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JULY CLEARANCE SALE OF OUR ENTIRE STOCK — WOMEN’S SPORT OXFORDS Black and Tan Trim Values to $3.00 $1.69 WOMEN'S PATENT PUMPS Cut Outs or Plain Values up to $6.00 $4.19 Special Lot of Men's Brown and Black HIGH LACE SHOES Values up to $6.00 $2.95 White with Patent Trim WOMEN'S CHILDREN’S SPORT PUMPS in all sizes $2.00 Value $1.00 $5.00 Value $3.29 PLAY OXFORDS and BAREFOOT SANDALS WOMEN'’S WHITE CANVAS 1 STRAP PUMPS Values up to $3.00 SATURDAY SPECIAL WOMEN’S SANDALS Smoke, Patent and White $4.00 Value WOMEN'S BLACK AND BROWN 1 STRAP KID PUMPS $4.00 Value BOYS’ HIGH BLACK LACE SHOES Values up to $4.00 $1.69 . We Lead in Values Next to the Fair 193 MAIN ST. tion, and resemble the clothes worn'by moth and age. The garments are by Dante in the published pictures of now in Copenhagen and deposited in the Itallan poet. They are not yet the Danish collection in the Museum open to public view; but may be ex-| housed in the Prinsen's palace. hibited at some future date. Dr. Noerlund has found also several These interesting finds were made old wooden crosses in the frozen Men'’s Costumes of 13th and 14th Cm-ihy Dr. Noerlund, a Danish sclentist,|earth. They are covered with in- | while- excavating in ancient burial scriptions in the Gothic rune script, turies Found in Greenland; Con- |g.ounds in the southwestern part of‘undr are considered by scientists ’to Greenland. They are the only exist- be of great historic value. RIES OLD IS DISCOVERED Phillp moves; vexation vanishes, lll-'emverrd!terulmng story ‘'of various celebrities people begin to chuckle in spite of themselves, everybody crowds about him t6 be entertained. So it must hap- pen; and it is not surprising if such a visitor as this has found many nice things to say to us."—Times (Lon- |don, Ifit. Sup. cept one’'s own pleasure.” New Books at |- "~"Fi ) CHRISTIAN WORK AS A VACA- the Institute TION by H. H. Tweedy & Others. BLOCKING OF ZEEBRUGGE by years and of his own interesting |career. Monsignor Drew is the author | of several readable novels. | | P ’ PENQUIN PERSONS AND PEPPER- | MINTS by Walter Prichard, Eaton. | “This little book is intended for the young man who is thinking of some form of Christian service as a life work. It describes the nature and Captain A. F. B. Carpenter. “The book describes the most bril- lant and difficult naval exploit dur- ing the Great War undertaken to bot- tle up the German submarines in their bases.” LR BOOKS AND CHARACTERS, French and English by Lytton Strachey. “To read ‘Books and Characters’ is to come again into contact with, and 60 to get a fresh sense of Mr. Stra- chey's many-sided talenf. It leaves me thankful that he has been such a great reader of letters and memoirs and ‘pure literature,’ as I believe we still say, and convinced that one of the best preparations for writing dbout books and characters not con- temporary is to have done one's read- | opportunities of such service in the ministry in the mission fleld, and in the Young Men's Christian Associa- tion. ... CIVIC SCIENCE'IN THE COMMUNI- TY by George William Hunter and Walter G. Whitman. v e e MORE BEETLES by Jean Casimir Fibre. ) P MY DISCOVERY OF ENGLAND by Stephen Leacock. ““When an explorer so gay and good humoured as Professor Leacock lands at Liverpool for the discovery of Eng- land, can we rightly plume ourselves if his impressions are agreeable? No- body, we must think, could be churlish Henr{ ing, as Mr. Strachey appears to have | with such a man. A ripple of laughter almost all of his, with no object ex- spreads round him wherever he OUR UNCONSCIOUS MIND AND| HOW TO USE IT by Frederick| Pierce. | “An explanation in plain untechni- cal language ‘of the relation which the unconscious mind bears ta the con- scious, and of the practical applica-| tions which can be made of this knowledge of the control and opera- |tion of the will, in creating energy, | |in eliminating worry, in educanng[ children, in getting more done in business, in making a contented; human group industrially and politi-! cally, in replacing personal opinion| with exact knowledge, in merchan-| dising, advertising and selling."” Ayscough, pseud. - Here, under