Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 23 Sep 1915, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

New Silk` Crepe Blouses `loan: \a. raw grnuauuuuyw an: ::'c')1o1js, `eacI1 ............. .. `Flesh and Whitg, each Woollen and Cashmere Hose all in Stock at Same Prices as Last Year. Ladies Special Raincoat, regular 6.5o'va1ue, A... -..I.. ....-I. Q1 A All Winter -Lines of Underwear For 2 Ladies Childrenand Men Now In Stock. Ladies and Childre/n s Middies to Clear runs:-`nu uarvvosnn -\1.pIIlV\IID|n I on sa1e,._each.._........ .... .. l "The following report was pre- sented to Council from the en- ~gineer s department, being the re- port- of work done for July and __ -__-L _ . Total . . . . . . . .___$1377 81 Sewer Connection Dept. Ten sewer connections have been made during the two months. Fees to the town, i $20.00. _ Plumbing Dept. Fourteen plumbing permits have been issued during the two months `for work to the value of $2495.00. `Fees to the, town, $30.50. ..:1.l..~ 1\-..i. vriililies Repairing Wellington St. Repairs to sidewalks . . . vv vunv :44. vs; Repairing Toronto St. . .. Repairing Blake St. . . . . Garbage removal . . . . . . Repairing Sophia St. Repairing Penetang St. . . Repairing High St. . . Repairing Ross.St. . . . . Repairing Essa Road Constructing garbage bin Q..- 1_-'II ICE . onto. ' ts- \.I\lLALJv.I. v|\JvaA: ail; Islvvav 5 --- re hall . . . . .. Repairing Burton Ave. . .. Cleaning Bradford St. . . . Clegning Dunlop St. Maintenance of sewers _ Material used . . . . . . . . . .. cannon!-Ithaca WU! Thirty building permits have been issued during the two months for work to the value of $35,463.00. When you envy another, you lose that which you have yourself. \J.\lllIJIl.L uuvnnab uvuang. vv yr. ;n- -gz -- Vincent s Park .. |. . Cutting weeds . . . . . . . Repairing Elizabeth St. . . . Repairing Clapperton. St. . . Cleaning water-tables .. .. . . Repairing William St. . . . . Repairs to culverts and 1...: 3...-.. AA-IJBIILIU 0 Board of Works Dept. Repairs to Highways . . . . .$ 52 20 Repairs to Essa Road 14 35 Constructing stairway in St. TTZ..........4.7... `D....`|. Q7 Q1 ENG-INEER S REPORT T3? TCT3 I `I323 ;-FOE August : D. `The date of 1 Thanksgiving Day this year was xed for Monday, October 11, by the Cabinet Council` `at its meeting on Wednesday of last week. ' ' THANKSGIVING OCTOBER 11. [$1.90 Itniiiuhluu IN ADVANCE smut: coats -nun: ourrq Lfor mu. eouen {Poetry 3 ill IICBII auu VVIIILC , .................. ....$3.5'o 1 ................... ..$5.00 in esh and white` Lpj L98!-Inll, \Jg :9 V (51515, ........... .......$4.45 vul. V U1. U0 uuu .. .. 22 33 iellington St. . . 115 20 idewalks . . 30 75 pronto 2440 ake ..33645 oval .. .. 2442 rphia. . .- . . 13 11 enetang 13 35 igh .. 450 ss.St. .. .. .. 22 50 sa Ijoad _.:. .: 748 U LU-ll` \IalU uh ' FOR TWO MONTHS ........... ..19c L1} St ton.S.t. :: ales .. 5% 2;; E5 '9748 % 14 48 109 50 `LA I d1n., and. rr1e.. 37 31 128 68 A-- 35 ii 29 17 177 37 32 10 -Ads q[oney- V Bar- 1-onto. low- remo tario, --_- a;`...` U0-. at}. of iew of the visit of Sir Sam. H beg to Barrie this week, tl_1e_.fo_l- uf"- 0 appreciation of the Munster lolliaitia will be of interest. Be- .f ` is o'iV8I1 a portion of an article h;ari1;_.- in the current `number of $111]? Canadian Magazine, by Britton .3, Cooke: ._ M - V - One ,ini;:ht write? two, or even three sketches of as many really, 0pu1ar public men in_ less time 3,311 it takes,` merely to..dra.w, a hem on General Hughes.