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had he been Willing to cooperate with this government, to have gotten rid of this thorn in his side, but he refused such cooperation and even did his ut- most to impede the gn forces with | the result that Villa ‘escaped and re- mained to plague. He was a merciless enemy as Carranza has reason to know since their break and it will be with pro- and Goufied m Ym ow found relief when northern Mexico gets convincing proof, fof such it will natus Sebeision S 35 & wwki S & mesthy gasy | TOIlY insist upon, that he has quit his old " - game for good. ?Jmndl &n Fniersd 31 the Pesefem @ Nersth, Oma, o ciam matter. LODGE AS EEYNOTE. Among the dutfes imposed upon the [y committee of arrangements for the na- i O 7 o I e ¥t | tional republican . convention to be held | mants O 8 e S Tvene 1% |in Chicago on the eighth of June is that ! = ednesday, of selecting the gemporary chairman. ,—"L‘_’,—_E'.'_"#;‘s This is a job whlch’w be extended to . include the permanent chairmanship of the convention, meaning the responsibil- ity of guiding the convention through its session of several days, but they are of- ten held by difterent men and such is the plan that will be followed this vear. In the selection of Senator Lodge for the temporary chalrman the committee has made choice of the party leader in the United States, who has been the guiding force of the party in legislative matters and who hi taken the lead in directing the efforts in rezard to the treaty with its league of nations Which will be carried into the coming elec- tion. In view of the policy that has been followed and in view of the contest that is to come it Is quite proper that Senator Lodge should be selected to open the convention and deliver the keynote ad- dr CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING MAY 8th, 1920 NO SURPRISE AT EFFECT. gical result is disclosed in at comes from Wash- flect that the appeal of r the democrats to. d the treaty and the st the reservations been approved by a majority luding democrats as s has thrown conster- s of the democrats £ the repubicans. to the Oregon was evident from dif- of the country that there ratic opposition That he is qualified for the position thers can be no question, that he is the logical man for the position is indicated by the fact that he has been in full charge as chairman of the senate for- eign relations committes of the big is- sue that will be raised in this campaign and that he is regarded as the man for the place by party leaders is indicated by the fact that be is chosen. Senator Lodge held the permanent chairmanship 20 years ago at which time in spite of all the efforts it was impossible to side- demo t he had been (aking | (o the name of Roosevelt and he was commitleeman |y, meq g5 vice president. 114 make the request Much importance is attached to the keynoter and confidence cannot fail to be imposed by the rank and file in set- ting forth such policies as the party should be guided by. That the conven- tion will be as well served_in its own selection of a permanent chairman is to be sincerely hoped. at there must be contrary to the pres. tude and appar- s responded with the rank and file e in approval of | s Kept | ators fight- of the v "“l““' - ‘t HANDLING TURKEY. r nothing to preven e At a time when the imporiant move of {0 mean an ef-| Dringing about a peace between the al- e "t “ic|ties and Turkey is being brought to a - | tocus, when there appears to be an agreement on the part of the allies as to the terms should be and when the t definite siep is being taken to set: {tle the near east situation, it is impos- sible to overlook the fact that one of the | two Turkish factions is making a move ging about unity. little time mow the nation- Mustapha Kemal Pasha n causing much trouble and un- ness in Asia Minor. There the mew government has been established and a considerable army raised. Do what it would Constantinople has not been able st the de- Quite n made to war, - nver| 0 control this faction. It is in fact are| 25ainst the sultan that this new gov. means In|croment has been sct up, and it was & "1 1 ssiblo g i » time when other | mPpossiblo to get rufficient Turkish disconcerting | “rhus {nasmuch as force has falled to S At bring about the overthrow of this fac- tion, efforts are now to be made to reach an understanding whereby it will be possible not only to prevent Turks from | Aghting Turks but to be able to present & united front against outsiders. That "} the Turks are still causing enough trou- | bl in that region is perfectly apparent > | but there is appreciated the danger of | having @ division among themselves | with the sultan of course conscious of ."'r‘"lhv powerless position in which he is former| placed by the nationalist defection. o In golng to the nationalists the sultan must be prepared to meet the dgmands of that element. The move in that di- rection