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DESTROYER SINKS, 10 DROWN. Lopdon, Sept. 26 (By Assoclated Press).——The Britlsh torpedo hoat Speedy sank early yesterday in the Bea of Marmora as the result of a col- lision with a Dutch trawler, says a Reuter's dispatch from Constantino- ple. Ten of the destroyer's crew drowned and 87 saved. The Speedy sank minutes. were within seven YOURPALS! When a man likes his clothes, he gets real chum- my with them. Haven't you always noticed that? He’s proud of the style— the fit just suits him—and he’'s sure of the wearing quality of the material. All these virtues make a pal out of the clothes that we tailor. Ask any man to whom we have given sat- isfaction with our strictly hand-tailored garments. Will you be one of the men for whom we're going to make a chummy fall’ suit or topcoat? Ye London Shop TAILORS FOR THE SMART DRESSER MAIN STREET at ELM Call 585-3 for THE VALZST —for CLEANING PRESSING REPAIRING CARRIAGE BUILDERS INVADE NEW YORK Filth Annual Convention Will Be Held on October 9 Cineinnati, O, Sept. 26 (By the Assoclated Press)—There 1is a busi- ness as well as a sentimental reason for holding the fiftieth annual con- vention of the Carriage Builders Na- tlonal Assoclation, oldest [n#ustrial organization in America, in New York city, October 9 to 13, says George W. Huston, of Cincinnati, secretary and treasurer. Aceording to Secretary Huston, it is fitting that the golden jubilee an- niversary be observed in the metro- polis, where the C. B. N. A. 'was born; and it will be a good buiness stroke to show the nation's first city that the carrlage trade {s far from being “a dead one." Buggy nus!noss On “The popularity of the automobile hasn't kept the buggy business from prospering,” Mr. Huston explains. “Buggies are still largely’used in the rural districts. Down south it will always be the favorite conveyance, We also do a large business with South America, where buckboard wa- gons can go over mountain roads im- possable to autos “Wise farmers keep huggies, in ad- dition to automobiles for use in in- clement weather and on bad roads." Officers of the Carriage Builders' National assoclation are P. E. Ebrenz of St. Louis, president; George W Huston; Cincinnati, secretary-treasur- er; vice-president, W. I.. Delker, Hen- derson, Ky,; W. C. Heitzman, [nion City, Ind.; W. G. Norman, Griffin, Ga.; J. H. Birch, Jr, Burlington, N. J, B. F. Taylor, Oxford, N. (".; T. J. Me- Namera, Cincinnati; T. M. Robinson, Nashville, Tenn,, and L. R. Jones, Franklin, Va A feature will be an exhibit by the accessories trade. “We expect the largest attendance in the history of the organization,” says Secretary Huston “The novelty of holding a buggy convention in the stronghold of the motor car, the subway and the ‘L' appeals to many. ‘We are contemplating a horse and buggy parade down Fifth avenue." BORAH TO URGE AMNESTY. He Will Speak at Chicago Meeting Organized by Council of Churches. ‘Washington, Sept. 25--Senator Wil- lfam E. Borah of Idaho has consented to address a mass meeting in Chicago next Thursday in behalf of the reiease of prisoners convicted of war-time of- fenses, according to an announcement made here yesterday, The mass meet- ing, it was said, will be under the auspices of the federal council of DYED A SWEATER AND SKIRT WITH “DIAMOND DYES"” Fvery “Diamond Dyes" pnrkl(' tells how to dye or tint any worn, faded garment or drapery a new rich color that will not streak, spot, fade, or run, Perfect home dyeing is guar- anteed with Diamond Dyes even {f you have never dyed before, Just tell your druggist whether the ma- terial you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. For fifty-one years millions of women have been using “Diamond Dyes" to add years of wear to their old, shabby waists, skirts, dresses, coats, sweaters, stockings, draperles, hangings; everything! e ———— churches of Christ in America, and other chureh, labor and civics organi- zations The announcement was made by the joint amnesty committee, an or- ganization which is agitating for the release of these prisoners. Its state ment contains the following: “Interest in the forthcoming meet- ing has been greatly increased by the news that has fust leaked out here of the recent release of another notori- ous German agent and dynamiter, the sinister Captain Robert Fay, who at- tempted to blow up a munition ship in New York harhor in 1916, and broke jafl and was at large for over a year after his incarceration He was recently freed and permitted to slip out of the country at a time when the attorney general was telling in- quirers that he was too busy because of the industrial troubles to consider any of the political cases. Virtually all the German spies and agents have now heen freed. REJOICING 1 Near Easterners There Parade Celebrate Turk Victory. Moscow, Sept. 25 (By Assoclated Press).—In a celebration yesterday of the Turkish victories over the Greeks several thousand Tartars, Mussul- mans and other Near Easterners resi- dent in Moscow paraded the streets with bands of music and carrying banners inscribed, “Down with the Sevres treaty” and similar quotations. The paraders assembled before foreign office, where they were greet. ed by government representatives. Several of their leaders mounted boxes and thanked the Soviets for moral support in the struggle fo! Turkish independence. The speakers declared that the Sevres had been pierced by the Turkish revolution- aries. The demonstrators visited the head- quarters of the Third Internationnle, where they were greeted by Soviet of- ficials. fOSCOW. to SEE —Man From Factory Here At Our RANGE SALE MR. WALTER J. COOKSON, an expert from ther Fuller and Warren factory, Troy, N. Y., will be here tomorrow, Tuesday and will be glad to show and tell you about the STEWART Coal and Gas Ranges. COME and meet Mr. Cookson; hear him tell how STEWART Ranges are made and fin- ished, how they operate, and exactly why they are the hest ranges for you to buy. Have him tell you about the new GAS-COAL WATER HEATER, just invented. Sale Includes This NEWEST Range—THE COLANGAS STEWART--2-n-1-OVEN Range HERE is a combination Coal and Gas Range that—with It is the results of many years It is very attractive in appearance and compact in design, being SAME: OVEN for Coal and menting and testing. for Gas. complete success—uses the of study, experi- only 41 inches wide, yet having spacious oven and cooking facilities. J. LEROUX ————— —— PALACE Giving Great Satisfaction IN every home where this it is giving perfect service and com- stalled, plete satisfaction. fuel to the other. finest TWO-IN-ONE OVEN or bake with coal or with gas. pull or push on lever changes oven from one range has been in- ready to cook Just an easy It is always It is, we believe, the very RANGES MADE. SALE PRICE LOW TERMS EASY 174 Arch St the | |as the “try for point.” | Texas at Dallas; iNotre COLLEGES PREPARE FOOTBALL SEASON Great Strides Taken in Gahie This Year as New Rules Prevail New York, Sept. 26 ~This will be 4 holocaust.year on the gridiron After the great strides that ball, tke most popular of college spoits: and rival of baseball in the public’s highest regard, has made in the last few years it sounds bromidic to say that the coming season will he the greatest In the game's history, Yet that's the fact. The season won't start 'ny earlier, nor is there likelthood of it extend- ing past New Year's—the day of the usual carnival game at Los Angeles— but it will be stuffed and choked from the first kick-off September 23 with the ingredients that bring hun- dreds of thousands away from warm firesides to freeze in cold blasts Opponents of the inter-sectional idea who have contended that the game was growing beyond bounds and becoming the god before whiah €ducation was being sacrificed get small comfort from a perusal of the schedules. At least 40 games will be held that it will take at least a night on the sleeper for one of the oppos- ing teams to gach Contests Start On the five Baturdays beginning with October 7 there will be at least slx or seven . intersectional contests, scattered all over the country. Kan- sas is coming to West Point, Georgia Tech and Princeton are going to Chi- cago, the “Praying Colonels” from