New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 2, 1930, Page 2

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ATE FEDERATION OF LABOR LEADER FLAYS DRY LAW (Continued From First Page) the year had been one of progress despite general business depression and widespread unemployment. More | than 40 locals had been affiliated, others reorganized and a better un- derstanding of the labor movement spread. better attended, social affairs were a success and organized labor hene- fited by its progressive, militant trade union organization. He paid feeling tribute to workers who had died in the year—William Larkin of Westport, William Hoff- man or Bridgeport, Frank Musanti ot Bridgeport, William H. Vale of the Hatters, Timothy Collins of New Britain, Timothy Regan of the Car- penters of New Britain and others, | all well known in labor circles, and of John F. Gunshannon of Hartford, “whose efforts to improve living con- ditions in Comnecticut were untir- ing.” President Moore made an appeal for support of the union label, shop card and button. He also asked for whole-hearted support of organized labor's own insurance company. He explained at length the old age pen- | sion movement and the coming cam- paign to get support for the legisla- tive bill. Urges Five Day Weck On the shorter work-day. Mr. Moore said less hours and the five day week are an absolute necessity. He said: “We are fast approachir condition wherein the machine driving from the payrolls the peo- | ple who consume the product. X x x The condition must be met by shorter work-week and shorter work- is day.” I n Taking up political activity which will come this fall President Moore said: “The non-pa political slogan of the American Federation | of Labor, ‘Elect our friends and de- feat our enemies,' should be car- ried out by the labor movement in| this state. Never in the history of | organized labor has it heen so im- | portant to make a carefuly dy ()f‘ candidates for political office. Many | questions of great importance to the | wage earners of Connecticut will be | placed before law-making hodie: The opportunity to elect candidates who are triendly to labor is here. We are fast approaching that day when, by our ballots, we shall say who shall | represent us at Hartford and at Washington. On the prohibition question Pres- ident Moore said he had advocate modification of the Volstead act, but after ten years he believed modification was a fallacy. He believ- ed the amendment should be repeal- ed. He said: “Federal prohibition has proven to us that a very large supply of bad liquors can be main- tained In the face of very rigid laws, and that a fair supply of fairly good | liquor can be maintained probably to | a large extent through corruption of government employes. 1 Says Prohibition Failure “Prohibition has failed in every | Christian civilized community in which it has been tried. It has cer- | tainly failed in the United States. Each year we find 1,000,000 people, | or more, convicted of drunkennes: Temperance among the young has| disappeared. The government loses annually in revenue hundrels of mil- | lions of dollars. Graft and corrup- tion is rampant among enforcement officers. Crime seems to flourish and disrespect for all law seems to be growing. x x x There is no legal or moral obligation upon a state to un- dertake state enforcement of na-| tional prohibition: it cannot honest- ly be enforced. Therefore, T am of the opinion that the state enforce-| ment act should be repealed as a step towards the outright repeal of | the 18th amendment with all its hypocrisy, political corruption and | the ever-increasing disrespect for all | law." ! President Moore advocated a labor | paper, and insistence that the labor department of Connecticut “adopt a policy similar to that of the Penn- sylvania department which secks to eliminate the barring from industry men who have reached the agze of 45 years." “Abolish the age limit” he sald. “Yet the sole test he—ca the applicant do the work?" The defeat of Judge J. J. Parker for a place on the supreme court bench was regarded by Mr. Moore as a victory for organized lahor. He desired a law which will require the | state to give preference to its citizens at prevailing rates of wages. and passage of the Credit Union bill In conclusion, afte the troubles of the ve expressed hope that will be dotted with those i board posters which wr ous about the first of the year us that business keep it good. no We all hope that apepar they will r thing more than a be in mob psychology.” In his report to the Secretary J. J. Egan tention to old desirous of securing the backin every member of unions to t deration’s bill which will be 1 ed at the next le that In every confer discussion the tion line in industry comes u ed: “Tt who are