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#nrwich Bulletin and Goudics. 116 YEARS OLD. _ Subser! mou tha; Ertered at Postotfice at Nerw! Conn, ay uum-chu matter, Telephone Oalla: Bulletin Business Office, 430 tiom price, i8¢ a week; U0c & a year. Bulletin Edltorial Rooms, 36-%. Bullorln ob Office, 35-6. Willimantic Office, Murray Building. Telephone 110. Norwich, Wednesday, April 3, 1912, E — HIS BROKEN PLEDGE. On the 4th of March next I shall have served three and a half years, and this three and a half years con- stitute my first term. The wise cus- tom which limits the president to two terms regards the substance and not the form, AND UNDER NO CIR- CUMSTANCES WILL | BE A CAN- DIDATE FOR OR ACCEPT ANOTH- ER NOMINATION.—Theodore Roose- velt, November 8, 1904, I HAVE NOT CHANGED AND SHALL NOT CHANGE THAT DE- CISION THUS ANNOUNCED.—Theo- dore Roosevelt, December 11, 1807. | WILL ACCEPT THE NOMINA- TION FOR PRESIDENT IF IT IS TENDERED TO ME. — Theodore Roosevelt, February 24, 1912, THE FREE-PASS GRAFT. How the Rhode Island legislators ean stand up and vote for the free- pass graft clause in the public utilities act now before that legislature fs hard to understand. There is always an idea of a behind-your-back act as- pociated with the spirit of graft which in this case seems to be avoided un- der the pretense that the legislators are engaged in state work. Yet two PREVENTION OF TUBERCULOSIS Agein Norwich finds itself in the lead on matters of importance to every city, in that by securing the establishment of the county sanator- ium for the treatment of tuberculosis here it will have just such an insti- tution which it is maintained every large American city should have, Dr. Biggs of the New York health depart- ment has pointed out that large cities should consider the advisability of es- tablishing & municipal preventorium to ocare for the tenement house chil- dren in whom, through poor homes, there is an inherited inclination to contract the disemse. The inetitution being establigshed here by the state will serve practically the same purpose, for it is intended for those with the least tendency to the white plague, and it is in that stage that the most effective work can be done. It means, therefore, that Norwich has still greater reason to be gratified at the location of the institu- tion here, being, as it will, an hygienic institution, and being in the limits of the town, just across the city line, the objections which many might have to going away to an out of town sanatorium are overcome, It will come to be in reality a preventorium such as the big cities of the country are being advised to secure. BIG COTTON CROP. The size of the cotton crop looms up prominently in thg present condi- tion of affairs among the mills. The cotton crop report issued by the gov- ernment shows that last year's cotton baled to the end of February was 1,000,000 bales in excess of the largest previous crop. Last year's yield was about 4,000,000 bales larger than the year previous, 1910 having produced 12,788,572 bales to 16,723,221 for 1911, This means that there is plenty of cotton in the country, at a somewhat better price, and there is no danger of a shortage curtailing mill opera- tions. Because of the amount there has been a much larger movement than In the preceding year, and throughout the country there is a stored surplus of 2,000,000 bales. In- creases in exportation are also to be “I wish,” began Traphagen, “that you would come over to my place for five minutes—" “Well, you can kn on wishing,” growled Rumbelow. ou worked me once too often, Tl‘uphlltn. and you can do your own chores after this. You're the ringleader of the conspiracy to drive me out of this neighborhood, and 1 suppose you have SOme new plot against me, that you ask me over to your place, You want to drop me down a well or something. “I suppose you think l'vt forgotten the last time you asked me to go to vour place for tem minutes, ' It was along in August. You came over here your face wreathed in smiles, and said you had a little favor to ask of me. You was getting the house ready for the painters, and the children had thrown a gob of mud against the gable. Wouldn't I be good enough to walk up a ladder and remove that mud? You always became dizzy, and wae in dan- ger of falling when you went up a | ladder, or you wouldn't ask me. “I might have told you to go to thunder and let the painters remove the mud, but I'm just too good natur- | ed for any use, so 1 went over there, and shinned up your ladder, and swat- ted that gob of mud with a hatchet, and the rest baffles description. Your old chunk of mud was a wasp's nest, and the wasps were all at home, and they didn't do a thing to me. T'll bet a dollar that the shortest stinger in that bunch of wasps was two inches long. I lost my presence of mind dur- ing the heat of the conflict and fell off | that ladder and hit my head on a| cement