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Men’s Department uIM":‘l;'l‘ t\'er_v.l“'!{na Qut;‘lity 80 Square Per- e Shirts, assorted patterns 98(: and colors .. ...ovineiainins ) elgen;fll e{x!ru Flll\e (‘boltwnt Pajamas, trim- med with frogs, colors blue, tan, white and lavender .. ... each $l .69 Men's Fine Balbriggan Shirts and Drawers short sleeve and ankle length 50 AYAWErS .. ..vveienios 200 €Bch C llmn'u ::xtru l;‘\ine t('}dn'llty Nainsook Union Suits made in the athletic style T.ocevonss . each 890 Boys' Very Fine Nainsook Union Suits, sleeveless and knee length, 89(: Forest mills +.....oooonvv.. €dch ———e each New Spri of colors and patterns. yard 690 made with the panel back, black $2.19 seam back, in all the wanted pair 980 seam back, medium weight, pair 590 also in Bow Ties 50 (o Union Suits, made with the the bodice 5 C Down Stairs Store All Pure Irish Linen Hemstitched Lunch- white satin damask in a variety $7.98 A Full Line of Plain Irish Linen Hem- 18x50 Ecru Linen Scarfs, with good weight ... i 250 Saturday s in terry cloth, sev- eral good designs. Saturday 95 inch Silk Sunfast Draperies in a variety Saturgay 3 : 2 yd. wide Black Mesquito Net- 1 2% C Plain Wide Hemstitch Voile Curtains in NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1023, SMART SPRING APPAREL The following groups are of especial importance for weck-end shoppers. Here are a few examples of the many OSTON ST Donnelly, Mullen ORE Co. EXCEPTIONAL VALUES IN FOR WOMEN AND MISSES remarkable values we are offering for Saturday— \ TWO VERY SMART MODELS, COPIES OF HIGHE CAMEL’S HAIR, TAN GROUNDS WITH GREEN AND BLU Y — L) [4 POLO AND TOP COATS at $9.00 SATURDAY ONLY ! NAVY BLUE AND BLACK TRICOT SILK LINED THROUGHOUT, SIZES NEW SHIPMENT, EXCELLENT QU ELS FEATURING PLEATED EFFECTS, ORS TO CLEVER BOX COAT S NAVY BLUE, TWILLS. OTHER TAILORED SU NEW TWILL COATS at $25.00 UP R PRICED COATS—MADE OF ALL WOOL E PLAIDS VERY SPECIAL FOR INE AND POIRET TWILL COATS, WELL TAILORED, TO 48. SEVERAL DISTINCTIVE MODELS. CANTON CREPE DRESSES at $14.00 CHOOSE FROM. NEW TAILLEUR SUITS at $29.50 ALITY SILK CANTON DRESSES, SMART NEW MOD- BEADED MOTIFS AND EMBROIDERIES; MANY COL- JITS, PLAIN OR WITH TRIMMINGS OF VERMICELLI BRAIDING, IN ITS OF NAVY BLUE, TAN AND BLACK, TRIC- Charmeuse Satin in black, navy and brown heavy quality, 40 in, wide, sl .95 Saturday Special yard :l\'mzl Jersey in ur;.\",llnn, brown, copen, jade, henna, rose and black, Special .. .. vard $l -89 Shantung Silk, natural color, light and 8c dark, heavy, rough weave; vard wide, Special yard l"lalt Crepe, ,:i" silk standard make, heavy weight, Saturday Special % yard $2.89 Dress Voiles in a large assortment of styles, fine quality, 40 in, wide, Saturday Special vard 396 Madras Shirting with neat colorved stripes, all fast colors, 82 in, wide, Special Gira e S0 390 Percales, first quality, all desirable pat- terns, yard wide, 5 C Saturday Special Japanese Crepe in tan, blue, rose, orchid and pink, 80 in, wide, best quality. Saturday Special yard 290 Bates Ginghams in checks, plaids and plain colorg, 32 in. wide, yardzsc Saturday Special Another New Lot of Blouses, of very sheer dimity and cotton Pongee, neatly trimmed in colors; Peter Pan and Revere necks; sizes Ladies’ Envelope Chemises of fine quality nainsook with embroidery and lace 98 bodice, and shoulder straps ... c Ladies’ Extra Size Bloomers of good qual- ity crepe in flesh , 59(: only ..... i Child;en‘s Slips of finee:‘1 quality nainsook, ace and insertion trimmed, sizes 8to 14 years .......... $l.19 Ladies’ Slip-on Sweaters, made of good quality yarn, in all the spring shades; in fancy blocks and weaves. l Special $ 089 Ladies’ Genuine Swiss Embroidered Hand- kerchiefs, 50 different patterns; reg. 25¢ value. Saturday Special lZi‘C K Toilet Goods Department Mavis Talcum Powder, Saturday Special el 160 Miner's lfie{{no:\i Cr;am, the ideal cream for removing all kinds of make up. Specialb. GOC Packer's Sp%ciall 8 l 9 C aseline, in the white and yellow. Special l OC Mineralava Beauty Clay, the famous treat- m]on!. forb Taggigg muscles, wrinkles and com- plexion blemishes. Special $ 1 . 79 Sterling Hose Supportets, in black and white. Special 130 The Combination Skirt and Coat Hanger. Saturday Special loc 2 in 1 Shoe Polish in tan, ox blood 9¢ Ladies Full Fashioned Pure Silk Hose, polo, brown, grey and otter, pr. Ladies’ Pure Thread Silk Hose, made with colors Ladies’ Extra Fine Quality Silk Lisle Hose black and brown The Very Newest in Gents’ Polka Dot Ties, each Mis! bloomer knee .............. each 69(.