South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 188, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 7 July 1922 — Page 6

HE SOUTH BEND NEYS-TIME3

FRIDAY MORNING, JULY 7, 1922

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sunday j. m. 5 Tin li knson, ru!.'iisfcr.

Member: Associated Press United Press International News Service American Newspaper Publishers Association Audit Bureau of Circulation Newspaper Enterprise Association. MOUSING tuition Th- a"'!jV(1 Vrr 1 et-:!i:t:v to (n n ror . v.. , I .it , .... ... a . rrr.Il'rd tO It nf Pt

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United Press International News Service.

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JULY 7. 1922

WANT A KING? I ashair.ed of yourlvs, trood people, for votlr.jr In the primirl', for you m'i'. know now that you participated In n. vicious thlnff and really had r.o rUM to menace, this pood old republic by picking your own candidate. You will b tol l often, and emphatically within the next few months that th political primary Is destructive of tho -plrtt of democracy and that It la undermlrdr.c the stability of povernment. ladin.; the onslaught apalnsi this method of picking poetical candidates is Senator Harry New of thi. ?tate -who docs not h'dleve in primaries ?lnc that day in May when the j-opl decided to relieve him of any further raorifb es on behalf of th ration. Others of the Old Guard are too buT themselves in the effort to rducitf the 7eople irito the l.elief that they ouch! no: to rule themselves, but that they are much better off by having a fow ward workers ar.d politician. pick their candidates for o.T.ce. Listen to this flrt lwon In your education by your peritor: "The primary !.? a cor-splaious failure and in th interest of pood morals ought to bo eliminated. It Is the cau5o of more political corruption than any ether on thinir. It forces capes like, the Newberry cae upon candidates for office. Under tho convention i-yptem of nominating. Hn. Newberry would have, been nominated for one-fifth or lesj what H coat him. x "Men ar? nominated for oftlce who, under tho convention eystem. would not have a look-in. They get th people to' fall for them. "When they get Into c!eft the result Is very often disastrous to public welfare." There you hava tho Fyftrm exposed In all Its hldfousnc. WTnn men like N'ewberry want an cfUce It costs them Ave tlmc3 as much to corrupt a täte by poisonlnt? the public mind than It would If they pimply hnd to flip a fdoek, oily dealer In delegates the prlce and then commit to memory the fpeech the'.r 5ecretirles or press agents wrlto for them accepting the call from "the people". You find out what is -wronrr with government. You people never .eiect the men that conventions made up of prospective pertmater -would pick for you. You fall utterly to understand the necessity of hav. Jr. candidates that can be talked to, if elected, by attorneys for privileged Interests. Y$u are weak. Imbeclll" and guileless enough to "fall for" men nnd women who promise to reprerent you and whose -platforms and pledges sound cod to you. That Is wrong. You FhouM never attempt this gigantic ta.k of picking out your public employes. That is a task which requires the master minds of expert politicians. You are to be educated now as to the vIcIou?ness cf a system that gives you a voice in government. If you are apt enough students, you may In time enter that perfectly logical course, -which should follow, of learning that you would be better off with a king instead cf a president, and that the trouble with governments is that you have not senso enough to vote at an election. For certainly no one not fitted to pick a candidate can show any real ability to pick an official. Line up behind Senator New for the new reform. Get ready to buy a crown for your first king. o EVEN LASKER? Tho president, back In his old home town and in touch once more with the heart of the people. Informs the nation ty.at the prohibition amendment will b enforced. It needed this word, in the light of recent utterences and of present happenings. Only a week cr so ago, one of his cabinet members. Mr. Weeks. , presumably in close touch with the presidential mind, gave the wets ground for' hope in h'.s declaration that ho stood for light wines and beer. In other words this cabinet member let It go out that he. a c'oso and trusted adviser, was asrainst the lor'vitution. a fort of damp 'Ro!hevis!. The president's refusal to even admonish, htf Irjer.d. Mr. Lacker, who operates your .hips, against filing Ii pior on them and turning your property Into float;:..; saloon gave more ground for the bell, f that the Harding administration was quite accurately represented In the Weeks statement. Mr. Harding now disowns the Weeks stand but he has not as yet stopped this government from being tho b:gcct and mo.t flagrant bootlegger, hi:'g bor.re for the open and avowed reason that i: r.ced th" money. I'ar be it from ar.y one to suggest that there be

