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Pm DO YOU BUY THRIFT STAMPS REGULARLY Best & Co. Fifth Avenue at 35th Street ‘ Established 1879 There's a Wealth of Promise in the Offerings for Saturday and a Fulfillment in the Low Prices The latest trend of fashion is followed closely and with regard for the rigid requirements for economy, so necessary in these times. Apparel for the School and College Miss ; For Boys—Correct School Styles JUST THE DRESS FOR COLLEGE AND STREET BOYS’ KNICKER SUITS An effective model (as ihustrated), braid and button trimmed, is of fine There's a smartness of style and long quality navy blue serge. vee pee tar and youthful for the girl service in these suits, due to expert who attends boarding Schuol. Misses’ Sizes, 25.00 fniloring--and carefully chosen all wool SATIN DRESSES ARE VERY DE- fabrics. Note the silkssewn seams, SIRABLE Sizes 7 to 18 yrs. ‘ i 19.50 22.50 24.50 An apron peer dress which may be had in navy, black or brown satin will just fall the a . 42 TS eopin the young Misses’ Sep With BOT ar aan nga ale dts eto carvan: for prep school fellows, unusually smart se dresses which is good f sh aoe Miser ‘Sies bal 29.50 fabrics and sensible prices. Sizes 13 to 20 yrs. ‘ 28.50 EVERY YOUNG MISS WANTS 24.50 one of THESE SUITS Because it is of fashionable Duo-tone of | Boys’ SCHOOL COATS Fall Top Coats for Boys. Fine medium Silvertone. With a large roll collar of Hud- weight coats for first cool days, of selected Telephone Greeley 1234 32.50 son Seal, cleverly designed, it will be one of the more war suits for Fall and Winter. ’ $ opi ewest i isses’ foreign as well as domestic fabrics, in peg Uae es 55.00 all the styles boys like. Sizes 8 lo 16 yrs. 15.00 18.50 21.50 BOYS’ FALL OVERCOATS Shower proof finished coats, suitable for service any time, rain or shine, Rag- lan, English and form fitting models, THE KIND of a COAT EVERY 5 led LADY be pple BAY Ite; IS es i reciate this Cote bat whieh i a sendid te wear about the campus. Of Scotch wool mixtures, a warm coat in a pleasing style. pat ge Sizes 32-40, pba o3 + Neat 71.50 24.50 «28.50 WOOL JERSEY IS USED MORE THAN EVER BOYS’ POPULAR COATS Wool jersey now holds the same place among The popular coat of the hour is our ex+ staple fabrics that does. An unusual model of Monk brown jersey nay be obtai in the latest Fall colorings. Semi-collared ard with contrasting embroidery on blouse and pockets, 2 O it is very individual. Sizes 13, 15, 17 yrs., 9.5 HOW NICE and WARM THESE JUNIOR COATS ARE! | For all kinds of elie: especially oe kind of eer Netryeel i i irl, there is a good-loo! coat of unfinis! Crone?" Fran thee are the two pociets at etter side." Also {0 be had in brown or wine colored Burra cloth, 00 Sizes 13-15-17 yr5., 35. THE MILITARY STYLE isin VOGUE | p A practical school coat of khaki Armi-cloth with army buttons will greatly please the pr. besides giving her the maximum 25.00 wear. Sizes 10 to 16 yrs., 5. WHEN THE NORTH WIND BLOWS— Mackinaws are useful for skating or other sports when a long coat is rather bulky. A three-quarter model in handsome wool plaid will be a great asset to any girl. Sizes 12 to 19.50 16 yrs., FOR. THE YOUNG GIRL There is a smart Buster Brown dress of plaid serge. A large clusive Military Ulsterette—good lines, mighty comfortable. Best _all-wool coatings in many shades. Sizes 8 to18 yrs. 24.50 28.50 32.50 BOYS’ WINTER COATS Only the splendid full weight all-wool fabrics that you have always had from us—and our usual expert tailoring. Sizes 14 to 20 years. 28.50 32.50 37.50 SCHOOL BOYS' MACKINAWS Every boy wants a mackinaw, but this year the mills that usuall Sea are doing Government wor! fe have enough to equip early arrivals only. 14.75 16.50 18.50 Savings on These Suits—Saturday Boys' Winter Weight Knicker Suits— Pet pe san 8 see Fiat collar is detachable and easily laundered. 7.05 made from short lengths of smart mix- KINDERGARTEN COATS for GIRLS suits. Limited quantities. Sis 71017 rs. The double-breasted coat will look well this year or the year 16.50 after, for they are never out of style for the little girl. Utility Boys’ Knicker Suits of Medium Weicht Blue Serge and Homespun, suitable for school wear until coldest weather—less than whclesale price today. Broken sizes 7 to 17 yrs. 13.50 & 16.50 Boys’ Corduroy Norfolk Suits—a special Best & Co. value. Sizes 7 lo oly TS. 50 Young Men's Suits in Medium Weight Homespun, suitable for Fall wear. models in green or navy with deep patch pockets. i 5 to 12 yrs, " 12.95 Women Will Be Pleased With a shipment of suits—just unpacked—twelve samples in various shades. The newest materials are developed with great style in both convertible and tailored effects on smart new lines. 