{ title: 'The advertiser-journal. volume (Auburn, N.Y.) 1913-1931, September 03, 1920, Page 3, Image 3', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031374/1920-09-03/ed-1/seq-3/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031374/1920-09-03/ed-1/seq-3.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031374/1920-09-03/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031374/1920-09-03/ed-1/seq-3/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Seymour Public Library
iswKauuijtnniiUMWRUiMUM The Busy Store “ W h e r e t h e B e ^ t B a r g a i n s C o m e F r o m W i l l B e D o l l a r D a y ^ lengths of Fruit of the Loom, Hill's f/ ind other best yard wide muslin, 3 yard*for... .............................. .. • • -S1-00 ■ f o Outing Flannel, 45c kind, 3 yards . ................................. .......................... Cotton, 59c kind, 3 yards for. .$1.00 Yird Wdc Challies, 3 yards f o r ----- - .$1.00 iat Cotton Batting, 30c kind, 4 rolls for $1.00 ■45c Grey;Percale, yard wide, 3 yards for $1.00 J. & P. Coats’ Thread, 1 dozen for . . . .$1.00 $1.50 Silk Stockings f o r ...........................$1.00 Bearskin Stockings, all sizes, 3 pairs for $1.00 Girls’ Stockings, black, brown and white for Saturday only, 3 pairs f o r ____$1.00 Best Yard Wide Unbleached Sheeting, 3 yards f o r .........................................$1.00 59c Galatea Cloth, 2 yards f o r ................. $1.00 45-inch Pillow Tubing, 2 yards f o r ___ $1.00 fire Rolls Toilet Paper f q r ....... ......... 25c jfoiranteed - Alarm ■ Clock ..$1.50 (phi* tax) fat p f e - ; ....... ...................... ............... *•**« in Flush’, can ..................... ........... 21c dulsnere Bouquet Soap . . . . . 10c, 6 for 55c Kojynos Dental Cream . . . . . . . . ..... 19c Dr. Lyon’s Dental Powder . .. .............. . 19c horySoap . .. .......................... 10 cake* for 75c (Limit 1 0 cakes) Hucot Soap •••,.•>.,.•• ............ .. 5c Lenox S o a p .......... ... ................. 6c Sonny Monday ............................................ Fairy Soap ........................... ......... ............. 8c Star Soap . ............................ .. ......... 10 for 75c (Limit 10 cakes) \ & G. White Naphtha S o a p .............. 10 for 75c (Limit 10 cakes) 3ctagon Soap ......................... . ... .. .10 for 75c (Limit 10 cakes) Fels’ Naphtha S o a p .......................... 10 for 75c (Limit 10 cakes) Palm Olive S o a p ............ 9c cake, 1 «Joz. $1.00 Star Naphtha P o w d e r ................... • ........... 4c Gold D u s t ............... . .............................„ . 4c Octagon Cleanser . . . ................................... 6c Jap Rose Soap ............. .. ............................... 9c Skat, c a n ........................................................ 9c Physicians’ and Surgeons* Soap ................. 9 c Cuticura Soap .............................................. 19c Resinol Soap .............................................. 19c Woodbury’s Facial S o a p ........................... 19c Resinol Ointment........................ ... ............. 45c \ Woodbury’s Facial Cream ...................... 19c Djer Kiss Talcum Powder ........................... 25c Mavis Talcum P o w d e r ................................ 17c Colgate’s Talcum Pow d e r ........................ 10c THERE’S A SAVING AT O’BRIEN’S O ’B R I E l N ’ S 3 S t a t e St. “The Marriage Trifler By HAZEL D E iO BATCHELOR. Copyright, 1020, by Public Ledger Co. t f Katherins Begins to Think. Bubua Knight, who has always her own way, marries K eith nnt, the most eligible n a n of the m, and prepares to go on having own way for all time. She is a tet in the younger sot and although r ideas are those of the .people .she plates with—ultra-sophisticated — i loves her husband as he loves her, ienieath the social veneer. Keith, weTer> reaches out for the real “Ss ot life, real friends aud real not the small patter of people *w linkers. Katheriue New- his private secretary aud a col- woman, offers him just this friend- He is interested in her friends, ^though