in fact indicates the recognition of his own weakness and along with that must b4 inferred the disposition to accept changed conditions such as others will impose. Certainly if the national- ists have driven the sultan to this action they are not going to lose sight of the fact that they have him practically un- der thelr thumb anq it can be expeeted | they will make the most of it. Thus the Turkish problems are bound to be { kept to the front in more ways than one an office at|during the next several weeks. restrict his politi- B Mat EDITORIAL NOTES. publicans. T1is| There will be many besides the potato slap at the | PUES looking out for potatoes during the \chusetts and u| SUmmMEr months this year. there for the| Of course these many big stock divi- o it S¢ems 10| dends that are being declared have had At he was promi-| no influence on vi Mot 20 vun - the cost of living, ast since that time been se- TeCALL'S bintments made been shown e claims on with many get the nec- the acancy | tion of | be filled | Senator | but that ervice on that ex-Gov- wed and inasmuch as leclination on his part th iIs willing to was but a short . hat comes t The overalls movement has apparent- lv come at a convenient time for the government to move some of its stock. Carranza will now have a chance to sympathize with these who are ardent- ;’: secking a.new place to hang their at. has ore thers is the feel- approval that would leral commiseion, but [ he would not be less operations in such a uld be If confirmation There ean be no question Itness s considered o The man on the corner says: There cannot be much objection to being called @ piker when it means living within one's income. ¢ lified to Al the place and it s action will finally be obabillty. Those who are burning up the roads these days don't have any fear of a se- rious shortage of gasoline.. They don't bother to think so far ahead. furnished before accepting hat comes from the interior © %o the effect that Villa has 1ald down his arms, given up his activi- s as a t chicf and turned his fol- Of course: with prohibition in force it must be imagination that causes so many o require the whole sidewalk and part of the street these days. lowers er to the revolutionists. For the future welfars of Mexico it fs to he| Th ONlY surprise in conmection with hoped that this is true. 1f it is so 1| the Sentencing of a Californian sugar will ndicate that Villa has been kept in 1 by his determination to down 4, and now that his former chief profiteer to six months imprisonment is that he wasn't placed on probation, S, &xd uo Democrats may be praying for. a split In th 41 - o.!:'w constitutionalists is|in the republican ranks but the ex:fl- - ..n~um?“| 8 ’l’!‘ rr:d‘y'h:nhq:lt r:-: Jife | ence the country has had from such ac- at he has been liv ich has terrer- | ¢ lsed both sidcs of the United Statas.| - . ooth '0 1SS asainst it fexico boundary line. Next Saturday you will be able to Villa has successfully defled the ef-|under fashion's law to start off on yoyr forts of federal troops for a long term| Week-end trip wearing a straw hat pro- of years and in spite of all they could|Vided you're willlng to lead the proees- do he has continued to get his ]lvl.n‘ off | slon. of the efforts of others. And about him e e be gathered a band of feariess fghters| Emms Goldman is sald fo be home- who were ready for anything that fn.|Fick for America When she was here sured loot and excitement. For Villa to|*N® couldn't say and do enough against Five up mich a Iife will mean a decided|!: Put distance apparently lends en- change and for that reason it will mot | Chentment. @o fo place too much reliance upon such| Mr. Hoover is being fold that he made carly reports. There is no telling when| his migtak, e In going into any primary. something will develop that will force|}is unquestionably made a mistake 1 Bim back into his old operatfons it in[1etting the peopls think he. was other fact he temporarily abandons them. g Y 2 i v The Mexican government under Car- ransa maintaived that It was in full esn-| The head the American Woelen trol and yet it was never able to check | company says the profit of the manufac- Villa Following his famous rald acress|turer on a sult of clothes is 75 cents. the American line at Columbus, N. M., | Now let the rest of the profit takers on %o, Waa an epportanity for clothes show their har<s i troops to fight against them successtully. | e THE MYSTERIOUS SIX. L) % x 3 “I'd-like to know just one thins” burst out_the young man who, with his foot braced upon the mahogany piano bench, was briskly polishing . his shoe. “Is it a sure sign when a girl smiles at you—oh you. know how!