walk, and the surgeons worked | around my scalp for a week. “Now you have the nerve to come | over and ask me to lift your house off its foundation and carry it around a | block, but I won't do it. A goat is| useful, but I don’t want to be it all the time.” “You're off your trolley, Rumbelow, I'don't want you to lift anything or | climb anything or be a goat. My sis- | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. NOT FOR HIM ter from Indiana has come on a visit and she says she’s on friendly terms. with a Mrs. Rumbelow in her own town, and she’s curious to know whether that lady is related to you, so I said I'd bring you over and in- troduce you.” “Well, you go back and tell your ter that I don’t want to be introduced to her. She probably has ht or ten trunks weighlng a ton and she wants me to carry them upstairs for her . You tell her that the Mrs. Rumbelow she kows in Indiane is an impostor, and I'll have the law on her if she goes around wearing my nhame without permission. I have my opinion ot sisters from Indlana. “Fespenden had a sister from Indiana visiting him a few weeks ago and he came over and sald his sister was suf- fering to see me, as her husband's first wife was a Rumbelow, and she felt sure that I must be related, 1 might have khown that it was a put up job, but I am the most confiding and un- susplicious of men, so I told Fessenden that I'd be over to meet his sister in half an hour, and then I went to the trouble of putting on my purple and fine linen and polishing my teeth and shoes and shaving myself. “Then 1 went over and Fessenden introduced me to a tall yellow female and left me in the parlor with her, and | she never said a word about her hus- | band’s first wife, but dug up a book called ‘Great Women of History’ and sald she was agent for it, and she feit sure that I'd order a copy after looking FeA OUS ‘SIULINOD JO 3[qBI YL JOAO the most determined woman I ever saw and when 1 tried to escape she grabbed my coat tails and pulled me | back and 1 simply had to subscribe in order to get away alive. Fessenden kept out of my way for three weeks after that or I'd have bulilt a porte- cochere on his head. That's all 1 want to know about sisters from Indiana.” “A man never knows what the limit is,” remarked Traphagen, as he turned away, “until he gets acquainted with you.”-~Chicago News. The loaning of money into circulation is an automatic debt producer, a debt which can only be paid with wealth. —Il—A UDITOR I U M—Iii\l— Btarting This Week Wednesday and Thursd BREED THEATER “The Hobo's Redemption” Matt Bennett and J. E. Calkins in Ilustrated Songs. . POLI’'S THEATER, . music rooms, especially hot air from | when furnaces, acts directly on the kiln- dried pin board, and no piano contain- ing one can be made to stand in tune after It has been In use three vears, because the wood shrinks gradually and the pins move in the blocks from every hard blow of the hammers on the wires. away from the direct influence of fur- nace heat as much as possible, “In spite of all the efforts of GHAS. MoNULTY, Lesses ahd Manager STERLING VITAGRAPH FEATURE Cortlandt Barker essee and Manager, Latest Motion Pictures RAYMOND O’NEIL, Baritone Thursday—“THE JAMES BOYS” Friday—“AMATEUR NIGHT” and Centinuing Until Further Notice the ANIMATED WEEKLY— Will be shown. A Picture of Topical Subjects new, should be tuned once & New York Sun. VDR. LEd;{LARDT'g DISCOVERY. HEM-ROID Wlll Interest Every Per- son Who Has Piles. The public is indebted to Dr. g, A piano should be kept the I Taft vs. Roosevsit. Mr. Editor: Probably the reason the bosses, with the assistance of the machine newspapers, object 8o strong- Leonhardt of Lincoln, Nebr,, for years | of study of the treatment of piles, and for his discovery of a successful remedy, taken inwardly, which livens up the stagnant blood circulation and makers I don’t belleve one plano in Aifty will stand in tune mere than two months, When you consider that the steel wires and iron frames are aller- netely contracting and expanding un- The law or rule of supply and de- mand on money must be changed be- fore the octopus can be brought down from the tree. You know, Mr, Ayer, what was done about noted, there having been 8,007,814 bales sent out from the country of the 1911 crop, to 6,337,968 of the 1910 yield. Though the c¢rop was large big objections‘at once loom up, and make it ridiculous. In addition to the passes, the legislators draw mileage by law from the state for travel, and Boss Tweed, reduces the swollen vessels. Dr. A ly to Mr, Rocsevelt’s popularity is . » der varfations in the surrounding at- . » ., the passes, it is found, are used in- | the price has ranged between 10 and | .+ pov" figure the more educated don!t y;;ui'l_ g::i'.m:hm:f?mgz gfj mosphere, giving a constant movement ;;:“”]'H‘“"“]; h“f"i.‘ r‘l“)“”ir;evl’! &”EM discriminately for business and pleas-| 11 cents a pound. R .