42.50 Mostly size 36, A New Plain Tailored Suit Distinctly a lady’s suit, carefully tailored. An unbelted trico- tine (navy or black) braid-bound, features the close-fitting 4zeS P sleeves, narrow lapels and tight button wrists, which this year Sizes principally 32 to 40. 21.00 5 3 more than ever mark a well-tailored model. Care- 4 7 fully lined and interlined. 42.50 New Fall Footwear for Girls Developed on our famous College Last in brown and tan calf, black Russian A Velour Suit with Novel Pockets at both sides, has the belt fastening at one side. The three pockets, parallel to each other, are entirely different. The sleeves may be buttoned or unbuttoned, and are 42.50 rather tight-fitting, plum or brown. Winter Dresses for Women Very Low Prices calf and brown and black calf. Also black and tan vamps with contrasting cloth tops. Sizes 244 to 7, 9.00 Corsets for Growing Girls Designed so that they permit the cor- The newest fall models fashioned in accord- ance with the latest style features of the hautes couturiers of Paris. Effective youth- ful frocks on long straight lines and draped skirt. Trimmed with beading to match or rect functioning of the organs by those experienced in fitting the young and growing girl. Many are lightly boned and are adaptable for sports and general athletic wear and act as a support to with long krotted silk fringe. Crepe meteor the wearer. In coutil and batiste, flesh # and satin, which has been in demand this or white. season, is used in fashioning them. Hip confiners for those who require only that a . m support, are obtainatle in white with elastic side Soft clinging crepe meteor, formed into a inserts, Confiners with elastic in back are sold “dressier” frock, will be appreciated by the strong pink material, 2.00 to 5.00 woman who knows values, _ SUNDAY WORL A demi-gilet of One of the most unusual bells and pockets seen in a long while are placed on a'semi- narrow skirt for the woman, binding and large novelty buttons, it is further enhanced by the beauty of the | Scotch plaid of soft wool, With braid 15.00 D WANTS Wor { Pt You Never Pay More at Best's white satin is supplemented by the silk, . which is trimmed with beads o Interesting news to the woman many colors, As illustrated. 32.50 in need of a Sweater. henna cutnanad Women's” FishTail’ Sweaters Women’s Skirts Along Of fine Shetland wool, in slip-over . model with sleeves, New Lines Reduced from 3.50 to 1.95 Fall Weight Shetland Sweaters with long roll shawlcollar. Finished with a belt, in all the desirable colors, Reduced from 8.25 to 6.85 rk Monday Morning Wonders | GERMANY GIES UP "DEA OF INDEMNITY BUT HOLS TO LOO |; Vice Chancellor Says She Might Return Belgium, Keep- ing Gains in East, AMSTERDAM, Thureday, Sept. 12. j—Reiterating that Germany, “as the innocent and attacked party” in the war, had aright to demand indemniti. cation, Friedrich von Payer, the Ger- man Imperial Vice Chrancellor, in his spech to-day at Stuttgart aid that “we prefer on calm reflection, and even with our own favorable military | situation, to abandon this idea.” Turning to the question of the oceu- pled territories, the Vice Chancellor said that as a preliminary condition of peace for Germany and her allies those nations must have all their pre- war possessions, including the Ger. | man colonies, restored. Then Germany, ho declared, could A|evacuate the occupied regions and could give back Belgium without en- cumbranee and without reserve, pro. 4j| viding no other State was more favor. fal | ably placed in regard to Belgtum than was Germany, He asserted that Germany would not submit to the Entente Powers for approval or alteration the peace trea- ties which Germany had signed with the Ukraine, Russia and Roumania. “Our state debts,” the Vice Chan- cellor said, “are everywhere Teaching y | fantastic heights and everywhere wo 4 struggle against the encroachments fy}on our personal liberty. Ail of the | | belligerents of Hurope must admit, if iy | they are not blind, that the longer the Buropean peoples lacerate each other the more certainly will the historical and paramount position of weakened and impoverished EPurope be lost in favor of cleverer and more calculat- | | ing peoples.” Herr von Payer reminded this hear- ers that, after four years, the war | still was being waged almost entirely on enemy territory. He admitted that the U boat war had not worked so quickly and surely as had been hoped, He added that it was useless to dis- pute