` Other public men have their pose and their accidental moments` off-guard when one may observe the mark In V T Who,-9 the pose comes o at night. With the aid of Morgan _s g Men and Women of Canada. and one of the tried and proven formulae for writing short "biographies, . it IS usually easy to drape a few words over. almost any gentleman s moral of a man who must be `either all pose or no pose at all 1S disconcert- jug`, To discover any c-rack or joint in the outward manifestations of the member for Victoria and Hali-. burton, where one might lay a fin- V ger andsay; Here begins thereal man and here--the thing he hopes` the public thinks he is, is_ impos- sible. The outward and apparent i-llinister of Militia and Defence is the only minister. There is behind that quick, alert, sun-bronzedvcoun-h tenanee and that ne straight glance - no seeondar_v Sam Hughes pulling ` the strinsrs by which the outer I _:i1re, if he have one. But -to write! -Hllf_"ll(`.s` is actuated and the public deceived. s While other public men- some of the bestof them at that- dissemhle a modesty theysurely don't feel. so as to encourage the simple-hearted into bestowing extra - eeoniums. Hughes vtreats . modesty 4 as she should, logically, implore to he treated. _He says,_I am---that l I am" thrusts out his splendid-`jaw, _; draws down the corners of his . ll`."l1I yet humorous mouth, sets\his A rather .`_"00(l and aggressive nose ; sti'ai;`lit in the pace of public dis- . a]>p1`0\'al amlblazes away with as `ne a `pair of snapping, deant, and l; intelligent" Irish-Canadian` eyes- ` _L'i'a_\'-l)1ile---as evpr shamed the devil. j l,\'ent1n'e`to call him to your, at- . tenion as a genius, but if you must - l1a\'(`_\'01.ll` geniuses conventionally ; elad- harbareil, and tamed, then I ; witluli-aw to a stronger position. Here is a man to whom it is tting ; to `.1'l\'(` honour. From this position f there can he no retreat. ' I artist, is painting, in his studio in! Homer \\/'at_son, the Canadian the hamlet of `Doom, a tremendous ran\'as-onc of` three ordered by the G0\ 01`I1I'II(`1l'[ in. commemoration of tho inobilization of the First Can- adian Overscas Contingent at Val- (fa1`ll(`1' last year. This canvas shows acainst a back_rround of Laurentian Mountains crowned with September sunliL'ht, the great Valcartier `plain covered with our soldiers march-, in`: past"`t}io Duke Connaught andl th0i.\linistor of Militia and at blot of spectators in the foreground just behind the Royal Standard. Between . this fl'illt'(`1'll1f_1' piece of colour and the mountain background are thirty th0n:~'and sons of Canada, organized, ml.lf01`lI1('(l. and armed for War-- _th1rt_\' tl1o11;~ta,11l stalwart men swing-I. me` across the plain under the clear`, lmt >`k_\'. thirty thousand bayonets ,`. la11f`ll1`.' in the brilliant light andl l'0rmin where the long lines back In the miihllo distance swing` round ll10.turn into the stretch leading M-%'t tho (`rmtcrnor-General and the lllinistcr, a figure like a faniof burn- ished (gold un the gray- Ereens ofthe hills behind. V t_was a stirring picture. It Was 3 st1rrin5_v` scone. Here was uinfonnod a . lllllt, a l01'f_`0(li by a not a mere assembly of nd orderly men, `but a f`orce--the thunderbolt young nation, a terrible Instrument, keen, hard as "adamant, I10 as steel, now ready to be 15!`-t?l1ed--iii the defence of Christ-- "`l0m- This was the` force ' of Whlch General Drain of the United States Arum looking` on, `said: .;I i`V'0uld rather command this `army than any army on the battlefields of 1aunched--as it` has `already been` m:`TD;.' or in the reserves of` Eur-i . -_<~u U3 '6 `true ste , v____,_,_,____ _v___u ,___,__, gm` arr}1y on battleelds of 0peT"`I~ In reserves of Eur-_ It is t 1s not a body of golgliers. om-Q `a'n army. of non-commV1ss1one`d_ stonlsd Tins was the, force that__ \ItD<}%] the breach at tLangemarch," far 9 %(1 been gathered_ from coal $8 of the na_t1qn, Afromt -:th'e 2 of Hxes of Nana1mo'j_t9_ the ggks `Of P31 ax. from`- the ~rock,- stre Jlavemmce `Rupert .t. . the '-from EMS of the c1_t,vt bf. `_;Qu"e all office bui~ldifn,gs_;i_ W * Y farrn-"V--1311. to t I d -A I` to I `V _ '. I I . An Informal Es 1ma gt? ofanMi1g)are:111::l 1%1efpfn:el}e. Eonoxfable the Mm- VI No. as T `gob Lx|p3ON cncwa By Britton ZB. Cooke-.-In Canadian. MAJOR-GENERAL sm_ sA1vI EUG'HI:s wuou No.-. nos} puuuuun A I I military vvAIUv vvv Jauvv Juno B60113 Within` two weeks the eet of transports sailed to England.'