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MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’'S SUITS Made of very fine worsted fabrics, all sizes, made to sell at $20, MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S SUITS All sizes, all styles; worth from $25 tc $30, ANNOUNCING $12. S0 1-4 ARROW AND IDE STIFF COLLARS 1 OC Each sizes, all styles Worth GRAND OPENING DAY BOYS’ KNICKERS 89c¢ $1.50 WHITE FLANNEL PANTS $5.50 Wortn $9.00 BOYS’ SUITS All wool, some have two pants _$6.50 Worth at least $9.00. Don’t Forget— SAME BUILDING silk lisle 4for$1 BE SURE AND $12.50 HUB CLOTHING CO. FREE SOUVENIRS MEN’S SOCKS COME EARLY —THE— ' $18.50 $18.50 SHIRTS Collar Attached FROM NOW ON WILL BE LOCATED AT 407 MAIN STREET — AT THE — HUB CLOTHING CO. 407 MAIN STREET Saturday, July 8th DOORS OPEN AT 9:00 o’Clock WHICH IS THREE DOORS NORTH OF OUR FORMER LOCATION ASK YOUR MANY FRIENDS who have visited our store during the Removal Sale about the many bargains we offered the buying public in the line of Men’s and Boys’ Clothing and Furnishings, and in order to make your acquaintance we are now offering the following: With Each $5.00 Purchase — GRAND OPENING DAY — WORK PANTS FREE SOUVENIRS Real Value $2.50 white, $ worth $2.50 MEN'’S SOCKS (Cotton) 1 1 c Pair 11 Pairs for $1.00 SAME BUILDING tan and stripe 1.45 MEN’S $1.50 $15.50 ‘GRENADINES Latest Style Neckwear 89c¢ All Patterns, worth $1.50 DRESS SHIRTS $1.00 Worth $2.00 MEN’S AND YOUNG MEN’S SUITS in Herringbones, Tweeds, Worsteds and Cassimeres; worth $22. 50, at "ur e g 1e ‘qig A[np ‘Aepanjeg AFRICAN CONGO HAS GOLDEN LURE AGAIN Party Visits Rainbow's End in Search of Nuggets ‘Washington, D. C., try nearly Texas which was founded by a com- mittee, provided king, now is.to be mined by a syndi- cate—such is Belgian Congo whither a group of New York business men are reported to have gone in search of a stream where golden pebbles may be scouped up by the handful “Seance leopold II turned wistful eyes toward the ‘black gold,’ or rub- ber, of the Congo country and Henry M. Stanley proved that white men could survive there, rainbow’'s end has RUTH HITS HARD WITH BASES FULL (Continued from FEighth Page) July 7—A coun- four times the size of frequently held feated Philadelphia in the first game | of the series 9 to 5. Tt was “Heimach Day,” and Camden, N. J, friends of the youthful pitcher presented him with a gold watch and other toke The score: CHICAGO ab, Johnson, #s. ........ 5 Mulligan, 3b Collins, 2b. . Hooper, rf. . Mostil, . 0 Hodge, p. ... 5loo PHIL ADF' Young, 2b. . Hauser, Walker, Perkins, c. Miller, cf. 4 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 Yarrison, p.’ b 1 > 1 1 1 1 rs o B PRIA N 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 ) *Batted for Heimach in fth Chicago ahn 103 Philadelphia 100 112 000 Two base hits, Collins 2, Mostil; home runs, Hauser, Sheely; stolen base, Mos Jeft on bases, Chicago 6, Philadelphia Dase on balls, ot Heimach 1, off Yarrison 1, oft Schupp 5, oft Hodge 1, struck out, by Heimach 2, by Yarrison 1, by By Hodge 3; hits, off Sciiupp 6 in 5 nings, off Hodge 1 in 4 innnge. off Heim- sch 9 in 6 innings, off Yarrison innings; winning pitcher, Schupp; pitcher, Heimach; umpires, Moriar Nallin; time, 2:04. E——————— 201—9 is what you want for your skin trouble —Resinol to stop the itching and burn- ing—Resinol to heal the eruption. Scratching makes it worse, besides being embarrassing and dangerous, but the smooth gentle ingredients of RESINOL OINTMENT often over- come the trouble promptly, even if it is severe and long-established. Bathin the affected part firg with RESINO SOAP hastens the Deneficial results. Resinol products at alNgruggrists pocket money for a" this land of the | pnhhr attention,” says a bulletin from ‘ the Washington, D. C., headquarters | |of the National Geographic society. | When Congo Stirred America. | “Once before rumors of gold, to-| gether with rumors of cruelty to na- | tives, sent the name ‘Congo’ Frhom:‘ around the world. The [U. § senate | discussed Congo Free State, as the | country then was known, and alleged | atrocities were deplored in churches and in meetings all over the Inno"] | States. “In the year America was celebrat- ing her independence centennial Bel- gium's young king helped form a so- ciety, along with other European gov- ernments and geographers, to explore Africa | After Stanley's expedition of the| following year a committes of this| society, continuing the work, devel-| oped into the International Associa- | tion of the Congo. This body sought | |to unite various territories in Central | Africa into a single state and obtain | [recognition as a political entity. The| I'nited States was the first to accord | this recognition, whereupon the Comj go Free State was born, in 1534 | Called ‘“Free State'; Was Neither. ' | “Actually the new political divi-| |slon, the largest in Africa except the | French Sahara, was neither a sgtate nor free. Tt was an association for | its governance which was recognized; '\rw] yrnpnlri 11, personally, not in h | of King of the Belgians, “‘r’!.