—well, When she looks at you as though she Wasn't thinking of another thing on - earth— does she like you a bit 1 “Oh,” groaned the other occupant of the bachelor apartment, dusting his ci- gar ashes into a small mouthed vase Which never in the world could be emp- tied, “why is this wished upon me? I never did go in for anagrams and prizes for puzzles. : “When a girl smiles at you like that, Tommy, the safe’ bet is to take a long, deep breath and run. Run.for your life! Especially if she is sitting under a rose colored Jamp shade with her dimpled hands folded iny her lap within _easy reach of yours. More especially if she leans forward with slightly parted lips and asks you please to go on, that she never heard anything so ,wonderful in her life. You may be telling her how you: made a base hit when you played on the high school team or how you re- cited a problem in addition, but she is Just as interested. 'ou have just about as much chance as a mouse With six cats guarding the exit . “For Pete's sake he's gone. “One of the exasperating what it means. ted with the ruler to boot. fore you complete your gues: “What you shoula do, make thein do the guessing. her without ‘minute. having to sid “But,” protested the young man with the shoe brush, shifting shoes and a tri- flle red from exertion, “I know hew to act, I guess; I just wanted to know what you thought of how she really felt if she acted like that—" “Well,” she might be planning her spring clothes,” cruelly decided the young man. scattering ashes with aplomb.| “Most always when a fellow thinks they are about to spread their wings and flutter upward they are deep- ly engaged with the question as to whether the ruffies shall run up and down or crosswise. Why, I've seen my sisters bend a luminous, soulful gaze upon a befuddled young man, stammer- ing smile. just as permanently. your young illusions, but than have 'you come stagge some night saying that wrecked, that women are you'd mnever have thought over _the: “Well," abstrus to know whether I am ing out his aspirations, hopes and|if she felt as she looked as though she dreams and afterward they uld say | felt—" they had perfectly decided how to have| “Oh” growled the coat of their new tailor suit cut. Besides, if it did mean anything she Wouldn't know whether it did or not. So what good would it do you if you knewe scattering cigar ashes, gone, all right! My advice course, I' don’t mean any girl lar—but I've noticed that girl at you that way, and when they do they certainly look as though they were aw. fully interested and—well, 1 just won- dered. Not that there is anything about me to make a girl notice me twice—" “Whoa, -Tommy,” reproved his friend. ‘humble! ‘When a man is humble and spiritless and cowed some girl is going to come along and gather nim in quicker than scat, and before he gets his wits back Also, this humble strain is a certain forerunner of an attack df love or a hard cold, I don't know which. to have their minds occupied. man with her mind occupied is exactly as barmless as a serpent with its fangs extracted and you can enjoy looking at every your “I gue in parf don't get traits s. Tommy, They need ‘A wo- estep “Donit let yourself be fooled by that trusting, interested expression and ador- Just_remember that she puts it on with her face powder and it sticks 1 hate to blast al hand must deal the blow and I'd rather do it home. some| ering life fickle and it. I don't see why you are bothering vour head things anyhow?” said the young man who had completéd his polish, eveing his adviser a bit deflantly, “I guess I'm old enough interested in what a girl might really feel about me the other young man to | rough-and-tumble 1s do look of girls is that they can put on an expres- sion and then sort of dare you to guess ‘Whatever you guess you g0 to the foot of the class and get spat- If you do guess right they change their mind be- s you're ou is ‘to hustle right along before some one else gets there and ask her just what you've _in_ hard-hitting, cont He neither gave nor asked gquaster. It was a poor school in manners, taste and temper. His triumphs over those who boasted their descent made him boastful of his own ascent, and this self-made man never forgot his maker. v The bold seif-reliance of Johnson be- came heroic in the eyes of the nation when he alone among the twenty-two Southern senators breasted the wave of secession which engulfed his section and which swept out of the Union even the State from which he held his credentials. | He not only fought secession in the sen- ate but he challenged it on its own ground, in Tennessee where he faced a cloud of deadly threats. Pulling out his pistol at one place, he pointed it at his muttering audience and deflantly shout- ed: “If any man has any. shooting to do, let him begin now.” No one ventur- ing to second that motion to a hip pock- et, Johnson laid his weapon on the table and opened a vocal bomoardment of the foe. By Lincoln’s appointment, he was made military governor of Tennessee, where his stout, fiery soul became a very fortress for the Union in the midst of the enemy’s country. It was from that outpost that he was called to the