his pen name, Mon- | signor Bickerstaffe Drew, gives an en- —TIRE SALE— Kelly-Springfield and Hewitt Tires NOTE PRICES ON GOODYEAR CROSS RIB CORDS SATURDAY AND SUNDAY ONLY We Must Turn Over Our Entire Stock in That Time HEWITT FABRIC 30x3 xdiei .00 CORD 30x3% .............. $13.50 30x3 ... $9.00 30x3% .. KELLY-SPRINGFIELD FABRIC .. $8.50 ... $9.50 CORD . $13.50 KELLY SPRINGFIELD AND HEWITT CORDS 32x2% 31x4 32x4 33x4 34x4 32x4% 33x4% 34x4% 35x4% 36x4% 33x5 35x5 37x5 30x3% 32 x 3% 31x4 32x4 33x4 34 x4 32 x 4% | 33 x 4% 34 x4% $19,00 $21.00 $24.50 $25.50 $26.50 $31.00 $32.00 $33.00 $34.00 . $35.00 . $38.00 | . $39.00 $41.50 GOODYEAR CROSS RIB CORDS . $13.50 $19.75 $23.50 $25.45 $26.80 $21.35 $31.45 $32.15 $32.95 CALL AND INSPECT OUR VULCANIZING DEPT. Goodyear Factory Tire Expert In Charge of Our Vulcanizing Dept. S-K Tire & Vulcanizing Co. NEAR POST OFFICE WEST MAIN STREET ‘ PHONE 1721 PAGES FROM THE PAST by John' |triguing situation, a lis ready to bring forward the guilty i MORTAL “The author has the power of pick- ing up from the tame daily routine of business and pleasure significant “little observations and comments, and | tumes of the 13th and 14th centuries setting have been found in Greenland. They Or 4| are in an excellent state of preserva- he has also the power of these forth in eight hundred thousand words, which seem less in| number because they are exact and| because they are flavored with a dash i of personality.” Literary Review. e e A POLITICAL HISTORY OF MOD- ERN EUROPE from the Re-| formation to the Present Day| by Ferdinand Schevill “Anexcellent text that is also in- teresting to the general reader.” e o A STUDENT'S PHILOSOPHY OF RELIGION, by William Kelley| Wright. i “A boek aiming ‘to furnish col- lege undergraduates and general read- jers with the necessary data—facts and arguments on which they will be able to work out their own philosophy of reMgion.’ Truly an ambitious pro- gram which is carried out in !eadablei fashion by a man who shows him- 'selt competent in summarizing and interpreting other men's ideas.”—Na- tion. ; s s TERRIBLY INTIMATE PORTRAITS | by Noel Coward. “Burlesques by the young Englith dramatist of old-time and present-day prominent figures of France, England | and America.” | i .o |{TOWN GARDENING, by Harpden. . “A delightful book whic! covers Erglish conditions but can be used here where climate does not inter- fere. Suggestions for plantings are| original in design and combinations.” —A. L. A. Bookl s |THE TRAINING OF A SECRETARY, : by Arthur L. Church. | “This book is thoroughly practi- |cal.'—Springfield Republican. ‘e sy {WAITING FOR DAYLIGHT, by H. M. | Tomlinson. “Something between a.diary and a !\'c!ume of essays where recollections of war-time London jostle reflections ion ‘Bookworms’ on ‘Figureheads’ and on ‘Ruskin’ all written in a style of distinction and charm.”—A. L. A. Booklist. Mary .o | iWHY THE BLUES? by Harvey Kel- logg. f This is a popular manual of hy- glene by the well known Battle Creek | physician. | 5 . . }VV!LTSH!RE ESSAYS, by Maurice Hewlett. ] call these chapters Wiltshire Es- because they were all written | { my country, and many of them| lare directly concerned with it. Some deal with the doings of my neigh- |bors as I view them from here; some deal with literature as I think about it here® Mr. Hewlett's preface is| !“On Oneself ] cen Fiction. M BENNETT MALIN, by E Singmaster. “A novel in which three genera- tions of Mali bound by inheri- itance and the same ambition are| woven together.” e o MARKENMORE MYSTERY, by J. S: Fletcher. ! ¢ TR MIDNIGHT. by Octavus R. Cohen. “Mr. Cohen creates a most | 4 keeps the in. wulated until he} in terest thoroughly the | person. The story l& among brightest of its type P Aldous Huxley. COILS, by satirical short “Five humorously stories.” | “ e THE PARLOR BEGAT AMOS, by Ar- thur §. Hildebrand “The book is a cleverly written, often penetrating study of a small| town life, as well as of a certain fa-| miliar type of character. Th-npenph in the book are clearly drawn o SECRET VICTORY, by Stephen Mec- a “T‘::n::nrv s the third in the tril- ogy the “Sensationalists’’ We meet here the same group of people whose chief aim fn life s to find new sen- sations, ‘always plaving a part and pulling up their psychology by the roots o see how it was growing. e SOUL OF A CHILD. by Fdwin Biork- man “An analytical study the thoughts and emotions of a small boy from his fifth to his 15th year. The| book is well written, ‘and the people and events it describes are all of them natural enough. The material .is handled deftly, in a discreet and clev- erly manner, and to those especially interested in its subject the book will| no doubt prove valuable and enter-| taining.” . | of sidered Important by Scientists Copenhagen, July 21.