whose was the fault. The Ej | enemy, he said, was etill unable to | COmpensate their losses by new con- struction, and declared that the rob- bery of neutral ships, almost without parallel, by the Entente could not be repeated, | “The more troops the United States sends the greater will be the need of shipping for reinforcements of muni- tions and provisions,” Herr von Payer sald, “The filling up of the enemy army by Americans, therefore, bears | in itself its Umitations.” | He argued that the loss of ship- ping would become fatal to Great jj | Britain after the war because it would 4 {lose its shipping superiority to the United States, and “the hope of com- pensating themselves from the Ger- man fleet, which still has to be con- quered, will surely be adequate com- fort only for the very imaginative Britishers,” The speaker said that the Germans have only to see that the war con- | tinues to be waged in a foreign coun- try, that the Germans are fighting for their lives and their homes and that the enemy's only hope is that the Germans collapse inwardly soon- er than they, Herr von Payer considered that the present terrible struggle would not end with a peace of the cus- tomary character, A mere glance at | tj) the state of complete exhaustion of the world excludes such @ possibility, he said. The Vice Chancellor said it was unthinkable that Germany would contribute to the restoration of the “despotic Russian Empire which, by its mere existence, always menaced a nnot hand over Poland to ne added, “nor can we assist | in having Finland again placed under |the Russian yoke. We cannot leave | to their fate the border states which || lic on the German frontier and the f]| Baltic to be subjected against their | will to Russian imperialism or thrown into the perils of civil war and anar- | chy wn | “In fact, these states having come to [ | an understanding with us, as those | Russ! most nearly interested, can only be an | advantage to the world, and we can | never permit any one to meddle with of the present European balance of or rather British predomi- ee Chancellor here mado his to the return of Belgium and added: “It is hypocrisy to represent Bel- gium as the innocent victim of our policy and to clothe her, as It were, in the white gurment of Innocence. The Belgian Government—-and that is what matters, not the Belgian peo- \ple-—-took an active part in Great | Brita policy of encircling Ger- many.” | Von Payer's statement regarding | indemnities follows: | “We are deeply convinced that as the innocent and attacked party we \have a right to indemnification, To go on prosecuting the war, however, to that point would cost us such heavy sacrifices, irreparable by | money, that prefer, on calm re- vetion, and with ‘our favorable | », to abandon this a, qui art from the question | f jeopardizing a future peace which | would be inevitable if compensation } were forcibly ur ER 13, 19 | | | | s under the orders of physicians ile he 18 ill at @ tuberculosis sani- said to be @ conaiderable dis- from New York. {heen suffering from tubsreulosis for five * t years, @ald bis brother Jacob, uspended his campaign for severai Hillquit hos z All Wool Poplin Suit $27. Others $13.95 up More Than 200 Other Equally Attractive Styles in Suits and Dresses A five story building literally FILLED with Suits, Coats and Dresses— all priced so economically that you will save at least $5.00. Can we make it plainer? Why not BE CURIOUS and investigate our claims. The newest, smartest styles in the most favored materials for Fall. Free Catalog upon request. Address Dept, 9E. HAMITON GARMENT CO. 307 FIFTH AVENUE Between 31st and 32d Streets NEW YORK ir occupy the entire building. Parents, this is almost unbelievable—for it has been a long time since you've seen any kindof Boys’ Suits advertised under $5. Here are about 1,500 Suits, worth $6, $6.50, $7 and $7.50; the famous **Schoolmate’’ brand, in twenty- one different patterns in Fall and Winter weights; your choice ‘atest models, with full belts and buckles; pains “ah ARAN OAITE and walt until you Sa ae see the variety—included are dressy browns, checks, gray stripes, dark greenish ch k overplaids, medium shade of gray, and scores of mi . ‘The making alone would cost more than the sale | without the goo and every garment is thoroughly tailored and guaranteed in every respect. Your money back on request. SIZES 6 to 17 YEARS. Bet. 15 & 16th Sts. "Surprise, Store Roth Stores Open Saturdays Till 10 P.M. AT MAKES LITTLE DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED--A SUNDAY WORLD “WANT” WILL GO AND GET ih e