_.The rst sectioniofi a gigantic piece of organization was thus completed under the hands of this one-time Canadian country boy, private` - in the militia,` school teacher, poli- tical worker. In - unhappy Germany the task would have been accom- plished with even greater speed. In England, rich in military tradi- tions, of war organization, it might have been done--though it was "not done.--without any mistakes` What- soever.. The fact that Canada, non-military . nation, Without real previous_ experiece, without prepara- tion before the declaration of war, except the ordinary preparation for manoeuvres, , collected. equipped, ` mobilized, and trained thirty thousand men _ without one serious mishap, is due to the genius _-for it required genius-of General Sam Hughes. Criticisms have been raised and have died.- ,Er'rors have been found in departments. ` Dis- honest me_mbers .of Parliament and dealers in `supplies have attempted to take advantage of, the nation s necessities. But no loss of time, no slip of memory, no blame, worthy under the circumstances to be.coI_1- sidered, attached _. to the Canadian Department of Militia and Defence. On `the contrary, with General. Sam Hughes at its head-the department executed its'_ task in a way `that brought praise` ` from `the military chiefs of Great Britain, Awhose praise is never given without cause. ""1-.3. ucvtutu J-1:1`; n1na\uotIn`t\'IC:(\+;n I3ll\l\1I71`\ and `with at least a nucleus` 8.. (.0101) to 11v v ML 5; v \aLL vv Avnnvuv vuuuuuu This was the characteristic shown by Major-General Hughes all through the fall of last year. t This man who had spent so many years as a quiet member of parliament, never noted_as a Speech-maker or as! _a startlingcontributor to the sum ltotal of the ideas in the ,House of Commons, showed -the qualities of a` a great `executive. Certain Work had to be accomplished by a xed date. Knowing that, Hughes out- lined the chief departments of the `work and picked out men,` either from his staff or from outside, tted [to look, after them; ' i ,,,-_1_ LL- ...'.....1,.....1....I What inusf it feel like, reto;'t- ed the `other, A have achepted the responsibility and to have achieved -_-what we have just seen I `KT:4-L:-n 4...... .......`I-._ LL- av; 71,` WU 'I:a i :l:;-`E)'I1:ue>::la.`1cr;i;ie, the mechanical {transport section1..'tItf1stsa1d bthzit hevwent over a 1s 0 19 95 ` known Canadians who had had ex- perience in the autorrfobllekxbusmess. He chose one man ong nown as an expert. This man, T. A._ Ru,S%el1, was of thevquiet, 'te&:dYh`%`01ng tylii `a man accustome o 0 so m1_1c Work in so much _ti`m.9a and k99P1n.%` u the pace steadlly. .Acc.ord1ng to 111) t hich has since been told e s,or,v w 1. . , ~ Hughes handed Russell .3 P190? Ofl paper ~not " much larger than the palm of one s _hI1d; `and 9Vred-l I w1:clh_-__I1otes. V , 99 1.-. ....:.1 in him. nnanm-l Look at Hughes! .whispered the reporter. .What must _a man feel like who has risen _from a farm boys in adull Ontario `county to a position .where it lies in his hands to give form to this rst big unit` sent by this country to the war? . When the last officer s sword had ashed in salute, one newspaperman touching another s_ arm, pointed to General Hughes, grim of face, his white, close-cropped hair gleaming [under the edge of his service hat, riding soberly from the eld. | (IT iW1En- Iluwa. . . There,,he` said, in his: custom- |ary_ brusque voice, that s -a memor- |andum of what yve ll need in .- the -----1.-............I l--nnna~nn-pf T andum OI Wllula WI: 11 uccu Lu. . luv Way of`_mec_hanica1 transport. I want that looked af er and I want all the stuff ready? by September I 22nd. l`O_`I......J 77 ` _`R.`l1.-9 :z'.:na." o _ Burt, Colonel-- `protested Rus-l Sell (Hughes was then still Colonel Sam), it s absolixtely impossible. It can t be done. ` Hughes lo_oked{_up. ' , ` ``What- did I ask you to come to Ottawa for?! he snapped. To tell me_.that?