vice- oresidency, and in a month more he was president. Exiled from his home and family as he had been, his house seized by the con- federacy as the property of “an alien en- emy,” the long struggle had indeed been a civil war to Andrew Johnson. and it left him in a most unctvil mood toward the Confederate leaders, Yet through it all he had remained as stubbornly a Southerner and a Democrat as he was a is| Union man. It was as a war Democrat and a Southern Unionist that he was nominated on the ticket with Lincoln in 1864, when the partisan designation of republican was laid aside for the broad- er name of the National Union party. Wiat his course would be now that he had taken the \fieel was the riddle of one of the most anxious and pregnant hours in American history. der, rung by rung, i Tomorrow: Blowing on the Embers of War. Stories That Recall Others it been asking me. It will serve you | “I'm getting sort of mixed up” de-|right! Right From the Hennery. clared the first young man, scowling at! “Well, T guess T will” agreed the| (On a recent morning a farmer heard the shoe brush and his shine impartially. | puzled ome, brightening up. “That's “I thought you were older and had gone out lots more and would know. Of what I cago News. intended to do, anyhow."—Chi- one of his prize hens cdckling in the hennery. He hurried to the yard and there to his surprise he found a nice brown egg on the ground. Picking it up l Five Minutes a Day With Our Presidents Copyright 1920—By James Morgan No other private ever have. I sat cross-legged as he trade, he stefped direct! and ‘he remains the onl: occupat ! LI—TdE ONLY -PRESIDENT EVER WENT TO SCIOOL 'WHO man. make his own cloth governor of Tennessee 1808—Dee. 29, Andrew Johnson born at Raleigh, N. C. 1818—Bound it to a tailor. 1825—A ruxaway bound-boy. 1826—Opened a tailor shop at Green- he suit for him. Johnson's tailor shop only schoolroom. ville, Tenn, other, even for a day. 1827—May 17, married Eliza Me- | pis own teacher. Cardle.. liza MeArdle, the who 1828—Elected Alderman. 1830-33—Mayor of Greenville. 39—Member of Lesislature. many giggling girls have goes my beau!” In do; 3—Congressman. 7—Governor of Tennessee. 2—Senator. 1862-5—>ilitary Governor of Tennes see. 1864—Klected Vice President. the groom not yet nineteen, married and keeping house room tailor-shop. Johnson already could Never has there been a change in the |: White House so untimely and unwelcome | as when, in the flash of Booth’s pistol, | the presidency passed from Abraham Lin- coln to Andrew Johnson. That sudden shift in pilots was dreaded by all the people, South and Nerth, except for a radicgl faction in Lincoln's own party, which confidently hoped to see his noble watchwords of “Malice Towards None” and “Charity for AlL” replaced by the slogan that the Vice President had been sounding, “Treason Must Be Made Od-i ous.” Although a Southerner, alw: been. at odds with holding flrisrccrac_ which frowned on the rise of a penniless youth who had been bound out at ten_to a tailor and who had been advertised at seventeen as a runaway “bound boy." A fugitive from his native North Carolina he crossed the mountains to Greenville, in Eastern Tennessee, and there he nailed abovs the alphabet. needle or guiding his hand practiced writing. where other ambitious the tailor in wordy cambats. Before he was of age, a workingman's ticket, and more he was mayor. Then years he was in the legislat years. a representative Johnson had the - slave worthiest monument as a great national domain poor, to State over of | lobby of land-grabbers. s honest: wad chanced North Carolina boy walking into town and had giggled to her companions, as so “There less than a year, though the bride was only seventeen and were in the two- read this in_congres: two terms’governor of Tennessee, finally he was elected to the senat: door of a two-room house,the sign vpon which the weather beats to this d A. JOHNSON, TAILOR ion was also He never was in any But he was not That post was filled by to seq e : , they while two for ure ; legislator the Homestead law, which opened the landless 2 measure that he introduced and that he perseveringly championed against he No one ever questioned Andrew John- and more than his courage did he m the table on which he worked at his into_conaress president who could ‘describe himself as a hand-crafts- He continued most of his life to and when he was complimented the governor of Kentucky by making a his a little and could painfully form the letter of the alzm his wife became his first teacher, reafling to him while he piie® his he Her ecager pupil was most apt in oratory, and soon his shop became the forum of a debating society, workers joined village Demosthenes was elected an Alderman on years eight for ten for and His he found it warm and decided to have it cooked for breakfast. who was frying eggs, to fry that par- ticular one for his breakfast. On at- tempting