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Bis1tiNG coMPAN a) at 4315 Chure! xceptes 87 New B ) Post OMce 8% vor. @ Class Mall carrier w0 a Week. or a 6 to be sent by 60 Cents & T, p. m. ritain y part of the city 'cénts a Month. mall ofitable advertising medium in ®girculation books and press giways open ty advertlsers. fwill b round bn sale at Hota- ‘Stand, 42nd St. and Bro: York City; LEPHONE CALLS. €e and firemen are incll lat at least one of the k. was of incendiary origin linderstood that the matter Investigated. Incendia Plesome crime to fe ecause it seems as if it i ry to have a witness atch applied before ividence h is estd a crime has d and that is not easy of If there have been lent. B the recent fires in this fbeen done very cautio ting all the evidence L it impossible to jaturday evening was s e the suspicions of the iremen, though not poin Vn any particular direct lity to find any one to ain matters, however, he suspicions and the police Harshal are now working on There was another fire in place a few days ago, thich was not explained ed to make the case more That, however, does ndiarism. per of efforts have the past to obtain infor the cause of fires but they pd in absolute failure. he police were sure they nst one man, yet he jin the upper court becax | of evidence, although if about the only thing that hg was the admission of glf. . The firemen have been busy during the past week if any of thé calls were pre- were set d to nd the fires fine thing to know an ity parties punished. EFIT TO WEST fas begun to talk about fit that will come to gason of the iarge amount at will go westward . account of the Pan ¥it being fizured out 100,000 which form b ¢ : to by will find cour. its ‘way to land the various resorts ér for it. No one can ¥hat so many went to fthout first having seen their | bpv, except that it be a d hat kind of a world F the United States, but the great sights are t e being noted for their gran- their beauty. Much of in the way vages of the war, but s and will in all probabili year. | etter known after this before. long ways from here to and there are a great many be restrained from visi ition on account of the sums have also been the mountain and seaside it will take a lohger time to exposition than has | been spent in tne ordi put there are some jhe prediction that the ade in three weeks, increased The great point, hean east. t our own country'is going by the vacation money may not be as large a thich used to g0 to Eu Il nevertheless be a nd in addition to that th ‘the tourist will be dir e wag hardly aware o he and his friends will IS BEING ADVERTL 8 an apparent disposition in rters to criticise Wi pr bringing stit agalnst oosevelt regardless ai fhe obtains judgment o of the publicity the colonel It is being said that pre- ne- the opening of tihe pro Roosevelt wa fter Bay and r interested in puts while now he is one wa him or Board Walk. City and Hartford depot. DIARISM SUSPECTED. en on prove it. been Burope of arcnitecture destroyed in' Europe owing and if can be definitely determined attendance ad- ined fires rism s al- who con- and in the story of the trial he is allowed to explain how he fought in the Spanish war and how much in- tercsted he is i good government, it of which is expected to help him as 2 public character. There is no gues tion as to the value of the publicity because when the thing is all over the colonel will out the peaceful retirement of his home and held up to the gaze of the entiis country with such noble ideas as that a4 man can contribute to a campaign fund with as lofty a purpose as if he were chipping for the support of church. No one need hesitate about swelling the campaign fund if the colonel should run agajn. It may not be as high a motive if the money is given for anothers candidacy. The testimony so far has not been of the greatest importance but it may assume a Jdif- ferent phase when the lawyers knit it together in their summing up. Therc is apt to be some wincing statements made then and it may be that the feel- ings of some persons will become bit ruffled. In the meantime Lead- er Murphy of Tammany Hall is pic- tured as reading the testimony and have been taken of a city’ but uch po- ting ion. ex- has the and | not ma- In had was e it the it this this | ama | that erly | the will i tell | see | sire | xists | it is | o be | the here San iting cost, ex- con- nary who trip how- this sum rope, vast e at- ected f be- want SED. lliam