Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Norwieh, Monday, July 7, 1919 Y THE WEATHER.: Thé heat wave thfoushout the easts &rn was broken during. Sunday ‘and “Sunday night. Modewate tem- All Galis Answered Promptly Bay and Night middle Atlantic and New states. Generally: fair \weather will prevail in New Hngland during Mon- day and Tuesday. : Moderate temperatures will pre- vail du the next 48 hours. AVondsfor Mon nd Tuesday: X5 marls, Jeaing o eah nortl ng 3 er: 3 l%fldle Agfi'f_me"—- Aederate twindk, cleafing weathér. ,Forecast. 4 \Southern New England: Clearing Monday; Tuesday fair; modefate tem- ®lank Secks Made and Ruled to Order | nerature. £ e 108 BROADWAY ¢ Observations in’ Norwich. eemse=Sots ==esime—m————===1 The following record, reported from The Bulletin's observations, show the changes in temperature and the baro- metric changes Saturday and Sunday: A Serviceable Line of Men’s and S SI; o 7 a.m. e ! : : lil—?;';fl t 104, Towest AT THE RIGHT PRICES Sunday— Express and Team Hamess|:a m : at Low Prices s;,f;‘ ! ; s t e YHE L L CHAPMAN cp, | To i iuin ™ = ™ S " ] Preaiétions for Saturday: Fair and 16 Bath Street, Nerwich, Cotn warmer. ” Saturday's weather: Fair and: ex- 4 tremély hot, northwest wind. . - Predictions for ' Sunday: Thunder & showers, = Teacher of Violin Sunday’s yeather: cooler, casferly wihd. Thunder shows, Tides. and Mandolin 3 [I _High ! Meen I Watar, ! Sets. ERNEST E. BULLARD Bliss Place TELEPHONE 127-4 A. G. THOMPSON, F. S. Chiropodist. Foot Specialist (PROTECT YOUR FEET). M. Cummings’ 8pring Arch Support Buite 7-8 Alice Building, 321 Main St Norwich. Goan. Phone 1366-4 Del-*off Hote! EUROPEAN PLAMN HAYES BROS. Preoa wafer, which is followed by flood tide. TAFTVILLE At a meeting held Saturday after- noon at the Academy care'is by the junior Chautauqua Town. :. local girl, Miss Elinor Border swas made a mem- ber of the law and order committee. Gustave Greenwood, who is station- ed at the torpedo station, Newport, 1. I. spent the week-end at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Greenwood of Front street. The hot weather of Friday failed to stop the local lovers of the polished | floor. from having , their weéekly dance. This. time the dance was.run by the Happy Three at the Maennercéfisr. It is«the ‘intention of. these three to keép thé dancers of the village satisfied during the summer months until the regular dances can be runm in the fall George Weller, Jr, spent Friday at Ocean Beach, returning to his hemé here late in the evening. Clifford Cormier has roturned te his heme on Huntérs avenue after over a year's serviee on ‘hoard one of Uncle Sam’s destrovers in the war zone. Mr, Cormier's ship has done patrel Aty along 'the “hores of France and | F. C. JACKSON DR. D. J. COYLE DENTISTS Offics Mours: Teleghons rait of Gibraltar to the Arctie Cir- 1o in its work. S a m te 8o m sent to the U, S. reeeiving ship, B: Ridge, and rémained there until he re- céived "his discharge ffom the scr- vice. i CONTINUES SERIES ON CHARACTER OF CHRIST Sixteen new members have been re- ceived into the Central Baptist church since May ist. _Ten were recéived by bhaptism, five by letter and one by ex- perience. The Great-Heartedness of Jesus was the topic of the sermon de- livered - Sunday- night by the pastor, Rev. Arthur I. Purkiss. This-was th ixth in the series of sermons on the | character of Jesus. 