New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 19, 1914, Page 6

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xation’ veary a equip first at itructunesy as b #project the ieves " thodo 1 Was fther pas-* 4o ke for tone time troliey com- that com- “the Bullding, ner!;\ly against 2 o finte. vicinity 28’1t hey h?br melr ob- q how;vr L that v be made to fon for which i8 ‘strong demgnd WHITMAN,‘ forld seems to take up’ publf¥ ofjcials, Bowernap-eject Whit-" ssibiljty for the ‘worried as to (%pim grict at- thot” He will ¢, obliged e It s stated ‘that. F. fhairman of the republicims. fttee, is\slatéd for the place irld saySrthat he has had no in th¢ administration ' of al\law and: furthermore that e know nothing of him except anaged Mr. Whitman's cam- d that while he was the fig- - of the state committee, Wil- arnes: conducted the republican into power. The World deplores jondition .ot affairs for the reason, , that it.means turning the dis- by attorney’s office into a poljtical ge. 1t adds that Mr. Whitman is Mo moril oblizations to ignore par- & claims and considerations and to léct thepmost experienced and com- tent man he can find for this pax- fuiar service. F'1t would seem, as if the Laking out a good caseshere,, hir. anner s not an able latyefhe is ot the man to be placed 4f'charge I? such an important office, which re- jres peculiar skill and training 'and iso because of the fact that it usually in courts the In New World is for it h% - for opponents baftiest attorneys there age ork city. place and has been filled by some competent lawyers. This - has sen repeatedly proven by the results ¢ cases tried in the courts. The office } by? no means the place for a politi- jov: it better than My, Whitman. & now as if Yale and Har- aye an unpleasant fleld to turday. The New Haven prefigfing for any kind ot ther ibig crowd. Provision i being ma 3 jr#to be place 't':‘ar for those who.care mmeg Ita gul winter weather now, [ NS tharoug}(l knowledge of city affairs $and the power of discernment to ex- .ment of this office, which has it is surely a very fmpor- | {an 'gn ana there is no one who should | d: all and cots Iee well under- Miment. The first 0t pro ftem was econd, F. N. BChrist, \The Ples with it the leader- ouncll and there Is no pne flown those gentlemen but r«g that their knowledgo airk entitled them to all tho ; i‘ at, went with the position fwill be appointed in his place nqauon Ahy member of the fell, however, is eligible and if the s of former years are to have Eearing the place would naturally go | ta Councilman Landers, who perhaps, is the best informed member the body, he the fc Humph- position | any of council several of for four years. The place, ver, has always gone to the par wer and of course Mr. Landers, the other.side, but that would not nt him from filling the positfon a leader of ‘the council, and to the ntire gatisfaction of both parties’ "The republicans have such'a, large ma- Jority in that body that!'politics need ave no bearing on the matter at all, the apgolnlment being one of honor Wwith no additional power attached to it.. The main qualification would he having been In years, and mayor the how- y in is ev press the right kind of an opinion on the varlous important questions which come up and in which pelitics has no part, wnd no one will question Mr. Landers' fitness for this duty. His appointment would be one of those nicetfés of local public life which strengthens friendship and tends to yembve the ill feeling that sometimes areeps into politics. A REAL CITY OFFICIAL, City’ Chamberlain Bruere York . thinks his office should abolished, notwithstanding the fact that_it pays him $12,008 a vear. He says that, it ‘Sshould be combined with that of the controller. The abolish- to do enly with handling the city deposits ag-treasurer of the city has long been fpsired. It has been recommented before but it ngver had ythe backs Tag 6t the occupant “the office 0 that the movement has an element of strensth about it now that may bii n.boqt the desired reform. For man to recommend that he be legislatég, out of a Job with a $12,000 & yen' shlary attached to it is some- thing hithefto uiiknbwn in municipal politics and the one Who @oes it must k Le a man who has a very high conceps tion of public service when he makes sych a recommendation. It cannot be