The- s to r not ceed- living quiet- s ap- | larger than it was then. fsummer, that the railroads, | enjoying it while the tiger is sitting iblished | de him with another copy and been | having just as much fun out of it. CORNER STONE CELEBRATION. Twenty-five years is not a long peri- od in the history of any church, but it is a long time for any religious ganization to be housed in one place of especially three quarters of a century of the vicissi- tudes which had been the previous 2x- periences of the Trinity M. E. church in New Britain which is now celebrat- ing the silver anniversary of the lay- ing of the corner stone of its pretty gray edifice on Main street. The his- torian tells it all in his story of the growth and development of Method- ism in New Britain. It is an interest- ing history, too, but the great work of a church will never be written because no one can (cll] the sweet consolation that religion imparts, the peace that it brings to a human soul and the piety ~d devotion which it instills in- to the everyday life of those who prac- tice it and which marks the happy close of lifes journey for each and all. Religion is good for the individual, fer the government, for the country; it does more and exercises a greater in- ‘fluence for good than all law, the ar- or- worship, after my and navy; it causes people to be good, to be honest because they should be and as they are in the greatsma- jority a little thoughful reflection will convince the skeptic of the great part it plays in our modern life. Methodism part. and it would be measure tha2 good influence that has been wrought | by the little granite church whose cor- does its impossible to ner stone was laid a quarter of a cen- tury ago. passed some of those who occupied its pul- pit but others have come to take their places and the membership is now It has bene- Britain, it has made mecn and women all have derived spiritual strength from its teachings and its influence to ralss their voices in its praise, their song would be heard by all who make up our community and who are glad to Many of its members have away during this period, also fitted New better and were who record and recognize the blessin religlon. of The Grand opera house in New Ha- | terday, was not as old as some other theaters in this country, but Jennie Lind sang there and that was a num- ber of years ago. John Wilkes Booth, who is remembered for some other things besides his efforts in the drama, also played there. ‘Whether the board of public safety should be split up or not is an inter- ting question for public discussion, — It does not look as much like sum- mer today as it did yesterday. FACTS AND FANCIES. According to a prominent movie magnate $275,000,000 was spent by the public in this country during the year 1913 for admissions to motion picture houses, The question naturally arises as to what we did with all this money before the film theaters were prepared to help us get rid of it.— Bridgeport Standard. €pring could be far more enjoy- &ble for most folk if that mysterious ailment known as “spring fever” did not come along with it. This wanting to lie down on your job and get out in the country, or not knowing exactly just what you want to do to obtain re- lief from something the matter with veu that you really can't describe or explain is an annoyance, to say the least.—Norwich Record. The jitney bus suggests that the day iz not far distant when tne streets of a city will not be obstructed with rail- Wi tracks and made dangerous b overhead wires as thev have been sinve the trolley car came into use. Then | the railway companjes will find that one of the wisest policles was to pur- his being cnase right of way for tracks wher- ever they could because it enables them ven, which was destroyed by fire yes- !“ het place for unprofitable pa vice.—Waterbury Republic: More aged the French army go or what amounts to the same thing the retired list. This is ne dishonor to them. They may he capable and ef- ficient men but the str 5 of K needs strength and that in men fitted fight line pasechs of how unsparing i war upon the modern rank.