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HING COMPANT. “\ otors. fay exceptod) at \ding, 67 church S* | Post Office at Olass Mail stier arrier 1o any a Week. 65 C* or to Do | 2" afvance. 60 Cents & Bath, §7.00 & year. —_— fnts a Month. O eutatipn books and pres ys open tu advertisers. 1 be round on sale at Hota- Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- York City; Bonrd Walk. City and Hartford depot v PHONE CALLS. FOR WATE! MISSION o, dblican caucus has S . Humphrey jer and, as he is pree ¥d of public works, it scems | selection will work consolidation of those de- It has been said that e by the common council enciusion he water nment fas. it it igislative enactment. onsiderable talk along thi past, but when an effort 'to consolidate the two de- amending the charter in reality department is and it de disturbed in itself can be There by nent was fuse of opposition. common with these de- aban- "here the laying of water pipes | ts and the matter of street fnts being so cl dllied Jula seem as if this class of d be better handled by one it than by two, and witn ntage to the streets. Should | er come when the depart- d be consolidated, it seems ould be necessary to have ept apart as is done by the artment, which is now un- risdiction of the board of ks, because the whole task one of such magnitude as ire great skill and busi- ity in' the management. hphrey, is one of the best ‘ en there is in the public Britain, he having served | cil before being appuinted pd of public works, so that proach his new duties with ithat they will pr in the way of accompiish- nt ' appointment, as has been nd to simplify matters & and bring the two 8 under one n talked of ther 'OM BU the vesterday AKS OF was at York and nday New Giants and 15 9. m- New Britaln art of the eity be sent by mall plo advertising medium 1o lent | if out, is hardly correct no head, for so long. Polo Philadelphias | same town as in which him he was elimis . m | | it his only chance tv escape the death penalty for the murder is throush a petition to the governor. The case has attracted attention all over the country first because of the heinousness of (he because Franik and the tion. About heen to trial crime and second claims he innocent of Tegal him given all The principal is is vietim race perse new every point used have a and the courts have decided t him. against Frank was a ne that Frank employed of the body, while the defense have that the negro is the real murderer have not however to obtain any proof of that contention agair witnesses ro who says him to the been dispose lawyers for contending been able. | and unless the governor interferes the will to death, south ccusad be i The | strong against crimes against women put has always been very for water | and children and while it seems as they have sho¥n all the proverbial ike for the accused under the cir- cumstances therc has been one | I able to prové that his trial was not i no I 'a fair one and the sentence just. TWo the court ssenting opinions {cr justices of supreme have filed dt the in re- | gard to the habeas corpus proceedings hut these do not give any help or ank any hope of a new trial by which he may es- tffering the death penalty afford Fr or show & way TWO BILLS OF INTERES The senate has passed two bills the cape | | | importance of which have apparently | been .overlooked. and they will in all | probability pass the house in a few days. when one town | to been months in his new place of residence One of those bills provides that a man moves frem another and has not six | he shall be entitled to vote at all state | and national elections in his last place if he there of residence just the same as | haa { right along. | place of residence and has been there | for six months he of course becomes | entitled to vote there under the law. | This act was considered desirable in losing their continued his residence When he acquires a new 1‘ order to prevent so many | votes. It has happened in some Itha[ the man who changed his resi- i dence was allowed to vote in his last | Mace because he was not registered cases i his new | fect a man has no place, but as n matter of legal to | vote anywhere in Connecticut unless has been six months in the right he town and a year in the state, Aind when he | 1¢aves one place to live in another he :’ loses his voting residence at once. Un- | der the new he will have the ight to vote at his last place of res- | law ice until i ider i The other bill compels a man to file Lis property assessment sessors through himself he acquires a new one. with the as- third