Center college, Danville, Ky, are scheduled at Harvard, Nebraska has a date with Syracuse, Notre Dame will tussel with Army at West Point, Ala- bama will scrimmage with Pennsyl- vania at Philadelphja——just to pick a few at random. The season of 1922 marks further loosening of the monopoly that the east once had on the hig contests There are not only more games scheduled than ever before but there are more inter-sectional contests, and | intra-sectional matches of genuine importance than the pigskin dreamed of when it was more of a pig than a skin and could dream. Yale and Harvard both sald last fall that they would mot tread in the | path of Princeton and invade the | Western conference. Just the same the schedules shows that two weeks before the Tiger is clawing around at the university of Chicago, the Bull Dog will be snarling in Iowa. Harvard apparently s satisfled | with entertaining the team from the | Blue Grass state. Army-Navy Games. New York city loses its gridiron pic- ture play. The Army and Navy game previously held at the Polo Grounds| will be staged in the reconstructed | Franklin field of the University of| Pennsylvania at Philadelphia. In.| half is out for the remainder of the | al Saturday, the same day as the Yale- Harvard game. There will be several revivals of | lf(ro(bull relations between institutions| that permitted their historic gridiron enmity to lapse. Notably among| these are Harvard and Dartmouth. | One radical change in the rules| will make the game a bit differgnt. | Instead of being confinedsto trying for | goal after a touchdown by a kick from placement the scoring eleven will be given the option of placing the ball anywhere beyond the five yard line with the privilege of putting it into play in scrimmage-—a line plunge | or end run, by passing, or by kicking a field goal. The ball must be put over with one try to get a point score The new play will be known foot- lof one. A foul by the defending team when the “try for point” i{s being made au- |tomatically gives the attackers the advantage, and if the attacking team fouls its attempt is vitiated. { A player taken out in the first half |cannot return until the second half |and a player taken out in the second The more important, but not all, of | | contest. Games Scheduled, ton; University of eGorgia vs. Chicago the intersectional games scheduled for the season which opens today are as follows: September 30: Cincinnati ve, burgh at Cincinnati. | October 7: Pennsylvania Uni- |versity of the South at Philadelphia; Army vs. Kansas at West Point;| Washington vs. Montana at Seattle; Yale vs. North Carolina at New Ha- ven; Princeton vs. Virginia at Prince- | ton; University of George vs. Chicago at Chicago. October 14: Cincinnati vs. George- town at Washington; Pennsylvania vs. | Maryland at Philadelphia; Army vs Alabama Polytechnic at West Point; Arizona vs. Southern California at| Los Angeles; Vanderbilt vs. Michigan | at Nashville; Wisconsin +s. South | Dakota State at Madison; Yale | Iowa at New Haven. October 21: Detroit vs. Boston col- | lege at Detroit; Fordham vs Géorgm: town at New York; Center vs. Har- vard at Cambridge: Missouri vs. Ne- |braska at Lincoln; Princeton vs Maryland at Pvinceton; Vanderbilt vs Navy s, Georgia Pitts- Vs, Tech at Annapolis October 28: Georgla Tech ve. Notre Dame at Atlanta; JTowa State vs Washington at Ames; Oberlin vs. Am- herst at Oberlin; Springfield vs. De-| troit at Springfield: Texas vs. Ala- bama at Austin: Chicago vs. Prince- ton at Chicago November 4: West Virginia vs. Cin- cinnati at Cincinnati; Harvard vs.| Florida at Boston; Pennsylvania ‘s | Alabama at Philadelphia; Nebraska | vs. Syracuse at Syracuse. November 7: Rutgers vs. State at New York November 11: Syracuse vs. McGill | university at Byracuse: Army Dame at West Point; Yale V.