—Ansonia Sentinel, that inc which and worn out to the genera scrap heap modern youth and any means he seventy tenacity cannot by found who are the council than e al Joffre knowledge ind of of high e for the know his tae officc upon « ased burden Connecticut's first Concerning of taxation legislature bids fair to put over on the corporations and thr them upon the people, we hear that “there is no other way than to grin and bear it” and just grve. thanks *'taint no worse.” Thi of New Yo predicament. Its leg bt 1 direct state t ot $19,000,000, and over seventy per cent. of this will have to be borne by the rk's )poses lature 1% |in /HAT OTHERS 3SAY Views on all sides tmely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to Herald of The Sorrows (New Up-state with sad unfailing of the Canners. York World.) canners eyes and Promise the watching hearts the Soon heavy of be signs of the forthcom- of ruit, corn, beans blight has faHen there will spring. there will tng harvest tomatoes, sweet string and peas, but a upon the land ana be no more joy, for a leg- islature that wanted to scatter sun- beams over the commoenwealth in the m of an act permitting women and childran to work eventy-two hours \ Week in the cannerics lost courage the last moment and did Prosperity, smiling and garlanded s city of New York. It sounds big. dosen’t it? TIn reality it is no bigger in proportion to size and wealth, than is proposed by a different method in Connecticut.—Hartford Times. Dead Chum in Wheelbarrow, (New York Herald.) Promenaders alo Knickerbocker street, Paterson, N. J., smiled indul- gently yesterd afternoon when a | bare-headed boy, pushing wheel- barrow in which lay another boy, hur ricd past them. One of the promen- aders, Mrs muel J. glanced curiously at the vehicle as she stepped to the edge of the sidewak. Then she screamed. For the wheelbarrow and its bur- den were streaked with crimson stains and each jolt of the clur vehicle left a ragged trail of red in its wake. At the woman's scr 5 the boy, who was George Everett, 9 vears old, of 439 Knickerbocker street, dropped the wheebarrow and fell across it with b Ross the matter?’”” Mrs. Ross de- manded, and the boy, with his hands muffling his face, gasped: “I shot ‘Mike' Quant, my chum, and I'm taking him to the hospital.” Then, before she could ask another question, young Everett turned and ran up the street. Mrs. Ross suwm- moned an ambulance, which carried the boy's body to St. Joseph’s hospital, | where surgeons declared the boy dead. Wooes With Fake Fortune. (Portland Oregonian.j ! Spurious letters indicating he had fallen heir to a quarter of a million of dollars on condition that he be married by June 20 were used by Webster A. Waugh, alas N. W. Nee- | ly., in profitable wooing, according to | several women, who say’ hé obtainea | from them cash advances in various | sums. Their complaints resulted in the arrest of Waugh. He is held on a | minor charge, pending investigation of the complaints of four women. The Police y Waugh has con- fessed he wrote the “fortune letters” as an aid in the wooing he has under way. A telegram found on Waugh said: “Uncle Paul dead. One-half of es- tate of $250,000 is yours, provided you marry and call at St.-Francis hotel San Francisco, on June 20, 1915. Should you have had no children, two-thirds of your portion goes to was signed ferman.” The tclegram k‘u = Schomover, Chicago,” as were thvo let- ters found on Waugh, which pretend- ed to reprove him for his reluctance to marry and adyise haste. The Portland women from whom Waugh had obtained money are reluc- tant to prosceute. “The Falling Home.” (New York Press.) “When women zc into politics they will leave the home The home will be destroyed the ballot, and then will become of the American people 2" It is a dark picture. It was paint- ed by the hand of a former cabinet officer. A “cabinet officer aught know what he is talking about, but often he doesn’t. Most of our n: tional troubles go back to that aby between ‘“ought” and ‘“doesn’t.” At the same time, this menace should be gravely considered. Pic- ture the scene for vourself. Year after year George Jones and his wife have lived happily tagether, acquir- ing a home, a piano and a family on the installment plan. Morning ana night they have looked into each other's eves in trust and amity, grateful for the past and hopeful for the future. But one dark gives Mrs. Jones the right to'vote. shadow falls across the Less than two years presidential election, a day which is heavy with doom for this contented family. As the campaign progr they sit with clasped hands, discu ing the tariff in the gloaming, afraid to speak of that fatal November day when ail their happiness will be as ashes on their lip: At last the day dawns. Mrs. Jones slips on hat and jacket