Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
days of the late Belkan wass has Ade rianople witnéssed sueh scenes. EST OF ALL SALES EVENTS N o 4 ~ T VALUE GIVING STORE”— Price reductions that bespeak Economy. Assortmients that assure easy selection. Qualities beyond reproach. An oc- ALWAYS! casion worthy of the traditions of this successful business. GREAT IMPORTANT OFFERINGS THAT ARE NOT ADVERTISED! FRIDAY AND SATURDAY—COME EVERY DAY - WOMEN’S DUPLEX JERSEY GLOVES Two clasp style, black and grey, good fitting and extra warm. -35¢- Hosiery Bargains Galore —At The— ANNIVERSARY SALE ‘Women’s Wool Hose. A good quality heather ~dropstitch' style f’.i..anlr 39c ‘Women's Sport Lisle | Hose. The popular | English ribbed sport hose. All cool:s, .. Pair 33c WOMEN'S SILK and WOOL HOSE Dropstitch—all colors. 2 $1 .00 Regular $1.19 Hose—English and Children’s Si B e 00y Children’s Cotton Hose—black and cordovan; :‘l:‘ktttlnlvn::h' i 3 for 25(: Children’s Wool Hose—Heather colors. beau- tiful stockings. Flat rib .. FULL FASHIONED HOSE Silkk Lisle, strictly first quality; America's leading maker. Light and heavy black only. $1 value WOM Mgn's Cotton Hose — Black and cordovan; all sizes—A good buy. 3 Pair 25 c Men's Heavy Fibre Silk Hose; black only; worth a lot more. Pair ROM THE BASEMENT STORE house size. $ 1 .00 ne copper tea kottie— [eavy gauge copper—Nick- 1 plated. Skze 5 to 7 > unarts $1 .00 e Piece Aluminum ALUMINUM SAUCE auce Pan Set — Made POTS f heavy gauge stock. 2 Ots, All made of heavy , 114, 2 Qts. 69 e A e pecial—Set . . C TR l’:fl‘;'l“‘ ml“l‘ Fl Aluminum double [J0eide hizhly Polishes Outside well made. paster, made of heavy auge stock, each half Sauce: Pots—Specially Priced ay be u as a scp- ‘ 1 Qt Size. .. 890, Irate pan for baking. ize 10 1-4 in, pund—Special 790 2 H 6 Qt. Size $1-19 Aluminum Preserve | ettle, all heavy stock. Quart $ . Aluminum colander — Highly / polished finish. A 10 inches round. 89c § Aluminum * Double Boiler— Lifetime brand, Colonial pattern | R Heavy stock. 2 Qugrt sizc D Special ; 8 Piece Double Roaster with basting rack— | bif-basting top and rotary air ventilator. Heavy | § eight black metal. $l 25 . . Mirro Aluminum Sauce Pan, with 89 ! ver, 3 qt size. Reg. price $1.45. Special C| [ 7 | ECESSITIES Good weight house ooms, made of select- i Ilinois corn, four ced, with polished hndle. Regular price c. 75¢ value. hecial. 33 C Special d _: g : Imported fruit presses | and potato ricers, made of stamped steel frame, heavily retinned. 44c |} YTt v A Reg. GENUINE BOYSHFORM BRASSIERES s; all sizes. broche fabrics ...... shirred tops beautiful hamburg —_—1 We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities WOMEN'S UNDERTHINGS Marked Very Low BAND BRASSIERES—mesh and lz%c NAINSOOK BLOOMERS—with ruflle flesh and white SATEEN PETTICOATS—with deep flounce, all colors HEAVY SATEEN BLOOMERS—White, pink and black ¢ 1o CAMISOLES—of pink sateen 19¢ 59¢ SKIRTS—with deep flounce of Women’s Flan- nelette Wear At Extraor- inary Prices GOWNS of warm flan- BLOOMIERS of flannelette, 37c flcecy nelette in striped heavy pink and blue stripes flannelette 5 # GOWNS ol extra heavy Scotch flannels, beautifully trimmed. HOUSE SACQUES of dark flannclette in floral patterns ................ & o G NIVERSARY SAL| Wonderful Notion Values Two-In-One $hoe Polish, all colors . 7.0 90 Nickeled Safety Pins all sizes, doz. 2c Cumeo Snap Fast- eners, all 2 c sizes... doz. Sunset Soap White Twilled Tape, 1-2 in. ~ 13k vies 1€ 5 Rick Rack Braid, all colors Merrick’s Darnin all colors 3 West Elcctric Curlers 2 on & Card Whisk Brooms, good selected stock Bias Seam Tape, all width b Specials at The fx“» Good Boys’ Dept. PERCALE BLOUSES—A fine sclection of de- sirable stripes 330 BOYS Heavy navy blue fabric, all sizes.... 1922 HEAVY PANTS— 59c 'FALL FABRICS —A— Astonishing Prices Dress Ginghams, 36 inches wide, fast col- 14c ors, pretty assortment terns to select from. . of pat- Yard . yard lc Cotton 3 for 5c Surprising Values In DRUGS AND TOILET GOODS 2,000 Sheet Rells Fines TOILET TISSUE ........ MERCK'S SODIUM PHOSPHATE 1 Ib. Package LIFEBUOY SOAP— BAYLER'S ASPIRIN FABLETS . doz llc(hi. 19¢ KOTEX One dozen in package GILLETTE SAFE BLADES T SYRUP OF WHITE PINE AND PAR. .. 160 RINSO, for 5 Cc washing MASTIN'S VITA- MON TABLETS. . .. 