work legislation t is abolished inst pensions for aged 70, we will have limit down to lower." Conies To Be A copy of the will be sent to each f to a legislative office Mr. should back up I dance when hearin As to fonds. he “This campaign Pension is goin rade Union movem tisan | referring to Mr. Moors re cons age pensions 1s quite app ng a st ad peopla 60 act the gan gaid, th Business meetings had been | | insurance companies took an appeal | sentations e eaaa ! Hunger Strike Causes Bank Robber’s Death Lincoln, Neb., Sept. 2 (P— Pneumonia, superinduced by a ' hunger strike in the Nebraska penitentiary, caused the death of Johnny Brown, 26, bank robber, yesterday. ‘Warden W. Fenton, said Brown stopped eating three weeks ago and contracted pneu-j monia three days ago. Brown was under a 20 year sentence for robbing a Sioux City, Nebraska, bank of $20,000 in 19 compensation cases heard. In two, 1o superior court but later withdrew these and settled. One supreme cburt decision of interest was that which it ruled that the injured workman is entitled to medical at- {ention and that the employer is re- sponsible for payment of med- ical bills during the life of the in- Jury the Companies contended,” that this was always the the law but insurance com- panies contended that they were only compelled to pay hospital and eriod of 10 years. would like to tion among organ- s where the injured person has to do light work, giving opportunity to do so in or- may recover from his dily Mr n said, urging an appro- on rehabilitation Ralse Query he intent of s0 Mr. ¥ see more him the der that he federatio played a part in to carry vork “It w that some represen- t this state were opposed to federal aid.” said Mr. Egan, “but ssman Tilson agreed to favor of a bill and to work for assage with the result that the ilitatjon act continues to oper tatives f is important to us in Con- are interested in the rehabilitation bill we succeed- ed in passing at the last legislatur which will have to be improve upon by asking for a larger appro- it our next legislature.” Small Loan Companies Mr. FEgan said there had been little complaint during the year on methods employed by small loan companies. Credit for this, he said. goes 1o the bank commissioner. The credit union bill will be drafted for the coming session. In the matter of injunctions of which there have been a number of temporary one: in one instance, that of a Bridge- port painter, the court denied the right of a permanent order which was a victory for the union. The pe- titioner asked for an order so he would be compeHed to pay wages in accordance with the constitution of the International union. In an- ther case, one involving motion picture operators, Judge Foster held that the men had a right to strike nd to picket a place of business. This decision set up legal rights for unions, Mr. Egan said Mr. Igan spoke of the trouble- some problem of a year book, and suggested that in view of misrepre- and irresponsibility of some solicitors promoting unofficial books, it is time the federation tool | an inventory of the situation. Secretary Egan said little head- v was being made in cooperation the metal trades mechanics te and that the policy of Label rades unions should be ged to obtain results. It has been three years since a representa- tive went about the te advocating use of the label, Mr said urg- ing the need of a full-time worker. He said he belicved the buliding trades would secure more coopera- tion if they built up their ‘organiza tior. through the federation Talks on Unemployment As to unemployment in the state, Mr. Egan said that was best met by keeping wages and even increasing them, as a reduction would reduce the buying power and further in- crease unemployment Quoting from a statement credit- ed to Gov. Trumbull that machinery is responsible for the situation and s solution was the four-hour day, Mr. said some relicf would come if the eight-hour day v established in the state. There working nine or teh he said, and women working eleven are in hours hours a ¢ The a thorn istries A da n school was held to be of the federation and a comn to study the sit tion was sugges Mr. Egan said ols are expensive proposi- they are here to sf be operated in the in- ose working in the vari- ed should FRIDAY, AUGUST 29, 1930.TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER -2, 1930. [BELIEVE IT OR NOT in | said, | (On request, eent with stam proot of enything depict (Reg. U. & | YOU CANNOT SAY- ‘ BUGS BLACK BLOOD" Q . | | The slors conbe seen | in broad deyliht with o | ordinary Zelescope.o Aslyonomers keep BOTHeyeS | open when looking through | her nstroments. | THe AN | BARNACLES GROW MOSTLY ON THE LEFT SIDES 0f DOLLAR LINE BOATS. BECAUSE THEY SAIL WESTWARD AROUND Tz WORLD | @ 1930, King Featores