sgid that such a man is in office for } at he can get out of it. Mr, Bruere has been connected with the Russell Sage Foundation has visited several citles where wfade - ad- dresses’ on municipal government but’ while he has always created the im- pression that he was a constructive city ‘statesman no one ever thought that in order to carry out his ideas he Vguld urge his own lucrative office to be abolished and he sent about his business. That action may be taken as conclusive proof that the office should be eliminated and the work performed by anothey department. It will be in- teresting to note-how the recommen- dation works out New be of ot and he a There is no disposition on the p of t’? United States to go to war with Turkey, but the governmerit would, like to' know why the launch of the who did general every- Tennessee was fired and it. in thing In sight has become a habit. WACTS AND FANCIES. on The war has become so KEurope that shooting at ] The crar's declaration that Turkey must be crushed was neem only will Turkey be crushed, carved and divided to the hungry fe- fore this is over. And the bones will bhe picked so thoroughly that it will be impossible to find any bones. —New Haven -Reglster. . . The hoof and mouthr disease epi- demic doubtless will bring a boom in pasteurized milk, and a lasting preju- dfce, on the part of many consumers, against raw milk. We may look for interesting report ou the subject when the present scare is over, and verhaps for new interest in pasteur- izing processes.—iBrockton Times, Wars may come and Business may hg bad or be goad. -But fhe opera Mew York seemi-to continue undis- turbed. Tbh4 opening night at- the Metropolitén was aphajrently the same old success except for the absence of diplomatjfts from European’ nations, who o h»enr C’flnsp Nuous in the } sl Tentures of formephaopenings i mm—m Mn{orxuu, i ,}‘f wars may go. business may ason in Vo MBaper of Nov. 18 had ews itém ‘‘Mis Bakers,” of which your reporter must have been misinformed as to the facts."We wish to have this correct ed,. We:did not receive an anoty- mous’ telephone call. We received a telephope call from the young man's father one hour before Dr. Wright notifled B. €, Porter Sons. On the way to the house we met Dr.*Wright and ,he told us he was going to turn (he remains over to B. C. Porter Sons. As we. had been notified by the fami- ly We proceeded and arriving on the scene, Mr. Ladinig (father of the young man); teld us to take charge of the funeral, and notify Dr. Wrigit or medical examiner, to thai effect, for him not to bring another under- taler as he thought one was suM- clent. We: notified Dr. Wright of this, but he refused to do it. As to Officer Wagner being despatched to the scene was. absolutely unnecessary as, we know very well we can- not touch a body of this kind with- out the medical ekaminer's cofsent, and wish to say that we did nht move or intend to remove the body as we co@ld not zet permission from the il examiner. Th not the first time that a thing of thi§ kind has occufrediin New Britain. It has oceurred aquife frequently of late where the ' medical cxaminer had thrned a body over ta a certain un- dgrtaker, that other undertakers have d to go and zet the body and take it away, from a friendly competitor which is embarrassing. It had nev er been ealled to the public notige you "before, and we would have said noth- ing if it had not been, called to the public nogice now. wé Jforward to thge day New Britain like many other cities will haye a public morgne where cases of this kind can be brought and examined, so the family may have the undertaker they wish without any outside influence, and thereby avoid any when mix-up. el - THE I. PORTER CO.,, By John A, Erighson Campaign Bogies. (Washington Heralds) Senator Ollie James {s not far wrong in declaring that Senator Pen- rose and Uncle Joe Cannon are the principal ‘nerocs of the republican victory, in that their vindication was complete, The senator, therefore, nominates Penrose and Canhpn -as the candidates of the republican par for president and vice president, om the theory that once a hogie s set up i will always continue to fighten the people. A little study of paligical bogies would havé warned the fbig Kentuckian agalnst this assumption. Both Speaker Reed and Williany Mec- Kinley were political .bogies in 1890 nd 1892, and were quite as frightful in the eyes of the voters as ever have been Penrose and Cannon. But they me back after four years of demo- cratic rule in the house of represen- tatives, and the cnactment of the Wil- son-Gorman' tariff Jlaw. The whole country hailed Reed as the represen- tative of sanity “and courage when he returned to the speaker's caalr in 1895, and a good many, democrats joineg, with the republicans in recog- nizing McKinley as the advance agent of” prosperity and electing him presi- dent in 1896, e The &enator might also look at his own party's history and find that after the ‘defeat of Grover Cleveland, In 1888, his old clathes e hung up in the cornficld to frighten away the crows, but four years, later he again captured the democratic nomination over the protest of Kentucky, and was again elected, The senator is too fer- tile in political,ideas to trot out old bogies in politics after the voters have shown that they cannot be frightened by them. > The republicans will, no doubt, make their nominations for 1916 in the old way and not call upon Senator James for advice. But it might be quite as dangerous to the democrats to vest the longevity of old bogles in 1916 as it was In 1896. Knocker Who Hired a Hall. (St. Louis Post-Dispatch.) The other night a prominent New Orleans citizen who desired to chasten the old town that he wved but didn't altogether admire hired a hall in which to relieve himself of some long accumulated criticisms, Said he: “When a man has grouch he should not worry his triends with it, but hire a hall and advertise Those who don't want to hear him can s away., I never, grumble to a man who has to listen to me. [ pay for the privilege §f grumbling to people who like to )I(‘BJ" it.” Thus everybody a and the freedom of speech some good healthful and ing éxcerise. vbe 1t is good the town, too, to get a first class “bawling out,” as the New Orleans vrom. ¢it. affirmed. But in any event it can’t hurt the town. 1f “bawling ot could hurf or destroy a town the whole area of this country would re- semble the region of the Dead sea and ancientUderighq The most cri- ticised, censWQge condemned town in the tes is Chica- go—and look a The great dangg runs is the absenagd they put in all § They to sleep praise, and commonw a back nu ” The New Wgleans man declared his ‘hired hall that his town contai more knockers in proportion to popu- lation ‘than any er clty—but he didn’t mean to b® Bagging. The fact is that knockers are byilders, and they are bound to make' of New Orleans something more than Nfiftately pleas- ure dome” before fthey et through with 1t, What would St ¥,ouis have heen, would &t Louls be, with- out ta devoted guild who w‘{mo a has a good time is given invigor: for with % wake up to th of the happy ~ ‘hammer? - -up Among Under- IN ll\S'l ITUTE’S le’l‘ Hls wm\ History. foundling state of Wadham ' Peacock. v g Colonial histpry off Hartford gath- ered from the'original records, by W. De L. Love. the Bu- by Albania, rope, under the Hanoverians, Robertson. e 1815, by s Germany: welding of a world powe by Wolf von .Schierbrand. AT of British England by D. G. . urope since Hazen. Hlustrations Ci—A. from and history 55 B. D. 1854, being extracts contemporary documents literature, by J. Turral ] RS Recent’ developments in China, G. H. Blakeslee. wenty-two addresses, Clark _university by experts ferent lines of endeavor. is the history of nearly of the revolution given, litical. economic and changes are interpreted asg well.” L. A. Booklist. P P of the American G. Usher. “Interpretative by g delivered at in dif- Not on every aspect but the po. educational A. Rise people, by R. history of the United States. Author takes . the acts of history for gragted and con- fines himself to an explanation of ef- fects Readable and suggestive.” A. L. A. Booklist. . in ‘Amerfcan W. M. West. Source book 1 by history to WHAT OTHERS 5AY | ‘ Views on aff sides of timely questions as discussed In ex- | »s that come to Herald The Right Man, But Fifty-one. (New York Globe.) The municipal employment agency, established by the city to assist the uhemployed to find work, when it opens will not be in charge of the nan who had been selected as super- endent. Walter L. Sears, for eight ears head of the Massachusetts state employment agency, was picked as the most useful head of the agency, and the work of -organizing it was carried ov under his direction. It was dis- covered only on Saturday, however, that he is ineligible, as he is one year older than the age Hmit, which is fifty years. 