there is nothing in .i^ 'o u l a not tell Barbara, still she would not under- ^M d therefore keeps everything ■P. Chapter XXIV. ine this cbanS° in K ath- fea him th ,msolf- N(-‘ver had she e tjjnf ch sllshtest; reason to sup- tor him. Their , -- iur mai rolatinnbK-°n b'l,sod ou n a tu r al, , if in a drni s‘ If Bob caTed for ined c w en 1 moment Katherine . enough ___ .. perfnmo for him to smell he tonohr,,! J L h?.r h“ir*-°r perhaps lightly on tho arm, - Alum i “e touched him one knew this and to tnf-A i, 6 f as u'illinS to ^ his chances at win s’ her. \’n ™ ures at w >n- ttat to for« bettor than 1 eT«ythin^ f0? v tWs ' vould be to ■nt of w 0 . hlmself. dellehted in 6 'Ken different. ® a]Kl most H'oaia use all ™ blm ln w h ich 5. Methods t®auner of irritating g u ttle s^dWm- Bob p ?e . £v ,0anino in her S c ™ *■«»= t - bnt 1 thinl- 'Ir'at 1 wnnt fronl ; rou conlcLtiv r°mance. Of arse ^ e^ r f j ° ure<>S“ter0Sttaslife r°°m. ^nr® tof'thor in the bis? C°ac* t win,' ‘) \ Vbory had gone Katherine w as restless. She took out her restlessness on Bob. \S you .think I don’t understand the meaning of romance?” he said evenly, turning a slim ivory paper cutter, which he had taken up from the table, over and over in his fingers. Katherine shrugged her shoulders.. “Oh, you newspapermen,” she said lightly. “You’re the most practical people imaginable. You’d never stejj out of your marrow little lives, noth ing would tem p t you to go •will-o’-the wisp hunting, to leave the accepted things in search of the intangible. How much wo talk, all we people, when we get together here, and yet it’s all tallc done within four walls.” “Janet w rites books about us, and Rolf paints, and Nancy strings words to music,’ Bob suggested. “Take K eith Grant.” Katherine went on, as if she hadn’t heard Bob a t all. “I think he’s done more than any of the rest of us to get out of his rut, and yet he’s so clean and f a ir about things Not one of us h a s ever heard him say a thing about tbe people he knows. And his wife, I wonder what she is like.” “She’s beautiful,” Bob suggested. “Yes, she is, K atherine said honestly,] “I t would be interesting too, to try be-1 ing spoiled as she is. I ’ve always been curious about th a t kind of woman. He’s very m uch in love with her”, she said irrelevantly. These conversations got nowhere, but they served to show Bob that K a th erine was not happy, not as she had been, in her h e a r t of h earts, Katherine, the sensible, w a s wondering w h a t it would be like to be petted and spoiled, to have a m an hang on one’s very words, to w ear gorgeous clothes with out a thought of the price, to take everything and give nothing. K ather iue, who had never even thought of the power of money, was now wondering how it would seem to have plenty of it. It wasn’t th a t Keith appealed to her personally, th a t she was interested in him as a m a n : It was rather that he represented a class that up to now she had taken for granted, even scorned a little, but in reality had known little about. Keith made no attem p t to tell B a r bara where he had been that night. Having decided in his own mind that it would do no good to tell her about she might be curious a t his failure to say anything about i t and his con science was too clear to make him feel in the least guilty. T h a t Barbara was curious was true. She thought a great deal about it, but h e r life kept her so busy and took up so much of her tim e th a t the worry w a s for the most p a r t subconscious, she would have thought nothing of it, if K eith had said he w as going to the club, or if he had m ade any of the other excuses th a t men make when they don’t wish to return home. It was h is curious failure to say anything about his engagement before or after w a rd that puzzled B a rbara. There seemed to be a conscious effort on-his p a r t not to allude to th a t evening, and yet she could not be s u re th a t this was s a I t .was a ll very va&ue in her own mind. (To be continued) some frinnrVc these friends of his. he ceased thinking > a n a a a o a tit~ . Of.