to crack the egg it was found to be hard boiled. The farmer's hopes of having a hen that laid hard boiled egzs was shattered when his wife remembered that she had just placed some egg shells taken from hard boiled eggs in the hen fery and that the hard boiled egg had undoubtedly been left among them. On Blaker's Day. Charles had been going to kindergar- ten two weeks during which the chil- dren had been taught the song. “Whe: the Sun Wakes Up at Break of Da: The children had also been told that Mrs. Blaker lived near the kindergarten and could hear them sing. Impressed by this fact and the words of the song Charles on reproducing the song. at home insisted his version was correct when he sang: “Whep the Sun Wakes Up on Blaker's Day.” Have Faith in Massachusetts. Speeches and addresses of Calvin Coolidge, go ernor of Massachusetts. Cloth, il lustrated, 275 pages. Published b Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston. Calyin_Coolidge has jumped prominence throughout the country cause of the position which he has as governor on law and order. volume is a collection of the and messages he has | past six vears. It is a time_when all men should real- ize that, in the words of Governor Coolidge himself, “laws should rest on the eternal foundations of righteous- ness;” that “industry, thrift, are not conferred by act or Government cannot relieve from {and when every inhabitant should “make known- his determination to support law and order; that duty is supreme. into De- ken This speeches felivered in the is resolve. Governor Coolidge that “often whis sen- They compel attention and stimulate thought. ~ There is no cheap appeal TMake your breakfast cereal asubstantial part ~of the morning meal - An energybuilder n an at-. tractive form is GrapeNuts ifBr this fdod of pl is made of " selected wheatand malted barley and is fuill of’ * GrapeNuts is untisual among cereals as it added'm makin G S i i taste ng EeB T sugar, not but selft developed from its grains. Grape-Nuts saves sugar ; “Therels Reason” Made by Postum Ceredl Co.Battle Creek Mich. Going. to the house he asked his wife | character | toil,” | It has been well said of the words of | tences are texts rather than arguments.” | to men's meaner emotions and no false| note struck regarding American princi- ples. American policies or American h‘len‘t 1is a volume that cleafly shows the high type of man that our neighboring state has s its leader., Touring-ds and Flanders, The Life of Leonard Wood. By John G. Holme. ~ Paper, illustrated. 228 pages. Published by Doubleday, Page & Co., Garden City, N. Y. This volume deals with the career of General Lonard Wood from h early boyhood and school days to the present time giving in ten chapters which treat on his days as a soldier and surgeon, with Cleveland and McKinley, as a com. mander of the Rough Riders, the res- cuer of Santlago, governor' and business manager of Cuba, pacifier of the Phil- lippines, chief of ‘staff of the United States army, the awakener of the na- Jon and the champion of law and or- er. The author has presented a most in- teresting story of this most interesting life down to the present time and dwells upon the points which are of particular concern just at this time. months. Motor-caravans, combined traveling. tuously appointed—even problems 12 persons by day and For Sale Only—Owne: of empty houses. But of prospective tenants cs is exorbitant, and London Chronicle. GLEANED FROM FOREIGN EXCHANGES, If you want your The convictions for drunkenness in | Nio s 1916 were 953 in the Cariisle area. In|have & eneaking desire 1917 they were 320. In 1918 and 1919 our planting now. . 0 and 78 respectively. oy T ity o table and colorful trasting with the 1914 fizure of 275.|S! That is to say. we have drunkenness put |Can be started | down, attractive catering facilities pro-|later. Any florist wil vided, the trade compensated, economies|Y¥OU state your color effected and profits accruing to the|Will state. S This is the refult of the unique experi- ment in state purchase of the liquor mer. even more smothly under peace than un- der its first war conditions. Who can doubt but that this is the real. the prac- tical. the final solution of the great problem of temperance reformy Soil Maps—One of*the thing “they do better in France” has a distinct hear- Marigolds hung with and black would be {the idea can be multi There is looking out of a wind ing on food production. Ingeniously eol-|of 4 riot of colorful flowers: ored maps, With a geologlcal look about|a)) times, the use of flower hoxes is to Them. are hung in village halls Thess | ol tUmes. the use of charts tell the prospetive farmer ex. |D° particula ised whe actly what sort of soil he may expect, ;lflv_t‘m_xn gk is unfortunate. and save him rash and costly .experi- | POXeS can be arpenter, or they from the peofessional cost, especially if the at home. ments with the wrong seed. \ Apart from their returning to' pre-war plentitude, and with an_important re- cruit to imported supples. Sweeden | course, the outside of d to be the main source of the cheap|phe taken into consider: afetied” which wil never be cheap {or scheme. again, but Belgium. ana later Japan also sent their contributions. Now Can- Canadian Matches. price, matches ar A peacock blue box % has -ntered the fleld. She Is send.