and goes forth bravely to make tHe sacrifice. She ‘stops in at the butcher's to buy the steak, and on the way home goes unflinchingly up to the polling place and casts her ballot. It is done. She returns to find her hearth deserted and her home made desolate. Husband and children are gone. Husband has gone fishing and the children to the neighbor Yet she bears up herojcally. She has saved the state even at the cost of a cold fireside and an abandoned home. {Also she has bought the steak. Her done, a hal ew sncks up by tu day the legislature A threshhold. ahead ts the ned the house But it stepped American When she place the like & is all into that homa over, bolling came down p first page in all the big dail- | now to operate fast freight cars in _l?usled elevator. i the ‘\‘L'\hflv\. | other | desperation | which | ligation that Holler was under to Rob- | simply “beat them to it.” jord in which the “big men,” the men i, never befor by. Wall 1 the in darkne and thus passes the canne reet's fireworks illum but the canners s Manufacturers of arm ammunition in wealth while cs lan The looms ferges the anvils husbandman goes mer- ut the canners aban- themselves to grief because they nullify reform legislation made necessary by their own abuses. L5 renders this deprivation wholly intolerable, the boon that the canners asked was for themselves. It was intended primarily to uplift and h r women and children. Incide “ contended that it would lead to such a business revival that n fall the people in the can_ ning districts would trample on each in their rush to the polls to vote the republican ticket. Now what will happen. Fruit will rot on the trees and bushes. Veg- etables will go stale. The democrats will rise up and chortle aver the calam- ity that is befall peas, beans and the grand old parf As for the can- ners, perhaps they will fade away in sorrow and perhaps not. In sheer they may dry their tears and run two shifts of ten houys each, they are entitled to do under ex- 13 e skies, roll ruish rouar, ¥ don to his to 15 see isting May a Small Man Squeal? (Indianapolis News.) We note a disposition on the part of certain of the citizens of Terre Haute now domiciled in the Leaven- worth penitentiary . discriminate against Ed Holler, chief of police in the city by the Wabash. His offense seems to have been his effort protect and to serve his own interests by turning state's evi to former to himself dence. More than four scaore of the indicted men made the same choice, in truth seems to have been a very wise one. We know of na ob- erts or others of the gang. He did their will and got caught. They would have dumped Holler in a minute had it been possible. There is not one member of the congpiracy —which was utterly cold-blooded—that wounld not have made Holler “the goat.” He And this reminds us. far as we know, not There is, as a case on rec- Wwho inspired crime and profited by it, ever made a serious attempt to protect their corrupt and criminal tools. That would, indeed, be in vialation of the rules of the game. The little men do the work, assume all the responsibility and take what- ever punishment comes—and keep si- lent as to the complicity of the higher- | ups. That, we say, is the rule of the game. It is the same as in the old days when the king repudiated the act of an agent, even if he had ordered when it was found that the mon- arch would suffer because of it. And the agent expected nothing else, In cases of political crime, the boss- p buried with full military honors in es, so far from protecting their agents, invariably expect to protected by them. And they are nat often dis- appointed. Nothing is more astound- ing than this self: crificing loyalty. In “days of old” the barons used to give a full equivalent for the services performed by their retainers. But things have changed. The madern barons demand that their retainers shall not only work and steal for them, under their orders, but also bear the penalty for the crimes committed at the command of the barons. It expected thut the retainer shall not only do the dirty work of his over- lord, but suffer in his stead—and in abject silence. Sur by this time the little people must realize that there is no possible protection for them. When exposure comes they are immediately dumped. And it is actually considered ‘‘bad sportsmanship” for them to complain. What about the sportsmanship those who inspire the crooked work, profit hy it, and then run to cover