2 Great-heartednéss _is 6ne 6f th dearest terms ome can use about an- | other. said TMev. Mr. Purkiss. Jesus i was spetless, Thé white light | twenty centuries has been beating {down on His character and no single Race flaw has vet been found in Fim. prejudice—some will say this thing; but Jesus had race preju contend with in Hig day. Jesus had ne raee prejudice. Anéther possible prejudice is that which comes from sin. If you ge inte a small country town you will find a strong line he- tween the church folks and the weorld folks. | " Jesus has the rizht té the claim of being_big hearted. There is a reason John & Geo, H. Bliss r A1 :::.the;e:&:’ k‘n‘:whthe pessibilities of | Dorothy Heath, Town E {ing him to inquire o r depart- men. Jesus was able to comprehend |Border, Taftville; Amy Marsh, Falls; |ment the military < Alfred J. the possibilities of the individual soul. | Evelyn Easiwood. Greenéville: service|L'Heureux. Dr. McLaughlin said his ! You have no Tight to bold suite | commiseion, Bedfrice Ableman, Mt {attention was called to the follewing against anyone. The only, one your |Pleasant; Hohert.Otis. Pearl; J. Bras-|article which appeared in the Jewetl %2 | spite hurts is veurself. You and 1 |8il bealth cemmission. | City Press, May 29, 191 | haven’t .very much license to hold for- | Ri¢har Norwich “ Day| Alfred J. L'Heu %, who within giveness frem anvone. You and Ijschool Pearl: Ruth|the past month w promioted to a " haven't any power to hold forgiveness | Sterry street; improvement|ijeytenant colonel in the army, has oF AL from anyone nad then ask forgiveness |commistion, Marlan ‘Gibbs, Yantic; |now risen to the rank of a full colenel ALL KINDS ON frofh ‘Godl ToP Sibastvi . [Kevneth McNell, Lgurel Hill: Kirk|according to a_ letter réesived from AUTOMOB i Patrick, Storrs. iy 2 him on Wednésday by his mother, Al ILES, Local Boys at Pine Grove. Ethel May Duncan is the junier su-|irs. Victor L/Heurcux. and it ie re- Lawrence Stanley’ and Carl Parker. members of Stanley’s jazz band, are camping at Pine Grove next to the Casino. Stanley’s Jazz band is playing at the grove for the summer months. Among the week end visitors at th camp were Raymond T. Counihan, Timothy Brewer, Willlam J. MeKnight, Walter Kilroy, Samuel Crowe, Hareld Jordan and James Carney, e of chestra is a gpeat success at the grovi CARRIAGES, WAGONS, TRUCKS and CARTS | -“..-Li’nfi Repalrs, Painting. Trim ming, phelstering and Weed Work. Slackamithing in all its Erances Seoti & Clark Corp. Nerth Main St DENTIST DR. EDWARD K{RRY Reem 187, Thayer Building Phons 619 Einues 9:12; .138-5 and 7 to'B P. M § Three Autos in Mixup. A mixup of automobiles occurred at the corner of Hank and Spring streets in New London Thursday evening when the machines of Alonze Nichels, Harry Mosely of Blaek Point and John Gregson of Norwich came together. Fortunately neither of the autos was extensively damaged and no injurfes incurred by the occupants. 807 te 515 P D. MORRISSEY, Prop. ! | | —— e Flowers and Trees FOR ALL OCCASIENS verod peratures were general throughout the ngland tlantic—-Mederate northeast England. covering the seas-from: the! TUpon his return to nis side of the pond Mr. Cormier was! Ot lbury Toel Co. W {sure rclease valve. Bulletin. | ANNUAL OILING Norwich streéts have just received their. anhual “cogt of - oI, avhich .will l lay tWe-dust for a long time wherever it has been sprinkléd om-ths highways and will be a big saving in water and in the care that would be requireéd to keep down the dust without oil, In all Street Comimissioner James P. Fox has had 716,000 zallons of _oil sprinkled on the strects and the work has been done much more expeditous- ly and efféctively. than ever before. Thig' year the oil-has been laid by a motor driven™ tank machine u:grmg a small enging on it that furnished the: pressure to squirt:the oil down and into the dust irstead of merely lay- i it on top to soak in. The last of work was finished up the day be- fore the. Fourth, when the last of two tank cars of oil that had arrived, was cleahed out. . The metor apparatus that was used F. RUSSEL!. SMITH HAS - “"WAR FELICS ON E BITION, XHT redies _collected Jur: 1555 are on display ayvr of tie’s. P. Barstow ore on Was i by corps for a year with ths Fri-h later with the Americans aal was awarded a croix de guerre Irench for distinguishéd service. « The relics displayed include spilked | German heimets, a German worn in the Verdun attack, one worn in the. Soisron drive.in 1918 member of the Geérman Highlanders, the first and Américan and German gas masks. helmet. worn French Forelgn Legion who was ki ed in Lorraine in 1918, a German Uh- lan helmet, Verdun attack én Hill 304 and Dead Man’s_hill, two bayonets taken off the 7 1 battlefield. French b attack dier and Noyon, a French military po- {liceman’s jmade from shells and shell cases, two ] shell cases shot trench mortar shell case, a knife used 0GR L - ¥ranch < hours after high water it Is low|from Afri mbulance a in the by the heimet by a atest French gas mask a member of the by a two Dbavonets used in the south of Soisson, a onet used in the German in_June 1918 between Monti- bayonet, cigarette lighters at’ Verdun, a Senegalese (black troops in the German attack in June 1918 and’ French ' machine gun- ner’s There also are cap worn by the fi with the Frenéh, a met, a Scotch bayonet used by gloves used at Verdun in 1817. German canteens, tha st American tréops rench trench hel- the Highlanders of the Black Watch, a piece of a nch air plane propeller shot down in July 1918, a French fa- tigue hat, a German .fatigue hat taken from a dead German about 200 yards frém thé place where Capt was killed south of Seisson, Roosevelt a Ger- man jron cross of the second class. a sample French each week by ment, anti-aircraft gunners. German Buckles, “button, lieutenant’s, private’s and other shoul- der epaulets, sued by that gevernment and given to a_ sol@ier having been wounded six times or more. G. tei scho A i Rearden, David T. | McCarthy. jon tl | Mr. and Mrs. Enos M. G { were Dr. and Mrs. Nat catch and rélease; Hartford, anti-friction bearing; Lyhue, : G. A McCombe, gssiznor to Hartford Autometive Parts Co ford, universal jsint; Britain, s signor to Underwood Typawriis: Co.. issued to the the govern- a cane carved by ene of the Dbelt epaulets .and a first of tebacco the German button is- RAZOR SHARPENER PATENT GIVEN TO BALTIC MAN ued frem the U. S. patent »sday, 1318, for the state of Connecticut, incjude: C. A. Bailey, Cromwell, toy nistol: P. M. Renedict; New Haten, assignor te thé B. & K. Mfz Cs, Milldale; wire or! cable clamp;: Haven, producing moving pictur | Dion. Baitic, sharpening razors: Fisher, Pratt Reed Flater Action River, preumatic vale-actio Frost, ¥lammend, New Haven, L. S. Brainérd, New Saybrook, assigner to Sound Heach, teneé-regulater; ‘magazine B. M. W. Bridgeport. flash-light He A. Pow svace ‘for penden: J."A. B. Smith, Stamferl, typewriting machine F. Staud:sh, Shelten, reversible cuff; H. 1. Etone. assignor to The A. C. Gilbert €o.. New Haven, rheostat: Wetdjj Sr ford. salt-shak . D. Wilkzms, of Wallingford, assignor to Ti> Water- aterbury. bagk pres- JUNIOR TOWN® ORGANIZES AT NORWICH CHAUTAUQUA ol for His bis heaftedness. ' Jesus saw | LOWn street: William dn life than we | Patric perintende: intendent is\Ethel May |local chairman is Bessie Grant of Nor- lwich Town. iel Coughlin, John Cafféry, William J. O'Néil, H jernhart, a-sorev o | Fitzgerald, Patrick J. Mahomey, Mij. e it chael Finnegan, Patrick Buckley, Tis in & days, impie Othy O’Leary, David M. Welch, Wil- liam T. W Ca 1 Organization ef the Junmior Chautau- ~ qua tewn toek place Saturday morn-|Feter J. Cuny. ing at a meetin; campus. Mayor, Richard Holden, Mt. held at the Aca. cers elected my follow: Pleasint Disco, The of town clerk, Millicent Broadway: law and order comniission, ! William* Tirrell. Bread; Allen Latham, st i Shanley. West Town Louis and the assistant super- Eerner. The SECOND DIVISION, A, O. H, ANNUAL MEMORIAL MASS _ The Second Division of the Ancient Order ganized May to is F¥iendship, Unity, Truc Chris- tian Charity, Inual memeorial mass church - thi { necrology EBenjamin Patrick Dale: of Hibernians, which was_or- , 1888, and whose mof has requested in St (Monday) merning. The =t of the division includes: ohn J. Toomey, Mahoney, ry. Themas Grefley, Mi- William. Mahoney, Dan- the .an- Patrick’s James Cotter, VWil 3 Michael Maheney, Patrick rd, Michael I"lynn, Timothy James J. Cafiery, M. illiam J. Caples, Wiiliam J. Dani¢] O'Connell, Nobert Ma- Patrick J. Cglés. Willigm J. tzgerald, Eugene Attanded Family Gathering. Amon he g oyr e at a family gatherin of July at the :ome o% ray of Ladyard. ray, Mr. an {3fre. John MeDeugall and Miss Lucy ‘Mr.l)ounll of this eity. © | the tortured sida. Apply V. b I!(bd;—-il,muu Hansen. | in the work was séent on from Boston by the firm from \l}lcl,x the: street ‘sommissioner bought the oil, tNe. piiee t which the oil was bought Mcluded ale cost of laving it. Aflarge snyount of work could be done by ihe machine in a day and many streets covered so that the, job was all closed up in a very short time as soon as the oil cars reached here. In order to do the work most effectively, the car had to have a pilot, a Jocal man familiar with the streats to guide the opcrator of thé car around. sioner secured M. C. this, - ¥ . _.Among . the most important streets treated to their anpual oil Baths were Boswell avenue, Roatn street, Broad street, Grove stroet, Oak street, Ho- bart avenue, Lafayette street. Yantic treet, Rockwell str Croscent Street, Franklin street. Summit street and West Main street. Hizggins to do GIVES SUFFRAGIST VIEWS . E % ON SPECIAL SESSION The following open letter from Miss Katherine Ludington, president of the Connecticut Woman's Suffrage’ asso- ciation, to Governor Holcomb, states the suffrage position in regard to a | special session of the legislature: My Dear Mr. Holcomb—>ay I send ¥ou a word of comment on one or two points raised by your statement to the citizens of Connecticut in regard to a_ special session of the legis- lature? You speak of having received let- ters from “several members ?, he 1919 gzencral assembly opposing snd none in favor o the calling of a spe- clal session. A petition is now in circulation ;among members of the lezislature in regard to this matter. When this pe- T |tition is complete it will be presented to you in due form. This fact accounts favorable members of the legislature. - You further say that vou “cannot conclyde that the desire of a few wo- men—be they more or less in number —to have a vore upon said amendment taken, prior to the next stute session of Nhc general assembly creates the special - emergency which would justi- fy_calling the legislature together, Then the legislature was conside ing the suffrage bills, which were un- der consideration this winter, a pefi- tien of 98,000 women's names was pre- s®ented to. The canvass of women has now grown to 103.000. Tt repre- sents women in the state whe favor woman suffrage and is, 1 believe, the largest number of names ever gath- ered on any petition presented to the Connecticat legislature When the suffrage movement .has gained such tremendous momentum in Connecticut. is if quite fair to refer to the supporters of the movement as “a_few women?” - T am convinced that as time goes on you will have such evidence of the strength of sentiment in the state .in favor of ratification that you swill feel that it constitutes the “spécial emer; eney” prescribed by the constitution of the state as the oceasion for the call- {ing of the legislature in special se: sion. Respectfully KATHERINE LUDL President. CHURCH-GOING OBLIGATION BINDING In announcing the summer schedule of. three low masses every Sunday morning until September, the rector of St. Patrick's chureh, Rev. -John II. { Broderick, spoke incidentally of the vaeation season, at the 20 mass on Sunday. Tho rongregat was re- ed that the oblization of attend- mass cverr Sunday is just as binding. during’ the summer season as at any other time of the vear. It so arranged that parishioners of St. Patrick's_who feel that they must Sunday outing have ample et 1o take the All were advised to so reg- eir summer plans and past- times that the result may prove as condueive to their spiritual as phy sical =afe ‘ Rev. Father Broderick preached from the gospel for the Sunday, which was_the fourth affer Pentecosf, Luke {V. 1-11, the miracle of the draught lof fishes and ths Saviour's significant promise to Saint Peter, the apostle [upon whom the Catholic church was founded, ‘“From henceferth thou shait catch men.” The’ members of the Young Ladie and Immaculate Conception i v, led the large number “ommunion ther Broderick and his assistant, Rev. WHY DR. M'LAUGHLIN -ASKED ABOUT L'HEUREUX J. Harry “fcLaughlin of Jewett , in a statement made io The Bul- explains how he came to write ‘nator Frank B. Brandegee ask- {ported that he has ju fely arrived from France. Mr. L'Heureaux is undoubtedly the ungest man in the U..S. army to ai; so high a position, and it ¢ that no mian has risen in the ranks faster than he. Affer being 2 student at Plattsburgh, he entered the army as a second lieutenant about a vear ago, and his promotion has been steady ever sinee. He ed to arrive home any time. An argument as to the aceurracy of the article followed and to settle the dispute Dr. McLoughlin wrote Senator {Brandcgee who replied that the war department had informed him that Al- fred J. L'Heurcux was a major, ELLIS SAGE MAKES SHORT VISIT HOME Ellis Sage, gunner's mate, first class, of the crew Of the T B S, Arizona, spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mre. Frederick F. Sage, 121 Cedar street. He had a short furlough from his ship which is now at New York, having returned from the eastern end of the Meditérranean where she stop- 5d 4t Constantinople for three days. he has steamed 35,000 miles in the ipast year. On 'the Zbth of Jume the battleship was at Gibraltar en the homeward voyage, stopping just long enough to take ou oil and leaving that night. On the vovage across the Atlantic they just missed hitting two floating mines. The trip was rather a lonely one as they saw only four ships on the way, three of them the sante night The Arizona brought back a number of na- val reserves and duration of the war men who were landed at New York. Attended Silver Bay Conference. Miss Agnes Leahy of Otls street has tecurned from Silver Bay, where she attended the conferemce as a repre- ;‘nt tive of the jymior class at Cone 12 eut edilege. “She also visited at 0¥, N. Y. on hér way home. The, street commis- for the absence of lstters to you from | IN VACATION| Sodali-| ‘Far