73c SAGRADA 17¢ 35¢ 'Y RAZOR Halt Doren 3 1 C CASCARA TABLIY 100 5-gro LYSOL, DISIN- TANT, 50 size PLQUOT WID} 2 1-1 yards wid bleached SHEETING 1’\!11. .. Yard 55C Cretonnes, first quality, for draperies very pretty terns that will make ~clecting ‘easy .. Yard WHITE OUTING FLANNEL 27 inches wide, good quality, 3,000 yard . Yard Apron Gingham, good quality, fast colors Yard ’ inches wide, 40 pieces, all vaa 16€ Chaliics, a wonderfu! assortment of pat- 15¢ 10¢ I I li | | Infants’ Rubber 1|‘ Pants quality — Kleinert White, First make. pink, natural. I Children’s School Handkerchiefs with Good quality cotton colored picot edges, 3 ror 50 S e “DOVE” White Bath Seap It floats—Large double bar. C-B A la Spirite Corsets Two full models for dium and heavy figures. .. .. e Cases 6—Special 35¢ In The Basement. Long Cloth w0ve reee . $1.00 Children’s Flannel- etie Sleepers Heavy striped outing with i . 50¢ All sizes to 8. s J Vacuum Bottles Aluminum cup and should- er—Heavy metal frame— In four colors — Black, green, brown and dark 47 ; Cc blue, In The Basement. Willimantic Thread 150 Yard Spools, 3 ror 10¢ Black, white — All aumbers. L= _— Ingersell Watches watches, sell $1.00 “Yanke everywhe Silk Kritted Scarfs Large variety of handsome colors—Deep fringed. $1 Values to 8295, me- | —_— 790 Adrianople, Oct. 17. (By Associated | | Press)—Thirty thousand Greeks and NEW BODKS AT THE INSTITUTE | (Continued From Second Column.) | the lawyer who places him there ‘l-‘or sheer entertaining qualities Fair Harbor, with Mr, Lincoln's other | novels, fs unsurpassed.” — Boston | Transcript | .o | FOR RICHER, FOR POORER, by H | H. Armstrong. “The hook is delightfully frank and American in its essentials and, there- | fore, most enjoyakle in its vigor and lack of sentimentality.” "o MAN WHO LIVED IN A SHOE, by H. J. Forman. “The story of how his dead sister's | three children and a mother's helper from an orphan asylum completely | upset the life of Randolph Byrd, | bachelor bookworm." | . s | ONE OF OURS, by Willa 8. Cather. * ‘One of Ours' is a book which | must be read. It is a book which it | would be an insult to give facile and | unbalanced praise. It is a book for | discussion. And one reviewer, at least, will rejoice if he be convinced by more competent discriminations that | ‘One of Ours' is not only as good as he thinks but incomparably better, There are books which it is a joy to attack; lying books, mawkish hooks, pretentious dull hooks, the books which stir a regrettable hut natural spirit of deviltry, a desire to torture the authors, and a desire to keep people from reading them. ‘One of Ours' is quite the opposite. It makes the reader, for a moment of | modesty, hope more from its success than for the authority of his own judgment.'—Literary Review. PR TIMBER, by H. Titus. “Deplcts the struggle between two groups of men for the control of the white plne forests of Michigan, the one group seeing in them only a | source of personal profit, the other | & perpetual supply of timber for the ‘future needs of the country. An ef- fective plea for forest conservation.” —A. L. A. Booklist. | TREMENDOUS ADVENTURES, by | Dion Calthrop. | “To reveal the bare plot of the | story would be a grave injustice to | the author, for the charm of the book lies not so much in the matter itself as in the manner in which it is told. There is humor, pathos and | tender sentiment and all are skill- | fully blended together to make an ex- | quisite prose poem.” PP YOUNG PEOPLE'S PRIDE, by Ste- phen Benet. 30,000 REFUGEEY - PASSING TO WEST |Steady Stream of Greeks and Ar- | menians Leaving Adrianople | Armenians have passed from this city |to the west since Saturday and the road between here and the Maritza river is an unbroken line of men, | women and children with ox carts, | cattle and camels. ‘ Through a steady downpour of rain |they are plodding doggedly toward |their unknown destinations, driven| forward by the nameless fear which | When, on Saturday the Gréek eivil authorities atterapted to reassure the people by stating that the Turkigh gendarmerie would not arrive for 18 days, the Christian inhabitants sigply refused to believe them, Nearly every Christian family in Adrianople gathered up all they could carry, elther on their backs or on oxX carts, and as soon as possible were off. Another Exedus, Meanwhile from the countryside & similar exodus is under way and ev- ery road leading to th& Maritza {8 jammed. This whole flood converges upon a single road as it approaches the Karagatch bridge across the Mar- itza. The refugees believe that if they can reach Karagatch they will be safe from the Turks. This small village, which is just across the boundary will be in neutral territery until the