| the voters become the less chance they gg‘cen‘ts and the retaller got 8 cents |Of the wires and a consequent chang | tU[b. SOC DY R $1 e i F ey ure. The house has passed the bill Another big yleld is anticipated this | will stend of working things in their g in the pitch and tone of the instru- |#nd all druggists o vy by 2 {iee) s 5 = a per dozen, because the beef trust own- Be o 5 | treatment. Guaranteed to give satis but it is to be hoped that the sober- | year and planting has already been |own direction. ed the money. ment, the impossibility of & plano| o ition. Dr. Leonhardt Co. Station minded senate will give it deeper and | Started in the extreme south, so that| ‘While they oppose the honest prin- J. C. VALLETTE. |maintaining perfect tune for any|p®pie " ot tor Bosk~ presiinnaiita gt S befors the emd of July this year's|cibles advocated by Roosevelt, who is length of time must be at once ap- In condemning such legisiation, the interstate commerce commission not only declares it against the interstate commerce law to use such passes in interstate journeys, which is done as far as the state line, but expresses surprise at the comtemplated measure and the decided step backward that Rhode Island is threatened with. In this state the legislators have their expenses in traveling to and from ‘the sessions of the legislature paid by the state, the business being done by the comptroller, who issues the mileage books to the representa- tives. The railroad is naturally op- posed to the Rhode Island bill and so should the state be. The double-biad- ed instrument which gouges from the railroad and then from the state for the same thing is an evidence of retro- gression. The legislators intend to get theirs both ways and it should be this glering example of graft which wshould make this state recall its abom- inable practice of voting gratuities to newspapermen, who get paid by their employes, and then look to the legis- lators to hand them out a wad from the state funds. PRIMARIES STRENGTHEN TAFT. Just where President Taft stands on preferential presidential primaries is known. He favors them, but he wants them properly safeguarded. It is quite significant ‘that It was through the help and influence of his supporters that the primary bill was secured in the state of Illinois, More than the two-thirds vote necessary was secured and the people of that state will have the opportunity to declare their choice for the nominee of their party. - mois is an important state in the cam- paign, and there is not the least doubt that it will go overwhelmingly for Taft, thus sending a delegation of 38 to the Chicago convention., It is a Taft stronghold and the delegation will have much infiuence on the con- vention floor. Maryland has also swung into line for the primary and in that state the Taft forces were also instrumental in bringing about the change of method of selecting delegates, though the change there is not at all radical. This is acknowledged to bhe a Taft state, even by the Roosevelt managers, and will send a solid delegation to the national convention after its state convention the first Tuesday in May THE SOUTH POLE. The conquest of the South pole, in which exploration interest is so gen- erally centered at this time, concerns a much different territory than the struggle to locate the North' pole. With much the same atmospheric con- ditions, there is not the necessity of making the dash across the frozen sea at the South pole that is true in the north. The South pole is located on terra firma, s0 that travel is of a different characler and i is possible to approach much nearer by ship. Amundsen’s dash seems to have been & very easy trip in comparison with many others, from the fact that he selected the best route and spent his efforts more directly in reaching the goal. The discovery of the North pole left nothing further to be sought in that moving mass of ice, but in the =outh the explorer has far greater op- portunities for the discovery of new territory. Much remains to be found out on that great tableland and the explorer can push on beyond the pole and continue to find something new, There are mountain ranges and remote portions. of the poleland, about which it is believed Captain Scott, in his prolonged trip, will bring back much additional information, There was nothing about the trips of the two explorers which was in the nature of a race. Captain Scott, whose safety waslearned with pleasure, found more obstacles and was hindered by storms and troubles with his motor- sledge and ponies. He is sticking bravely to his hobby, however, and should have valuable data to give to the world when he returns. If he crosses the tableland and decides to return by another route, still further honors will be secured by him and there will be some distinction in be- ing the second man at the pole. A quarter of a million dollars’ worth of potatoes imported from Great