‘. Ladies’ Extra Good Quality Vests, made in Specials From Our GIFT LINENS FOR SHOWERS AND THE JUNE BRIDE con ‘Sets; Cloth 66x66, Napkins 20x20 ...... set $1 2.75 All Linen Pattern Cloth, made of a snowy of patterns Also Napkins To Match * stitched Scarfs, Squares and Napkins, in all sizes—Specially Priced Saturday. hemstiteh. Saturday ....... each 59C Union Linen Huck Towels, Forlost Mill C ases.l size 45x36, made of good heavy cotton cloth. . 25¢ vard 79c 36 in. Burlap in green and brown, 19 b regular 29¢. Saturday yard C ting, regular 23c. Saturday yard white, cream and ecru; regular $3.50. « Saturday pair $2 .69 and black. Special ....co0vinnn OTINE; ALL AT ONE PRICE; VALUES TO $49. the coast of ancient Lycla; the penin- that ply from Rhodes to Adalia pas: rations the Greeks here have lived sula now has no distinctive name. ‘It by. It has attained no distinction | so much to themselves that they re- | name | tain many ancient habits. . This also | “It taxes the imagination to realize | since it acquired its present the wealth, culture, and great popu- from the red castle erected there by |is true of the Jews, Bazaars and| lation of western Asia Minor in the| by, the adventurous Juan de Heredia | mosques hold their early Turkish era of the Seven Wise Men, through | when Edward 111 was on England’s | character. y y the period of the Kings of Pergamus, | throne. “Streets are very narrow in places, down to the time of the Roman oc-| “From the steamer the island flecks | balconies of houses often project one cupation and that great letter-writer, | the shore line back of which rise the | above the other so far that two per- 8t Paul. | snow-capped peaks of Lycla, the foot- | sons can almost join hands across the “First” Citles of “Asla.” | hills of the Taurus mountains. street from upper stories. “This region then had at least-230| - "One discerns the site of Xanthus, | “Adalia has a flourishing silk. in-| citles, each city struck off its . own! a city of which Homer sang, Wwhich ‘ dustry, Cocoon sheds outside the city coins, | limits are interesting becauso the la- and at least three claimed pre-|gave up an obelisk to modern ex-| eminence as the, ‘first city of Asia.; borers represent so many nationali- plorers not many years ago. While| The Eegean was to Ionia what the KASTELORIZO WAS NOTABLE LONG AGD Tsland Is Now Important Only as Key to Ttaly's Asiatic Influence Washington, May 11.-—"Kastelo- rizo, raided by Turks, who were re- pelled by an Ttallan garrison, was a notable island among the classic Greeks,” says a bulletin from the Washington headquarters of the Na- tional Geographic Society. “Today the istnd is important only as a key to Italy's sphere of influ- ence on the contiguous mainiand of Asia Minor. A reglon as conspicuous in Ignic times as England is in the modern world has become one of the Jeast known areas in the inhabited world of 1923, Lacks Even a Name. “TFwo major peninsulas protrude from the south coast of Asia Minor into the Mediterranean. Tink Kas- telorizo lies along the shore of the swesternmost protuberance, which juts .out between the Gulf of Makri and the picturesque port of Adalia. The shore line between these points marks 10 MAKE PLAYGROUNDS Head of Indianapolis Traffic Police- men Plans to Close Certaln Num- ber of Streets Every Day. | the res the posited. | wastage of gasoline annua The wastage of fuel c |expense to motorists of §180.01 carbon is by no means |why it believes that every car owner|its habits of beating to a cherry red ;rnnld save about four cents per gal-|and pre fgniting the cylinders’ gases, Jon: why the price of gas would thus| It does its damage mostly around the [tend to decline, and why the individ- | valve heads, causing them to remain ;n];:lkh).!s nrl gnsonr;n‘ !hrr;u];:l)\ ra‘rhn’nknughfl_v open when they are supposed | g ] choken engines and too richly adjust- to be closed. i A . Motorists Themselves ReSPODSIDIE | va"carurctors is reft ant of the is. won by artowing the xas to teak back . cuesion until car owners sense the |into the carburetor or out the ex- N. M. A. Bulletin Declares ~|<eriousncss ot ne situation haust. One valve that 4068 not close Loss Drives Home Lesson. {tightly, or which is stuck because the y | To tell a motorist that his engine|Owner neglects to oll the valve stem, ) b y, \ | taa” While mn!lorists bemoan the high |y \asting gas because it is cholw-‘l‘“‘m prn:‘!lmlly cut out an entire cyle Egypt's tombs weére storage vaults, » cost of gasoline, few stop to consider «with carbon does not spur him on inder which, in the case of a six western Mediterranean was to Europe|the rock-cut tombs of these shores | that the key to the situation is Ié.rgfl‘y!,.., remedying the condition; but once C¥iinder engine, means a waste of of medieval times; and Greek colo-|represent homes as they were fur- ” | he has a glimpse of the sum total of about 30 per cent of its power and nists fringed the shores of the east-| nished while their dead were vet 1iv- | in their own hands. Ithe nation’s c:‘rfl'\"m“ with fl‘: et |18 fuel. ern Mediterranean. In nomenclature, | ing. It is from a Lyclan sarcophagus | With a view to remedying condi- “ BT he raises the Tnod| ANy one of a mumber of thin at least, Kastelorizo gives a hint of that bas-reliefs were taken to the | tions the National Motorist associa- and looks into the ituati Carb B - classic {imes for the atlas still des-| British Museum which are considered | ton has made an investigation which b B IUMTIOR. QREDDR |WESH BN MESEIEeN e ignates it as an Aegean Island—the some of the most exquisite extant | wlieg : & b i something-or-other | 6f Sngings, Ikpruper Sngine 1EEIORE easternmost—and it has been gov-|types of this tyle of decuration. | encourages the prediction that, un-|which aceumulates in a motor and badly adjusted spark plugs or drag- erned in modern times as an adjunct Adalia Built in CHffs. By The Associated Press less car owbers turh & new leaf, close | a8 to be cledned out every spring. 1t ging brakes will increase the cost of to Rhodes. “Adafia, which is the apple of the | Y adianapotis, May 11.—The closing |10 & billion gatlons of gasoline will be 18 & VEr¥ real efficlency Killing a motorist's gasoline anywhere from “The setting, too, recalls that en-|Italian eyes as Smyrna was of the|of a number St city, strests &t certaln| Vet dUHEE tho Dregsnt yess. posit of diet, ofl snd anburned gai-{ome CEN 10 FRO GNNES BEE GROGE. L [ ironment which gave the Greeks the| modern Greeks, s the most faBoIAAL: | Rours Of the dRY, .t ey N The greatest difficulty the N, M. A, |oline \'\hlch accumulates by degrees, |slight readjustment of the carburetor joy of living and youth of mind which | ing city on the coast. CUff-built, the | used a5 playErounds by the children, 1o s vs treaend wastage of gaso. (ind which cin bs msimibed, Sreh|EE O O et ta i the world still envies. Here, says one|town is notable for many cascades of | has been Savooated by Captalg|int is the tremendous gap betwpen |neutralized in the same way. It isjalr was found in one instance to in- \writer, “the sea is blues than other |sparkiing water, though it seems like| Michael Glenn Diie ot D Tiiees [ VUM ARd U e e the jcote SUBRIE LIl O D O i loaiitr e st e Az o seas; the tints of the skies are softer, | stretching a point to call them cata- | poils police traffic department <|age car owner does not conceive the [carbon is dirt drawn in through the cnginet 235 per cent. As the Na- the violet and rose blend more mar-. | racts. | P Ca tpnln Gienn's rrcommflnfiaflnn important part his particular engine carburetor. Ailr cleaners and slraln-rllonal Motorists association points out, Velously in the sunsets, the mountains| “Everywhere pieces of ancient ]a\'epbeon 'laccd}wfnrt- the oty re S| plays in conserving or wasting gaso- (ers will, therefore, greatly improve by studying his instruction book and have & sensuous attraction, and'the |sculpture are used to adorn walls, | euon Gspartment. Mo v e e appreciate |the efficiency of the engine; but when | keeping the power plant in trim, the sails on the horizon allure.’ doorways, courtyards and fountains. ¥ ]0, oot . rm be closed to t fr, - |the role the proper functioning of his[the car owner is not able to attach motorist will not only save his share st Pass It By. The ancient wall is preserved aimost! *"":‘” e "C""d 4 € l" '°m"’ "‘_ alengine plays in cutting his own fuel 1sm‘h devicies, feeding each cylinder of the predicted 1923 wastage of gas- “Kastelorizo then was one facet of | in its entirety. B ot ?rh N summer Moalth 1 1o, e with.a tablespoonful of kerosene oline but help to effect that relation the charm of the insular life of the| “Popularly Adaiia is best kno lightest, during the summer months.| That is why the National Motorists' | through the pet cocks when the en-|ship between supply and demand Medit N R = e s o N Wh | The suggestion has been taken under |association, in presenting the rncmlgln» is left for the night will elim- | which should result in a check on the editerranean. ow the mumm‘ for its dancing dervishes. For gen-|aqvisement. reverses the situation by speaking ocimm much of the carbon as it is de- | rising price of gasoline.