if he does not live ™ the town This because or a rty wlhere the property advantage to | ncw the man who does not live in the Kl is located. an a city property while he gaye the Glants | is located is not compelled to file his lbeing a great team, he the old feould beat either Chicago of them, said list, but unless he does so in future White | ten per cent. additional will be added hy the assessors as required by law. humerating the players ne | There is scarcely a town in the state the late Tom Burns n, whom he character he great infield of that f son or Jim ike Kelly, Preffer, second base; Ton rd base; Williamson, catcher; Anson himself, Gore and Dalrym- field. eat many years since Sun- good e will always retain an in- | his story d ball, but, like all he game, and in ¥'s contest which he wrote York newspaper he showed dgment was not at faul P an estimate of the there will be a differ pinion as to what the out have been could the fa Stockings rise up from th all their speed and engage in a game witl Giants or the Philadel ey surely were an able lo and won the champion ‘several seasons. Billy’ to the New Britain bal | recall for many the latter’ entered the and before he na when he played with th 8" which were more or les a Connecticut of whom are still in th living. TRANK. lourts one after another dis- ious points brought up | grets that there are some well inten- e v of | in which there arc r d ! who will be affected by a- | of these two bills. The team he would pit fher was composed of either | play- regation, | some | the ople passage | POLITICAL TROUBLE IN TORD, of Hartford these nai < his own troubles in his ef- forts fill the oifi of the city, as he is required to do under the all evening being Mayor Lawler has day to appointive made last the law, his nominees rejected by board of aldermen, although assigned for it that the trouble was due to d:fferences, a most regrettable condi- no reason was and the supposition is factional l‘w tion in political ‘organization. i Hartford’s politcs, however, what similar to that which exists n _| New Haven, where anything fs likely | to happen and at the most unexpected times. Hartford has with its charter, view to improving it and enabling the any is some- been tinkering presumably with a 1 various oflicials to perform their work more efficiently, but the still very lame when it that the mayor can | a = document is does not pr his sppointments unhampered hy ratifica- vide make s 1 | | ernment. of he should The responsibility for good gov- it rests upon tion. so far relates to the work appointees him y and be permitted to select | his cabineet without erference, Mayor Lawler read his message last © ! ¢vening, which appears to be detail ana m com- | plete in every which econ- | teins one paragraph which well cther cities besides Hartford. particular m considered by He re be of Leo Frank, convicted | tioned people in Hartford who make 8 2 young gfrl in Atlan , it 1s Qifficult to recon 0 a belief in the stories tha t have r Th es court decided for a writ of habe, a fair d in his case anq that t in the court room whe eturned a verdict against against | s corpus | o lon the ground that mob vio- - | statements about the finances of the facts, costs ¢ | city which are not borne out by ¢ He the that it e | rmore to run the city now than it used to, that the individual family that reminds people bhut he say: this is alse tv husine: Hart- and und § fcrd have advantages and comforts now which they did not have when the city budget was smaller. This is NS the residents of n vas nim : the | a point which is not understood courts of GeorgIgR It 106R8 now us | chould be in every community, and a | for 5 it a result there is dissatistaction he of senti to there should unanimity It is to idea and ained ment instead. a good matter. he city in call attention this public henefit the of would refer to it would b mayor every the in th annual suges. The pubiie would soon hecoma interested and in time there would be improved tidca o public and theip officials would I the cities e the hetter for it FACTS AND FANCIE Sunday consents to S0 England to fight the Demon Rum is not unlikely that the ‘“brewe big horses” will continue to run over | {he tight little island.—New Haven | TUnion. | Unle: Billy to ix some prospect that the state can zet along without state | tax during the next twenty vea AL the most it will not be much more | than one-half mill, which a big reduction from the two miils recom- ! t.ended by Governor Baldwin i h messuge.—Bridgeport Posf Ther a is Some of the state paper: ‘ng rules for drivers of automobiles. Suggestion all right, hut «ith the | increase of autimobiles and the sire to get the most crowded | piaces of traffic, it is only natural presume tha tsome drivers, like some | individuals in 2 crowded passageway, will stop to talk, turn to the wrong side, or do something to impede traf fic. If they did not many would be out of an official job.—Middletown Penny Press. into have come to acknowledges. with chil- That *“the movie. stay every now That they are very popular dren, and that what they teach s very easily and quickly milated hy the growing mind, is also an obvious fact. Much of this. teaching is un- desirable, though there is also much that is useful and helpful in a high | degree. The children's theater, in | which plays have been produced for the especial delectation of the little people on certain days of the year, has proved a real success in some of the large cities, and now this is sup- ilemented by the children’s movi Waterbury American. There is one thing for which Jack Johnson deserves credit, and that is the way he has taken the trimming he received at the hands -of Willard. He has done no squealing nor has he undertaking to excuse or explain his defeat except to frankly acknowledge that he was licked because he w: unable to deliver the goods. He is thus giving evidence that he is more cf a game sport than any white pugilists who under simiiar ctreun- stances have shown an indisposition to admit theh inferiority to the man who has vanquished them, or to take their medicine, bitterethough it ma be, graciously.——Norwich Record. one According to Irving Fisher, fessor of Ikconomics at Yale, are not the cause of the cost of living, as popularly supposed, but are one of | the effects of the chang in | the scale of wages follow, rither than precede, changes in the scale of the cust of living, One of the commonest fallacies in this respect the belicl that prices are high to-day wise | wages and ries have heen raised in s0 many lines of work. The exact cpposite is the truth accoraing to Pro- fessor Fisher. who demonsirates that it is a historical fact that prices have gone up first, and that have visen afterward—when of higher prices made . a ge schedule imperative.- Tolegram. pro- wag cost Wazes the pinch higher w: Bridg Abicst Men Not La | (Popular Mechanic | > are all inclined to look up to the | yeically big man only ! hut there is always ce sumption in his favor that correspondingly sironz mentally. | ple ke room for him: they at- | ‘h more importance usually (o what | ¢ says than to the same uttered by an undersized unconsciously picture in the bayonet chargs and the trenches as the work men. The boy dreams sotball physique and littie sister wor- s her big brother, Other abilities being cqa man has a positive advan small man. And yet ms majority of the great voorld have been only e, and not a few even A certain lavge city in this cour Ly had for years made it a rule not to cemploy in its fire department any but large men. The result was a small army of athletes which never | failed to cause a po: thrill when cver they went on parade. They tinctly represented the day of physical | niight For some year: t mind has I cessfully. to produce never tires, and cale to a great extent the muscle (o machine, this evolution may small towns everywhere tre engine drawn worked with hand by Tcoked for in museur mechanics of the past, is the self-propelied chine, carrying alle of highly only two men: means of which ipulating not literally ain pre- he must be | words | We minds storming of of large of having a man our I, the lav, 12 over th if not the men* of the of medium | undersized. | ive dis the and inventive very ratus which | The evidence, be scen in and now voluntee of | even | the by and i in gas-cn v hose cctive its « and cap- e work with ladder trucks small man levers can t ladders detuge and by | one hort scconds raise gre: heights, or pour water into tenth 'y windows while standing in the street below. Henc ahout that man small nimblc hody and | not only 1 M- inoa to | some he ature of of mind often the superior There vet remains s the big athletes, bhut it less each year, and the man rature has not endowed with great by b build, of ti rowing physical strength is coming into his own. i | i | when ! al state | matters | Fifth United States | story { der { ritory tow: iin a ce { length of L but | owned Americ | heed | 1earning. | be | ture | head | have | disposed " | the { humor, ' ot | that | silly | face | rado, we of | wear | sociologic whom | of WHAT OTHIRS SAY Views on all <ides of thmely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to Herald office. Cutlaw, But Br Thompson, Casalry hting i (Washington Licut. Haroldq of tobert T tells Starr, a noted Ok- 1d bandit, who was recently in a bank rob- one or th towns, “Hen Lee's old “Fj about H vhoma outlaw piirehended ery in Starr accused, about fteen years ago, of bheing implicate: in numerous train robbe misdemeanors on, at the 1 ideputy M out on wag ries and other Lieut. Thomp- “United States 11 Floyd Wilson went Ains the Indian Sty The 1 ert. Tk hout {wo 1 each their horses d the othe and cac as he rolled, When Sta Ison, the deputy sheri 1l Starr apiured d in n “Stary said leigh. of to met in the dc other when : they approached Foth fell from distance of f Vo N hted ea wpart. 00k, a within each rolh man fir- rr got up had been W to twenty penitentiary at and the th Wit Fed Ark put in a cell near the nce door. Chero Bill, a half- Indizn and desperado, was put il at the other end of the peni One while Larry Keat. ir the turnkey Jocking uy Cherokee 1ili. from his cell, pointed a Winchester at Keating and shot him in the leg. Keating fell in way as to bre his neck and die: The shot attracted the tention United States Marshal 1. and a lot of his deputics ran penitentiary, hut seeing Cherokee with the gun, were afraid to Henry Starr, the first cell, ‘Let me out I'll get the gun from that Indian. “'Stall handed Henry Starr the Keys to his cell. Starr walked the entire the penitentiary, stepped into Cherok Bill's cell, and in the twinkling of an cye came back with the gun and handed it to the marshal It was for this piece of bravery that Starr was pardoned by Roosevell from his twenty-yvear sentence. Cherokee 3ill was afterward hanged, “There are many,” concluded Lieut Thompson, “who believe that 8 w never guilty of the willful mur der of Wilson, but that he shot in -defense the day they met on th desert.” breca tentiary, day of St the Bill enter. vellec r Without a Flag. (New York Piess.) The tale is in the making of a man of very considerable celebrity in hemispheres, but without a fla fugitive from the United having fled the country when con- victed of a rious crime Not only had he achieved world distinc- tion of certain kind, | he had amassed wealth suddeni Now the distinction has wrested from him ch of his wealth has been dissipnted, together with hi manhood’s s=trength, dissolute living. Afraid to his native land, Jack Jehnson, the other day worl champion is in fact stranded. course, he can go whithersoever winds of his whim blow him, ways at personal peril, with the pro- tection of no flag. In the honr of his humbling by s Willard he appealed to the Amer He States, ide a 1t heen in approach only of Je ican Minister to Cuba for a that was denied him. this conntry unluss he re-enters United States; upon himself. and profitble reer of this a lesson well worth ipped of hi: fame, in lands no longer interested in more than vulgar curiosit, doubtless yearning yet afraid to return to his own country, and ad vanced in yeurs, oxible, that a ter all, his pi the e s great ad paid penalty his offenses by going to prison. He pays no to him mocked the turned It will be interestir to observe the future ¢ man. it will be St He his mockery an alien him prompts of It may be that one of these days he | will come back to throw himself up- on the mi v of the conrt, A Bundie of Lawmaking Wisdon. York Ever since the New Yo prohibited that ancier proved if neavhat rude hunting with a baseball, “Aunt Sally,” citizens of sWo 1 with sending us (New Su legisla- and ap- port of known othe prid specimens To a v well foreigner many of these might look fictitious, the progeny unrestrained American fleering at American follics slation: but the natives know i a supposed Ty is sufficiently there can he no doubt of Surely, Kansis is (0 she prohibits the us h bleach, carring cation for must | her her sphisticated and their own heauty. 1o is an older if not a better er than Kuans; In Cola- are told, chicken roost not later than 7 m.i bulls driven along ds at shali lights imabiy Ma < and 1linois made of iol the tax on hachelars? hut even our unhounded and al lawmalker sk a tates, ite been of enuactive sapience. sen leg a its thenticity, form when powde of the ch u the wearing cars ner ar hai rece; e« una- dorned s Cola ve hy suffrage s must and night hullseyes. Have T that old So we hear; belief the “reach” little when Minnesota in wisdom we are has ord that that that t lumberjacks of re belt shall have “in- bath tub: and that North has a statute for the uniform of sleigh runners. Are those the banana dividual Dakota thickn the | outhwestern bor- * later | such a | Stall | two | heavyweight | the | but al- | | charge of the farm that it will go far | medicinal | nels of supply of passport, | dis- | | entitic | | | | | {and countrymen abroad and here and | to of | | the it. | ture, Lycurguses of the west satirizing themselves?” From Wisconsin anything may expected in the of law; and the badger teachers in school, mal schoal and university are forbid- den to smoke cigarettes it serves them right. We should like to know, how- cver, if a South Carolina act restrict- ing each whiskey a month is unusual punishment to the staff of our philosophic contemporary the Colum- hia state. Where Nebraska by for- bidding free lunches may be the more inclined to high task of living on Mr. Bryan's words. All friends of thin diet may rejoice at that las we are informed, all this legisla- tion is in solemn ecarnest, It is ser- ious because it Is burlesque, and it burlesque because it is secrious. be way not a cruel and its is Insurance Money Works, (Chicago News,) Nt exc of the bi companies tells about by the doliar policyholders In home a re ent brief state- ment one ife insurance R the work done paid in as premiums by 1‘ls office the company says, “is a steel safc about the size | of a large bedroom. This safe has | lin it about $300,000,000, repr by stocks and bonds, In other s nearby are another $300,000,000 more, represented by real estate xages and titles to property, on “The dollars themsclves are not in these safes; they are all out at work. Each safe might be regarded as a sort of cloakroom, where the dollars leav their hats and ts and then to work Each of these dollurs we regard as a little slave working hard every day without taking any holi- | days, without taking any vacations, 1nd each one earning about 4 1-2 cents 3 r for the compan Policyholders send into this com- pany money at the rate of $40 a min- ute for 300 working days of the year —nearly $5,000,000 a month, more than $58,000,000 a year. Of actudl cash the company prob- ly does not keep at hand more than Very prompt- At what? the com- or mort- nd =0 co. [ ab comes in in ten day fly money is put to work. As soon as 1t comes in,” |.pany says, ' the money | 'building railroads, making | tives and railrvad cars, erecting of- tice buildings and business houses, and performing a greal service to society all over the land. ‘In other words, it is immediately invested in railroad and vonds and real estate mortgages.” Of course, what this money adds to the fund held to pay the | claims of policyholde Last year, tor instan this company paid out | $118 for cvery $100 received from { policyholders—a record equaled by every sound old company, and made possible by the policy of keeping money constantly and safely c¢mployed. 1t is well worth while to get and study the financial statemcnts of the | Lig insurance companies. They aic | among our biggest and most succes: | 1ul investors. Medicinal 1 (Washi A medicin: Plant Farm. an Star.) drug plant farm on a large scale, the of abroad, a thing unique this in annals and has been American scientists on the Virginia just opposite the national cap- It is contended by -those in horticulture in coun- ital. taward de in chan- revolutionizing the tr; drug plants and the these plants. The whole operation has heen un. taken after conference with the experts of the department of agricul- who for some years have con- ducted experiments in the cultivation of medicinal drug plants at the Ar- lington farm, owned by the depart- ment just across the Polomac river, The new drug plant farm is estab- lished on the property of John B.| ilenderson, . who has taken a sci- interest in the matter and ¥ turned over his land to thase in charge for a long period of years. Athough attempts have been made before to establish farms for the cu tivation of somce the medicinal drug plants, no attenpt has been made heretofore to plant and har- vest all the mcdicinal plants which have been found grewing in the tem- | perate zones of the world. It is planned to develop the farm the best and sturdiest of drug plants, through ful cultivation and selec- tion, making it possible to provide the medicinal drug trade with plants | of standard value, which is impossiblc | at this time. ! For the drug plants are al-| most entirely coliected peasun de at i used by to the ma | rily vary according in New sent neces rkets. These plan in strength and value, and to the government of- ticials So far | is set to work | locomo- | municipal | earns | probably | established | 2fternoon, members of , htman . COMMUNICATED, | g sealnllaledls | Appropriation For Appeal Made For i New Britaln Institute. New York, April 20, 1915. Editor Herald— true friend Britain Insti- That very | pruning hook, inserted by the common : | council in the allotted the iconomy appropriation be pullel in municipal administration to Institute, must out and a lower tax rate are, as a rule, to be commended, but not when the bur- | den of retrenchment falls unjustly on | & free public library. If you beliove in | the Institute and its increased effi- | | clency, your place is at the city meet- ing where the appropriation comes nup for reconsideration. Rallying to the defense of a library easily call forth the familis r about our responsibilities to rekindle the dying torch of literature and culture. But that is not my pur- | Pose. Finance Is a subject dealing | with hard, cold fac Brevity and fo- the-pointness, are frequently twin souls of any appeal, to say nothing of | wit. After a somewhat detailed study of the Institute ana its needs, | suggest the following reasons why the city | meeting should restore to the iibrary the $3,000 clipped from its budget by ; the common council and restore also | the $1,500 lopped off by the bourd of | finance and taxation if possible: (1). Because it is foolish to econ- omize on essenti Try to solve the { high cost of living by climinating your | board bill or room rent, and you will | find that there's a limit to cconomy. S0 it is with the Institute which con- tributes to New Britain that wonder- fully composite intellectual food which | e call supplementary education. The city cannot get along without the li- | brary and the library cannot stand a | fatal cut in its appropriation. : (2) Because in economy, the human side takes precedent over the techni- cal. T heard Commissioner John A. ; Kingsbury of the New York Depart- | ment of Charities say, recently, th ing cconomy he always i in pract aged to err on the side of humanity, rather than on the side of efficienc Voicing this same attitude, Marcy : Marks, president of the Borough of | Manhattan, says that the real thing in his job is the man who walks on the pavements or who lives in the tene- ments, not the pavements and the ten- | ements, important ts they arein bor- ough administration. Can you imagine { any agency in New Britain which touches humanity more closely than the Institute? Tt is free,—open to all,—stimulating | to democracy. It ranks with the pub- lic schools in the difficult work of assimulating strangers from many lands who are fortu e in adopting New Britain as their home. Through the Institute they learn the best of our local and national traditions while | hooks in their native language tend to preserve for them the lustre and finer sensibilities of customs in for- n lands. And when you come to what child- | ren find in the Institute, the typewrit- er acts as though it would like to | purr along for hours. Alice in Won- | derland never had a more delightful experience than some of the little folks who have happened to wander to | the storyvland realm known as the children’s room. Most any Saturduy the common council can find New Britain future citizenship jammed into over-crowded quarters, their bright e shining | ghostly clear in the dim light of the stereoptican which beckon: them to whaolesome amusement. With a de creased appropriation such sights as these could not be. Through the children, has an ever-increasing ence in the homes. Let ‘riends of the ildren’s r own story: “My father could not read correct one day [ brought home a book in which he was very much intere £0 he went on reading it and now he 'n read a book without mistakes,” “My mother often sits down reads them (children's books) lier work is done and she “My mother would ard read it ond help her if she the word.” Such little notes as these In childish scrawls comprise a 1 Institute’s bill of particular gide of humanity. An error of $4.500 on this side shou'd he made at night's city meeting, not because to err but because humanity demands such errors. (3) Because the library exercises an elevating influence, a chance for cveryone to get above the smoky and noisy industriaiism that ates New Britain to greatnes (1) Because the city ernment is on trial in thi 1t behooves the fifth city in to treat its public library consideration. This is es the Institute reflex influ- the young room, tell and when is tired.” take my book wothers would not pronounce my could on nd its gov- ituation state due of any with York great quantitics plants are shipped | annually. i with a war raging | all of Burope, the sup-| ply of drug plants for usc in the! United States has become more p carious than ever. In the first place, | the persons who © thered thes: | plants in the past are ecither at war | unable to gather the wild plants hecause of war. In the second place, ct that thousands of men are heing wounded in the war each maonth | makes it G the military | authorities to take over the zreat part of the supplies for their own use, At the dru forty-five planted nd it crease of spurious drug this country, Just at present, in practically necess for drug s | in Vir land plants farm ac of with drug is planned to ver, this acr g¢ next year. A enough selected belladonna | plants for five acres have heen brought up under gl beds ing 100,000 ot niu are being this year. much in- about ready contain- | nseng roots have h woodlands, being grown clude cannabi; kspur, golden seal | or hydrastis, Japanese peppermint, sencga, colchium and sprigelia. out in ihe plants which | they | csteem and mans watehful and critical obser city of another. (5) Because suicidal, A per cent in tion which source of vhile the ation, one the proposed reduction of the of cut income inatitu- had tationary for cight population of New Britain has nearly doubled, is not retrench- ment or cconomy but assassination A former mayor of New Britain onco boasted in city meeting that he had never known the city to turn down ropriation for education an income vear “rhaps foundations perhaps the realize how had dealt the admissions me time but that will not relieve sponsibility of tonight's city meeting. Give the Institute a square deal and itz just desserts so that it can forward to wider spheres of \dequate financial support from is due an institution by citize hi i librarians who find joy in unde service. firancia was tional not common G serious a Institute the re- activi that ommunity erned ns of d by a paid EDWIN N. LEWIS. it's | the assault on the library's | New St lat 9 p. w Saturday other days at 6 p. m. McMILLAN’S Closing Hours, Monduy at 9:30 p. My House cleaning, no when you havoe a cleene COMBINATION in-one. ir special, 86, PREMIER" Electrie cleaner, Let us demonstrate at your home. DRAPERY NEEDS, Largest selection in t made curtains, drapery the vard, fixtures, brac shades CURTAIN SCRIMS, Drawn work and colc fects. Two extra and 15¢ yard. NOVELTY SCRIM:S MARQUISETTES. spec MADRAS. e yard, with ¢ rd, MADE €©URT. Others at 25¢ READ Madras curtains, spe $1.50 pair. Scrim and Marquisett to $4.98 pair. All our curtains are displayed on swinging WINDOW SHADES. All kinds, 2! and bet Any special size shad NEW DRAPERY MAT tapestries, and monks ¢ PILLOW TOPS 25¢ and 50¢ e All ready for u SILK FLO PILLOW 20¢ to 75¢ each. All rizes, square and BATH ROOM MATS. $1.25, $1.50 to 0 ¢ Size 14x VELVET RUGS. At 98¢ each good Size 27x54 inch bales of these special Largest assortment and oil cloths. $1 we v r i | i 109-201-20:3 MAIN Ho! ol Union practical the administrs the (Roc The istry in ter ang he ry is new e is | and cngaged twenty-five | 4N chemists | | uninten- | gtudy of so: council | These blow | cost Such | o ¥ have been made-by this | =it | ient the | of | public | ginning A i hotel management western fuliy city ¥ equipped chemie: graduate ™ chemist 1« to all into hotel assistants will a the food i the come that buyers, pur ntitie upon by ders in at are frequen dealers who part with infer will promptly « w practices The hotel chemist ma apparently thosands dollar large hotel The upplied to to receive Colorado woman for a skin doctors to be in the soap hot The hotel f for the the liqu wa insign of in n consic ha irritati due to furni of her alko hrooms from each sure that standard. specimens order to be the proper SWEE The very best of its kind § 825, Lace curtains, 50c up to application Gleaners AND Garpet Sweepers more a task r in your home PER-VAC. 0 cach, 00 each, these cleaners he city. Ready materials by kets, window red border of- ial lots 10e AND S¢ o 39¢ yard. uinty colored effects, AINS 98 pair cial $1,25 and e curtains, #c¢ cinveniently Ks. ter, e made to or- ERIALS, All the new designs and colorings In silkolines, cretonnes, burlaps, denims, loth rach SPECIAL RUBBER MATS 5 inch at 39¢ cach 25 value. Wil sell s 1g3, Linolewns two STREET istry. 1 Advertiser.) ol che n of great wrinklc in la hotel | tely adde 1 laboratory hemist and pply scientific oducts which It is claimed chs 1) in ing larpe impored till th or The t all such kes a special nd cleansing powder ificant items annually in tencd by ingred- 1l chemi will rde complies with ’ D. McMILLAY |