an j thou

permitting practical politicians in

the rc-vubhi-an party from pointing to Weeks in wet districts this fall and to these words cf the pnsident in tho dry tenters: "The e'lT.tltuti t. has been amended to meet th popular vv i 1 '. . Our representative form cf Constitution! government is responsive to the will of the majority. rcs;on:ve to the expressions of deliberate pubhc opini r.. Majorities, restrained to the protection of mir.or. :..-. mut ever rule. The Constitution an 1 laws por.ered by the majority r.;u-t be i-nf.i oed. It '. net matter who opposes. It an vppt j-'.r.g v. ijority b.a.s a ju.t objection, tho r.sir.g t:de t f pub'io opinion will change the law. There i- - alid.ng liberty under any other plan.

It is

nit ret quibb'.o to ay that because

'.-.wye r di.-agr-e as to whether an American ship Amcrhnn f-rrltory. it is perfectly nil rieht to (. i r.t'.r. je the v.ile t.f b"v 2-? aboard th.em Th.:tt . w mUht have some l asis if the ship v.-t.-e pri.ite ; ro; rty hut when it is remembered that t !;.- ships be'.. r.g to all the people, the same

.lb w.io a.

ptt-d tiibs pro!.

ion amendnient, it

I more than crime to ptrmtt the sale to continue. T'very day Mr. IIard.:r.g. who promiües real enfrc mer.t. permits tii.s s-b of booc, he throws l:T.:in:.te at t:;e cr; tituti-n. Let It 1" hr.; t-1 th.it hü trip to Marion will so tho."Uhly convince him cf the determination of the pe- pi to rres re tl;at part cf the constitution that he w;ll have nerve and courage enough to ay

. . . . .

country does not care for money mads

ry violating Its own laws, criminal In .urpvo and results een thoup!. the lawyers say that thre Is a ternnioal doubt of the principles and morals of AmTlcars extr.lrg hryond the threo n.lle limit.

-o-

MODERN MATRIMONY. It rem.dned for London to furnish the newest brand of wedding ceremonies and the final word In feminist demands. Ther was a woman minister, a woman organist, women ushers at the church women, all women, except the one lone man who happened to be essential to the program of the day, or at least n substitute for the groom was discovered. The old ritual of the ceremony was greatly revised, in order, as explained by the lady minister, that this particular ceremony should not be "an insult to woman and an cffen.o to the purity and holir.ess of marriage". Fo it happened that, a.s the bride fondly and proudly garnered herself a husband, there wns no vow cf "love, honor and obey". , Instead the pledge taken by the bride and groom. Identical in language, was to "love, comfort, honor and keep" and when the rings were placed upon the fingers, no longer In the eyes of these women a symbol of servitude and ownership, the parties proclaimed, "As this ring now encircles this finger, fo let my love surround thee all the days of my

! life'

Poetic, of course, but hardly complete in its purpoe until these v.omen, who are so Intent on putting their own Interpretation upon ths word equality, find a way of entirely eliminating the male from the scheme of things. The mind tries to picture the groom of this wedding: and the bride. Was he a spineless, effeminate creature, a poet at heart and a weaJcling by circumstance, cr was the bride so endowed with beauty that it hid that determination which Is supposed to be found in sharp angles rather than in the soft curves that delight the eye? Ten years from now let It be hoped that forne London reporter who knows real news, will Journey out to the homo of this couple and give a veracious report of what that homo is. Until he does, you are entitled to your own guess and prophecy. Will he find there a man who is thoroughly cowed, who takes his orders meekly and submissively, a love nest ruled by the female with a stern and relentless word? Or will this bride, with her ideals of modernism, find that real wisdom does not need an insistence upon definite rights and that happiness comes from something deeper than mere forms of speech? Or can you picture this submissive male, who calmly ltens to the poprano ceremony, throwing" oslde his humility aftT the honeymoon Is over and asserting, his British Inheritance in cave man tactics? This ceremony is fllled with possibilities. Will it change the manner and mode for other women, or will It be listed among the freakish things that happen when the sun Is hot and the mind of men and of women touched with a little madnesa? ' 0 A XEW STANDARD. "I have an abiding faith that the man who loves his dog to the extent that he will grieve for him has in him tho qualities which will make him a loyal citizen." .This was the new standard set by President Harding in pleading for the life of a dog. In the stato of Pennsylvania there Is a law making. It a crime for an alien to own a dog and condemning the dog to death. This new method of determining tho qualifications of citizens has in it something which may appeal to the imagination, for it makes the heart, rather than the mind, the dominant ruler of life. Thero may bo those who will point to the fact that there have been hardened criminals, wife beaters and abusers of children who cling to the devotion of a dog as the one redeeming characteristic of their lives. The love for a dog may indicate possibilities for other achievements than that of loyalty to a country. For it is based upon a sense ofchlvalry. a protective care for a weaker creature, a kinship with sympathy and the quality of devotion. The judgment of men has been, tending in a far different direction in which the efficiency, the education, the brain has been the object of paramount Interest. There have been questionaires touching knowledge of unrelated subjects by which men have been judged. The presidential suggestion may so change the basis of judgment that men may he measured by their kindness, rather than their knowledge of logarithms, by their care of wives rather than ability to speak different languages, by their tenderness towards children, not familiarity with classic literature. Perhaps some day men will look Into the human heart and Judge by what is found there rather than PTobe Into their minds to find what has been learned. And in that day there will be a greater inclination to give those who make mistakes another chance. True, mistakes miy be made. It might be possible that the most fhi grant of eriminais would cherish a dumb beast of whose loyalty he was certain. Hut no other system yet devised i.s infallible pr.d It might be well to try the new one.