peace Conference decides its tate. Although the rallway is moving & considerable number of réfugees wépt- ward from Karagatch the statien there 1s becoming the center of & vast concentration camp. The rain has fiooded all parts of the village fore- ing the refugees from the lowland. Cattle Are Drowned. Many cattle have been-drowned by the quickly rising Maritza on the west bank of which thousands of refuge are encamped. Groups of giant drom- edaries belonging to the army have been assigned to the duty of pulling refugees’ carts from the mud into higher and safer places. Meanwhile Adrianople Has taken on the appearance of a deserted eity with the shops and houses closed. The Greek and Armenian priests, remain and are doing conspicuous work in assisting the fleeing inhabitants, Two Troop Trains. Two troop trains leave dally for western Thrace and there is no more talk of resistance among the soldiers although they boast they could have hela up the Turks at Chatalja with three divisions and declare they are only leaving because crdered to do so by the allies. The first French detachments of the allied troops of occupation arrived yesterday. EVERY SEAT IS SOLD. Enormous Demand for Tickets foe Princeton-CTiicago Game. Chicago, Oct. 17.—Alonzo A. Stags, 61-year-old coach of the University of Chicago, has two football preb- lems on his mind teday. One is to defeat Princeton, which plays here Oct. 28, and the other is to crowd about 100,000 persons into Stags Field, which holds 31,000, The feot- ball committee announced yesterday that every seat for the Princeton game was sold; that there would be no public seat sale and that thous- ands of requests for reservations were being returned. Applicatiens from alumni have been reduced to two for each alumni, it was announced, in or- der to allow as many as possible to witness the contest. It was also as- serted that Federal authorities are co-operating with university officials to stop scalping and admission will be refused on any ticket purchased from a scalper. CONGRATULATES W] NERS Councilman Rice Extends Best Wishes to E. W. Christ and Judge Alling Councilman Henry Rice of the first ward, defeated at the primaries yes. terday for nomination as represénta- tive, called up E. W. Christ and Judge B. W. Alling to extend his congratu- lations. Speaking of the campaign and balloting, Mr. Rice said today that he was pleased with the man- ner in which the event went off. It was a clean campaign all the way, he said, and the people in expressing their preference certainly picked two very capable men. In conclusion, Mr. Rice said that | has gripped the whole populace of | eastern Thrace since the government’s | | bulletins were posted on Saturday an- | nouncing the terms of the Mudania |armistice, which provide for occupa- tion by the Turks within 45 days. The members of the allied missions stated here declare the extent of the refugee exod indicates that the| | Turks upon their entry will find east- ern Thrace almost uninhabited. Misery Is Extreme. The procession has been orderly but the misery of the refugees is al- ready extreme and pneumonia will claim many victims if the present in- | clement weather continues. The Am-| |erican in charge of the little Near | Eastern relief soup kitchen at the| railway junction on the opposite side |of the Maritza declared: “In all my experience I never im-| |agined such a pitiable sight as the | mareh from Adrianople in the driving | | rain. BEvery refugee soaked to the skin with a wagon load of bed- ding fleating in water.” People Panic Stricken. arrives its stormy existence not even in the Perhaps never in the 1800 years of [al he will do all in his power to suppert the successful nominees and the en- tire republican ticket, He also ex- pressed appreciation to those who gave him their support. HORSES PLUG ONWARD Brandon, Vt, Oct. 17,—The 21 horses competing in the army endur- ance test left here early this morning for Burlington with 60 miles of coun- try roads between them and the stables at Fort Ethan Allen their ob- jective for the day-. SUCCEEDS IN SUICIDE Boston, Oct. 17.—Lorenzo Adeso, who shot his cousin, Josephine Gen- tili and wounded himself in the head yesterday died late last night. The man killed the girl because she had refused to marry him, according to police Of the 855 officers of the regular United States army retired for dis- ty since the World War, only 54 ed wounds in battle. 7 The coffeé experts chose Putnam, Your first cup~ fragrant and delicious~ will tell