Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
New Britain Herald. HEBRALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. Proprietors. | Iasugd daily (Sunday excepted) at 4:15 p. m., At Herald Bullding, 67 Church St. mtered at the Post Office at New Britain as Second Class Mail Matter. Delivared by carrier to any part of the city for 165 cents a week, 65c a month. bscriptions for vaper to be sent by mall, ayable in advance. 60 cents a month, 7.00 a year. he only profitable advertising medium in the city: Oirculation books and rress room alwaye open to advertisars. The Herald will be found on sale at Hota- ling’s News Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- way, New York City; Board Walk, At~ lantic City, and Hartford Depot. ‘ TELBPHONE CALLS. Business Offce .... torial Rooms A SUGGESTION. New Britain's fire department has on more than one occasion proven it- gelf efficient in many respects. It has jhandled fires that were threatening to he business section and 1t has effected Eubstantial work in lesser blazes. In ases where the flames were confined 0 buildings in the heart of congested istricts the fire fighters have gone bout their work with a zest and zeal hat were amazing, and comparable 0 the work of men in other cities’ fire Pepartments. The members of the Hepartment here are equipped with early all the essentials with which to fight fire. There have been instances fvhere . they worked under difficulty pecause of prevalent darkness in the re zone. One of .these occurred last pight. Because of the conditions exist- i then it was sometimes difficult to ee just what should be done and the en were forced to grope their way bout a building that had it fallen prey to the fire would have jareatened the best business part of In view of this tance, it might be well to consider e plausibility of furnishing the fire epartment with a searchlight that an be attached to an exténsion ladder nd thus furnish light for extremely ark places while the men are at work lghting fire. jurther e town. circum- RADICALLY WRONG. Because one of the big gamblers of he West, the man who attempted to brner the egg market, knew he was nmune from arrest so long as he did pt sell his product to retail or whole- le trade outside of his state, he ew brazen. This man who held P.000,000 eggs in storage and re- sed to let them out wuntil prices ared asked the question of Federal vestigators, What are you going to b about it? which was the same ing as asking the American people lhat they were going to do about it. e Federal investigators were at a 3s for an answer because there had Pen no violation of the interstate bmmerce laws. The American peo- le in the city of Chicago through the ivice of their civic authorities pro- ded to place a boycott on eggs and they adhere to the threat the spec- ators may see what the American bople are going to do about the high ices. Speculators in food-stuffs, whether e product they deal in be potatoes, Jheat, rye, eggs, or meat, operate so to control the law of supply and Pmand, a time proven theory of ionomics. By gathering in the early pply of .staple articles and hording away they increase the demand and ith the increase in demand and the ortening of supplies there are estab- fhed® the high prices. Then, when e prices are just about right for a ry enormous profit, the speculators loose their goods upon the mar- t in quantities sufficient te prevent b over-supply. This has ever been pne in the wheat market, presum- bly upon the theory that the Ameri- n people know nothing of such perations. The dealers float stortes the effect that the crops have been maged by storms, that not enough hs planted, that the = demand usted the supply. Because of present day prosperity eculators have become bolder than ual. The European war, which has date borne the weight of more sins ainst humanity than any other fenoy in a hundred years, is always 00d excuse for the high cost of liv- as it is for everything else. It is Sy to explain that the food-stuffs iginally intended for American con- mers must be shipped abroad to Pd starving women and children, hlereas the same food-stuffs may be fely locked up in great storage jults in Chicago awaiting the arti- al advance in prices. With the pub- jity now attending the high cost of ng there is very likely .a change jming. The Federal investigators en if they are unable to prosecute specified cases may point out what beifig done and the American peo-|| can call for a reckoning in some er imanner. There is something dically wrong with a system that al- s men to speculate in the very nec- aries of life and which permits ople to Be held up and robbed. in en day-light. It is timé for a change the laws. -/ ex- NEW v MERELY ANOTHER BDUNDER. Great Britain acts first and gives reagons afterward. In the case of British refusal to grant a safe con- duct to Count Tarnow-Tarnowski to take the place of Dr. Dumba in Wash- ington_as Ambassador from Austria- Hungary there will probably be no reason given. of