_ , ` 1 1115 ,L l'1-14nnI Ilnnhoa-. fmagvazine`. `oii Bagk mtncus` or Iannst, 1'uI oo'uu'r4r of `stucco: Ann `rut oouuucu or cannon .oun cnnumou. j BA.RRu~:..cogNT`1 OF s1McoE.w,0`NTARI10.SEPTEMBER23. 1915 j Meantime Hughes. had given or-l ders to the engineers to prepare the! camp at Valcartier. Departmental chiefs _who had for many years` plugged along in the usual routine were suddenlyface to face with the problem of draining, lighting, and otherwise equipping "the enormous; new camp. If "Hughes. when he told` them .the situation, had expressed so much as half a doubt that the! thing was possible, they might have lost their nerve; The task was colossal. But Hughes treated his `men as though they were Colossi as Well. He gave no sermons, express- ed no doubts, refrained from inter- .ference. His_ orders were carried out. ` n. . u - - --- vvovo As train after train dumped addi-l tional thousands of men on the`, plain at 'V alcartier high officers] shook their heads in despair and all butthrew up their hands. It was! impossible, they felt to bring order out of such a situation. Men Werel arriving so fast they could never,| never" handle them, But "one man` in the midst of the strainxremained ` unperturbed. If anyone whispered impossible, his retort Was, nothing is impossible. Do it. f\LL....' ......-.... .......I.1 1..---- ....I.........J L1... `av A A A u as vvul. IJIIU UUUILULJ, Ullb CV51] one of these men,` in addition to those. collected by the .Canadian Northern Railway had" ultimately to be "hauled by the Canadian Northern Railway from Montreal to Valcar- tier. Soldiers were` poured into those `grounds at the rate of ten trainloads .a day. The railwaymen worked as they had .never Worked before, building extra sidings and loops for the handling; ofthe enorm- "ous traic. ` ` TT 1 1 1 anv v n a A A : u ; n u n Uunlnllnun Azu Lu- C I I Other` men would have planned the `work to the last detail--and ` been, `late. Hughes had the perspective of a big undertaking. `To look after all. detail himself was`, of ` course, impossible. But he cut it into tre- mendous pieces, picked the bestlmeii he could nd foreach piece- of Work. and then by his own industry and determination inspired them to `do their utmost. ` I110` '0 .1 ix It is doubtful if ever a railway company _ in I the wor1d--certainly not in Amcrica-had quite the task the Canadian Northern. Railway had in that. lmobilization. The Grand Trunk Railway and the Canadian Pacic Railray collected soldiers from all over the country, but every nnn n-9 I-lunar. man` 5... -.1|J3L3--- L- There is no idling in the Depart- ment of Militia and Defence at'Ot- .tawa, and the work carried on in` the somewhat cramped quarters onl Slater 'street gives every appearance of being efficient -work. There is a `minimum of noise -and a maximum of eiect. Hughes himself is there` early and late.-_ The ' whole place, hums with industry. There is com-} paratively little red tape. In the midst of great pressure the Ministeri still insists that everyone who wants: to write him about grievances, large` |'or_small, may do so. He looks" into every complaint personally. ` His. l mail, needless to say, is enormous; TL 2.. .....2J 4.1;.-.4. Q... T_T.....`L.... ....`I....... LHBII Lll.a.lllUI.u i l J I nun nu` uv uuuazucu. ' I How many men will we have to- mpve? asked one of the officials- .`Anything` from twenty-ve to `fty thousand. . ' . .I1'1 how long? Right away. Soon as they are ready,to go. A t'T.L -....u. 1.- :|_,,_ H That` work was done. ` . When the war broke -out Canad had no suitable lmobilization ground `convenient to the port of 'embarka- ` tion. _ Hughes, in 1911, had decided that Valeartier would be the ideal spotforysuch a purpose, but had not been able to complete all arrange; ments r for the laying. out of the grounds. He summoned the railway` chiefs of the "Canadian Northern Railway A and .told- them that the Government a would require an un- precedented train service to the Val- cartier mobilization grounds. If the Canadian Pacic . Railway and the Grand Trunk `Railway could do anything to ease the burden on the Canadian Northern Rai1way`-on whose line the ground .is-their aid was to be obtained. 