“ nq rnh‘r Leopold bequeathed the territory to his conntry in his will } | “Before Leopold's death the con-| troversy over harsh treatment of t natives who were pressed into servi |as rubber gatherers became a topic of discussion all overd the civilized world. Missionaries and foreign con- | suls complained of the outrages Th;j system by which taxes were payable | only in rubber, and the practice of| holding women as hostages when guch | payment was not made, was liable lo‘ ahuse Consul Cazement Protests, “One especially severe criticism | _ signed by Consul Casement at| | Boma—later Sir Roger Casement,| who was hanged for conspiring | against the British in Ireland, Bel-| | glans averred that the agitation about | | those abuses suspiciously | elose upon reports of the discovery of lgold. While Leopold denied the | right of foreign powers to V\Vnr'fiv\@‘ in his rule of the Congo, he instituted | reforms Continued of relief were not applied followed assertion that measures |2 1 led to the| o cession of Congo Free State to Bel-|between gium in 1910 | “Belglan Congo 1s a bowl.like| s-crossed by rivers, polka- | hes, ribbed with rock, | throughout with the| The veritable jun- plateau, cri dotted by m and blanketed equatorial forest 5/gle of this wilderness surpasses any | Religions temperate zone dweller | forest’ forests, meaning the attaches to the word “Into these primeval ingstone wrote, ‘the sun, though ver-| tical, cannot penetrate, except by sending down at mid-day thin pencils into the gloom. The rain| water stands for months in stagnant s made by the feet of elephants The climbing plants, from the size of a whipcord to that of a man-of- | war's hawser, are so numerous, that the ancient path is the only pas-| | sage. | Wearied With Eternal Green. “More recent explorers have com- mented especially upon the dire de- pression which besets the white man | when he traverses this forest ‘You are hemmed in by thickets which pre- vent you from penetrating the green depths on either side, and on gazing |upwards, the dense capony of foliage overhead forbids an untrammelled | view of the heavens to the eyes 60| wearied with eternal green’ “Hemmed in thus animal life is |scarcely discernible, but monkeys | break the silence with their chatter, | butterfiies of infinite variety and | color flutter about the occasional open | places, and conquering hordes of in- sects hold undisputed sway. Here Ithe ants abound. White ones build | curious structures against the trunks | of trees. Others patiently carry the| | earth, bit by bit, to the treétops to | fashion strange houses that often | suggest some weird animal about to spring upon his prey. “Forming the northwestern bound- ary of the territory is the great Congo river, sometimes spreading out to five miles wide. Unfortunately for its IV\- |and after nine days there it was con- My Jack, You Look Sporty! Would you recognize him? Tt's General John J. Pershing in ice cream trousers and dark coat. One has to wear ’em at Atlan- [ tic (|tv you know. With the general is his sister, Miss Mary - RI0 GRANDE HANDS OUT BIG SURPRISE Generally Placid Stream Over- flows and Causes Damage commercial value this river bhreaks into a series of falls when it pierces through the Crystal mountains from the great central plateau of -\nm to the Atlantic. These rapids ex- tend for nearly 200 murs vmm \11v adi to Leopoldville this barrier a railroad was cons lru:' ed from Matadi to Stanley Pool. “Few more than ple live in the Belgian Congo mates of the native population range ten and twenty millions These natives, for the most part, either of the Bantu race or pygmies s (¢! FASTS 53 DAYS 5,000 white y.r-fl, are| Washington, July 7.—-“The Rio de river, between Texas and Mex- which has been giving an all too realistic imitation of the Mississippl . on a rampage, is normally so shallow WIthout ;14 luggish that immigration agents and customs officers are kept busy shooing' back Mexicans who wolld eénter the United States by the simple and informal proceduré of wading in,” says a bulletin from the Washington, . €., headquarters of ghe National Geographic society in regard to the Fecentrie Goes Eats for Long Time as Example Slade, Ky., July 7.—Fifty-three davs |of fasting fla.s credited to William Rice, a religious eccentric of Nada, near here, yesterday. Rice declared he was told in a vision that he must show his neighbors they must sacrifice to be redeemed. The tast began when Country's lates flood region. Rice was confined in jail for vagrancy, It is hard,” continues the bulle- tin, “for the Mexico-bound traveler to realize under normal conditions that the ribbon of water meanderipng through a broad bed of sand is the stream that in Spanish means ‘The Great River! But once a year at tinued at his home. Rice's fast has attracted widespread attention in this part of Kentucky His condition is described as very weak, but he is able to walk. A STRENGTH- .BUILDING VITAMINE-FOOD Summer’s heat often is more strength-sapping than winter’s cold. The body needs an easily absorbed, vitalizing nutrient, that places no burden upon digestion but does yield refreshment and strength. SCOTTS EMULSION OF PUREST VITAMINE-BEARING COD-LIVER OIL may be take_n with strengthening benefit any day. Its abundantly rich vitamine- nourishing properties are exceptionally helpful to children or adults who are rundown in vitality. Scott’s Emulsion has rich food-tonic properties that promon growth and build strength. Buy Scott’s Emulsion today—take it regularly! Scott & Bowne, Bloomfield, N. J. 2-12 |of beef cattle among the feathery #éa | |carloads of watermelons, canteloupes, |country |fired |fired on the banks of the lawer Rio least, and sometimes oftener, the Rio Grande fully lives up to its name. “The loam banks of the lower Rio Grande and its broad, fertile valley, covered with a heavy growth of the| thorny mesquite—half shrub and half | tree—was long considered a wilder- ness and given over to deer, wild pigs, | armadillos and jack rabbits. Then came ranchmen to graze great herds of green Large areas somewhat re- moved from the river are still }:uon‘ over to cattle raising. New San Joaquin Valley. “But near the stream pumping sta- tions and irrigation canals have come | into existence in recent years, and each spring and summer thousands of onions, cabbage and other vegetables steam north from the region to help feed the more northern portions of the For this region, near the| warm Gulf of Mexico and barely out- side the tropics, competes with Flor- ida and the Imperial Valley in pro- ducing early crops. “Still more recently another de- velopment has taken place which promises to make the Rio Grande a second San Joaquin Valley. Between a million-and-a-half and two million citrus fruit trees have been planted, and in the winter of 1921-22 the first carloads of oranges and grapefruff were shipped out. “‘Historically the Rio Grande has| held a promnient place. It was one of the chief land-marks in the fam- ous expeditions of the Spanish explor- ers who pushed up into Texas and on to New Mexico and California four centuries ago. Later it became a sort| of Southern Concord: for if the shot in Massachusetts in April 1775 was ‘heard round the world,’ a shot Grande on another April morning 71 vears later by General Zachary Tay- lor's soldiers might be said to have been heard over an area of half a million square miles. That area was added to the T'nited States as a re- sult of the shot; for it brough on the Mexican war which resulted in the annexation of what is now California, jconfirmation \Prime Rib Roast of Nevada, Utah, Arizona and parts of New Mexico, Colorado and Wyoming. ’Vtha Rio Grande, came ito newspaper In addition this skirmish near the mouth of the Rio Grande led to the of the annexation of Texas which had brought an addition- al quarter million square miles under the American flag. “Part of the region lately inundat- ed was known to thousands of dough- boys during the mobllization along the Mexican border shortly before he United States entered the world war. Port Isabel, almost at the mouth of Specialfor Saturday Legs of Genuine Spring Lamb .... ..Lb. 38¢ Beef ....... Lb. 35¢ Native Roast of Veal Chicken, Steaks and Chops All Meats at Reduced Prices Jones Quality — Market — 10 MYRTLE ST Free Delivery - Tel. 285 fame in the fall of 1920 when Sena- tor Harding, having just finished the strenuous campaign which took him to the White House, went there for big game fishing.” Bargains —in— White Oxfords — and — Pumps Broken Lots If you have waited until now to buy you can save money here. MISSES’ and CHILDREN’S SHOES and HOSIERY —— MEN'’S SHOES ~The - W. G. Simmons Corp. 85 WEST MAIN ST. SUMMER FURNITURE How often have you passed a home and have envied the pretty porch furniture and the comfortable “homy-like” atmosphere prevailing there? A bare or uncomfortable looking piazza is never desired and is rarely occupied. Between the two porches there is a world* of difference in the looks, but when it comes to the actual cost the difference isn’t so much after all. Why not make your home a better place to live? Ask about it. C. C. FULLER COMPANY 40-56 FORD STREET HARTFORD