| Maryland at New Haven | November 25: Washington and Jef-| Louisiana Starting The Great Amencan Next Sunday Dr “HAIL THE WOMAN” | State vs. | many BOSTON STORE DONNELLY MULL EN CO. these Blankets at Extremely Low Prices. Famous Beacon Crib Blankets Teddy Bear pattern Plaid Blankets $2.98 $9.00 Grey Wool Blankets Pink and blue $6.49 borders. Sale $10 All Wool Cali- fornia Blankets Plaid, hand- some design Large double bed size. Sale Detroit at Detroit; Iowa Nebraska at Lincoln Vermont Vs, Notre ferson vs. Detroit Dame November 30: at Detroit; Nebraska vs at Lincoln. A PRAYING CANDIDATE Mrs. Anna Olsen. Nominee For Sen- ate on Democratic Plank, Starts With Sermon and $30. st dollars with which Mrs Cloquet, Minn., Paul, Minn., Sept Thirty and a prayer were Anna D democratic nominee for the United States senate, started her campaign for the natorship “Thirty dollars was all I had,” she | declares, “and I didn’t know how long that would buy gasoline for the small automobile kind me “But now, of weeks, after a I know 1 have enough to ‘carry on,' for a ery hand I have met witl recep tions that my faith is complete When Mrs. Olesen completes a ¢ aign address, the chairman of or sometimes it is a wom- | campaigr always sha ev- such N the gathering an presiding—announces to the audi- a ence that the candidate is without funds, but seeks only enough contri- | butions to meet pressing expenses friends had given s Extra Value White Wool Blankets $6.49™ An outstanding value, 1007 wool filling, heavy quality, size 70x80, white with pink and blue borders. Sale $6.49 Pair. $7.50 Plaid Blankets Double Bed $4:98 size.. ... Pair SALE of BLANKETS TUESDAY MORNING Just received ten cases of High Grade Blankets. make room for Alterations going on in the store we have marked In order to 200 Large Size Plaid Blankets excellent value Famous Beacon Indian Blankets 50 patterns to $4 98 choose from. Beacon Traveling Rugs e posterns $4.50 $15 Plaid Blankets Made of the finest stock, e rair $9.98 EXTRA SPECIAL 72x90 Pequot $l .39 Sheets .. Sale Then a hat—a man’s hat—is plac- ed on the ground or on a chair front of the speaker, and the chair- man invites those who are “for Mrs, Olesen” to give “their bit." EX-KAISER FEELS FREE Tormer Emperor William Now Does Not Fear Gaze of Curious Public and Walks About Yards, Doorn, Holland, Sept Since the the Prussian Count Von lismissal of former from the royal house- hold here, William has begun to lead 1 much freer existence, and he no longer appears to fear the gaze of the public. Count Von Gonthard was a rong advocate of the strictest seclu- Gonthard, court marshal sior office the hesitate to view of He clips former emperor does not work in his garden in full sers-by. and trims fir-trees within a few feet of the footpath which en- rounds, and with only a between him and the pub ks incessantly of forestry care of trees. The former lord is having the dense woods which surround the park thinned out land he is himself taking an active W. S.Quinby Company “and it tastes Just as good JaTouraine (offee in | Emperor William's | n. but now that he is no longer in Special Demonstration of the CLING BLADE SCISSORS Removable Blades, designed on the idea of the safety razor. Including extra pair of blades ............... .$1.00 part in the work. He looks cheerful and healthy. CHRISTIAN CLUB PLANS First Steps In Organizing New Asso« ciation Will Be Taken in Kansas, Ovctober 21. } | 1 | | Kansas City, Mo. Sept. 25.—~First steps in the organization of a nation- wide federation of Christian business clubs will be taken at a meeting to | be held at Unity Farm, near here, Oc- |tober 21 and when representatives from almost all sections of the coune try will be present The completion of such a federation is expected to be made at a national convention to be held in Detroit in 1823, Preliminary plans for the meeting will he brought up at the Oc« tober meeting. The purpose of the various clubs, at lcast of which has been or- ganized in almost all the larger cities of the count is the adoption of !Christian principles in daily business one from various clubs indicaté members are almost unanimous- Iy in favor of the proposed federation |and a large representation is expected lat the preliminary meeting, according to sponsors of the movement Reports state [flourdm “(offee as it smells!” 45 c per pound All star Theodore Rober’s Cast Wi Madge Bellamy Tully Marshall Florence Vidor th