3 ' I171 E6553 i" the ,war . had . started. Lavuuavuu vv -.u~J, Av vnnu;4nA ......., .....,. It is said that Sam Hughes,- when` yet" a _colonel, brought unon himself` the disapproval of a military expert` from `abroad to Whom he. declared that there would be only one . way `to .ght the Germ`ans-this was afte 11'r1'_'___n!9 :.;.._-:._...1 -1.1... .L1...._ ..__.. VIII: /vvcu, Luau. -ovum. uuxu How? inciuixfed the. other man lwith lofty accent. ._ ` um.--__-._1_-.. n .....:.J t1.;._.....'1 1:r.....1....... 1 VVIIJII IULUJ sauvvglvo Trenches, said General Hughes.` Trenches! I've been all over that` ,2_'rou11`d myself. I ve ` studied .it.! There's just one thing to do. Dig one row of . trenches in front of the Germans. ' Then` dig another, and :` another,. apd .another,; all/the way `back to Paris, and the channel ports if necessary. -Fast as you get put out of one trench retire to the next. `Try that -for awhile--and _ the Ger- mans will be fagged and read_y . for .53 . before they get very. far :5;iY;?3f'e*hsire 9bi<*tiV- ,2I_u.-.....A_....`-..A. .:|:m.L....-.:I 'n..+ towuru blltgll Uudvuua. v v. . . `The `Lmilitary expert _d1ffere'd. But 'Hug'.h_s {was `right. ' _ 7-II11 l`-I_._-'I `U ...-u-`gnu cvvlun `:71 IIIIKIIBS Wu: .u_;uu. ` A Th'e Colonel Hughes who in times` of" peace" occupied 'himself_ with. all _th`e, minntad of % military work,` `at-l ` tszhes~ andlprleslidingl `:I`Tv :": C-unIn' '3; nJhrLin`:y..: gun- at" .45-3-53] _ II\I 8!]! ' It can t be done. Oh, yes it can, said Hughg,-`s. It was- K180 I'L_LlB .5 lllil/yhullcn ` cuxu y; uu;u;-:2, gnetixfgsv of `V small" a1`msJ- commit- ` uuuuu IV 6 LVIJ, ll-\JU IaIa1vvIJIJnJo I His mind works at a furious pace. He has _' the imagination of the H` `Salt of the earth-the {Irish- |Cinadian-and',he `has a tongue for 1a 1 hone sasuvo General..Sam Hughes may not yet Kitchener, and he has. the soldier s faculty for speaking with more can-l dour than is usually" palatable to `- the heroes of peace, but in his pas-. sion for Canada and things Canad-i ian he is unexampled. Every sol-! dier is, to Hughes, his boy. I ; think it is -not _an exaggeration to, say that he has a- queer sort of fatherly" "heart for his great family] of ghting men. The; loss of good- men does not leave the stoic ghterl himself unmoved, He loves war,` not for itself, but for the qualities it brings out in men. If one could. read between the lines one might nd that his one regret was that he; could_ not both ght and administer` at the .same time. | I have learned to be as taciturn as usnannu - IIIJ-ll\J s mIs:mi1 disreet " and A always re-! Iticeqt? _No, not always. - ` T_T-... ._..-....1I ......._`l-.. ..L - .D--..2---... .....-.. UUIJALUUD ILU \IL4l\J VUILL B uuuun No one ever ' described General Hughes as lovable-and yet in ` a rugged sort of way he is; that is to say, he commands the affection of - his friends` and of those who work under him.` ' His loyalty to a] friend is proverbial. Once Sam` Hughes is a man s friend nothing inl heaven or earth` or in the waters under the earth, can make him for- get. The same loyalty he shows to his friends he shows for his coun- try. A Toronto plawyer, meeting in Ottawa a noted writer of National- istic 'pamph1ets,, exclaimed, My `dear Ewart, you re not one-two- three as a Nationalist compared to Sam Hughes. Sam Hughes is the most Canadian. Canadian I ever met. ' ` 1 In I-r 1 - tees and so on, is not the same man you meet under that name to-day. He was a man out of place except when war--such as ' the South Afri- can War or _the present titanic struggle--gave him an opportunity to serve. In` South Africa his im-_ petuous gallantry and daring were a unbelievable.