1 is unfortunate that the city should have to lose the services of Mr. Sears merely because he happens to be fifty- ope years old instead of two score and ten. Doubtless there are many men within the age limit who can accept- ably fill the position, but of all those under discussion by the city authori- ties Mr, Sears was the first choice. But the civil-service rules interfere, and if a way Is not found to surmount the obstacle it will not be the first time they have been a hindrance to efficient ard economical public. administration. | This does not ‘mean for a moment that civil service rules should be aholished, but only that some of their wglaring defects should be" remedied. Tt i=s proper to set age limits, but in doing so we ought not to be blinded by that popular falacy that a man in the neighborhood of fifty and In the prime of life has served his usofulness, Great Rritain today, for instance, is in luck that a foolish civil service rule does not deprive her of the services of Kitchener, who can boast of sixty-four vears. . Eugenlics, (Hartford Times.) friends the cugenists, who think ‘the human race could be ele- vated by artificial selection, ' as chickens and cows have been;. much disturbed by the present war in which so many promising young men are killed and the “‘unfit” left to perpetuate the race. Nor can they derive anything but discouragement from the address of the president of the British assoclation at Melbourne, who declares that any Interferencd with the natural selection, of mates, as far as the laws of hekedMy are understood, tends toy result in vdull gray uniformity™h sening of individualis tion of character on in | civilization depen qualties might be enhdifed, mentil. spiritual. or Motal excel- lence, the transmission of*which, is so complicated and obscure as to, be \Weyondiegntrol. since the determining factor, may be ‘the' blood of an ob- re ancestor. whom noboyly ,sus- & of ppssessing the (\\mll'fl(w in Our progress Physical but not & main argument of the eugen- vests on the perfection of ad- mestle apimals. But here they over- “\the fact that domestication has roduced a self-sustaining race, ¢ one in which certain quali- dve oxaggerated at the expense and that these, qualities permanent. , Turn our s loose in the jungle to with their wild ‘ncestors ey must cither perish or re- te*the wild type. The same 13 of dogs, cats, cattle or swine. lack the toughness to enter the battle of life in the wild unless they are able to throw off all their ac- quired qualitles. The race has not been permanently improved by arti- \ficial Dbreeding and perishes without true They the artificial environment of regular food and human care. Another point is that, physically and mentally, the human race reached the summit of its develop- ment centuries ago. Our soldiers are:not more fit than the ten thou- sand Greeks Nenophon led across Asia Minor bafore the Christian era. The only advantage Bergson has over Plato lies in the possession of, Trooper police of Australia, by Haydon, . “Of wider scope than the author's Riders of the plains, which it resem- bles in style and treatment and equals in interest. Australian history is woyen into the story of police and trooper exploits.” A, L. Book list. A, L. Feversham, C.. Snaith. Anne Anne of the Blossom shop. or the growing up of Anne Carter, by 1 M. Mullins. S Ashton Kirk, special detective, | T. Mclntyre. e Eternal Priestess, by B. L. P. Weale. “The author of ‘Indiscreet letters from Peking! presents a gallery of types, European as”well as Chinese. and deals with Chinese life weil as with the picturesque surroundings of the foreign colonies in China. In- cidentally there is an analysis of the conditions that led up to the Chinese revolution of 1911." _Publisher's j note. H. Benson. P Oddsfish, Selina, hek hopeful, livelier failures, by R. her Mar- and M. efforts ! by G tin, e Witch, by Mary Johnston. “Phe author of ‘Prisoners of Hope' has gane back to her earlier and more attractive manner. The tragedy of witcheraft is set against an English background.” “Outlook. more books, so that he can