|10W pansies is thrilling: a putty col- | o¢™tne han guished by its solid stalk Suitable | filled with these same flower: wood is the chief difficulty in Furope. The bul of came from Russia: and the Swedish match trust Is now tryjng to resume trading by offering to Russia the matches of inferior quality made fective; ivory a dark green and filled w geraniums gives difficulties having prevented the comple- tion of the string of hotels that were to be erected on the battlefields of Frange other arragements have ad to be made for the convenience of the visitors expected. during the summer DECORATIVE AND COLORFUL with those of the neighbors or if you them entirely, start your planning and There are many in the house for use suggest good hardy window box use through all the sum- A ofiit It is a pleasant fancy to make your trade—an experiment which is working | flower harmonize with your awnings. brown and and white awnings could call for these or scariet geraniums — something cheerful about casily made by the home | can The painting and decorating lare in themselves great fun, and, of color changed to dusky h a fillip to built on the chassis of old army lorries, have made their ap- pearance, and provide a solution to the of Some of these cars are sump- housing and t6 a tiny kitch- en—and have ample accommodations for six by night. rs of house prop- erty are greatly disturbed by the clam- orous demand for the compulsory letting' if regard be had merely to public convenience the demand might well be extended to flats. moment one of these is empty a crowd The rushes to secure only to be met by the announcement: The sale price in all cas- consequently the flat remains for months unoccupied.— tisement of what Lydia indows to vie to outstrip plants that can Il advise you if scheme, and he growers for ness, and you maj to the Lydis ed i stunning, over- white stripes, plied. ow over the top pretty at | the ® i when the win- [1he right spot These be ordered | WAY. A happy at a moderate painting is done |ideal combination. the house must ation in the co | outside But of doors. with plenty of filled with yel- iy Bl their | jreakfast table ! purple, is _ef- box banded in arlet zinnias Vegedable Compound had other women and decided surely did wonders for me. T pains pow and I can do work without any m‘;‘i‘d— will alwa; ise - do mot Deiicve there is a doctor that can do as much good in female weak: use these facts as8 testimonial."—Mrs. Lestez E. Wiz sEz, R. 1, Box 69, Onalasks, Wis. The reason women write such letters - E. Pinkham Medicine Co. andtell their friends howthey are help- that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vi table Compound has brongh and happiness into their lives. from their illness they want to pass the zood news along to-other on that they also may be 1 -3 my ‘ege- t heaith riened {green things in a box of yeuw.. is just needed perhaps. Latticed flower boxes may be placed lon each side of a front or side door- combination would be | marigolds at the bottom, flowering in the box proper, and a yellow floweri: vine climbing the lattice. s and flowering wistaria is another Decoratively tub- | bed trees also make effective sentinels Purple pans- pretty flower | boxes any house can be gay, and think ful of flowers, if you are that you can pick for the Sometimes the man who looks be- fore he leaps gives the other fellow a ifagination, and ivy or other trailing lchance to beat him to it WOMEN’S AND MISSES’ SUITS $29.50 Were to $55.00 Think of it—Suits of the finest serge, elegantly tailored in a splendid variety of smart new styles—all richly lined with silk pussy willow. These Suits are on sale at actually less than t!\g original wholesale cost. merchandise. M SIZES 16 to 20 Misses’ 36 to 44 Women’s Alterations Extra THE GREATEST SUIT VALUE Norwich Women Have Ever Seen On Sale Here Now WOMEN'S AND MISSES’ SUITS $ 49.50 Values to $95.00 The highest class Suits areincluded in this group. Suits that have command- ed admiration for their distinctive styl- ing, fine fabrics and superb tailoring. The sale price does not begin to indicate the real value of these Suits. They must be seen to be appreciated. IMPORTANT—These Suits are not an accumulation of unsold garments, but a purchase of brand new Suits, made of the finest materials, elegantly tailored and in every way typical of the high character of all Manhattan The Sale Prices Are Below The Original Wholesale Cost COLORS Navy and Black Only. haft 121-125 MAIN STREET ] (== ) ) ) Ne Approvals No Exchanges