world.” As a matter of fact the navy, under administration, peal, the ot realize proper or Britain fized Hucted apr do n charity the means, in past hnization. night perfect n order hould .point been made in the running of the Organization’s | b Britain Char pa bs ign for dollars,—that is, have been made. ter of individual onal pride, b of the city by a question of civic res rests on the shoulders every hg the prosper of be done to in the ething must paign moving HEN YOUNG ANSWERS. ry-two this there became Republican party, and vote candidate of that party, ed to thosc hood hadress elivered and to a great g mer people insienificant sum of $332 | kKind of a country that Young Ameri- tself is a paltry frankness shou cast he scenes of his gathering is not enough the it is to yea ather in more than sun poor and 60,000 population. approaching that | some- Charity Organization, Either the people connected especially as by this worthy At the meeting tomor- | d Someone qualified to do qut any mistakes that | if mis- It is not a | endeavor, this taking care of the | organized charity, ponsibility | of . each | man and woman who is en- | ¢ the set the | right direc- day. AMERICA month ans Hughes went to Brook- a member of his ght, as the presiden- re- young an enthusias- of during the course of which sked this question: “What kind of juntry does the heart has t America means there of ev: reached the age to lood! red blood the ftion. Young years has learned to of a it wants. Ing America has country its w g America will have in the near | tferent kind of a It will be a and re- lus animosities that now surge over are largely ai toda it will be try than. it free from the re, a try racial land, which e Buropean and war. bvo there were 4 htry years ago in every city and town men came the cour door to eack the hatreds lived next new members of did they her. It had sh h their new « hold was enough for ken the dust of feet and had arec a country i opportunity tc The s men of the nation, men ably come over in the nted the ex f what meant, and wk to all who would wor aws her sh of 1 Buror pother tumn nto it, unts 2 s flow prica tearing know 1 new started that of- who ¥ st ightning, As one country gianc made rs spru pret Am yuntry e terrible of America had to l” fashion. Young America want?"” merican boy realize is stamped answer to that America in the past | what And, which quietly in land And | other, yainst one them that | Hurope Lcces: Amer- ! and obey d intc them- | ook, 1 an Party e tha 1als were not all the and jumped shtiy if due the land. out a eerage, came until in | Young r 1 { the Wilson Amce ca does not linquished greatest in t seventh plac class nav reaching the tory. and one especially During his half years erica or go want. THE NAV claim as he world greates America dreamed their new America stood by Young measures land where kings side hat is the mat- | ropén rulers against the President of m{ the United States. when back and fell Yet the Colonel never misses a chance to show what terrible | condition the navy is in today. clamoring and hallering for v, as he puts o { relative to the other powers what our | pavy was in February, 1909, when the returned from aL: of hearin, were happen- z the older men of the nation, when the fathers of families born and taking one side belligerents of to the question M “What kinc will to that question, radical. s of terrible bit- when there better example taught to wor- the shrine of freedom and to 4‘ hold the United States greater and bet- { of ry with it enough punch and power to be heard all over the land, answer to It was in the Roosevelt administra- tion that the United States navy re- its third into the He is a first- “a navy its cruise is rapidly t stage in its his- The comparison between the | seven years of Roosevelt and the three of Wilson creditable to the Colonel. administration is not the navy | tonnage provided for was hut 428,279, { was appropriated. i 1| | i |of B Wilson admi n - 9" | In the three and one-half years of the tration there has been provided a tonnage of 1,014,66 6. The highest appropriation under Roosevelt 1909, when $140,042,655 made in 1214 254,33 vear the W propriated and bids ilson administration $313,300,095 were received yesterday The lowest in the Wilson administration was made in when the sum total was $148,- That was the first year democratic rule since Cleveland. of This ap- for the navy, for the new superdreadnoughts, to be the greates In son’s accorda a program of preparedness this country the battle fles will, within up to a total ing craft. - in e tenc nce comprehensive naval never before et of the three of 587 vears, At the present with President be broug vessels, Wil- program, such undertook, as United States | ht all fight- moment there are either in commission, or in waiting reserve, or nearing com- pletion at the government yards, some 490 ships. T t is proposed to buila 17 dreadnoughts and armored crulsers aof strovers, various classes, torpedo boats, submarines, monitors, de- gun- boats, tenders, transports. repair ships, fuel, tugs. supply Eight ships, soon as po three eliding scale the future ate the entire sums work. grand. total pending on land will do after the wa chance all ‘There is no to of naval velt's Yesterday publication America had to | 4 is it mar and good 1t, has not t y publication. s it ha realizes was a weekl)y past six year and T always cher this of ne in cditor known e was Herald's edi bis co-work tonds congratulations with the know- under ledge that t suidanc { progre year program to of program member vice the will and hospital vessels, of these to be ble, will effect, appropriate money to is of to uphbuild = powers in cause for worry. the Bristol a daily the been long s publi now shed by its inity. Pre \permen in Iy a staff! me torial ers the he Press cver will completed depending mediate enlargement of the nient navy yards and dry docks. work the congresses of take the Colonel Press newspaper. wonderful ristol while at the same time giv- & to Connecticut journalism another of the daily since an many Wallace , is one of member To him Herald march at and be capital four battle cruisers and four dreadnoughts, as on im- govern- This on a proportion- at if not fir t Within the hed twice a ambit w. this of today such the s in our neighboring city, another heard old loves country matter of al- and America be _s28 | shocked when Young America formal- s 1 It has rule, Eu- Young | America answers, the answer will car- and there to the care of The aggregate cast of the estimated $588,180,576 what Germany a De- and Eng- their navies the United States has a become second, t world. Roose- began In growth fleld. ion friends Miller, the best state, the and ex- able heaa | FACTS AND FANCI Another institution which has passed in Emporia is the separate cuff on men’s shirts—Emporia (Kas.) Ga- zette. Chairman Willcox the Adamson Iight-Hour Law ‘“will do more than any other thing to defeat President Wilson” for re-clection. Thinking makes a lot of things so, but the rule admits of im- Qmum exceptions, as in this case.— New York World. Republican thinks that 1 < City When Star). the rain and the lonely night begin are ghosts at call them in; And one is the ghost of Love laid Under the lilies of lcng ago; Too pure and sweet for a worid this Where the thorn’s blcod crimsons the rose's kiss; The love as deep as heaven is high: Memory’s music and Memory’s slgh. There the door and 1 low like This is the At the Love that when the stands lonely ghost of door of life lands Are whelmed in the Night when dark descends And cven the stars friends— Spirits to whom no grace is given, That cannot find their way heaven! O ghost of Love! Come in come Night! the are like lost in O dream of light! in from the homeless Come in, from the Night and phantom ways, With the gleams and dreams of the golden days! world is so weary, long And the break o’ the heart’s in the soul o’ the song, Is your haven own place— With the tears of the over Love's face I shall hold you In peace after part- ing and pain, God’s Votco shall Heaven again, the The the Nighi{ so This and this is your vears falling Till call you to COMMUNICATED. Patron Calls Attentlon to Conditions Existing on Local Trolley Lines. New Britain, Oct. 26,, '16 To the Editor of The Herald: N Will you kindly permit me some of the valuable space in your paper to voice my condemnation of the manner in which some of the emploves of the Connecticut company operate the cars entrusted in their care by the management T would like to place particular stress on the Bast Main street llne, which T believe to be the worst in the city, having had plenty of apportunity to observe conditions During the storm of last evening, T desired to catch a car home, so T stood at the corner of Myrtle and Main street for the 9:07 o'clock car leaving Central park.. After giving the motorman the usual sign to stop I was surprised to sce that the car suddenly began to travel at a much faster rate without any sign of the motorman intending to stop. That T succeeded in getting on the car is in no way up to the man with the con- troller, for his efforts did not in any way assist me. Having been incapi- tated by illness T do not cherish the idea of grabbing fleeting trolley cars ! as they dairt by, imperiling what remains of my life and limbs. Tt was noticed that this motorman wears glasses which would indicate that his e ht is not the best, a very fine ana canable man to have running a car leaving the public at the mercy of luck and fate if they succeed in escaping being ground under the wheels of the car. Conditions such as these will reach an end when the | proper officials are appraised of the facts. A PATRON. War's Sidelights, (Wash Post.) Certainly the most interesting and at the same time. from a certain point of view, not the least important of the war news is that picked tbe way. What the unknown in the ranks thinks and whole affair is told with read with avidity. The from the rank outsider, Lappens that the news him suddenly, serves to remind rest of how we felt before the | seemingly cndless succession of Lloody days obliterated the keeness of the earlier perceptions An arctic explorer from the northern years' absence to knew it gone ism as he may long solitude need. There was to his mind the rendous world ngton up by soldier says of the skill anq word also when it o hursts upon us has come back silence after two find the world as to the bad. Such have gained from failed to serve his suddenly presented knowledge of a stu- tragedy. ‘“‘Stefansson :pt” possesses a seemliness that would appeal to all could they shift their vantage ground to his. Tater, he, too, will be caught in the moving currents of the times, which render impossible any true conception of tne larger outlines. Hence the best and truest histories of events cannot pos sibly be written earlier than one gen- cration after their occurrence. Of lighter significance, yet touch- ing understandingly the cherished sentiments, is the announcement of the marriage of Princess Marie Ther- cve of Hohenlohe to Otto Kohleisen of Innshruck, an apothecary and a descendant of an humble Austran family. There is the further state- ment that the princess nursed Koh- leisen while he hospital suf- fering from an illness contracted the battlefield. That is all After such fashion do the soldiers fight and grumble arctic adventurers weep at the un- expected news and romance runs its accustomed course, all oblivious to { the or® and more momentous hat afflict generals and chancelleries. stoi his was in a on is unknown and jest, “higt matter kings, | difference the | ———— — COOD ARRAY OF NEW BOOKS NAMED IN INSTITUTE'S LIST THIS WEEK Aleohol and society, by. John “An expansion of articles that hav appeared in the Atlantic Monthly."” “A scientific treatment of sreat goclal problem.”—Springfield Repub- itcan “The chief difference between Mr. Koren book and the year hook of the U Brewers’ wtion is the between octavo and duo- decimo.”-—Survey. “The summary of in foreign lands is dependent. a recent I¢ interesting. ation *—In- Mexico, by he isMelling writes with authority B few to question his When he denounces the the Wilson administration upon grounds of political " Y. Times, . . Benighted “When Mexico fne there wWill statements. policy of hLe enters controve R. W. Smith. of affairs in e ox Rook of sorrow, compiled Macphail. “An anthology of the poetry of sor- row and consolation. Professor phial is now serving with the Cross in the war zone.” . hy Andrew . ox Case for the Filipinos, Kalaw. “A book that no one can afford to miss who wishes to be well informed upon the relations hetween the Phil- ippines and the United States.”—N. Y. Times: by Maximo M. » e Diary of Lady Frances Shelly, 1787- 1817, edited by her grandson, Rich- ard Edgcumbe 2v “As Lady Shelley was the friend and confident of many leading Eng- lish statesmen, her diary adds to thelr personal history and often re- veals the causes at work behind their rublic activity. It continues the life- like portrait of the Duke of Wellin, ton and gives delightful views of oth- er famous men, among them Sir Walter Scott, Lord Brougham itovert Beel, Palmerston, Gladstone and Lord Houghton, with a glimpse cf Green Victoria as a friend.”—A. L. Booklist. oo Trenchwoman’s notes on the war, by Claire De Pratz. PR Hawaii, scenes and impressions, T. Gerould. * Indian thought. past and present, by R. W. Frazer. “The hook is an excellent summary of Indian philosophical systems; but it is much more; it in view a practical and political end It re- veals how dependent practical life is apon lative thinking.”—Boston Transcript by K * * as spe xow o Music as “Takes ning, rhyme, a language, up the ight teaching of inging, time >ublisher’s Weekly. o % car- and Petrograd, past and present Steveni. “An intimate and gossipy narrative life and institutions in Russia by cne who entered the country at age of = ved there twenty-seven years The hook copiously and excellently illustrated Roston Transcript. “It has very little relation Tetrograd of the present confidently hope, tor. by W of for to the as we future. or, may of the roe o Roads (New Poetry series,) F. Norton. * by Grace Russia at the cro: Bechhofer -roads, by C. E. SAN'T FIND RIFE ! DANDS Every bit of dandruff disappears af- “ations of Dander- the scalp with 25-cent bottle ter one or two appli ine rubbed well into the finger tips. Get of Danderine at any drug store and save your hair. After a .few applica- tions you can’t find a particle of dan- druff or any falling hair and the scalp will never itch. PUT STOMACH IN ORDER AND STOP GAS INDIGESTION a “Pape’s Diapepsin” regulates ordered stomachs in five minutes dis- No more dyspepsia, sourness, heart- burn, pain, belc or acidit remain ch if psin ocea digestive harmless will digest and into the eat Nothing will sour on a little powerful though undigested or will take sionally. This and antacid, and pleasant prepare for all the food your s Diap tor you as si wlation blood ou can Bat what your out the slightest or that you will acidity or sour on stomach, from stomach, stomach eraves with- fear of indigestion b hothered with risings, belching, gas heartburn, heac nausea, bad breath, water brash or i feeling like vou had swallowed a lump of lead, or other disagreeable miserics. Should you be suffering now from any stom- ach disorder you can get relief within five minutes. If you will get cist a fifty-cent casc of vou could always with a hearty appetite, meals would taste good, because would know there would be no gestion or sleepless nights or ache or stomach misery all the day; an would not laxativ to keep stoma an and be ind to \ches vour pharma- Pape's Diapep- to the tahle and from your you indi- head- next need e besides, you liver pills and bowels Diapeps drug h or ur frosh. Pape’s obtained from your more overco tion or better cure a You in can 1ggist contains thoroushly of indi than sufficient e the we I8 dyspepsia. There is nothing for on the stomach to stomach headache couldn’t keep a ha is or ndier more uscful article in the house. Koren. | “Socialism’ and | Mac- | Red | kins have been gathered; a good thing | ” itors o | Stevenson man by Ethel Home. | the | of New Zealand, by R. H. !lnh‘hih.\(ll\. . Fi or, Peasley . % ion. The subjugation by P. B. Kyne. . Cappy Ricks; Matt of s % Kingdom of blind, P! penheim. “This latest Oppenheim novel deals with the present Buropean war, par- ticularly h the fight of the British | r office against the German Secret | e Publisher’s note 5 the by B. Op- it service, Multitud= and solitude, field. “The story construction of his life woman had been his chief piration was suddenly killed. He goes | to Africa with a friend to find a cure | sleeping sickne: The main in- | terest is the character of the man and | its growth under _terrible hardship, | yesponding to the Weautiful spirit of the woman he had loved.”—A. L. A. Booklist. by John Mase- writer’s after of a young who for P the Martin Kendall. “Here is a tale of which ture to say that nowhere literature has there more authentic sea story—one more 1stinct with the salty savor of the high seas.”—Publisher’s note. . on . Tomance of Oswald Connor, by we ven- in recent | been found a | . Triumph of Tim, by H. A. Vachell. i P storles of by J. Unfinished portraits, sicians and artists, Lee. mu- (B QOctober. (New York Sun). are days when everv I:\d should be in a cornfield, making | wigwam out of cornstack, :\‘Al sending field mice scampering. Pump- These a or there might be no decent pies, these frosty nights are hard upon Tt is no matter whether vou | walk or ride along the highways. In either case the keen air makes tobac- co as appetizing as those smokes that describes in “Travels With Donkey.” Like him you may sink | on pine carpeted woodland and inhale the balsam along with “as good a| cigarette as ever I remember. 1 for the | vine. cross by | for pro- Ger- not | base- | The winning of a military 3ill O’Hara, the old Giant, ficiency in hurling bombs into trenches on the Somme, is ccly to attract our plutocrat ball heroes to the firing line In Turope, but what deadly bomb throw- ers the Red Sox infielders would be! { —New York Sun, | forcing | monastery of | the construction of a wooden ve | of the walls of the | Huat* | tage, i rooms of When Royalty Dwelt In Cloistered Halls Washington, D. C., Oct. 26.—If the Austro-German army operating against the Rumanian forces in the vicinity of Kronstadt succeeds in its way southward through the Tomos pass, the first important objective of the invaders will be Sinaia, twelve miles within Rumanian borders, and the summer home of that country’s royal family. The Na- tional Geographic society, in a war geography bulletin issupd today, de- scribes this picturesqué and historic village as follows: “With its gabled and steep-roofed cottages perched upon numerous hill- and surrounded by the luxuri- | ant follage of many trees, the Ruman- - lian summer resort, Sinaia, closely re- sembles a “Fame fifty Swiss village. put her finger on S vears ago when the late harles (then Prince Charles) passed through the village on his way back to Bucharest after a visit to the baths of a Transylvania cit He was so fascinated by the charming location of the place that he stopped there for a short time in a restful old monas- tery on the north side of the valley of the Prahova river. This institu- tion had béen founded in the 17th century by Michael Cantacuzene and had been named for the celebrated Mt. Sinai in Arabia. “So delighted was the prince with the surroundings and the reception accorded him that he returned the next year, and after his marriage to Blizabeth of Wieq in 1869 he and his bride came to the monastery to scape the heat of Bucharest. Here too, the young couple brought their child, the Princess Marie, each sum- mer up to the time of her death from | scarlet fever in 1874, “The ercction of the ace of seventy rooms, naia King summer designed pal- by ! the prince himself, was begun in 1874 | mn was not completed until nine ears later, and all this time the roval ach summer occupied white- washed rooms in the ancient cloister, practically the only modification made for their accommodation heing nda apartments. Scveral monastery are to- day adorned with pictures painted by Princess Rlizabeth (affectionately known to the world as Carmen Sylva) during their summer sojourr “Deep in the woods of the palace grounds at Sinaia is the ‘Foresters’ a charmingly simple little in one of the second which Carmen Sylva most of her literary work, far the distraction of court life. Here she painted, composed songs and wrote vedses and dramas. Tt is des- tined to become one of the hallowed shrines of Rumania for this queen gave her whole life to the service of connecting their cot- stor: aid i from and her writ- entertain and® but aided in understanding of world is the which i her adopted subjects, ! ings not only served to instruct the Rumanians, an appreciation and the country by the “Overhanging peak known as its name from a legend erning the tallest of the three sand blocks to be seen on rock a man been | the outside Sinaia L'Omu a high derives tone be vaguely its summi resembles the form (Omu) * and is to I shepherd who became lost mountain during a severe storm., In his rage at the clements and hi own misfortune he uttered a blas phemous curse. Whercupon, as pun- ishment for his impiety, he was turn- ed into a stone and set upon the mountain as a perpetual warning tc mankind “Another unique same mountain mance of a poor unhappily fell in tiful daughter latter promised thetic ear to would prove dergoing a consented and he to spend an entire of the mountain cruelty of the command went first to the prayed before the { then, with a supply three cheeses in a the rocky heights, his dog, who, as in legends, a animal crude and snow | uldvnnyy was said a a th who tradition of th youn is peasant epherd with the beau master. The ymp: dea t by u love of his him to 1 his suit himself severe test end a prov worthy The shepherd forthwith told the to b t pherd h was winter Undaunted the monastery on he where sacred of ma and he ¢ accompanic all well re remarkably h stones imbed hag ulated wa faith ter dumt to isolated that the 1 IS, cold that these forced t C lower altitude ! ‘““At length fi month | over and th hepherd” iled the mountain fearful ooner she his begar for th w companion fall and he His only freezing danger. to of to from soon came so th the o ver brothers ger but | sea in ¢ lor the down did found roused search A they approsz faithful dog rushed them, but the shepherd pear. Finally, they and cold. He was lethargy by their aged to struggle to T he attempted to move toward h cuers he discovered that hi were p: ed, and he toppled the cra 1lling dead in the below “And if authenticity natives of Sins wi very where the youth there the incredulous will doubts dissipated, for a c the hallowed ground where fan shepherd died for of 1hsent it one the reet - stiff hi man when re limbs from valley red sumr to not him from shou ind feet, 1 is ut you a 11 this via re skeptic nd lead about the of the to the fell, and have all ross marks Ruman- of e one you spot love! OUR LOOM END SALE Opened this morning and the big crowd of buyers seemed much pleased and interest- ed in the extraordinary values offered them, as they well know that merchandise is advancing in price daily and not only that but hard to secure even at the advanced price. EXT LA L LINENS Bleached Tublo Damask, neat pat- Table (lol!l in square 89c value. 49 C Damasi, terns, 39¢ price .... Mercerized and round, sale price Cream Bleache il 79¢ value. yard ... Linen Bieached Damask, fine as- sorimeni of patterns. $1.00 $1.25 and value. Sale "~y yard Sand. 9c price, urkish Towels, good size, Bleached 12%c i5¢ value. Saie ln'i(-v Turkish Towels, each 21c value. Saie price, 15 (o Extra Large Heav *h ne atterns, Scarfs e ?5(: T:lhlv SRR R PR and’ Shams, 39¢ valuce. Sale Mercerized Cloth. He price Biankets and Quilts | White and gray Bed Blan- 9 kets. Sale price {oC Large size Bed Blankets, in white, tan and gray, M,TUH$1 .19 value. Sale price .. Heavy Bed Blankets in white and T worih $2. Sale $1 49 o Large size Wool Nap Bed Blankets, e 89225 $3.98 " Wool Blankets at white cot- Worth from $5 up! ton Sale $ 1 2 Full miortables, priccl e Extra héavy Crochet Bed Spreads, without fringes. with and Sule 2 00 Value. Curtains, lace edges, neat worth $1.50. 8 Salaiprico N BUENAE 9 C Curtain Scrim, neat patterns, 17¢ Lunch m Scrim terns, RA SPECIAL FOR TOMORROW—. 50c and 75¢ SILKS Silk Poplins in all the newest Fall colors, worth $1.00. Sale 79 price, yard .... Satin Messaline, beautiful shades, At DI R2 D 86 inch Taffeta Silk in black. $1.79 value. Sale price $1 25 5 o yard ... extra fine Satins, high cloth. $2.50 $ 1 .69 sale price, yd 30 inch Fancy Corduroy Suiting. $1.50 value. yard 36 inch grade value. Short ends of the best lining Silks and Satins at about half pric WASH GOODS White Waisting in 8C 1215¢ value. Sale p Heavy White Crepe Waisting, 36 inches wide, 35c¢ value, 19 [ Sale price, yard .. Novelty 21c 36 inch, fine Percale, best grade, worth 15c. .Sale price, 1 1C yard Liolc Fine Chambray and Ginghams, in plain and mneat patterns. 17c value. Sale price 121/2(: yard 36 stripes ce, yd. 36 inch fine imported Waistings, 40c value. ale price . ... Linen wide, finished Suiting, inches 19¢ value, i, 1 price 121/2c yard price, yard Window Shades 2% Extra heavy Bleached Sheeting, yards wide, best madec, 37 C 45¢ value. Sale price, yd . mneat Domet Flannel pat- 9c¢ neat patterns, Sale price, 10 Extra heavy Flannelettes, all new patterns, 1214c value. 1 0 Cc Sale price .... 11c An extra heavy large Bed Sheet, made of the best muslin, 75c worth $1. Sale price A lot of Cotton Goods Remnants half price. DRESS GOGDS 54 inch Wool Serges in all the lead- ing shades, $1.00 value, 75 rad C Sale price, 54 inch Tweed Suiting. $1 69 value. Sale price, yard C imported Ser, > $1.00 black and white 89c value, oL 1243¢ value. price Curtain Scrim, 15c value. yard Bleached Pillow Cases, 14¢ value. Sale price, each 50 fine value. yard ... inch $1.50 price, 54 inch niting, Sale price, check 86 inch French Serges, Iatest shades, Sale price, yard all wool, 59c¢ Extra fine wool Poplin, 42 inches $1.50 yard. Sale price, 98 C yard on ¢