Brit- ain, selling for 60 cents a peck in tha market, are poorer than home-raised potatoes that are retailing for 40 A ook, vield will begin to get into the mar- ket. Each year witnesses an increase in the acreage of cotton planted and the general public has reason to look forward to its supplying the demand and the cutting down of the prices on manufactured goods. EDITORIAL NOTES. In politics, a good rule to follow at all times is to fight hard and fair, but lose gracefully. Happy thought for todasy The lit- tle habit of talking back causes no end of trouble. Theodore Rooseveit is to take a trip through the south in an effort to warm up things a little down there. This is called the legless age be- cause there are so few persons who have legs under them good for twenty at Sound Beach Mon- shows what a mountain some people make of such a small thing as a joke. day What has bacome of the oid-fash- ioned doctor who used to tell us about varioloid—the gentle representative of smallpox. Politieal contenllons put upon baseball. The season opens on time, if prices are high and vinegar mostly water, no check thought, would be to flush the Who would have ago, a year having streets, so that Norwich er enough quickly and Why not stock the South pole with big game preparation for certain strenuosity, for which there will soon be need of an outlet? The telephone girls of Boston be- lieve in union there is strength. They are not marrying-——only combining so their issues may be pooled. So eager are they to get back to , many of the English miners are spending the time to cast their on ending the strike. W not vote The relatives of the woman who left $100,000 for the care of a horse have ome satisfaction in knowing that horses never reach the century mark. Vermont is in the balance on a de- cision, but indications point strongly to the delegates being for Taft. The state delegation is promised solid for him. The New ;Jmcev legislature is first to enact a law for a trackless trolley. A 40-seater would be a nice thing making zigzags on the public thor- oughfar westerner says when the blue- jay yawps in the trees the coming day will be warmer. 1f this is true, it will give the jay's yawp the flavor of a song in the springtime. A The invention by a French scientist of an instrument which will detect a storm 300 miles away ought to be of value in the presidential campaign in keeping tabs on the Colonel. One of the agents who was deter- mined to oust Dr. Wiley, the peaple's friend, had $400,000,000 back of him. This is only part of what Dr. Wiley was standing up against in honor and honesty. agitators are devoting their energies to having the public libraries weeded out. TUseless books cumber their shelves just as old clothes and furniture gather dust and germs in the garret. Some Making 1t Worth While. ‘When that congressional probe into the baseball trust starts in perhaps it wili discover why the Washington tearu is always near the tail end.— Pittsburgh Gazette Times. Ceased to Be a Joke. Champ Clark will owe a lifelong deb- of gratitude to the man who takes that Houn' Dawg out and shoots it—Mil- waulkee Sentinel. Middletown—Announcement is made of the gift by an alumnus of a swim- ming pool to Wesleyan university, the namea of the donor being withheld. The pool will ba installed in the Fayer- weather gymnasium. of the people, for the people and with the people, always working for their good, for a fair deal, progression, the recall act amended, safety for all, to treat ev-ryhody squarely and fairly, and equitable. Now, dear reader, how does this compare with the utterances of the man “so quiet and unobtrusive” who virtually has no declaration of principles on which to plant his feet. Taft is the only man in the history of this country who could openiy pro- claim that he was the people’s friend and almost in the same breath declare that the will ¢f the majority ought 1, North Franklin, Conn,, April 2, 1912, Bible Question Box Your Bible questions will be a swered in these evlumns or by mall t to our Bible Question Box Q. —Please explain lsaiah viii:19-22, where the Prophet speaks of “fa ar spirits” and “wizards” that work in the to previ but the “majority rule is the origin of the nation’s woes.” The plain pecpie may be fit to rule, buc the idea is becoming almost as chron- ic and monotonous as & spring snow story. “Trusts should not be permitted to control the courts, but their financial rights should be protected” What Inbor needs most, God knows! but the trusts, who increasez the circulat- ing medium and furrish a limited amount,of employment, should be con- sidered! Labor ought to be treated fairly, but the unrest and resentment of the wealthy magnates must be avoided—politiealiy speaking! In fact, Mr. Taft evidently hardly knows where he stands—he has never thought much about it—'till he talks with his bosses! He forgets the com- mon people who shaped his ends, for “biz.” He slights the main ingredi- ent, that placed him where he is! J. W. MILLER. Jewett City, Conn. Cause of High Living Cost. Mr. Editor: Yes, Mr. Vallette is barking up the seme old tree, and the same old octopus is still there. The private ownership and controi of all the money is the primal cause of the high cost of living and other eco- nomic ill§ of which so much com- rlaint is being made in all partr of the country., It is the primal cause. To illusirate this principle and its results, T will give Mr. Ayer a prob- lem in mathematics to solve, open or free for all. Take the sum of $1,000 all the money there is, no more, no less, and all owned by one man. In the community are eleven enterpris- ing business men who wish to hire $100 each for a year, They must go to the owner of the money to hire it. Each one gives his note for $100 at 10 per cent. interest and receives 390 in _money. The eleven men owe $1,160 and have 3990 in money to pay with. The $990 with the $10 held by the money owner as interest on the last note, consti- tutes all the money there is, $1,000. Now. Mr. Ayer, tell us how this debt of $1,100 is to be paid with only $990 available money. After paying in the $990 there is still an unpaid debt of $110. ‘Teil ug how it can be paid. What part will or can supply and de- mand play in this game? There is a cdemand for $110, and the supply is short. Here is an indisputable fact, that the demand for money is equal to the demand for all other things ramed in money, including food prod- ucts, and this debt of §110. The sup- ply of money is conditional, under our present system. The demand for food yroducis is continuous, The supply of food products is compulsory, but lim- ited by human ability and endurance. Food products are natural products of labor on land, Money, on the other hand, is an artificial product or factor crented cr produced by society or law. This being true, there is no reason why the supply of money should not be equal to the demand for it. Under the present system, the law of supply and demand applies more specifically to_money than to food products or other products. Food products are produced by labor. Money is produced, not by labor, but by law. The pro- ducor of food products is handicapped by the owmer of money, as it is not created by labor. The trouble arises from the application or rather the mis- application of money from the pur- pose for which it was intended to be scientifically applied. Money was created to facilitate the exchange of commogities, to supersede the cumber- some system of barter and not for the purpose of robbing the producers of 3-5 of the products of their labor to enrich the few. We are told that if the common people want money they must work for it. Why not apply this same rule to everybody that wants money? What is sauce for the goose should be sauce for the gander. If every one was com- pelled to work, render service for iwlmt money they need, there would | There is but one way of scientifically | getting money into clrculation, and | that is by paying it out for serv ice. | The power that creates money has no | power to create a debt. Interest is not a natural factor, but an indirect creature of law(?), By giving one per- son or corporation the absolute owner- ship and control of that which all the people must have, and can get only by labor, is the raakest kind of spe- cial privileze. HBvery one else musi Pproduce to SUPROLL the. fomw, be less millicnaires and less paupers. { dark. (A. B. 8. Answer.—The ‘“familiar spirits” are the demons that infest earth’'s atmo- phere, and who are busily engaged in imperscpating the dead—representing that they are the spirits of the depart- ed ones, and thus confusing and de- ceiving many, who have not given heed to the instructions of the Scrip- tures tc the effect that the dead are dead, and will not be alive or con- scious until the awakening time in the resurrection. The “wizards” are the medivms who act as the agenis of these demons, or fallen angels, They peep and mutter and work mysteri- ously in the dark, in place of working out in the open where all may be clear and plain, The powers of righteous- ness do not have to labor in the dark and in an underhand way, as they have nothing to conceal. The “hungry ones are those who have neglected “the law and the testimony”—God's Word—and are giving heed to the doc- trizes of demons. They are dissatis- fled and suffer the pangs of regret and remorse because there i$ nothing to satiefy their cravings in the di- rection in which they are seeking to be enlightened. Theirs is a_ deplora- ble condition of darkness and anguish of mind, as they have neglected the only real source of comfort and con- solation—the Scriptures. PIANO FAILS TO STAY IN TUNE Some Reasons Why, With a Few Words About Moths. As she had purchased the piano only three months before, and as it was a high priced instrument made by