—Men's cos- 14th centuries. Sage, Allen ing specimens in the world of | ments worn by men in the 13th and, Being deposited gar- —_— In the royal household of England Co., Inc. HARTFORD, CONN. Rare Summer Values In Misses’ and Women’s Garments Two Specials In Suits MISSES’ TRICOTINE SUITS $7.50 Broken sizes of misses’ tricotine sults, models, reduced for Saturday to $7.50 FINE QUALITY —%$4 flare VARIOUS SUITS AT $12.75 Good looking suits of trelaine and Scotch tweed; colors, brown, henna, copen, etc. Big value at $12.75. JERSEY COATS .65 — HANDSOME STYLES Black, navy, brown, green, red, tangerine, gold, ete. Separate Skirts $3.95 Especially good skirts for vacation wear. Wool or silk. Exceptional value. Bathing Suits WE ARE EXCLUSIVE AGENTS IN HART- FORD FOR THE POPULAR ANNETITE KELLER- MAN BEACH ATTIRE. Special for Saturday in black surf satin bathing suits, $2.33. TWO SPECIALS IN WAISTS Jap Silk Blouses $2.95 Very attractive waists of Jap silk in white only. Two models, V neck or Eton collar. Ideal summer waist. Georgette Waists $3.95 No better showing anywhere of the ever popu- lar Georgette waists. Our special is a waist with frill and lace trimming. Flesh or white. AT THE INFANTS SECTION Infan Some embroidered children. ' and pantie dresses some lace trimmed, others with For infants in sizes 6 months up to two years. Dresses of nainsook. hamburg. And pantie dresses of gingham for older All these pretty little garments are priced—88c. Beach leg rompers of pink or blue poplin at—30c. IMPORTANT SALE OF SUMMER UNDERMUSLINS—GOWNS At $1.19—Home Made Gowns of heavy m strap shoulder, also short sleeve style, finished with hamburg edge At $1.00—Willow loom Gowns, lace trimmed, also round neck edged with convent edge embroid- ery. At $1.00—~Home made soft sheer batiste Chem- jee trimmed with the prettiest of laces, also hem- stitched, and lace trimmed At 812 for good models; At 89c—Marcella Drawers, small lots, hamburg trimmed; regular sizes $dc. $1.19. At 88c—Step-in Bloomers of soft batiste, lace trimmed —Home made Envelope Chemise, noted tailored or lace trimmed strap or built-up shoulders. workmanship; lace or Extra sizes— MARCELLA DRAWER COMBINATIONS AT ABOUT ONE-HALF PRICE These popular garments, of fine materials, 200 garments a!l to be enld at greatly reduced prices lace or hamburg trimmed Regular and extra $3.95, $4.50 and $6.95 About They were A For this clearance we shall sell them in three groups at—$1.95, $2.95, $3.95. TWO GOOD SPECIALS AT THE CORSET SECTION Gossard Corsets $2.00 Gossard front-lace corsets for which ®e are sole agents in Hartford. Models for small and medium figures. Priced only $2. Other styles up to $15. SATURDAY SALE 8-quart Preserving Kettle, regular price, $2.15, special i e price $2.35, special e i a% . 6-quart convex Kettle with cover, regular 2-quart double Boiler, reg. price $2.75, special $1.98 2.quart Saucepan, reg. price $1.30, special 85¢ 6-inch Fry Pan ves 49¢ $1.49 $1.29 Net Brassieres $1.50 Double mesh net garter brassieres with garters front and back. Sizee 34 to 40. Especially fine for all sports wear. At 8$1.50 and also $2.00. OF HOUSEWARES 6-quart Preserving Kettle, reg. price $1.75, special b Y f-inch Fry Pan, reg price $1.20, special. 1 1-2 quart Stew Pan 2-quart lipped Sauce Pan, reg. price 75¢ 2-quart Pudding Pan, reg. price 85c, epecial Sink Strainers, rég. price $1, special $1.45 5¢ 48¢ 55¢ 49c 8k¢ in|a candle once extinguished may never the frozen earth for about 600 years| again be relighted within the precincts | has preserved them from destruction|of the palace.