` `Now in the work ofl organizing ,.the resources of the-', Dominion in the present struggle he` has found.his metier. What might I have _ happened with "old-fashioned, retired `country `gentlemen holding his portfolio in the present. circum- stances no one can guess. `AT- -.... ..--.... .'.I........Z`|.....1 l`|...........`I :-: :-: DEVLIN & MURCHISON :-: :-: Another Shipment of British Goods has just come to hand. . This consignment consists of a lot of scarce goods such as Dress Goods, Suitings, Table Linens, o ' Towellings, Yarns and Hosiery. Boys 2 picc Suits, double-breasted coats with bloomer pants. Made from good dark tweeds. ' Sizes 24 to 8, were 3.50, .3.7.. .on sale $2.95 Sizes. 29.to 33, were 4.75, 5.00,..on sale $3.75 Boys_ Suits.... . Cerpet' squgm in all t_he new sinfades in Brussels, Wilton, Velvets and V ` Tapestry" at reduced prices. - ' ..\ k ` % Murchison . ..... .;.....$2.9s and $3.75 new fall Overcoats. and and Suits for men _and boys are now on display. Prices range from ....... .. ....... ..s7.5o to $13.00 Men's R_aincoats, guar-wt anteed for 2 years ...... `coats, guaranteed fqr I year.._,$5.00 and'$Ta5O % .................. $10.00 Merfs and Ladigs Rain- The rst shipment A of b There is more Catarrh in this sec- ; tion `of the country than all other s diseases put together, and until the - I last few -years was ` supposed to be >-incurable. For a great many years - ldoctors pronounced it a local dis- . 5 ease and prescribed local remedies, - l and by constantly failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it ,incurable. Science has proven Ca- fitarrh to be a constitutional disease {I and therefore requires constitution- l-al treatment. Hall s Catarrh Cure, p-lmanufactured by F. J. Cheney & , Co., Toledo, Ohio, is the only con- ; stitutional cure on the market. It [is taken internally. It -acts direct- ; ly on the blood and mucous sur- :;faces of the system. .They offer I -one hundred dollars for anylcase it` fails to cure. Send for circulars! . i and testimonials. ll l"f\ !.|.`oledo, Ohio. , V Sold by Druggists, 75c. T Take Hall s Family Pills for con- stipation; ' KIIJII IIVILIBI CUIIJ \llJ\/O Blunt, vigorous honesty, a tre- mendous heart,Aa -twin-six think- ling. e'ng'ine--these are character.- istics of the man who is responsible for the splendid organization of Canada s share in the ght of the` world. i , I real language. I once heard a story +-I `doubt if it is true,` but it` is characteristic-about c Hughes ,being far in advance scouting with twelve men, some of them wounded, in a piece of bad country in South ` Africa." They had been /long with- -out proper food and `without water. [They were concealed in a hot de- ;pression of the veldt from an enemy `active on almost all sides. At length, coming to a farm-house oc-. cupied by Boers the handful, led by the re-eating Colonel, captured it and with it a small quantity of food and water. _As night came on Hughes, whose bodily strength is a bye-word, whiled away the time telling his all but discouraged men bits of stories from Canada, and re- citing to them odd pieces of poetry lhe had memorized, When the crew awere ready to turn in, it was Hughes who took the hardestiwatch ofthe night _and-because he knew he was in better -condition than the others.--he took two watches with- out telling `anyone. ` 'DI.....L -.-..........-... `I....m.....L-- .4. L..- LL\L ll\JDULLLl\.lLLLI.~LlJo Address: F. J. CHENEY & CO.,` `_`I-,'.I`- (\LI_ Ladies Lisle Hose, pr ........... ,. TLadie`s Lisle Thread Hose, sizes 8% to 10, in plain black and fancy tans, were 25c, 3 5c and sjoc pair, on sale .... ..' ................ ..l9c Children's strongribbed Acotton hose, black only, sizes 6 to IO, reg. 2Qc pr, on sale 15 Ladies Middies in Palm Beach Shade, trimmed with white braid and white trim- med with blue, sizes 36 and 38 only, were 1.39 and L58 each, on `sale ................ ..98c All Middies, regular 1.00, sizes 34 to 38, on sale each ......................... ..69c fho 06$

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy