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GLENS FALLS Eks Halls Cimes Founded 1879 by Hon. Addison B. Colvin | Published every evening, (Except Sunday) for the City of Glens Falls, Hudson Falls, Fort Edward, Lake George, South Glens Falls, Warrensburg, Whitehall, Corinth and the adjoining country. No daily paper published in any of the above places except Glens Falls. CHARLES V. FURNESS, President and Treasurer. '. ‘ RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION By Carrier . 180 Per Week . By Mail One Year i Siz Months 3.50 Three Months One Month 75 Tem TABEL Cie Mtg T+ \p . Entered at the Postoffice of Glens Falls as Second Class Mail Matter. Advertising Rates on Application 7 elephones: Business Office, (Circulation and Advertising) .......____.. 1050 Editorial ROOM asc.... 1051 and 1766 Subscribers who fail to receive their papers at any time or in. a convenient place will oblige The Times by giving immediate notice | to the business office. muvee mame t _ MUSTAPHA, WATCH YOUR STEP! Mustapha Kemal Pasha is dictator of all Turkey. He - has proved that his hand is fron and his will is like a wall against the shifting sands of the desert. We had almost begun to think him a great statesman, when now comes this: CONSTANTINOPLE, July 5-Women in Turkey who indulge in criticism of the recent religious and dress re- ) forms ordered by Mustapha Kemal Pasha, shall be ar- rested. A group olf Moslem women, arrested recently, have 1 been fined $10 each for criticizing the rulings on short skirts and the veil. There is little to be said about this except that Mustapha Kemal had better find his onions lest he be destroyed. Whatever women want they have a remarkably prompt way of getting. If they decide to go after Mustapha Kemal, may heaven help that fellow. THE SPIRIT OF NEIGHBORS Out in Kansas Mrs. John Hubele's husband died, leaving a 75-acre field of wheat and a 10-acre plot of oats standing. It was the height of the busy season, with all hands busy in their own fields. But they were not too busy to lend a hand. The other day 11 binders and 27 shockers descended upon the uncut fields, At 4 o'clock in the afternoon the wheat and oats were in the shocks. The old spirit of neighborliness seems dead sometimes. In the cities people live next to one another for years and never say as much as \How do you do?\ A next-door neighbor might die and be buried without his {fellows knowing anything about it. It is good to know that the spirit of the old neighbor, who ised to rush in with a glass of grape jelly whenever anyone in the family would fall ill, has not vanished from the earth. NOT, ONLY TRAFFIC There is dancer indoors as well as out. Hazard lurks even in the gold-fish bowl. Robert Cantalupo, 18-months-old son of a New York vestaurant keeper, toddled too near a small acquarium that had seen installed in the restaurant, and was drowned. Apparently one can't be too vigilant where children are con- rerned. You would be amazed if you happened to read statistics on 1m large number of and astonishing variety of fatal accidents in- cors. REMEMBER THOSE SUMMERS? Three hundred feet out into the harbor at St. Nazaire, on top of a 70- foot masonry pillar, stands a doughboy, in steel helmet, in front of an American eagle. In his right hand he carries a sword, hilt upward in the form of a cross. It is the memorial to the first of our boys to land in France. It is a memorial to something else, too. It is a memorial to the glowing face of the man who went down the streets of Glens Falls, tgith a newspaper in his hand telling that the boys and his boy were there. It is a memorial to another summer day when the Yanks tleared Belleau Woods of Germans, we mean, live Germans. These things are not so old as to need a memorial, but the new monument in the harbor of St. Nazaire makes us remember. = = =m h C A The youngster donned his oldest! clothes. With pail beneath his arm,| load is found. 'The pail is filled up e hit the country roadway. He was' headin' for a farm. A coupla miles, er| ground. $6.00 maybe more, but, shucks, he didn't\li}<e a hobo on a roam, the (\hprfy'l‘z‘hoatrical ; He lugged the pail along he-! picking youngster are. 2.00) cause a cherry tree was there. It's funny how a little boy kin shin- y up a tree. Ke'd cat the The rest went So, there we find @him| shouls, real sittin' jest as happy as kin be. He'd|got the finest cherries that a feller! popbing back and forth to & kitchen! pick a few then shake a branch, an' ever saw. ‘ \ watch the cherries hail. largest, reddest ones. in the pail. meneame | } to New York, July 12.-Behind thch' Iscenes of one of Manhattan's gayest: night clubs! | It is well after midnight.... Hot outs side.... Flat \sugar daddies\ with! pretty maids have come puffing out! lof the night to puff some more asi they make the rounds of the dance! floor. hurrying from the, . dressing rooms, come , headin' houncing in on the arms of escorts. back fer home. \Back stage,\ is an I»shaped room, 2. , | out off from the eambaret by a single:\ He rushes in the kitchen. @M' NC swinging door.... Through the door foud, \Oh mMa®! U'Y€; guojings a jerking parade of waiters, In maybe 'bout an hour or so hefty to the brim. The hid's down on the A whistlin', sorta cheerful, now is 'Course mother tells him,' reached by . R ; hel wurr a +, . y a mysterious looking stair well, that's great.\ Then heaves 2) way,...Discarded lables: and chairs' tiresome sigh. But sonny wins. THAti are piled high in one corner.... Dust night they have a luscious cherry PE-! clutters upon them.... Z A window lets} 'in a sticky breeze.... Along the neck| of the \L\ the cabaret girls sprawl 'in a single line of chairs.... They. Our Cross-Word Puzzle Corner . wear liitle or nothing.... A lovely fig- ured blond swings in after a hectic, dance specialty, thrusts three of thel seated girls aside and stretches out| at full length....A frail bit of scarf ing is her sole apparel....A maid be- gins to powder her.... . | YORKE SHIRT CO. --» REQUIRES -:- 1 Experienced Feller The Tenth Dollar f EVERY tenth dollar you earn T is the most important of all. For, with an average income, you should put aside 10% as a reserve fund. Keep every tenth dollar in an account with us. You can make weekly deposits of one dollar or more. \Prudence Points the Way» First National Bank GLENS FALLS Resources Over Eleven Million Dollars BYRON LAPHAM, Pres. A. W. SHERMAN, Cashier 46 - Self. 18 To peruse. 49 Bruise. f 51 Almost a donkey. i 53 Boys. I 54 Sports. 55 Forest. VERTICAL 2 Exists. 3 Call of a dove. 4 Knotty. 5 Within. 7 Preposition of place. 8 Floated in the air. 9 Young goat. A Delty. man i Waiters dance in and out, Wlthoufl so much as casting a glance at the, y M s o array of semi-clad figures....It's all' ° in a night's work to them....Old stuffi .... Fat papas outside would pay well for keyhole privileges. « And in the center of the line sits 12 an elderly woman, sewing constantly on costumes....In the halflight the, re {et. silver of the needle and of the thimble! sparkle against the gold stars and moons that she sews upon a black} PB Ti | |25~ 37°\ \sto \5 k .5’ wn\ % se | 33 cloth.... She is a tall, spare old woman, her bair a mixture of old silver and fast I graying black.... Her eyes seldom lift: from her task....The girls mill back, and forth, slipping in and out of such: costumes as they wear....She sews. 3G for all the world like any gaunt seam tress of a small town.... \Oh she's one of the girl's moth er,\ whispers a chorine. \She comes every night. Never lets the girl go 45 so 351 HORIZONTAL 1 Outdoor party. 6 Wicker container used for car- rying food. 11 In a short time. 13 To labor. 15 Alleged force producing hypno tism. 16 Electrified particle. 18 Paid publicity, 20 Morinidin dye, 22 Belong to the open. 23 Instrument for cutting trees. 24 Dozes. 26 Pertaining to a type of narrative poetry. 28 Second note in scale. 29 To accomplish. 30 To court. 32 Courtesy title for men. 34 Angers. 36 Scatters. 37 Mother. 38 Bone. 39 Exclamation of laughter. 41 'Thronged. 45 Italian river, 33 140 R <i |- A3 44 '31 Correlative of either. 14: Hall an em. 45 around alone. Does she know Broad: way? I'll say sol She's been back stage in half the night clubs of New| 48 York. Had another daughter in the: game and she married some big guy. Forget who. Now she looks after the other - kid-that little blond - over there.\.... ho She pointed out a girlish figured +p youngster of 19 or 20..... Quite the most undressed in the group.... \She goes on with four others in 12 Turf. one of those 'very, very' dances. Y’ou 14 A layer of meat between slices of know what I mean. The kind thesj've bread (pl). |bepu padlocking the shows about. 16 Neuter pronoun. I glanced up, ‘unbelief in my eyes.. 17 Negative. ...The cluttering of dirty chairs 19 Brief pleasure trips and tables.... The endless dancer”?! e Ge 5S __ 2 - as - 21 Minor note. he - unconcerned waiters]. 2.. e- . asual nudity of the lovely, young g? grhgfegcg?ed sloth girls...... And in the midst, the lean, | plainly dressed old woman, sewing on iand on into the night....The foggy tones of the jazz band just outside... | The steady rising of the voices as the 27 Acts as a model. 83 Hypothetical structural unit. 35 Membranous bag. MEW VOR | rem rem mann nme rms ESTABLISHED 1869 a 'OWLER P A N Y port Dresses (To Be Embroidered] Ladies' and Misses' two-piece ¥ Sport Dresses, made of \Ever- a fast Suiting.\ Colors: blue, lavender, peach and dark tan- gerine. $1.25 each Easy to make (Art Department) BASEMENT SPECIALS - Wrought Iron Bridge Lamp, with parch- ment Shade, for reading, for radio. for porch. Only $1.98 EACH Vacuum Bottles, one pint Shopping Baskets, special ..____________399¢ READY-TO-WEAR DEPARTMENT _ (2nd Floor) ''Tom Boy Bloomers,\ of batiste, voile and cotton crepe . ee. 98c Philippine Gowns, (embroidered) in colors flesh and PEACH __ $1.98 Aprons with bibs, well made, of good quality percale, only .. 59c¢c VUDOR PORCH SHADES | _ +# (2rd Floor) Vudor Porch Shades, the self hanging, ven- tilating kind, with a ventilator woven in the shade-top itself. 3 to 12 feet wide x 7 ft. 6 in. drop. Prices from $3.00 to $13.75. \crowds grew gayer..... This, then, is the other side of the gilded | picture.....The bubble for 36 Thick shrub. 40 Vigilant. 42 Sun god. 43 Subsisted. 5 Seed bags. 7 English money. <- Vulgar cowardly man. clers.... The gay white way had be 1 Standard type measure. 1 Like. \2° Point of compass. ~3 Behold. Answers To Saturday's Puzzle of the night clubs...... (Copyright, 1926, NEA Service, Inc.) 'Sunday in April as a fixed Easter | date. And we thought Easter set by the price of eggs. Amything can happen. Ga., a water wagon caught fire. The world Hes before the man who doesn't himself. ; (LEAR YOURSKIN of 'disfignming blotthes and Use which fortunes are spent along the| § ireet of streets.... Outside, in the early morning, taxi-| ¥ abs pulled up and swallowed up rev-| @ come black, but for the comer lights.| & .... Only the beckoning electric signs GLBpRT SWAN |G League of Nations suggests second @ In Attanta. $ Resinol i orous TINTED CUT . UPS Cut Out the Pieces, Paste Them Together Correctly, Color the Sketch, and Fill in the Missing Word. [ BY HAL COCHRAN I gTHE ROMANCE OF AMERICA - ALLAN POF --- Plan your home, business block, garage or factory , with brick. We have 'oem- - COMMON FACE < TIRE We handle exclusively the well-known ~- >_ Fiske Tapestries iss eee o pe o f 1 I a N Poe's precocity 1 appreciate tham. -Fid i u \. f 6 l—i cursaw He's just as fat as he can be, And on his nose a horn you'll see. L He loves to sleep in Water deep. SUBSCRIBE FOR THE Helen became Poe's confidante, and there I sprang up between them T M E S a mystic influence that' Poe carried throughout Qis life. in literature was was ten or twelve years old. He showed Mr. Allan a manuscript volume of poems which his teachers had praised highly, but his foster-parent did not seem to ? At about this time Poe became a : kvery good elocutionist, an art practiced generally then. _/ firs? . . \love?\ © whom he ' called Helen, now enters the picture. She was the mother of one of his schoolmates, eno Helen died in 1824 and Poe was rent by sor several months he went to her f ? Svery aftgr his work at the academy was over. , believe that here Poe learnedy ° For : | grave every > night ° 4 a Many critics ~|' the \ways of the dead\ |. + ' which his later stories and:pooms express. It was' the first great tragedy he suffered. ~ (Continued.) j * a none nize n- a-1 - bo ; ner, Tus