£QOrsftthft^nfi nryjjrinnpfhnft* BATTLE MONDAY RAIN 0B SHINE Benton Harbor, Mich., Sept. 3.— R a in will not cause a .postponement of tbe heavyweight championship con te s t between Jack Dempsey and Billy M iske, set for Monday afternoon, Prom o ter Fitzsimmons announced to day. The. ring And a large part of the open air arena will be covered with canvas early in the day if the weather is threatening and the fighters will go in to the ring on schedule time no m a tter if there is a downpour. T h e referee situation is expected to be cleared up today w ith the arrival of Thomas Bigger, chairm an of the S tate Athletic Commission. Jack K e a rns, manager of the champion, said th a t ho would insist upon naming an official of his own selection Fitzsimmons said th a t the advance sale had reached $50,000 and that in dications were favorable for a total g a te of $150,000. T h e re is planty of Dempsey money in sight, but the Miske dollars are scarce. One :wager of $5,000 at even m oney that Miske would stay the lim it was snatched up quickly. One b e t of $10,000 to $S,000 was recorded ■that Dempsey would win. George A. Barton, a sporting editor of Minneapolis, who refereed' the first fight between Dempsey and Miske at St. Paul, itn May, 1918, in an interview today said Miske held Dempsey to a draw in their 10 -round encounter, al though most of tbe experts thought Dempsey won. FRYER, GENEVA STAR. 10 PITCH FOB AtL-AUBSlRl Fryer, the weil know n Geneva mound a r tist will twirl fo r the All-Auburns when they stack up against the clover team representing the Assumption Catholic Union of Syracuse tomorrow afternoon at the Y. M. C. A. Field. Tw irling for the Standard Optical Company's outfit o f Geneva, Fryer hung victories a g a i n s t the Lehiglis here and the A u b u rn All-Stars a t Ge neva. F ry e r ’s pitching is tho talk o t Cen tral New York. H is services w ere ob tained as it is the intention of M an ager Stout to trim th e A- C. U. tossers, who are fighting it out with Brown- Lipo and “Chick” M eehan’s team for tho championship o f Syracuse. defea T ho O se OF ■Seneca Falls, Sept. 3.—The Seneca Falls baseball te a m defeated the House of David te a m on the Seneca Falls diamond yesterday in a tw ilight game. T he score w a s 5-2. A crowd estim ated at 2500 w itnessed the game. \ BASEBALL i '* ♦ ♦ « > <i><j><Sk<i> j NATIONAL LEAGUE A t St. Louis: Cincinnati ___ 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 — 3 101 St. Louis ........... 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 —2 C l R ing nnd W ingo; Haines and Kir- cher and Clemons. A t Pittsburgh: New Y o r k ........ 0 1 0 1 0 2 0 0 1 — 5 1 2 0 Pittsburgh ........ 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0— 1 91 B a rnes and S n y d e r ; Hamilton and W isner and Schm idt. No other games scheduled. AMERICAN LEAGUE A t Boston: New Y o r k .......... 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 — 2 5 2 Boston ................ 2 1 1 0 0 1 0 1 * — 6G1 Shawkey and M cGraw and R u e l; Myers and Scliang. A t Philadelphia: D e troit .............. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 —02 1 P h ilad e lp h ia ___ 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 *— 2 0 2 •Marisette and O ldham and Stanage; H a r ris and Perkins. No other games scheduled. , INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. Toronto, 5; R o c h e ster 4. Akron, 7; Buffalo 4. Reading, 7; Jersey City 4. Baltimore, 3; Syracuse 1 (first gam e). Baltimore, 8 ; Syracuse 0 (second gam e). AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Milwaukee, 1; S t. Paul 2, (first gam e). Milwaukee, 3; St. Paul 5. (second gam e). Toledo, 13; Colum b u s 9. Louisville, 2; Indianapolis 3. K ansas City, 3 ; Minneapolis 5. Standings o f the Clubs NATIONAL LEAGUE Won. Lost. Cincinnati ................. 09 Brooklyn ................... 70 New York .................. OS Pittsburgh .................. 04 Chicago ....................... 03 St. Louis .................... 00 Boston ....................... 49 Philadelphia .............. 50 Games Today Cincinnati at St. Louis. Boston at New Y o rk. Philadelphia at Brooklyn. Chicago at P ittsburgh. 55 57 58 04 Ol 07 73 AMERICAN LEAGUE W on. Lost. P. C. Cleveland . 48 .GIG 49 .011 51 .005 St. Louis . ............... 02 59 .512 Boston ............... 61 C9 ..512 Washington ........... 52 07 .437 7G .387 Philadelphia ............. 42 S3 .303 Games Today. D e troit at Cleveland. New York at B o s ton. St. Louis at Chicago. Washington at Philadelphia. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE. W. L. . ................. 01 4.3 . ................. 01 45 . ................. SO 50 ................ SI 50 . ................. GO 73 Jersey City .................... 54 SO R o c h e s t e r ........................ 42 02 S y r a c u s e .......................... 31 102 Games Today. No games scheduled. Baltim o re Toronto . Buffalo . Akron . Reading P. C. .079 .009 .032 .019 .452 .403 .313 .233 Says Pile Remedy is Worth 5100.00 a Box “I h a v e - h a d itching: piles ever sincc m y e a r l ie s t recollection. I am 53 y e a r s old a n d have su f f e r e d terribly I have trie d m any rem e d ies a n d doctors, but no cure. About S w o o I ts a pro I saw your ad fo r Peterson’s O in tm e n t. T h e first application stopped a l l itching, a n d ln th r e e days all s o r e n e s s . I have only used ono box ami c o n s i d e r I am cured. You h a v e miy igratetf’u l. h e a r tf e lt th a n k s , and m a y everyone t h a t h a s this tro u b le see th i s and ffive y o u r ointm e n t, t h a t is w o r t h a hundred d o l la j - s o r moro a ■b’ox, a tria l . Sincerely y o u r s , A. iN'ewtih.. Co- lumitsus, Ohio.” P e terso n ’s O in tm e n t -for Piles, E c z e m a an d old sores is only So r e n t s a larg e foox at all d r u g g i s t s . M a il or d e r s filled by P e t e r s o n O intm e n t Co., Inc., Buffalo, N. Y.— u-Vdv. I Tomorrow Morning We Will Place on Sale Our Entire Line of Boys Shoes Just Like Cut, in sturdy Gun Metal lace blucher. Heavy long wearing sewed soles, sizes 9 to 13^, o regular $4.00 value and sold every day by us for $3-45. Regular price stamped on the box. Going to school price ^ g f - Bring the boy in, he will go home happy in a pair of NEW ARKS Sec Our C o m p lete Line o f Boy* Shoe* in M a h o g a n y A q A p . A • a n d Gan A fetat in Blucher and E n g lith Last, A t y v < « f v lO Largest Shoe Retailers in th e W o rld—3 0 0 Stores in 100 Cities 81 Genesee St. Opposite Trolley Station j Between North and State Streets Paris, Sept. 3.—Georges Carpentier, heavyweight pugilistic champion of Europe, will leave for the limited States tomorrow, according to news papers here. star, and Watson M. W ashburn wero winners. W ashburn accounted for the defeat of Charles S. Garland, of the Davis Cup team. This was scarce ly a surprise or an upset, as the pos sibility of the young Pittsburgh player falling out before the final of the tournament harl been foreshadowed since his return from abroad. He p layed a good match, Washburn beating him, 7-5, 7-5, 7-5. CHAiPION 8 EV ERE T! Forest Hills, Sept. 3.—William M Johnston turned aside a formidable as pirant for his honors, when, by steady and forceful playing, he de feated It. N o rris Williams, 2d, in the fourth round of the thirty-ninth all comers national tennis championship singles here yesterday The two stars of the Davis cup team fought a t the all-court type of game, Johuston mas tering his rival in straight sets, 0 - 3 , 0-1, 7-5. This was the outstanding battle of the day, although in the other matches of the round form prevailed and Wll- liamT. Tilden, 2d, the world's title holder; W allace F Johnston, the wiz ard of the chop stroke; G Colket Oun- er, W a lter Westbrook, the Michigan NON-INTOXICATING Wi&Jfche Hops in It* iA T jro G/ n t a i n s AND TOR TABLE U S E P h o n e - 3 4 6 (WE SING OF LUMBER GOOD TRUE-THAT^5 WA1TING- CT THIS YARD FOR YOU ' (■ —NOW— is the time to Re-roof your home. Don’t wait until it gets cold and raw. Your carpenter can’t work fast when his fingers are cold: Vulcanite Asphalt Roofings Best Red Cedar Shingles Creo-Dipi Stained Shingles —T H E - CO. fo a V & 4 A J U ; 80 State St. Auburn, N. Y.