Syndicate. Ine. Gro ” WOOD WASP (sirex gigas) CAN DRILL A HOLE N Y METAL dressed envelope Mr. Ripley will furnish ted by Pat. oOf1) ped. ad- bim). BY RIPLEY SKEWERED LAONIK % Fespryg UNDERGOING ToRIURE AS AN AID IN (LLECTNG ALMS for A TemeLe Jack CLEMENTS WAS THE ONLY LEFT-HANDED CATCHER INTHE MAJOR LEAGUES PLAYED WiT.. PHILADELPHIA. | S EXPLANATION OF SATURDAY’S CARTOON | Mithridates VI Could Drink Poison—According to Appian, Mithridates the Great was so Mr. Egan said that| saturated with mithridate, the antidote which he invented, that he repeatedly took large doses of a potent poison without ill effects. After the conspiracy of Pharnaces he had to or- der a Gaulish mercenary to kill him as poison was ineftective. “The devil helps *“The Devil Helps Him” Literagram—This literagram was first published 101 years ago. The author claimed that it could be read 194,480 ways. Beginning at the capital T at each end of the middle line, and reading up or down, to the right or left, and frequently turning corners, the answer is constantly the same: TOMORROW—Honoring the Potato him.” Anglo-French naval pact | Horan was charged with having | obtained the documents from th | | French foreign office in a manner | considered unethical. The Anglo- | American Press association expelle him from its membership in connec- tion with the affair. At the time the French press as- | sailed Mr. Hearst as responsible for | the naval accord leak. The so-call- | ed sccret accord provided for cruiser arrangement between Eng- land and France. Publication of ita | terms aroused a storm of protest in | | Europe and America, where accusa- | tions were made of a new Anglo- French military allianc~. The pa subsequently was disavowed. | FLIER BREAKS RECORD FOR HOP OVER OCEAN (Continued From First Page) passing Canso continent France and in reached the America. By landing late this afternoon at New York in their flight from | France Coste and Bellonte would | bring about the realization of a | dream which in 1927 brought about | the death of Charles Nungesser and | Francois Coli, the first to attempt | the flight | The d d Coli ushered in the great flying | summer of 1927, which marked a new era in aviation, for only a few days after the Frenchmen were lost in their White Bird, Col. Charles A. | Lindbergh flew without a stop from ol ot North | r.| New York to Paris, and he was soon rs on a fine bank bal ual Monroe labor was exp t in sec nerica in er members ciation | followed in océan flights to Europe by Clarence Chamberlin and Admiral | Richard . Byrd. t group of successes there failures, ocean planes | flying both e and west being lost, | many men and two women dying in the attempts Ten persons have been lost follow- ing that dream that was first Nun- | | gesser’s and Coli's, so perhaps it is | o wonder Coste called his plane the | Question Mark. None knew better n he, who already has flown the | outh Atlantic and most of the way | iround the world there is no | rtainty for anyone who attempts | the perilous cre he was due to | omplete late today COSTE'S WIFE HAS SLEEPLESS NIGHT Jaid 1 Het | Marie | sure her husband will succeed in the groups. | preacher. bit of English.” | —— | Bellonte's Wife Happy | Virofiay. France, Sept. 2 (P Madame Maurice Bellonte said to- | day that she is one of the happiest | women in the world, because she is | first non-stop Paris-New York fiight with Dieudonne Coste. ! “Of course I am often anxious, | but T have great confidence,” she said in English. | Madame Bellonte is an English- born girl, and was Doris Stafford when she, like Madame Coste, met | her future husband at a flying field. | The Bellontes first saw each oth- er at Croydon airport when both | Bellonte and Coste were working on the Paris-London passenger air- | line service. Madame Bellonte, like | Madame Coste, loves to fish, and she and her husband tramp off together | for that peaceful pastime as a relief | from the stress and noise of flying. Married Five Years Madame Bellonte has been mar- ried only five years and during that | time has been a resident of France. lish type of home. She lives in a lit- tle garden-surrounded house outside | Paris with her four-year-old daugh- ter Jacqueline, who was sent tem- | porarily to Toulouse to spare her the | excitement incident to her father's| transatlantic fiight attempt. Madame Bellonte often flies with her husband. “T learned to like flying.” she said “traveling back and forth with | liner he piloted. That gave me con- | fidence.” . Madame Bellonte intends to join her husband in America after his fl han ably not leaving for a month. SNOB PROF? PICKS (Continued From First Page) “intellectual and spiritual leaders of America.” T have tried to stick to names so well known that almost everyone will know them—names guaranteed to exercise considerable influence at least in their own All are important. The ar- wangement of the names. however, not the slightest indication of their importance. You will have to guess for yourselves whether the influence is “intellectual” or “spiritual” 1f T were giving tusm honorary degrees I should present them as follow Dr. S Parkes is Cadman, radio whose success delivered yet another blow at church going; his theology has a 1630 chassis with a modern paint job. Dr. Cad- man is the repository for the con- sciences of a million Americans with radios. Dr. Harry Emerson Fosdick. the idol of all the perplexed modernists of American Protestantism who wish to eat their theological vake ind have it too. Gentle Slap at Cannon Rishop James Cannon of the Meth- church, who has proved that niritual leadership is most effec- tively exercised in the political field William Cardinal O'Conpell of odist I matic traditions based on | more SPIRITUAL LEADERS it i documents connected with the secret | languages, including *just a little | Boston, ablest of the hierarchy in America; increasingly aggressive leader of the Catholic offensive against prevailing American phi- losophies. John Haynes Holmes, founder of the community church in many cities; logical successor of the old Christian socialists in these days when Christianity has gone “mod- ern” and socialism has gone “red.’ Felix Adler of New York, founder of ethical culture, which seeks to blend the best of Hebraism, Chris- tianity and paganism in a new in- tellectual discipline. Bruce Barton, advertising man with a mission, who thinks of Christianity in terms of business and salesmanship, thereby persuad- ing thousands of utterly irreligious Americans that they are Christians. Upton Sinclair, our only absolute 100 per cent social idealist. whose interesting comeback after nearly 20 years of obscurity shows that he still has an enormous public of which the middle and wealthy classes know nothing. Judge Ben Lindsey of Denver, | However, she still prefers the Eng. | "0 has labored for a generation to show that on subjects of social morality experimental thinking based on facts is preferable to dog- “ideal.” Edgar A. Guest, American poet laureate; his enormous popularity | has convinced the American public |that poetry must be vulgar in (theme and elementary in phrasing, | thereby cutting them off complete- ly from their great natural heri- strous flight of Nungesser (\aurice on the Paris-London air- |tage of English poetry. Editor Also Named George Horace Lorimer, editor of the Saturday Evening Post; for over 30 years he has taught the t. She will make the trip later | American business man his weekly Madame Coste, however, prob- | 80spel, viz, that nothing in Amer-| {ica“fs important enough to stand in | the way of private profit. John Dewey, most notable among American philosophers; founder of {recent American educational theor: influential through his disc complex and unemphatlc utterance. Henry L. Mencken, editor of the American Mercury; our only 18th century realist, whose long cham- pionship of liberty, science and aristocracy has not been entirely without result. Walter Lippmann, |New York World: author of “A Preface to Morals;” to whom all knowledge and all opinion are grist for his mill; a modern stoic who believes man must stand on his own feet Irving Babbift, the only professor of literature at Harvard who is s | creative thinker and not a philolo- gist; inventor of “humanism,” the new academic orthodoxy editor of the of modern thought. Paul Elmer More: ving Babbitt's Pollux; co-conspira- tor to restore classic control in literature and philosophy; the idel of the Ph. D. Charles A. (and Mary) Beard, whose conception of history as a social and economic complex has revolutionized its writing in the United States. Praises Historian James Harvey Robinson. hi torian: his notion of “the humani ing of knowledge” has gone far to brinz the world of knowledge and ideas within the reach of the com- mon man Stuart Chase, whose books on ad- | vertising, business and the machine which | seeks to put an end to the anarchy | Castor to Tr- | age Have revealed to us the over- whelming anarchy and irrationality of our American business civiliza- tion. j Clarence’ Darrow, lawyer and hu- manitarian, who has made more enemies than perhaps any other living American by his insistence that the American people are more responsible for crime than the criminal fis. Mr. Justice Holmes of the su- preme court of .the United States, | who is generally held to have in- herited the mantle of the late Charles William Eliot as “the first American.” ‘Will Rogers, cosmopolite, Wwhose successful debunking of the Ameri- the ship’s cabin, with some of the relics of the AnQee expedition on the tablé in front‘of him, and told the story of his discovery, and, from hig deductions, the story of the last days of the three men who in 1897 thought to fly a balloon across the | North Pole, as yet undiscovered. The Bratvaag, Dr. Horn said, left Tromsde July 30, intending to visit Franz Joseph Land (now Fridtfof Nansen Land) where the scientific expedition could make observations whilé the sealer’s crew hunted wal- rus, seals, whales, and ice bears. White Island was sighted August 6, twelve miles west of. its mdpped po- sition, and the next day the expedi- tion put in there; able for once to can politiclan, high and low, is an indispensable preliminary to a new | and intelligent conception of | democracy. EXHAUSTION KILLED ANDREE AND PARTY (Continued From First Page) | they died one by one, and at least two of their bodies froze into a sort of semi-permanency. Andree’s Body Headless Those bodies remained in their natural graves of ice and snow until | August 6, when two harpooners of | the Horn expedition, seeking drink- ing water on the bleak island, dis- covered a boat and boat hook which once belonged to the Andree expedi- tion. The began an investigation which ended in discovery of the headless body, or clothed skeleton ot Andree, and of one of his compan- ions, and a group of bones which may be those of the third member of the party. Andree’s body, sitting with a foot encased in ice and a rifle and oil stove by his side, was found near the base of a mountain at the spot. A skull nearby was believed to be his head. The body itself. Dr. Horn says, had greatly deteriorated and was not much more than a skeleton clothed in Arctic apparel, in a pocket of which was found a monogram by which it was identified. Tt is be- lieved the teeth in the skull of the other body, found nearby, partly covered with stones, may solve the question whether it was that of Nils Strindberg or Knut Frankel, the other members of the party. | Sweden to Pay Honor Today, nearly a month after the | giscovery, Dr. Horn and his associ- |ates are anchored in the small har- |tor awaiting the Swedish battieship | Michael Sars, which will accompany it to Tromsoe, gnd later to Sweden | where honors will be paid the dead |and the discovergs of the bodies | will receive the thanks of fellow | Scandinavians. 1 | Dramatically the little sealer | Bratvaag sailed into Hasvik Sund after a search by Swedish official vessels and news expeditions which covered a wide area of the North | sea. Dr. Horn notified the authori- ties officially of his discovéry, news |ot which already had reached the |world through the captain of the | |sealer Terningen. Then, without | awaiting an answer he took the seal- | |er on down to Skjaer Island to await | | the Michael Sars. | | Tells Tale of Discovery L | do so because of the quiet sea. Land- ing ordinarily is impossible at the island because of the surf and dan- gerous coastline. ““We landed and were soon on our way inland across the naked island,” Dr. Horn said. “On it ‘were moun- tains of granite and gneiss. Between them were stretches of gravel and sand. Only a shallow little lake broke the tediousness Brown moss gave a little touch .of color here and there. Aside from the moss vegetation was very sparse, | There were the usual polar flowers about.” Dr. Horn spoke of the vast silence |of the place, made all the more im- pressive with the occasional breaking of the ice, and the plump of snow talling from a hilly perch. Find Wreckage of Boat The next day, August 6, two of the crew of the vessel were searching for drinking water when they noticed a clump of#snow somewhat blacker than other heaps around and on in- vestigating found it to contain ruins of an old boat. A boat-hook, pro- truding, bore the name ‘Andree Polar Expedition, 1597." The two harpooners ran back to the others and notified them of their discovery. Skipper Eliassen came ashore and against the side of a mountain found the body of a man with its feet half buried in snow. Fliassen realized the importance of the discovery and hurried back to the Bratvaag for Dr. Horn, who fol- lowed him back to the island. Elias- sen had brought with him a book he had found with the body which Dr. Horn recognized as the Andree expe- dition's observation book, in which entries and notes of the journey were jotted down. Andree’s Shoes Badly Worn Dr. Horn, returning with Captain Eliassen, found not only Andrec's body, identified by a monogram on his Arctic suit, but a sledge, a piece of red and black cloth which may have served for a tent, and other of the paraphernalia of the camp. An- dree’s body was fully clothed except for shoes, which were worn almost through. Beside Andree's body lay a gun and an oil stove. Oil in the stove could be pumped out in a fine spray, the apparatus being in geod order. In Andree’s pocket was a diary, a pen- cil, and a pedometer. Between two mounds of earth and partly covered with stones, not far away, the body of another member of the expedi- tion was found. The body apparently had been laid there by the others. It was “frozen down” and hard to get out. In the old boat were found some bones, but Dr. Horn was unable to decide whether they were those of a Kuman. In the boats also were found other Dr. Horn sat with Odd Arnessen, correspondent for the As m‘m(t“cll TURKISH TOWELS — Heavy absorbent, durable tiread, large size Towels, ECONOMY WEDNESDAY SPECIAL WINDSOR CREPE BLOOMERS Full cut elastic waist and knee Bloomers — All Shades. ECONOMY 25 WEDNESDAY | SPECIAL SELOX AN ECONOMY WEDNESDAY 11 GINGER SNAPS SPECIAL | Reg. 17c Lb. ' Value 15¢ | CONOMY DAY SPi:ClA!. —LB. Must be seen to be ap- preclated. New fall shades and patterns. ECONOMY WEDNESDAY | i things belonging to the expedition instruments, stockings, handker- P. & G. SOAP ‘Nuff Said ECONOMY WEDNESDAY SPECIAL CURTAIN SCRIM Ivery wanted curtain pattern in this lot — These sure will go fast so comc here early. c ECONOMY WEDNESDAY N SPECIAL yd COOKIES Fig Bars Regular 17¢ ECONOMY WED) DAY c SPECIAL —LB. VEW FALL WASH FABRICS Thousands fall fab, inches wide. 29¢ yard F C FPress and the Oslo Aftenposten, SA of the Iandscape. | chiefs—two of which bore the fini- tials “N. 8.”” (Nils Strindberg)-—pho- tographic apparatus, and a bag of books. The boat, the men discovered when they sought to dig it out, was fustened to a sledge, the runners of which were worn badly, indicating that it had made a long trip to reach the spot. Cairn Built On Spot | The bodies and remains of the ex- pedition were packed into the Brat- vaag's boats and taken back to the sealer where a depository was con- structed on the after deck. Before leaving the island Dr, Horn and his companions constructed a cairn over the spot where they made their dis- covery. In the cairn they placed a note in Norwegian and English ex- plaining what they had found there. Dr. Horn believed the balloon ex- pedition, which 1éft Dane's Island in July 1897, met failure when ice and snow weighted the balloon down and sent it to the ice at latitude north 83, about 180 miles north of White Island. The men set out for the nearest land and probably after many days reached the island, as bleak and desolate a placg as there is on the face of the map. i Others May Have Passed Crot They set about to eke subsistence from the-island, but, worn out with their long trip across the ice, they failed. Dying, their bodies were cov- ered by snow and ice. Others prob- ably have passed over the spot but failed to discover the bodies. This year the ice melted down unusually early and to a greater extent than in years past. Dr. Horn believes it possible many other relics of the ex- pedition still are covered with snow and ice. The log, or observation bookof the exgedition, rather than Andree's diary, Dr. Horn indicated, must be looked to for the real story of the expedition. The diary's pages are stuck together and there is some doubt that it is readable. The log, Dr. Horn said, is most comprehen- sive and far from being the mathe- matical journal it might have been. Francis Family Members Attend Annual Reunion (Special to the Herald) Southington, Sept. 2.—About 125 mfembers of the Francis Family as- sociation attended the annual re- union held here yesterday at St. Thomas’ Commun! hall. Officers for the coming year were elected, as follows: President, Louis St. Clair Burr, South Manchester: vice presi- dent, Charles Francis, New Britai secretary, Miss Annette Franci Durham;: historian, Mrs. Arlan Fran- cis, Newington; treasurer, Mrs. Daisy Hall, Durham: sports program for next year, Miss Cynthia Francis, Durham; literary program for next year, Kenneth Stoddard, Newington. { ATTORNEY KILLED IN FALL® Albany, N. Y., Sept. 2 (UP);. Leaving a cryptic note in his Roy Brackett, 44, of 6 North P street, Hanover, N. H.,, an attorney, jumped or fell from the elghth story of the Ten Eyck hotel today and was fatally injured. The note, in part, directed Bfack- ett to “get out of town' settle in some quict town for a year and “get yourself straightened out.” Approximately 1,000 Confederate veterans and 2,500 widows are on the pension rolls of Tennessee. [SCHULTFUNITED | TOMORROW ECONOMY WEDNESDAY Misses’ RAYON HOSE Fall shades, Rayon all the way up. Reinforced toe and_heel. ECONOMY WEDNESDAY C SPECIAL Why pay more, you all know the value. SPECIAL FOR ECONOMY WEDNESDAY AT MIXING BOWLS Neatly designed in plain and fancy patterns. Reg. val. 25c. ECONOMY WEDNESDAY SPECIAL RAISIN COOKIES Regular 17¢ ECONOMY WEDNESDAY SPECIAL c i) % EW FALL WASH FABRICS of yards new . 36 to 39 Values up to ONOMY WED. SPECIAL

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