a leading manufacturer, the owner was surprised when it developed a series of wheezy, rattling responses to her touch on several keys. She informed the dealer from whom she had pur- chaged the instrument and a tuner was sent to examine into the matter. He ran his fingers over the keys and promptly said: “The piano is moth eaten.” “A. moth eaten piano!” the owner exciaimed in surprise. “I never heard of such a thing.” “Very likel said the tuner, “but 1 have heard of it very frequently. ‘There 8 nothing that moths like better than to revel in the interior of a piano. The soft cloth and leather used on and about the delicate mechanism offer forage peculiarly pleasing to moths.” The tuner opened the piano, and it was seen that moths had eaten the cloth away in many places. The sur- prise of the owner gave way to indig- nation, which the assurance of the tuner that the damage could be easily repaired and ihat future invasion of the moths could be prevented by dust- ing out the interior of the instrument with a large feather duster, did not lessen., ‘Then he surprised her quite as much as he had before by saying abruptly: “The piano needs tuning, madame.” “Impcssible!” she exclaimed. “Why, it has been in use but three months! A good piano should remain in tune a veart” “A common error among non-pro- fessional pianists,” said the tuner. “The principal object with the best pianc makers is to have their instru- ment stand in tune well. Unless they succeed in that the quality of tone or beauty of finish they impart to them will be of only superficial value. But even pianos bearing the names of famous makers are often disappoint- ing in this respect. And there is good reason for it. ‘“The artificial heat in parlors and College Minstrels COMPOSED OF Yale Students SLATER HALL, FRIDAY, APRIL 12th TICKETS AT DAVIS’ F. C. ATCHISON, M. D., PAYSICIAN AND SURGEON, Room §, Second Fi >r. Shannon Bldg Night 'Rione 1233 the | l parent, and if you will but reflect on the surprising fact that the tension of the strings of a piano causes a strain on the body of the instrument equal, it has been estimated, to the weight of | 100,000 pounds, agree with me that a piano that would remain in perfect tune for three years would be an necersarily be one of extreme rarity if not impessible to make. “A piano, good, tad or indifferent, | blossom out and give yourself a new outfit for the coming season’ and blue whipcords, Norfolks and those neat, braid, in square, round and high necks, diagonals, fancy black worsteds, also some exceptionall) visible stripes. GEORGE G. GRANI' Undertaker and Embalmer +2 Frovidence SL., Taftvill: Prompt attention to day or might eallx Telephone 630. apri4M WFawl you will doubtless instrument that must In Wages or Profit health, sooner or later, shows its value. No man can expect to go very far or very fast toward success—no woman either—who suffers from the headaches, the sour stomach and poor digestion, the unpleasant breath and the good-for-nothing feelings which result from constipation and biliousness. But just learn for yourself what a difference will be made by a few doses of BEECHAM'S PILLS Tested through three generations—favorably known the world over this perfect vegetable and always efficient family remedy is univers- ally accepted as the best preventive or corrective of disorders of the organsofdigestion. Beecham’sPillsregulate thebowels, stir theliver to natural activity —enable you to get all the nourishment and blood - making qualities from yourfood. Assureasyoutry themyouwillknow that—in your looks and in your increased vigor—Beecham’s Pills Pay Big Dividends The directions 'm':::ry b:xh::. vlo:y b::::nll‘l):—n&ecul]y to women. Easter Wear Easter Means Newness of Life. Are you going to be one the buds to If you are undecided where to purchase your new apparel, let us clothe you and you will be surprised how well you can be dressed, and at a very small sum, too We are outfiitters of the entire family from head to foot. You should come early and have a complete line to select from rather than wait until last minute when the sizes will be broken and possibly just the garment you desired gone. LADIES’ SUITS In Blue Serge with lace on collar and cuffs of coat, blue plain tailored diagonals Bray auits. $10, $12.50, $14, $15, $16, $18, $20, $22.50 LADIES’ DRESSES Of Messaline, Serge and Foulards, trimmed with Iace 1 the season's tailored latest me basket Is. $5.98 to $25.00 MEN’S SUITS In Blue Serge, plain and fancy, pencil stripes, and blue, brown fine guits with in in Gray $7.98 to $25.00 BOYS’ SUITS In Serges, Worsteds, plain and faney, cheviots and cassimeres, made in double breasted, Buster Brown and Norfolk style, with bloomer and knicker- bocker pants, $1.50 to $7.50 UNDERWEAR, HATS, CAPS, SHIRTS, TIES and SHOES at Lowest Prices. Green Stamps With Every Purchase. The National Shoe & Elnth.ng [0 252 Main Street, Franklin Square, BV VRTRE <