assimilate the ‘hought of ten thoufand philoso- phers and start beyond the point where the Greek left off. Nor is Newman of a higher type than some of the mediaeval saints, whose lives he studied. The province where the human race must make progress is not the individual, but the social or- der. Justice and equity In the state, embodied in law and custom and en- lightened public opinion, are now the goal of humanity, and it Is worth striving for and will remain so for many years. The storing up of ex- perience in the practical working of institutions, even the lower object of imprqving man's material well- being by mastery of nature's laws, is the task of the present generation, not the production of an artificial race by eugenic matipg. It has been pointed out that scientific basis for ‘eugenics is tirely lacking until it 1s settied statistics that the children of lected mating are in some way supe- rior to the progeny of unions based on mutual attraction. Tt would be very difficult to establish such a statistical base. We know that the Bourbons, starting from a magnifi- cont. specimen of a man. dropped to insignificance after a series of state marriages. No royal house In Eu- rope has improved from generation to generation. The giant Romanoffs have degenerated, at least physical- ly. But it does rot follow that all the unions in these cases have been loveless. So we are as much in the dark as before and eugenics still lacks a scientific base. a en- by se- Foot and Mouth Disease. (U. 8. Department of Agriculture.) The outbreak of foot and mouth disease has already affected an area so large that it is evident that most active measures are neccessary to eradicate it. Cases have veen found ag far apart as fowa and mas:acnu- setts. Both in virulence and in ex- tent of area affected the pyesent oui- break is more seripus than any of the five fiwlnus ones which have oc- curred im-ghe United States. These. previous outbreaks have not been suffiolently”’ serious either familiarize farmers with the symp- toms-of the disease or to render them fully alive to the losses that it occa- sians when permitted to gain a firm | foothold. Qme of its most aungerous characteristi®s is its = extreme con- taglousness, Not only may it be con- {yeved directly from.one animm to nother, but it may be transported in fodder, picked up from lm ground and carried ‘'over the country by cats, dogs and chickens, or,.communicated kthrough the agency of man. Cases have ®lready been found in which it seems certain that the disease was spread by the curiosity of farmers to inspect “suffering animals. They re- turned from these visitgto communi- cate the disease to thelr.fyn previ- ously’ healthy “herds. The contagiousness of the disease explains the ‘action of the federal au- thorities in quargntining such large eas. The practice 18 to clap a hnl&m «of ‘quarantine on the state in which, a case/of the discass has been found,.and then, by carefuj Investigu- tion, determine the exact area in- fected. When an anima: sufiering trom foot and mouth disease is dis- covered in a herd the whole herd is slaughtered. Ofherwise it. would remain a dangerous source of infec- tion and be & menace to the entire community. It is customary (6. aps point an apraiser o value the iferd. One-half of the appraised value ' is paig ke sthe owner by the federal gn\grnmrnt and one-half by the state, - The' slaughtered animals are burled in 4 deep trench, their hides slashed to make it useless vor anyone to dig them'up again, and the car- casses ‘are saturated with quicklime. In this manner previous outbreaks have been completely stamped out and there is cvery reason to hope that this whlesbp the case this year. The chief danger I%hat there may be infectediierds whose existence s not reportef 0 the proper authori- ties. Farmers, are therefore urged. both for their owi Protection andi-as a duty to their meighbors, fo repogt immediately. all gases of picious: soré mouths or lameness amuvhk their stock. oot and ®outh disease affecty chiefly cattle, sheep, goats and swine of ‘viner ani- importance | but there are a numbe mals of less commercial which are also susgeptible. OQcecasion- ally human beings are affected, but in the majority of instances the dis- ease is not severe in the case of man. Children, however, may become mm-i gerously, i1l if their