a dollar you can buy at,any i& goods counter 2 full 12-ounce i P to bo of Famd. ; 3 air tonics ‘charge more for a bottle that is one-third smaller. _This means that you can use Famo every day for little more than half of what it would cost for sOme preparations. And Famo actually does what no other hgir treatmient will do. - © 1t attdcks Sehorrhea; the cause of dandrff, and stops the cchor- rhean fdow that cansces the dandruff scale. - . Famo ends falling hair and itch- ing.scalp. It makes the head as sweet and clean a3 a baby's. Famo contains no alcohol to cause scalp and hair drynes:.” Tt fionpones grayness by making and eeping the hair heaithy. The regular daily use of Famo makes the hair soft and luxuriant and gives it a beautiful gioss and sheen. 3 - Every one in the family should use Famo every day. i| -, Seold all toilet goods counters in two sizes 35 cents and §1. Seborrhea §: @ morbidly increased flom from the seboceous glands of the scaip. The seborrhens excreiin form: in scales and flakes and is commonls known as dendrufl. Mfd. by The Famo Co., Detroic, Mica. Lee & Osgood Co. Special Famo Agents ELECTED VICE PRESIDENT OF THAMES NATIONAL BANK Thames National bank in the direc- tors’ room Saturday at noon, Oliver L. 1 OLIVER L. JOHNSON succeed _the Charles H, Osgood was elected a di- rector of the bank. the officers are the same as hereto- fore. e i Eastern Star Robert Mocris Day. -Eastern Star chapters of FEastern Connecticut are-to-:observe Rabert iMérris day on Jume 16 with a picnic |at Richards Grove, -at whieh a large lattendance is looked for. JZach chapter will'provide two num- bers for the entertalnment pro- &ramme and it is likely that eight or ten chapters will be represented at the mathering. Each member is expect- led to furnish her own lunch Scholarship for Miss Desmond. Miss Catherine Desmond, of Mavor J.'J. Desmond, who has just i uated at Mt. St..Josenh semin: lartford, has been awarded the irship at New Rochelle colles.. EDRMN- | SALOMON—Tn Nerwich, Ju 1 a daughtes, F ely¥n Ruth, o Salomon of DONNELLY—In Nor a s r n, James Pet . James Peter Baltic street. DONAHUE—In this city. July a_son. Robert Henry_ Jr., to Mrs. R trul av 3 Mr. anc bert H, Donahuc of 204 Ce.:- enue. MARRIED. WHITTET—-BROWN—Tn don, July 3, 1919, by Rev. Danforth, William Whitte nes MecLean Brown. both of ( | mond B. Johnson and Mi bt Mayna Duke, both of Hartford. DIED ew London, July . Howard, in his 43¢ RD—In Arthur Vv HOWA 191 year. MITCHELL—TIn 1919, Matilda L. Mitchell. Church Allen 15 Main Street FUNERAL DIRECTORS —~AND— EMBALMERS Lady Assistant Telephone 323-3 HENRY E. CHURCH WM. SMITH ALLEN FRANK G. BENSON Teacher of Violin ORCHESTRA For Dznces, Weddings and Receptions. 82 Fifth Street. Phone 1251-13 SHEA & BURKE, 41 Main'Street ] Funeral Directors At a meeting of the directors of the Johnson was elected vice president to late ‘Charles W. Gale.| The remainder of daughter 4.0 New London, July 4,! | . Northern walue The Weather Today Will Probably ‘Tue Porteous & MircueLs Co. Be Clearing—Fair Temorrow i'FactOry End dozen Femmed Kitchenware Department Qil Stove Ovens 56.00—at $6,35 Dover Electric Irons “No Burn Out,” regular $6.00 value —at $6.35 Window Screens value® 58¢c value 80c 18x83—at 53c, 28x37—at 68c, Queen Wash T5c—Sale price. .. Porch Gates Medium size—$1.10," value $1.25 size—$1.40, value $1.65 CGarden am@ Flower Seeds, fresh Large ha value One case of Huck and Turkish Towels—Sale price...... 