0 11.1 A PASSKS. (Washington Post.) The ouija. or yes-yes board, has had Its day and has gone the way of ping-pong and other indoor amusements, which became all tho rage for a brief space and wer th:i relegated to the obscurity from which they hod o suddenly emerged. The planchette. tho predecessor of the ouija. has been known for some 07 y.ars. it was a board equipped with two casters so that it might move easily over a sheet of paper when hands pressed lichtly upon it. and it had a pencil und-rneath which was tupposed to -a rite independently of the volition of the person or rer3ons using the . instrument. Its performances, strange enueh at times and arousing a good deal of curiosity even among scientists, were, however, generally explained as being the result of unconscious muscular exertion. The ouija, a modification of the plonchette. had an alphabet and other characters and. in p'.ace of the pencil, a pointer which, by indicating certain letters, was believed by it votaries to answer questions infallibly. The ouija owed its vogue to a lady from St. Louis, otherwise unknown to fame. .who. claiming to b the medium of Patience Worth, most renowned ot American "controls." pave a series of ouija seances which evoked enthusiasm throughout the countryThat was In 13. By the beginning of I3C0 the ouila was firmly established as a means of comrtunlcating with thc world behind the veil. It was made to erve all sorts of purposes. Many a block cf 5tcck was bought and many a hors? was backed to win a raco simply because ouija srelled out the Utters of the word Yes. The fad spread so rapidly and tho demand became so great that manufacturers could not ke-p pace with the orders and companies were Incorporated for the special purpose of supplying ouija boards. But a flump beran about March, 1S21. and increased with such quick peometric progression that now there is .'careely sale for onV of the toys where formerly they went off in tens of thousands. Not even the. visit of Conan Doyle and the renewed attention which it focused on spiritualism succeeded in reviving interest in what Silas Wegg would have called the minion of the hour. Other hobbies were clamoring to be ridden and would not be denied.

f

TMoweiyßaM Iii j3y Bill Armstrong Wl

ES

SOMI'JIODY IS Llin.Vfi,

Vomi.m, mi. ui Tili: t our

IM-MOKTAL SIIAKIXPIIULK "WH KNOW IT HAIN'T IS." (From Thursday's Moan):

i

AND.jeen from theo other three Moke !

wt-dxisdays niciiiATiox 16,956 Ii AUGUST CIIUTLATION OF ANY SOUTH Ili:.NI) DAILY

(Thursday's News-Times):

WTTDNnSDAY'S CIRCULATION' 19,lfl9 lUmber A. B. C.

We wonder If while Warren was writing that editorial In the Mirion Star offleo, the foreman came In and (bawled him out for being late with hla copy.

Mr. Jake Her:kaman is In receipt of an -unusual postal card mailed at "somewhere In Wisconsin," which re3ds as follows: THE PIG FOUR: (1) George IL Wheelork (2) A. L. Hubbard (3) F. A. Pryan (3) George A. Robertson. THR SECOND DIG FOUR: (lj Big bass (2) Hlff pike (3) Big m-usky (4) Big talk.