mik is infected. The first indications of the disca are a chill followed by a high fever. | the temperature rising rapialy, some- | times to 106 degrees, Fuhrenheit, In | a short time vesicles about the sizc of the pea appear in the mouth at the end of the tongue, on the inside of | the cheeks, and on the gums. Thesc vesicles contain a yellowlsh watery fluid. They spread as the disease | ddvances and cause the animal to oven and shut its mouth unecasily with a characteristic smacking sound. | A day or two after the firsi appear- ance of the eruptions in the mouth similar indications appear upon the fect. which are swollen, red and | tender. Because of this the animal | frequently persists in lying down ang bedsores develop with much rapidity, | In the case of cows the udder and, more frequeptly. the teats are af- fected by a simllar eruption. Once the disease is well estab- lished it becomes so painful for e animal to eat that fooa 1s frequently refused altogethe Strings or saliva bang from the mouth, and flesh s | lost with astonishing rapidity. When the udder ‘is seriously affected the milk becomes contaminated and may cause serious results to suckling calves and young pigs.. In mild cases from ten to twenty days may, bring about an apparent recovery, but this time may be greatly extended. More- over, an apparent recovery by no means implies a real cure. The ani- may may carry the virus tn its blood for a vear or more and Is llable dur- ing all this time to spread the con- tagion or to experience a recurrence itself. The mortality, consldering the seriousness of the disease and the losses it occasions. is very small, be- ing estimated by some authoritiés five per cent., although it frequently is much greater than this. The mor- tality, however, by no means repre- sents the real losses occasioned by the disease. No revenue.ls possible from infected herds, and in the case of dairymen an outbreak of foot and mouth disease frequently means that their business is completely ruined. Blooded or other cattle that have become sick with the disease naturally lose their value as breed- ing animals. It is, however, Impossi- | ble to get rid of the disease by ig- noring it. The only possible remedy is to kill off infected herds, disinfect the premises, and begin over again. What the disease means to thbse countries where if has gained a real grip is shown by the fact that on its last serious outbreak in Germany the German government 000,000 in fighting it. In cial statistics showed that in the German empire 431,235 head of cat- tle, 230,868 sheep and goats, and 153,808 swine were affected with the discase. During the same year the pestilence ravaged live stock in France, Ttaly, Relglum, Hungary, Switzerland, Bulgaria. In 1883 it that the disfase cost 000,000. On the occasion of the last outbreak in the United States in 1908 $300,000 was appropriated | by congress, and with the exception of a fow hundred dollars it was. spent in stamping out the disease. This of course does not include the indi- rect loss caused by the Interruption of business and other factors. Saloon Not Indorsed. (Sacramento (Cal.) Union.) Some of those who during the cam- paign were most energetic in their support of the wet side of the prohibl- tion controversy ‘scem to think that the vote agalpst prohibition was an indorsement of the saloon. It is more than likely that the result of the élec- tion is an indorsement of the Cali- fornia grape. Throughout the cam- paign, ninety per ceni, of the argu- ments in favor of the wet side of the question were tied to the grape vine. There was a feeling on the part of many people who oppose saloons that | it was unfair to the grape ygrower, after he had been Induced and assist- ed to develop the wine Industry, destroy his business with little or no wnr‘n!nx. 1t should be recalled that the dras- tic prohibition plgn of the southern Califprnia contingent «swad” strongly opposéd by northern California. The membérs from San Franclsco pleaded the causé of the grape grower and In the course- of a heated,debate one of the memsé, bers of the‘S8an Fréneisco anti-spldn league «enounced the amendment as crimipfl in itg harshness, The lolul ‘man, can thank mh‘j‘)ucfi stgrs that | the gmebgment .was drastic, It 6| ques io t issue hd@ been omly the saloon’ there mlg’ht gave been a dif- ferent story to' ter, “ae Bew . 1890 oMm- was estimated | England §$5,- ¢ ixtravaggnde of Opern. ¥ | (Washington Past.) Boston, sometimes called the intel- lectnal.center of the United States, has followed the ledd of Philadelphia and | Chicago in the abandonment of grand | opera_for the coming = season. = In Philadelphia E. T. Stotesbury, . the chief financial backer of the era, explained the abandonment the ground that money previously con- tributed for the maintenange of munl-‘ ‘cai gtandards in the United States is | not*fow -ayailable on accoynt of the Furopead war' Those who seek the cause of the de- cline of grand offera In the United States will have to go further than the Furopean wa There can be no com- | laint with reference to attendance or e size of subscriptions. 1In®all the cities favored with a season of grand opera, the subscribers have been €x- tremely liberal. the trouble has been that the p sons" . Who paticipat®in the opera have toved mohey more than the opera Like some of our bgseball stars, they have ridden the fingncial end of their art a little too hard. Na matter how wonderful the voice of a singer may be, it s extremely dodbtful whether one evening's work is “worth. $3,000. T spent §2,- | Austria- | to the anti-saloon lgagie. of | that the McMILLAN New Draperies. Add Much fo a Brighter - Thanksgiving * Portieres, Covebs. Laces, Couch Ready n Nets, quisettes, serim extensive tain Materinl and « Window Shades 69¢ ecach.. Any grder on short nol MARQU at 12 1-2¢, 15¢, 17 NOVELTY DRAW at 17¢, 19¢, Tabk¥ wde Curtains of s, Voiles and Mat: e showing of Cur- sther drapery needs of all kinds, 25¢ te Covers, und speclal size made te tice. ISKTTES ¢ and 26c y'l N WORK SCRIM# 20c, 3jc, and 89c. yd COLORED BORDER SURIMS, at 12 1-2¢ and! SUNFAST DRA in green, brown, 39¢, 45c. S0¢ and New showing tonnes, art o tickings, o yard, -4 MA'ncu;hg blue and old Hose 69c yard. f silkolines, ecres. & burtaps, dentnam § y v tapestries and Monk's cldth, UNUSUAL R DY MAD! VAL S IN i CURTAINS, Curtaivs of Lace, Net, Serim,*Ma quisette and Madras, $1.25, $1.49, $1.98 at 75e, $1.00, and $2.25 pair, ROOM SIZE RUGS At pi | All new designs in T Axministers and Body oft.x121t. upward. 8 ft. 3 $0.50 upward. size, SMALL 20¢ to 50 BLANKETS AND Cotton Blankets, ¢ to $1 pair, Single Cotton BA bed sheets now. 8 wWoonL $2.25, FIN 50, $2 Made of the best Australian and California wool, $4.50, $5.00, $5.50 SOFT. ¥IL $1.19, $1.390 $1. $3.50 each. | FOR RECOVERING inx10 f. 6 RUGS OF each Roumania and | RUES at $6.89 cach. FINISHED BL wWooL I!LlNKls.Tfl es that should appeal to you,, pesties, Velvets, Brussels. specials at $11.40 in., specials at ALL Special KINDS, B6x COMFORTABLES, white and gh ankets, suitabfe roi e pecial at 98¢ each’ ANKETS, 8, $3.25 paily, * R 34 selected grades . of 3.1 o COMPORTABL . .75, $1.98 - to $7.50 pair. AND COMFORTABLES: , Cotton Batting 10¢, roll. e Special targe three pou CHALLIES AND {COVERIN quilt lill;A 1212, L rotls at 2% nt vl SILKQUINKS nd rol 3 (o\n&m'unn @hallies in new design * Silkolines in play at 12 1-2¢ yard. o and shg 18 m& hetbrIAn wh {salary; roll "growing ,» by, Was lnfllah Boundlis, it systern Mpould later.: reach was not mands of ent has at last organizal it comes The singers Wil after a timg. o wa for large suins of concert tours, and mugupl ‘advantage. ingers, It may be' s wery good (Mc | in the Unifed Stites U\r w brought about: A 1nd to resul; "am. down, eA Yo ¥ !Mnfi h wager mark; o, satiegy p s on & aner planl v 1L very difigul tisty their craving: money~ Py making they, will he . | strainéd to Join the mdyement fo revival of opers upon d basis Some of the paper mills are €% | substitute for glass fense of the paper cleimed ta be more be destroyed after sldes, if dropped in per bottle woiilld ne 1:.5- bott wogon makers wou lese paper milk wag 1 and § o’clock a, m. things.— Nor'\ feh R | mentidg with papgr milk bottles milk jars. In d milk bottle it sanitad for it being used, Be-W the street the pa. ot create the hy le does. No: 1a perfect o a o8 for use belye Juwould complet caord, e No ong '} Yet that is the amount deMandea by some of the performers, while others Tequire. from 3500 0 $2,000 for simgs the progressive Wis platform a pr nt‘\nl‘ any faction out.ef the el Ption. nights, -uwfln el

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