23 ‘Towels, .slightly imperfect, r ular 25¢ value at..... Jacquard Turkish Towels, as- soried borders, regular 6dc and 7o walue at..... 25 dosen High Grade Turki Towsls, regular $1.50 and $1.75 58-inch Bleached Table Dam- vooo 122c | ask, value 69c—Sale price a Huck s SR b APV ERE T 45 o' 40k o 4% value at......., — 1,000 yird_s of .Crash Toweling, Sale price each. . 1220 _:‘;c—ls:;q "I;Zl::“&';::;“' "‘1“31,/” 36-inch Bleached apd Brown 12 donen T i atauns asd Sheeting—Sale pricg.a yard...-24e Embroldered Scarfs, size 18x5 31-inch Bleached Sheeting, —Sale price........ vieserne. 7. 48 | value 69¢—Sale price a yard... 49c Remnants of Table Linens, Toweling, White Goods and Sheetings, at Sale Prices. 1-burner, Detroit, value at $4.0 2-burner. Detroit, value at $4.50 2-burner, New Perfection, Wash Boards B $4.30— 0—at $1.50, value.$1.79 , value $2.19 $5.00— value 3 value value o’ ~ Sale It is now in full swing—the greatest Sale of its kind that we have ever held. This Sale is important because. it offers you exactly the kind of goods that you need now at prices which barely represents the cost to manufacture. § Lots of new bargains for today, just as good as we sold Saturday. Each counter and every table is piled high with Factory Ends, and yet we have been unable to display anvwhersi near all the lots. We extend a general invitation to -our patrons to visit this Sale while it is possible to obtain the best values — come today if possible. Towels; Table Linen, Sheeting During the Factory End Sale, we offer our entire stock of Sheets, Pillow Cases and Sheectings at Sale prices. A good time to‘lay in a supply. 70-inch Bleached Satin Table Damask, value $1.25—Sale price a yard 70-inch, Imported Union Linen Damaslk, value $2.: a yard % 50 dozen Hemmed Napkin: Universal Food Choppers Cedar Mops Combinations of O'Cedar Mop. value $1.00-—Bottles of O'Cedar 0il, value 2§c—both for...... $1.00 Liquid Venee . value 25 Cedar Polish, price and Lyknu Sale Pol- Chinaware China Cups and Saucers $3.00—Sale price a dozen Glass Tumblers Horséshoe—48c, value Star—48c, value 59 Plain, heavy—§1,00, value $1.25 Gold Rim Water Sets, $1.50—Sale price a set Cut Glass Water Set and six Tumblers, valuc le price a set value . $2.55 39¢ value $1.15 Pite le 1e 0d Drapery Materials, Curtains, Rugs, Etc. Curtain Materials Drapery Materials 36-inch * Curtain Ser{ms, with White Marquisette, 36 inches ] open-work borders, ,white, |§ cream and eccru, value 22c—at. 17¢ Better. qualify - Curtajn Serim, white,” cream and ecru, lue 29¢, at. . 25c 2 | price: 36-inch rquisette, with neat 33 a yard—yalue i white, cream. and 42: a yard—valuc c—at. - 34e 49¢ a yard—value 3 Madras, Best quality Sjlkoline, hes T patterns, wide, in a good assortment of ' ecru lue 49e—at....... A2c | patterns, value 2%, a ve . 29e i tonnes, Et: CURTAINS AT ABQUT HALF PRICE Odd pairs of Lace Curtains, alse_remnants of Serime will be offered in the Factory End Sale a Marquisettes, Cre- bout half i Rugs—Mattings—Linoleums Rag Rugs ihches— €9¢; value inehes—$1.09, vajue 129, value 2498, value inclies— 279, value Grass Rugs ifiches==$N39.' value inches— 1.98, valus 4-66-6— 4.00, value 6x9 feet— 6.50, vaiue 8x10- feet— 9.85, £x10 feet— 10.80, ax feet— 12.965, value $x12 feet— 15.26, inche: < 30.85, “49.99, Axminster Rugs Linoleums Inlaid and Printed - Lineleum for every poom in the heuse. Printed Linoleum 95¢ a square yard, value 1 Inlaid Linoleum v a square yard, yalue $2.2 Pro Line, looks and w Liroleum, value T5¢—=Sale a square vard. 4 Gold Seal Congoleum Ri Rug Sale price 36-inch Rug Border, —~Sale price a yard Westbrook Hammocks At $2.69, regular price $3.00 At 3.89, regular price 4.00 At 495, regular price 5.50 Al 559, regular price 6.2 7.19, reg v .40 ot ¢ Couch Hamiocks Sale Prices. ur and stoc! Porch