We have an Idea that there, was a preponderance of the last number four In this particular fishing pirty.

Wisconsin correspondent in

forms in that these three are regu'.a- dubs with the rod and reI. And "w can gt a whole lot mor caustic in our remarks, if the occasion demands it.

9srii:f Nirvvs or thi: city. We- -wouldn't want this to go any further, but Guj Peterson come nrar tipping Into Tom Brandon' front window yesterday p. m., while inspecting an elaborate display of hides' bithlnff suits, which were on the hoof.

Suggestion talnment by

for evening's enterstation WOAZ Let

somebody with a good clear voice read the history of St. Joseph county i to th customers. We followed Ooldie Mann for j fr.ur blocks Thursday thinking there i vas3 something up, but we found i

our suspicions -were groundless. We took after Gold! as soon as we faw that he was -wearing his well known picnic hat. Strange things happen sometimes. George Platner went whirling; past us !nh! brand r.w Cole, and by (leorge we thought It mut be circus day. we mistook George's new auto for th caliope.

And by the way, Senator Aldrich, the wldery known telegrapher, wishes to call our attention to Butcher, the meat dealer on Fast Monroe street. We have previously called attention to Fuma, the iee cream -man. and Planter, the Klkhart undertaker.

To revert to the Wisconsin fishing !partj-, we can only say that it Is possible for us to write some pretty mean thing about flshirur when once we get tlrred up. We have already eaten flesh off of that most capable fisherman. George Wheelock, but not a fish bon have we

jOrSITTtYI7D ON' A WASHINGTON AVIIXVK CAR. A young man boarded a car with another, deposited a dime in the cifih box; then was going to throw th rnotorman off the car because he didn't tender him any change. Our .corespondents can always dete.ct

these big town rubco without the j

slightest difficulty.

JAPAN'I-Si: SIGN BOARDS. Japaner- advertisers make use of similes. "Step Inside'." Is the invocation cf a ! ig multiple phop in Tokio. "You will be welcomed as fondly as a ray of sunshine after a rainy day. .Fach one of our assistants is as nlrr.'blo as a father ticking a husband for a drworlcss daughter, loods are dispatched to customer's .house with tho rapidity of c shot from tho cannon's mouth." A grocer proclaims that hh "superfine vinegar i.i more acid than the tongue of ho most fiendish mcther-ln-law."

YOUR HEALTH - ByCoD-laRnd s-

Many books have been written about srall-stones. The subject lias attracted the attention of pureren:s. laboratory workers and hundreds ( f medical men. It has worried mau a layman. Fortunately, the established facts prove it is a condition which need not keep us awuko nightA Gall-stones can l safely dealt w-lth if necessity demands action. In the majority of cases tho trouble can bo borne without treatment. And it can be avoided by the observance of the rujcs'of simple living. We rarely find gall-stones in young persona, almost never before 2-". More than half tho cases appear in persona past 4 0 and usually in women, especially In women who have had children. It is stated by some authorities that almost all women past 60 have gall-stones. I speak of the prevalence of gallstones, not to alarm you, but to reassure you. Tho condition is very prevalent, as you see, but it is rarely troublesome. In America there are fewer cases than In Europe, especially in Germany. Indigestion is a common and early symptom of gall-stones. Chronic dyspepsia, especially with pain in the right side, gives warning of the trouble. .There may be a feeling of fulness and weight in tho region of the liver. Faintness, sickness at th" stomach, -and a catch in the side are other symptoms. Gas formation, bloating, belching of food and distress after eating should lead to the suspicion of gall-stones if the symptoms continue for months. If tho gall-stones remain in th original location they are unlikely to cause annoyance. If stooping, a blow in the side, or any other mechanical cause, moves tho stone, it may gt caught in the canal or tear the tissues enough to excite trouble. Should the damaged tissues become infected there is serious dlttlculty t once. The passage of a stone throush the gall duct or the common bile duct Is likely to cause pain. It may produce what is called "biliary colic." In these cases there are violent, cutting, terrific pains, chills and high fever, great prcstration, sweating and vomiting and other symptoms. The

side becomes tender and swollen. If tho ?tone lodges in tho common

duct the canal which carries away ' tho fluids of gall-bladder and liver ; there may be jaundice, and there ccrI tairily will be if the j-tone stays there

lng. The bile cannot escape, it h absorbed by the body, and colors tho eyes and skin. The colic may last hours or for several days. It all depends cn the progress of the stone from the gallbladder to the intestine. Fortunately, the attacks of pain are in paroxysms, and are not continuous. It would be impossible to bear th

j exc ruciating pain for days at a

stretch. If the stone lodges in the duct just outside the gall-bladder, it will b followed by .swelling of the obstructed bladder. This organ may become enormously distended, forming a large tumor. When tho common duct is obstructed and the victim, becomes Jaundiced, he will have violent itching of the skin. Thero may be little pain, but nt'arked nausea and vomiting. The symptoms are some times like a gu chills, fever and sweat. Not many casts are so bad as to result in complete obstruction, pus formation and rupture. Usually the stone moves along and the symptoms disappear fr months or year? until another stone starts along down. For the acute pain the doctor will administer sedatives, but until he arrives there is much to do to relieve the suffering. The vic-tirr. should bo assisted into a tub of water, hot as he can bear. This appears to relax the tissues and assist the passage of the stone. Hot fomentations over the side, and a hotwater bottle will help a lot. A laxative, preferably mineral oil

' or olive oil, will be helpful. Alkaline

mineral waters are useful. The diet hould. bo regulated when attacks of indigestion give suspicion of pall-stones, s-jptomatic exercises and regularity of living are important, .soda salts, cither of sulphate or phosphate of soda, are advi"d as of possible value in dissolving the stonrs or preventing their growth. Tomorrow' we will consider the surgical troitmer.t of gall-stones.

1 1

Pore Ttuui

frhan Pootris

YESTERDAY, TODAY AND FOB. EVER. We learn from: old Inscriptions Unearthed beside the Nilo That even the Egyptians Were pretty strong for style. Upon the debutanty. Who graced King Cheop's court. The waists were thin and scanty. And petticoat were short, In Pharaoh's opinion Such sketchy skirts were wrong. And during his dominion The ladies wore 'em long. They've- found papyrus paes Depicting women's clothes, As. through the changing ages. A controversy rose How maidens briefly bodlced. In Cleopatra's reign, Were thought to be Immodest And looked on with disdain. Although it was not shockirg For wives of Barneses To fhow the silken stocking About their dimpled knees. We don't condemn the preachers Who seek with car.t success ' To tell young lovely creatures The way they ought to dr?ss. But if sinco history's morning As lately it appears This well Intended warning Has fallen on deaf cars. We venture the conjecture That they had best forbear

To .-torm and rage and lecture They won't get anywhere I

COMPENSATING ADVANT GE. A dollar will po as far as it used to, but it will go much faster.

HE PLAYED AFE. The rx-Kalser says very little about the war in his hook. Put then he saw very little of it.

WHAT'S THE USE? The man who could answer til of Mr. Edison'. questions wouldn't need to apply for a job. He'd have a good one with the encyclopedia pub- :: h--r. (Copyright, is::.)

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Capital flSO.ooofto

VACATION

Tak a Tar.ntin. If you need & little extra eah f.-r jafcty-firit take you nn get it hr and we will fx-i-nl your first payment six wek or twii niiitus. Loins on Chattels

Mi

174-

STATE LOAN CO IStaMUhed Suite X MrrrhnnU lUnk Ilblc 2.11 S. MIrhlrn. Opn 8 to 5:3U.

GEORGE WYMAN 8 CO.

Come And Sec I"

Saturday Specials To do 1 3 hours" work in 9 J2 hours is the purpose of the Saturday Special. By inviting our- customers to shop Saturday mornings and afternoons through special price inducements, we aim to do as much work up to 6 P. Tvl. Saturday as if we made our clerks work 1 3 hours. Silk Hand Bags $1.95 These novelty silk bags may be carried by their heavy tilk cord handles with the tassel ends. Saturday, $1.95. r r Shopping Bags 44c Double handled shopping bags makes the carrying of bundles easy. These are of kerato! material and large. Saturday, 44c. Kid Belts 50c For Saturday only we are celling these white kid belts with attractive pearl buckles at 50c. A

Hosiery Specially Priced for Saturday The following three specials in hosiery-introduce to thrifty buyers the best values in hosiery that have been afforded for some time. Each is marked at an introductory price for Saturday only. Regular pnees will rule the balance of the week. WOMEN'S white thread silk hose with silk clastic top, Saturday $1.25. r GIRLS AND BOYS' fine ribbed cotton hose in black, white and brown any size from 5'2 to 10. Saturday 3 pair for 65c. 9ft if. f. MEN'S SHAWKNIT mercerized lisle hose in several colors. Saturday 3 pairs for $1.25. Stationery 45c Take a 2 quire box of this special stationery on your vacation linen finish, and assorted colors, 45c a box. ifAlarm Clocks $1.09 These nickle finish alarm clocks keep good time. Saturday, $1.09. if. if. 3f. Saturday Notion Special White or colored r;c-rac braid, 3 yards for 8c. A. P. W. toilet paper (2,500 sheets to roll) 45c. Rubber kitchen aprons, several styles, 35c. Flesh colored sanitary rubber aprons, with net top. 34c. Ideal hair brushes with water proof rubber cushion, 95c.

4 i - - . -

Jj !T l.-o h

W i'n;

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Early Closing

Wash Fabrics for Summer Dresses Specially priced for Saturday 40 inch printed chifton voiles in light or dark colors at 29c yard. 32 inch Japanese crepe in new colored checks at 49c yard. 44 inch plain chifTon voile at 38c. 32 inch plain colored Japanese crepe at 29c. 32 inch ratines in new patterns. 59c and 69c. 36 inch nainsook of fine quality, 25c.

v- x

Saturday Specials for Child ren trepe athl etic suits (3 to 8 year sizes) 50c. Gingham, voile and organdy dresses (2 to 14 year sizes) $1.95. Gingham rompers in dark colors for play, 45c. Sfm Jjt MADGE EVANS MILAN HATS for girls at $2.00 to $6.00. Handkerchiefs A splendid cotton handkerchief for women at $1.00 a d ozen for Saturday only. Umbrellas $ 1 .35 The rain or sun will not affect these umbrellas of American taped edge taffeta. Looped handles. Saturday, $1.35. V 3

IF?

I x w

V

Traveling Bags $5.65 Everyone likes large, roomy bags that will hold all to be expected and yet be esaily carried. You will find these roomy and besides they are leather lined. Saturday only $5.65. Other hand luggage, too, has been specially priced for Saturday and you are quite sure to find a bargain to meet your wishes. 2f.

TW. v

Colored Bags $1.50 to $1.95 Many different styles and colors, including black are offered specially for Saturday.

We close at 6 P. M. on Saturdays during July and August. Would you like to work the long stretch of 1 3 houri on a hot Saturday? Probably not! We don't and that is why we are closing at (r P. M. during July and August. Below you will find many specials which you can buy before 6 P. M. tomorrow and you'll like shopping Saturday morning and aft-

"M H 111. '

Waists $6.95 and $8.95 Saturday Special For tomorrow we arc offering georgette and crepe de chine blouses at marked reductions from the regular price. In both regular and large sizes you will find waists in brown, tan, navy and black.

few

Imported Gingham Dresses $7.50 Few frocks are more charming or effective in summer than these simple imported gingham dresses with the hand made collars and cuffs. A bargain you should buy if you wear a size between 14 and 38. if. Toyland Offer3 These Specials to the Children Croquet set for four players. Nicely jjainted and varnished, $2.45. Red wheelbarrows with shovel to match, 50c. Aeroplanes, special at 25c. Humming tops. 25c. Kalediscopc, 15c. Bagatell game, 1 5c. c Jf -YAn assortment of dolls reduced to special prices for Saturday. Lingerie Specials Pink batiste gowns are reduced for Saturday to $1.00. White lace trimmed gowns in large sizes will be sold Saturday for $1.50. v-

1 i3

Some Extra Good Domestics Special for Saturday

100 single bed blankets of fine cotton, with small plaids in grey, tan, blue, yellow, pink and lavender. A good purchase for summer cottage or sleeping porch use. Saturday $1.00 each. Large size satin bed spreads with bolster cover to match the raised Marseilles pattern. The edge is scalloped. An extraordinary value. Saturday for $6.69.

Manchester chambrays in plain fast colors, pink, light blue, green and lavender. Saturday at 2Vic. Marquisette of good quality for curtains, 39 inches wide. Saturday at 1 2 Yzc yard. Regular sized bed pillows of dry picked feathers covered with heavy art ticking, special Saturday at $2.50 a pair.

A Growing Rug and Drapery Department for a Growing City

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