Dr. Dumba and his connection with certain plots against the Allies while acting in his official capacity. Then it will be concluded, according to British logic, that his successor has no right in this country because he, Count Tarnowski, might take up the work of destruction where the la- mented Dr! Dumba left off. If that is the manner in which thé minds of the British authorities work the American government has no re- course, has nothing to say in the mat- ter, although the people may label this latest action as another British blunder of which there are cxamples in the past. The United States govern- ment has shown itself fit to take care case of Dr. Dumba. able gentleman When that estim- caught red- handed and proven to be outside thé bounds of ‘common courtesy, he was handcd his walking papers and sent back to his native hearth. TIn view of what happened to Dr. Dumba it is was Hungary would send over another rran to take a hand in the neferious work which hag ostensibly beer: aban- doned. There have been no explo- sions, no blowing up of bridges or mu- nition. factories, ambassador left the country. sentment of the American peopl> may be aroused against Great Brituin for its stand in the case of Count Tarnow- ski, but the American government must pursue the even tenor of its way anfl try to get along with what dip- lomatic representatives there are in charge of the Austrian embassy. It is no fault of America’s that Count Tarnow-Darnowski cannot represent his country in Washington. It is merely a false assumption on the part of Great Britain. since the "he re- A WARNING SOUNDED. When the Federal Reserve Banking System was created by Congress the object was to have its board of direc- tors, the Federal Reserve Board, keep in touch with all financial conditions and to advise the member banks. This object was realized to a great de- gree yesterday when the board sent notice to all member banks advising and warning them to refrain from the purchase of treasury bills of foreign governments involving long term pbli- gations. There is ho mention of any nation in the statement known that the hint is leveled against the purchase of British and French Treasury bills which these two coun- tries have already planned to place upon the market. It is pointed out by the board that “while these notes may be short in form and severally may be collected at maturity, the ob- ject of the borrower must be to at- | tempt to renew them collectively, with the result that the aggregate amount placed here will remain until such time as it may be converted into a long term obliga- tion.” Which means of course that there is ‘a possibility of these notes dragging on until normal conditions return, or until Europe again is set on its feet. Without reflecting upon the financial stability of any nation at war the Federal Reserve Board simply issues a warning to the banks not to give European nations the liquid funds which should be available to American business fnen,—to the farm- ers, the manufacturers, and the mer- chants. The Federal Reserve Board such dangers as this. Everytime an industrial concern voluntarily grants its workers an in- crease in wages an I, W. W. agitator bites the dust. We sincerely trust that President Wilson will stay in the house until his cold leaves it and him. It is well that he abstained from the Army-Nav game and its dangerous exposure: ‘We all know who would be his suc- cessor.—Hartford Courant, We also know who would like to be his successor. FACTS AND FANCLES, it is now the House of Perhapsburg. —Winsted Citizen. Breweries put out of. business in states where prohibition rules, it is said, wil] be utilized in turning out denatured alcohol for fuel purposes. —-Middletown Press. A paper mill at Ballston Spa has resumed operations after an idleness of nine years, Anc, right after the re- election o lemociatic president, too!l—Schéneshddy Gazette. Charlie Schwab has done a lot for Cornel] and some of the alumni think he ought to have degree. One suggestion is that it be D. D. doctor ¢ donation.—Meriden Jourhal, Tt will be 434 men to one woman in the next national house of repre- sentatives but that 1s no guarantee The American people | will be left to remember the activities | lic of recalcitrant ambassadors, as ia the | unreasonable to suppose that Austria- | erstwhile:| but it is| | In the ninetythree years of advantageously | justifies its existence by pointing out ! [ that a man will have the last word. —Fall River Herald, Wherever you see a brand new hat, be sure it roofs a democrat; and when you see a long faced man, be sure he's a republican.—Manchester Union. | There is today no more reason why tne people should not have their pub- ervice at a fair price than there was 30, 40 or 100 years ago, except that they can't get it—Galveston | News. | The six nour day has been estab- | Mished at Sing Sing prison. Under | the influence of the new humanita- | rlfanism our convicts manage to keep a few laps ahead of the public in | the present mad race for the mil- | lennium.—New York Sun, Bwano Tumbo is &oing to Samoa. There he may get the name of Tem- baitalke, who “was short, middling | stout a poet, a good genealogist and | something of a fighter.” No mat- ter what 1he natives call him, he will | tun up with a new volcano and a .good story about it.—Brooklvn Eagle. The Tolling Bell, (By James Shepard). “Tell me not in mournful numbers Life is but an cmpty dream,”* Who is there that now remembers What those “mournful numbers” i mean? | | 'Aged people know the sto That the church bells used to tell; | When some one had gone to glory, | Then the sexton tolled the bell. while strokes of solemn ring- ing From the bell uncounted fall, News of death those strokes bringing, News that reaches one and all. Hark! are Silent then, while all make ready For the numbers yet to come; Mournful numbers, slow and steady, Pausing when fo ten they run. Other tens may then be sounded ‘With a pause for every ten, 'Till the full tens all are sounded, Less than ten is counted then. Every hamlet had its church bell, | Few there were with more than one, Then they knew their difference well By each bell’s peculiar tone, All the people knew each other, Knew if they were sick or well, Knew which bell, when life was over, * Would their well known ages tell. How they thought of every person ‘Who was likely to depart, Gnessed that it was this or that one As thoge mournful sounds did start. If perchance the numbers sounded On beyond the age so guessed, Other guesses then abounded On some higher age to rest. When at last the final number QGave the years of life thus flown Then the name of one in slumber All were ready to make known. Now no tolling bells remind us Of the end of lines sublime, May there,linger yet behind us Memories of. olden time. *Longfellow’s “Psalm of Life”. Tife Risked to Save Life. (New York World) The rescue of all aboard the Am- erican steamship Sibiria was a feat worthy of the long record of the par- ent life-boat institution of the world. or- ganized rescue work in England there have been few storms worse than that which in the past few days has strewn wide ,waters with wreckage | and plled tidal waves on half the | coast of Europe. On the evill Goodwin | Sands a number of small craft were . bounding before the Sfbirfa struck. The lifeboat crews were already ex- | hausted by their humane labors, but | they strove to reach her and were | overturned, with some injuries. They waited for the storm to subside, but, as the ship threatened to break up | sooner, they tried again while the waves ran so high and the ship ploughed so deep that their boats tossed level with the bridge. And, women first, off came the whole com- pan®. The younger life-boat men are off | to the war. The rescue must have been made by volunteers and by judg- | matical old salts whose rheumatic bones are offset by the skill of vears | of toil and daring. Tn the midst of | the vast slaughter of the war they showed once more that men need not | lose manliness in peaceful pursuits. | Soldiers in the trenches who risk life ! to take life have nothing of herolsm | to teach these unnamed boatmen who risked life to save life on the Good- win Sands. The people of the United | States in particular owe them grati- tude with admiration. New York, Papcers Moving. (Meriden Journal). The Herald building, a sight of Broadway, is about to give way to the upward tr For fifteen years this building has been one of the sights of New York, enjoyed not alone by the stranger within her gates but the na- | tive as well. Now a big office build- ing is proposed for the site and the Herald is seeking new quarters. The Sun building, down town, is to be sold at auction and the,Sun news- paper may seek uptcwn quarters. The Evening Mail has removed from its quarters on Broadway and | taken up a habitat at City Hall place where it has more room for expan- sion, The American and Evening Jour- nal will be located uptown within a vear. They have principal offices up- town at present, but the editorial of- fires continue at the William street | Jocation. | With these having been done, re- nembering the Times which has removed to Broadway and Forty-sec- ond street the glories of Park Row as newspaper row Will follow the Bowery as a relicsof the past, i stant Greece, the Fifteenth War Nation. (New York World.) If Venizelos is still the head of & constitutional government which King Tino usurped, Greece is the fifteenth nation at war, not counting Albania, Persia, San Marino or any colony- In fact, the war declaration of the Salonica governmient means 'a divided Greece and a small addition to the entente forces for the present. Ven- izelos can use conseripting powers onlp with delay and in part of the country. His volunteers can hardly as yet number an army corps, and as they enroll they must be reorgan- ized and rearmed. If the entente accepts and is to re- ward such services it must be in the hope that gallant sons of Greece from near and far, even America, will gather to the war standard. British inactivity on the Struma may mean in part that the task of driving the Bulgarians from Kavala, treacherous- ly delivered to them with much war material by the king's party, is re- served for Greeks, as the recapture of Monastir was left mainly to Serbs. Politically, Venizelo’s act alds the entente. It will be argued that the ablest man in the Balkans would not move now if he were not satisfled that Gen. Sarrail at Salonica is strong enough to do his work. Yet how re- cently the world was saying this of Rumania and of Bratianu! In any case there will be a Greece after the war. The king’s German friends will see to it if the big plans of Venizelos and the' entente go wrong. A Gicater Holland. (Denver Rocky Mountain News.) Holland is considering a proposal for the enlargement of her territory that will be vastly safer and less costly than the ambitious projects of her belligerent neighbors. It is a tribute to the sanity and self-reliance of the Dutch people that they should be planning a great reclamation under- taking at the very time when all about them men are engaged in the work of destruction, A bill was recently passed in the Dutch parliament to provide for the draining of the Zuyder Zee, the great inlet from the sea that is almost com- pletely landlocked by the coasts of the mainland and the Frisian islands. The Zuyder Zee is about eighty-five miles long and from ten to forty-five miles broad. Its area is more than 2,000 square miles. Its average depth is less than twelve feet. Its bottom would be exceedingly fertile, owing to the accumulation of silt from the Ysel, and its reclamation would add a con- slderable province to North Brabant of richly productive value. The big engineering feature of the plan Tequires the building of a dam from the Island of Wieringen, lying close to the southwestern coast of the Zuyder Zee at its upper, and the Friesland coast. The dam would be nineteen miles in length, exclusive of the island, which adds five miles to it. Holland has waged cantinuous war- fare against the sea. So far some 210,000 square acres have been won from it in peaceful conflict. Tf the Zuyder Zee project 1is carried out, after allowing for that portion of the | water are excluded from the reclama- tion and the inclusion of a lake, and possibly a channel to Amsterdam, there will be added over 500,000 square acres to the arable soil of the ! little kingdom. Under the intensive farming practised by the Dutch this means a great potential enrichment. A Question of Neutiality. (New York Tribune.) Mr. Bernard Ridder, that jealous and indefatigable upholder of the gaspel of true Americanism, has been preaching another sermon on interna- tional law and neutrality, with par- ticular reference to an American who has lately served in the French flying corps. Mr, Ridder has nothing to say against this young officer personally, though he thinks he might well have stayed abroad, for “where the heart is the hand should be.” It happens, however, that he is now on his native goil, and what Mr. Ridder fears is that he will be allowed to go abroad again. He accordingly demands that he “be interned forthwith and until France 1s again at peace with the world.” That the offender is American by birth is an irrelevant consideration. “The important fact is,” Mr. Ridder argues, “that we are permitting a French officer, actively engaged in war against a people with which we are at peace, to enter this country without interning him.” We must not let him go. “Only the United States appar- ently,” says Mr. Ridder, “gives the freedom of its territories to members of the fighting forces of Furope—and then only to those of the Allles.” Mr. Ridder’s memory is short: he has forgotten the U-53 and her gallant cammander, whose heroic deeds a few hours after his visit to-Newport were so glorified and exalted in the “Staats- Zeitung.” Did he cry out for the in- internment of the licensed pirate Captain Rose? Thank God and Help Europe. (New York Fvening Post). Whether in response to a request or selfmoved, President Wilson has done a fine thing in making his Thanksgiv- g proclamation mainly an appeal for the war sufferers of Kurope. He nrges Americans to remember them n religious services and also by re- newed gifts. If ever our country had a Thanksgiving peculiarly calling up- on it to be generous, it is down and running over, the misery of millions across the water would make us ap- pear exceptional niggards if we did not respond to it with open hearts and purses. The United States ought not to express its gratitude for bless- ings by thanking God that others are worse off than we are! YOUR NECKWEAR ALWAYS, T BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1915, Bucharest, Roumanian Capital, ‘Paris of East’ Good Old Home-Made Family Cough Remedy Much Better than the Ready- Made Kind—Easily and Washington, D. C., Nov. what extent the recent air raids of the Teutonic allies have modified the gay- ety of existence in the “Paris of the East,” as Roumanians proudly tal. ine but a striking picture of Buchar- Oliver LaGerce to the National Geographic society, a part of which is issued as the follow- ing bulletin in the soclety’'s was geo- graphy series: “The near-eastern metropolis of Bucharest is about equal in size to our | own national capital, and yet it has | tion. the ground. and twice as many theaters. It is re- garded as the most expensive place in | in the way. cheapest for the poor. Prices at the i Buenos Aires, Hotel du Boulevard are higher than ' in New York or London, and travel- | leading hotel fifteen to twenty-five per cent. higher than_those obtaining in the hostelries | chain procy “But if thelr prices are high, their service and their food leave nothing to be desired. The cuisine of the lead- ing hotels and private homes French, and money is no considera- tlon—quality is paramount. Some of the flnest restaurants east of Paris tween the 28.—Toyof walking in that picturesque capi- Nearly all the their own teams of long-named, flow- | ing-tailed Russian horses. call | Russian exiles of the Skopti sect, who their capital city, it is hard to imag- | have a religious belief that no fam- {ily should have more than one male est before the war is given by John | child and who resort to a religio-sur- in a communication ! gical ceremony to insure this condi- | “They wear great blue-black vel- vet coats, the skirts of which reach to Their wadsts 'are bound about with multihued sashes, the flow- ing ends of which drop back ove ; seat, and one can gaide his driver by twenty times as many restaurants and | pulling ons end or the other of this cafes, ten times as many street lights, | sash when language difficulties stand “If the presence of the landed aris- the world for the well-to-do and the | tocracy in Bucharest reminds one of driving bring to mind those of Mexico City. Every evening all ers who have visited Monte Carlo's!turns out in its smartest equipages nd then journeyed to | and drives up and down the beauti- Bucharest have found its rates from | ful parkway known as the ‘Chaussee.’ | Along this superb drive the | ion moves in double file, of Monaco. | with the center of the boulevard re- | polite served for the roval turnouts. Therc is no physical line of demarcation be- ‘king’s highway’ is | other part of the boulevard, but cour- tesy toward the royal family draws and respects an imaginary one.” = Cheaply Prepared. ‘cabbies’ own They are If you combined the curative proper~ ties of every known “ready-made’” cough . remedy, you would hardly have in them all the curative power that lies in this simple “home-made” cough syrup which takes only & few minutes to prepare. | __ Get from an drugfilst 21 ounces. of Pinex £50 cents worth), pour it intoa pint bottle and fill the bottle with plain . anulated sugar syrup. The total col s about 54 cents and gives you a fu pint of really better cough syrup thak ou could buy ready-made for $2.50. agtes zi)leasant and never spoils. 2 This Pinex and sugar syrup prepars- - tion gets right at the cause of & cough' nd gives almost immediate relief. 1t f roosens the phlegm, the nasty throat tickle and heals the sore, irri- tated membranes that line the throaf, chest and bronchial tubes, so gently and_easily that it is really astonishing. A day’s use will usually overcome the ordinary cough and Tor bronchitis, croup, whooping cough and bronchial asthma, there is nothmF better. Pinex is a most valuable concentrated compound of genuine Norway pine ex- tract, combined with guaiacol and has been used for generations to break up severe coughs. To avoid disappointment, be sure to ask your druggist for “212 ounces of 7 Pinex” with full directions, and don’t neceYt anything else. A guarantee of absolute satisfaction or money prompt- 1v refunded, goes with this frr‘purfltwh- The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind. r the stops customs Bucharest endless- and the are in Bucharest, and the night life, with its passionate, pulsating Evpsy musie, its sparkling wine, its beauti- ful women, its scintillating jewels, its handsome men, is as gay and as al- luring as anything the world has to offer. “As to.clothes, everybody who pre- tends to dress at all dresses in the mode of Paris, and the gowns of the elite are as up-to-the-minute asthose to be seen on the Champs Blysees. “Gambling flourishes openly, and high stakes are the rule rather than the exception. Many of the players own farms as big as an American country and their incomes are pro- portionately large. “The source of the wealth of Bu- This handsome 50- charest is the big country estates and the cheap labor. The rich ‘boyar’ has a whole army of retainers who receive little' more. for their toil than did the slave in our own country before the Civil war—their ‘victuals and keep.’ The result is an immense income, which finds its first expression in -a very fine residence in Bucharest, and later in the maintenance of an ultra- expensive establishment. It is said that the Roumanian government has the finest home for its foreign min- istry to be found in all Europe. It was built by one of these ‘boyars,’ or landed proprietors, who had the mis- fortune to die soon after his palatial home was completed. The govern- ment thereupon acquired it. “Nobody but the proletariat thinks Butter. oP Note: How To Get Relief When Head and Nose are Stuffed Up. 15 to 25, Count fifty Your cold in head or catarrh disappears. Your clogged nos- trils will open, the air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe freely. No more snuffling, hawking, mucous discharge, dryness or head- ache; no struggling for breath at night. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist and apply a little of this fragrant antiseptic cream in your nostrils. It penetrates through every air passage of the head, sooth- ing and healing the swollen or in- flamed mucous membrane, giving you instant relief. Head colds and catarrh vield like magic. Don’t stay stuffed-up and miserable. Relief is sure. The Chance You Have Been Looking For Here is an opportunity to own this beautiful set of dishes for 25 coupons and only $2.75 in cash. One coupon is packed with each dozen Parksdale Farm Eggs Ifyou have had trouble obtaining fresh sggs at reasonable prices, try Parksdale Farm guaran- teed Fancy Eggs. They are sure to please you. Coupons, also, with Wedgwood Creamery piece set of Saxon China has attractive, exclusive design and is deco- rated in the soft shades of gray, green, pink, yellow and blue with a gold line around the rim. : 600006 P. BERRY & SONS, Incorporated. HARTFORD, CONN. Sole Distributors for New England States o As we now ofter a 50-picce instead of a 42-piece set, we have been obliged to increase the required number of coupons from an Internal Bath? MUCH has been said and written about the present generation living un- natural lives and being, for that rea- son, only half as energetic, enthusiastic, ambitlous or even healthy as it should be. And this is so. The confined lives that we live, the lack of constant exercise (for it must be constant to be effective) and the strenuous requirements of our business or social duties, directly bring on a condition to which little attention has been pald in the past, though it does more to rob us of power, spirit and ambition than any other one thing known to medicine. But Nature has provided, as in so many other cases, an immediate and perfectly na- tural relief for this condition, and over five hundred thousand Americans are already taking advantage of it. When you are ill and a physician is called, the first step that he takes, NO MATTER WHAT 18 THE MATTER WITH YOU, is to clean out the colon (large intestine.). There are two reasons for this: One is that medicine will take little or no effect while there is waste matter in the colon. The other and MOST SIGNIFICANT REASON is that if the colon did not contain this waste, it 1s safe to say that you WOULD NOT HAVE BEEN ILL AT ALL. The penalty for the lives we live is agreed on by all physicians to be the dlogging up of our colons with waste matter which the sys- tem does not voluntarily carry off. This waste is extremely polsonous; the blood circulation comes in sufficiently close contact with this waste to take up these poi- sons by absorption and distribute them throughout the body. The result is a gradual weakening of the blood forces; the liver becomes sluggish; billousness asserts itself; we become heavy, dull and develop a more or less nervous fear of anything we undertake. The more this waste accumulates the more we are affected until at last we BECOME REALLY ILL and incapacitated. Now the Internal Bath by means of the “J. B. L. Cascade” is the one process with the assistance of simple warm water proper- ly introduced in & new and natural way, that will keep the colon as clean and sweet and pure as Nature demands it to be for perfect health. Enlightened physicians by thousands are prescribing this new method, which is fully explained in a little book called “Why Man of Today Is Only 650% HEfficient,” by Dr. Chas. A. Tyrrell of New York, who is a spe- cialist on this subject. You can obtain one of these free upon re- quest at Liggett’s-Riker-Hegeman's, where the “J. B. L. Cascade” will also be shown and explained. It explains just why this method has proven superior to any other for removing this troublesome waste; how the ““J. B. L. Cascade” gives the bath in the most natural and effective way, also many other interesting facts and statistics which cannot be touched on here. 8o if you are nearly well and want to get really up to “‘concert pitch,” if you want to feel consistently bright, confldent, ambitious and enthusiastic—in fact, no matter what your condition sick, or well, the experience of other hundreds of thousands would prove it worth your while to at least call at one of our stores and get a free copy of this val- uable book, and look further into this method and its history. . “J. B. L. CASCADES” AT ALL Liggett’s-Riker-Hegeman Stores