the first and faintest intimation sot the be gonds they at once turn their backs on those | made a dash for it who made it possible for them to ge them. And vet these infamous cow- ards expect to be known as “sports’ and fellows"! They denounce thos are so “base” as to save them and vet they themselves expect to be saved through the sac- ‘e of the poor, the ignorant and scure who have been betrayed and misled to their hurt Such is the “chivalry” of practica “good ves, noth- | COMMUNICATED. Ex-Office Holder Opposes safety Board. Editor Herald:— } Your article in Saturday's issue in | reference to dividing the safety de- partment was timely and well put. It | Lrough to mind accurrences of the ! B e et Severate mansse- | Jackson, Miss., Minister Tells | ments. . W then nad Joine conmit- | How He Suffered After the | tees and common council action to Grlppe and How He was Re_ stored to Health by Vinol. smooth over and straighten out de. Jackson, Miss. — ‘I am 8 minister of lays, (almost deadlocks) differences of | opinion and which arose in matters 5 . was con. | the gospel and I had the grippe so badly Nhoh fhe otk ] that I ached all over, flesh was sore, requiring joint action or action of ane branch in i cerned, so that it was a relief to the| yitst 8CISC * : ains in my chest and back, no city authorities when both depart- | 2 2 : i 5 d is B b ol 8 : :llfi}:_(;ui:a:;ese3221e ZiOLIAS i, 1 tried different medicines without Some of the troubls was due to the | VIR RUalY & Tgnd recommendss | joint occupancy of the city building | jmpivemant and continuing its use I | on Commercial street. Questions arose F=21 5 as to which board had charge, who ‘I”{llasgtgseéyusr:dh%vifigl iorfr:lr)\lyf:rfi?;fl::; ;n'pomh"fl the j&llnilfol“ “v}‘e(:;af;‘s‘d ;:C'l'] Chrofl:isc Fouglas BVr\lld c&l}«{i with ‘t]hekbest his services, paid or | results.”” —O. ILES, ackson, changes required as time went by. | Miss. § 3 Were some of the wants justified? Grippe leaves the blood in a thin Neither board had the money to ex-' devitalized condition. It takes away pend as they were kept down on their | the appetite and leaves one weak, with- appropriations then the same @S Now. [ out energy and often in a dangerous There was the question of fire police, | condition. their services, pay and the proper au- In order to restore the blood to a thority to obey One department was | healthy condition, iron must be supplied Splitting lat At Th da 45 manufac- % says, the National | association, | space given HOLDER. not satistied with the care their quar-| in an easily assimilated form. We enough; repairs were nat properly at-| Which contains no oil. If youtryitand | which both departments are liable to The Clark & Brainerd Co., Drug- keep back crowds, preserve order and [ SE— these matters can be better regulated Formerly difficulties and differences CORPOR ON BUR[ U political ambitions and were not in- | tated to in regard to their general de- clashes and bickerings between the de- v i S tH [ D d | an arious ou-J.Cts DiSeussed. and until they have entirely separate T | yay unless in the line of a three-member | Of Manufacturers and dealers of farm times is towards centralization in man- | cCOmpetition and increase prices, while | efficiency and results. | interests, in,a report by the advocates are those who are looking | FéPort was drawn before the Bureau | or are working because they believe Almost every important expect that i v tical P it will - add political | (/e the dealers have organized the What good . s ad._ §ood Muument Nas been B | L 1ich is compossd of RISEEGNE Wkt given for it? All 1 have heard has| Organizations are national in proven that such a proceeding will| Efforts of to fix control sign mysclf as an tents, opposition of | reduce costs of manufacture and dis- | i h YOUNGEST HERO OF competition of mail orders houses, the | ters received if the other was in con-!| guarantee this ma{ be done by Vinol, | trol. In winter there was not heat| our delicious cod liver and iron tonic, tended to and so on. Now we have | it does not help you we will return your the patrol and ambulance on hand mMmoney. want at any mumen_l. The police are | gists, New Britain, Conn., and at lead- required to turn in fire alarms, to|ing drug stores everywhere. protect property at fires, besides sav- | ing lives if they are endangered. All] lAs]- f | and more satisfactory service secured REPORI Of 0lD | by one executive head than two. | were smoothed out mainly because those in charge did not have higher terfered with by the mayors then hold- ing office as to appointment and dic- partment management. 1 seems o | SUDLItGA 10 Presideat Wilson; me there is a continued chance for | partments if separated as long as they | are so closely connected as at present, = quarters and their size materially in- Washington, April .d—SQme‘?:"h: creased it will be bad policy to change practices of nation wide associations | of hoard or single headed management, | Mmachinery are charac terized as being As you aptly say the trend of the | ©f doubltful legality, tending to limit agement, both as to government and | & large part of them are held to be | business. That is the way to get|Proper for protection of legitimate | If you will investigate the demand | Bureau of Corporations buhml};fid! for two boards vou will find its main | Yesterday to President Wilson. . for and expect to get appointments| Was merged with the new for the positions which will be created | Trade commission. their friends will. Possibly there are those who also | [sgajmembet Gor Implement and Vehicle strength to the party or some indi-| W % 4 { vidual if it can be pushed through National Federation of mplemem | - ' and Vehicle Dealers' associations vanced for this change? Has there : : been any specific and tangible reasons | and interstate associations. The two | scope been generalties and expected effi- | and work in close cooperation. ciency. All past cxperience has Manufacturers Efforts Reviewed. manufacturers lead towards inefficiency. wholesale prices, control of retail | Thanking you for the prices, concentrated of pa- dealers to direct | EX-OFFICE transactions between manufacturers | — and consumers, as well | tribution, are reviewed at some length. The fight of organized dealers against WAR LAID AT REST | fending manufacturers even in the | th reports says, has been carried to the | extent of efforts to have postal rates revised to increase charges on pack- | ages and to curtail advertising fa- | cilities of mail order houses by suading manufacturers who farm papers which mail advertisements. The great problem of the dealers | associations, the investigators found, | was to find some lawful means of | keeping members informed of man- ufacturers who refuse to confine their trade to regular dealers. i Refers to Black Li | through leaders not to advertise in | “While the organized dealers, dis- |1y claim any intention of maintaining a | ., black list or of instituting a boy- | v, cott against anyvone” says the report, | ~ | “it is clear that if they be permitted to disseminate information of this character, those loyal to the principles | of their asociations would refuse to | continue husiness relations with of- | absence of an express agreement w‘ Austrian Youth of Ten Ycars Suc- we cumbs to Wounds Received in Battle—Mourned by Company. s ry | ve (Correspondence of the Assoclated Press.) ! Vienna, April 26.—Jan Wisniewski, $1 aged ten, who died a hero, has been Maehrisch-Weisskirchen. He was one of the youngest, if not the youngest of the actual fighters in this | war. Jan's nome was in Rychwald, from which he fled with his parents, Pol- ish peasants, when the Russians came in December. The three were mak- ing their escape in a wagon when a plece of shrapnel killed his father and mother. Neighbors took him in, but his childish mind clamored for revenge and he waited only until it was night to run away and join the Austro- Hungarian forces. The soldiers let Fim in the trenches and soon made him their favorite, He was so small that he could wiggle from one trench to another with food, tobacco and the like, without making much of a tar- get. Last month when ammunition sud- denly ran low during the midst of a icious attack, and the fire was so hot | Trifing Damage Inflicted that it was out of the question to | make one's way to the ammunition wagons, Jan begged in vain to make a try for it, and, when he was refused, do so” | TURKISH SHELLS HIT BRITISH BATTLESHIP | Tri | of Upon Tri- Silenced umph—Turkish Batter) b of by Fire of Warship, Battles Dardanelles, | | . | ©On Board the British He reached the train in safety, 1oad- | Triumph, at ed himself down with cartridges, and | alta, April an AN T enAGH e began the return journey. A hun-|Triymph entered the mouth of th dred feet from the trench the soldiers | graits and opened fire with her 7.: saw him fall, struck by a plece of | j,ch guns on one of the Turkish shrapnel. While the men, regardless | irenches on the western end of the of the fire, ran toward him, he worked | Galipoli peninsula, at a range of 7,000 his way onward toward the trench |ygpqs, After half an hour’s bom- until he collapsed ten feet away. bardment the ship proceeded farther When the battle was over Jan was | jnto the straits in order to search removed to the field hospital but his | the trench from another point. She Yn the via | (« F 1 of ing wh politics. The little people might well realize that if they do not pro- tect themselves, no one else will. The blame, the odium and the prison sen. as | tence will all fall on them. We do not think much of the “sportsmanship’ of those who disaporove of Ed Holler's At the very worst, Holler pla the rotten game precisely his superiors played it. His example is one that should be followed by ali tools and underlings. Protection from their overlords they cannot hope for. Why not protect thenselves? d as Wwounds were too severe, however, for | thys came under the fire of a howitzer | him to survive them. He is mourned | hattery on the Asiatic shore | ?I_'I" by “his" company as no other mem- | Thig battery dropped about sixteen | " ber has been. shells around the Triumph in a quar- ter of an hour. Three shells struck | the ship but inflicted only trifing damage. Two men—a stoker and I bluejacket—were wounded severel although not dangerously, by a which lighted on the bridge and through to the deck below The guns of the Triumph were able | to silence the Turkish battery in a few minutes after it was located. Thc in WHIST LEAGUE CONGRESS, Boston, April 26.—Representatives of whist clubs in many cities gathered here today for the opening of the 1Sth annual national congress of the Women's Whist league. Play will start tomorrow and continue through- ! out the week. The business meeting will be held on Thursday, shell fe JCHED ALL OV, MeMILLAN | Store | Saturday at 9:30 P. M., Other Day¥ week $25 week ‘u|, to the large 9ft.x 12 ft. room- } | size Rugs. ws efforts to | Week 98¢ each, this week | Have described during one bardments lishes, “in pride, gratitude von Buelow, gust for M., Don’t forget the New Closing—>Monday Hours at 9 P. 6 P. M. FLOOR COVERINGS Special Sale All This Week Rugs, Linoleums and Oilcloths Our 3rd Floor Drapery and Floof Covering Department. s Special Sale all this week, Mon« y until Saturday night only. LINOLEUMS AND OILCLOTHS PRINTED LINO! Our regular 50c¢ grade, ¢ sq. yard, INLAID LINOLEUMS Special values this week, 75c, d $1.05 sq. yard. GOOD QUALITY OILCLOTHS Special values this week 32¢ rd. 850 ¢ 5 sq. REMNANTS Olicloths and Linoleums, all marked for a quick clearance, ROOM SIZE RUGS TAPESTRY BRUSSELS Size 9x12, good $15.00 value, this old | week $12.45. Size 8.3%10.6, this week $9.98, HEAVY VELVETS 9x12, guod $20.00 value, Size this Federal | week $16.45, , this AXMINSTERS Size 9x12, good $25.00 value, turer of farm machinery, the reports | week $19.95, Size 8.3x10.6, this week $16.45, BODY BRUSSELS Bize 9x12, good $30.00 value, 95. Size 8.3x10.6, this week $22.95, CREX AND DEUTOX RUGS New designs, unusual values in all sizes from 18 in, x 36 this thigf in. SMALL SIZE RUGS VELVETS Size 4 in., good $1.25 value, this . Size 36x s value, is week § in., good 9 eich, AXMINSTERS Size 27x64 In., good $1.98 is week $1.19 each. Size 86x6 good 9 cach, &Kvod $1.25 8 value, $2.98 value, 18 in. x 36 in,, ek 98¢ cuch. WIiLTONS $7.6 value, this Size 36x63, guud ek $5.98 cach, RAG RUGS Two specials this week each, BATH ROOM MAT! al values this week each. WINDOW SHADES 25¢ and Upw or 0 value, tais 98¢ and c up to color your shades looked you cannot call, 'phone nge to have our shade ur home D. McMILLAN - size to after now and ar- all at Any man 199-201-203 MAIN ST umph then resumed bombardment the Turkish trenches h the date f above is not that thi of the fir of the -h as have been reported Althoy ident it is urred bom= ybable tion ) nationul Turkish positions favorably TEN O orrespondence April 2 the KILLED FAMILY f th T Associated Press.) Serlin of he family coun- von Buelow family pub- and mourn- list of ten family illen in battle major general shot before 1 ms members The list in- rl Ulrich on Au- ns, one utene o have des one one two « eship commander ind four 108 or one first lic ond lieutenants. ere Buelows serving the ire army von navy HORLICK’S The Original MALTED MILK Unless you say “HORLIOK'S” you may got a Substitut