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Relying upon experience, of which he has certainly had mere than the : 2 average candidate when it comes to a Sorwich Fulletin |50 500 1 S of Sprague 2 has put forth his request for th\e nom- and Tonfied. ination for congress at the hands of alonal district, He displays a fear- lessness In his announcement which save = his bid before the people early in view at Norwieh, P : e of the Mkelihood that others will seek N, @) UEREPR: S N Sioh the goul. In view of the fact that Telipheaa Oatiss Mayor Mahan of New London has b e T been talked of for the office, Mr. Jo- ice, 35-8, doin’s announcement needed to come Reem 3 Wurmmy | ourly in order to carry its greatest Bollding. Telephone 219. . ~ | weight. m & democratic stand- , July 25, 1912, |point, once Mahan gets into the race {no others need apply, for he s a po~ litieal force at the present time in Have The Bulletin Foll'ow You | the eastern end of the state. Mr. Jo- ~ Norwich, Thursd doin was therefore well advised in-his Readers of The Bulletin leaving || Mr. Jodoin measures with rel the city for the scashore, moun- | [the pace he can go by the pace tains, rural resorts or for kurope | |has been, but apparently reckons not iance he may keep in touch with doings In || n (he difference in the cohditions of town by having The Bullstin sent | | (o vears ago and the present time. Period desired — days, weeks of | |!le Was particularly favored not 8o months. Hundreds follow this plan ||{much by his personality as by the fact om their annual vaca golng on during their absence. || g Orders should be placed with The Bulletin business office. which he cannot count on again. There promises to be a merry contest in the new district, however, SHE BULL MOOSE PARTY. i K‘Am!. fall and so far General The organization of the Bull Moose | light of Windham county, has ad- party in Norwich has been effected, at- [ vanced to the receptive ring again. tracting to its membership men who |'What the other two counties will de- have falled to get what they want in |mand remains question. the old parties and seek to jump into £ 3 R prominence and possibly office through EDUCATING THE NEGROES. a mew organization. This, of course,| {'nquestionably a great good is be- means that these professed folloWers |ing done in the south for the megro of the third term candidate are no |y the educational institutions which longer members of the republican |,y aintained in their behalf. The party. They have wrilten themselves out by their action in determining to | stand for the man whose selfish am- | {nat the com bitlon has led him to break his solemn | them more than they pledge, to sidestep and completely | higher inst flop on important national T the sake of gaining the voses of the |\urning out b people, and finally in his greed and |y, o, determination to have his own way o0 | bolt the convention and set himself up for momination with the pueri ory of cheat and fraud when by his |\ consent the selection of a candidate | At A as a compromise could have been ef- | \atjonal Educational congress. fected I His example, however, in withd ing from the republican ing only half heartedly followed by his | |, organizations. These Dr. Jekyll and |aig Mr. Hyde tactics cannot hold good f long. Duplicity never entered ver seriously into any moral issue or any | issue with great su. and a dler can have no dependence upon him. Basking under the r lican organization for strensth and votes in state and poittics, and breaking therefrom in favor of a bolt- ing national candidate, whose policy is rule or ruin, is the heigh consistency. To carry out the princi- ples of the Bull Moose party it is nec- essary to be a bull moose from up to national pol 18 the only reason for 5 h D TR republican state party and breaking ; il away from the national when it comes | uhility to carr 1 industrial trait to a party man hool facilities stics r ate. The recog: | these pe » higher schools special me in for has the norf schoois by furnishing teach- many in e iate John F. 1 steady ess, aced | the work being don ren are woefu iment to their progress. There is yet great opportunities fa h persistent ef gain 0 the wccomplish, ai NEW YORK WAS FOREWARNED. !er Developments are show New § York is bound up in ngle “which is requiri ravel and not a litt conditions w mitted to exist th much worse becaus. the police seem to volved in the entire and the apparent hown are per- |a new seem | it was halt for f us Th Being pald In that great city to the | _ - advice that the conditions were pre- | Happy thought for today: In these vajling there and needed checkin days nothing to be on both sides Mayor Gar the wide open s the developments must an eye opener to his pe long agzo that Gen address as poiic fcan beauty. fn half & mile of where we now where any erime from P Nt iy the greatest can be boug and T know it. and man Kknow it. and know the places, 1o doubt, | 5 g1 gorn o e and I can't touch thém under present W S eonditions, and 1 sa ew | man ; i York and will prove it if t ' S ' give me the opportunit s one | Out in Nebraska they say the Colo- Tason | want some secret ser el's party would look like a new party This makes ft plain that the v has been 1 £ its p &4 lice departn i M| u e hi Rave made the | cost .of 1 © weven vears he wi eonditions fon that | presiden has a record which gambler, arm in | m relfed upon, arm. New York is being keld up as 4 s glaring example befor It is apparent tr am | coate ar Das been vindicated in his statement | th that murderers exist there for hire the coming convention, he world, | Tn ( ng prett clearly CENSORSHIP OF THE PRESS. Roosevelt started lowers of the jers m } d f bad judges. candidate are assiduously spres SR the nonsense about the censorship of | How is it that the new party is the press relative o the third termer's | constantly spoizen of by the press as party. From the time when Kis en- | the third party trance into the convention campaign bitionists and social was hinted at up to the present time |first the prominence of his contention has e e et been due to the mauner in which the | looking over the Ro mewspapers have zi n phblicity to it. |ers Ris assaillng the newspapers I of his siump is n accord with his po- | ments. sition on the nomination, It is allel case with his aititude on th 1t the census come of the national uveation, The 'Primaries expensive position of the newspaper i# to fur- ' the volu nish the mews and the Bulletin will Yet becol e pardoned for any display of boast- Colonel. fulness In believing that it has fur- | ' 2 g nished the news and it intends to con- | timue to carrv out ifs duty, at toe ‘Of°r® W wd disappei be any Bot all the news, a politicians ; are not Its sole readers. o Regarding s ed censorship, the Hartford Courant aptly says: “But the fact of such publications does not Becessarlly add strength to the cause exploited. Wa question very much if mome thoughtful people do not laugh rather than enlist when they read of the third party gatherings in stat, this Jodoin have landed. eruits, natural kickers, disappointed |gippuished us the original thirteen, office seckers, pualicity huniers, fdeal. Wots, Impracticals, asirologists and | Some men followin others of whom they are either already | clatm o tired or hitherto unawars, The Cour- lgent Into headquarter ant gives the news, because that 18 | glgn membership In what it is published to do, but it gives |club” He was conscious e must cut'along the sfiver ray, and then they disappeared into the wood, it in these matters without worrying |joose a8 10 the reguit” i government responsible for thelr ac- [nee i 190 tions and promiss more. This would |thal nuwde him ndicate that terror would reign lf]-'md 1 19 kely fo ( nomineertn 19 they had the ballot and then falled to they voted for tlun sure in November THE CONGRESSIONAL CONTEST. ! the democrats in the second congres- | of confidence and faith in his | strength in the new district, and gets | on and return | |thut dissensions in his oppoment's fully informed as to what has been ‘i,..n ent strength to him. That is with {he republican strength greater| .a niy two lttle b of \Willimantic, a leading tive to the decrease in flliteracy among the negroes shows n schools are reaching did, while the utions like Atlanta, Tus- | s {08 | kegee, Hampton and Fiske are yearly indreds who are prepared ry on the teaching of the less ized need of is' being more and more | realized and the industrial education h been interested tances and again in s to the educational o negroes, the million dollar Slater 3 urce of his fund has recently per- trad- | mitted a study of the existing condi- ons in the common schools of the pub- | south relative to the negro by Atlanta aniversit This shows that despite the negro chil- glected, lack of 3 keeping them from i of good teachers ed by rom the ering their ding miy of steady at- aid the negro of exas turns out a watermelon and | D is esti- W York investigation has| 1 far enough to show that as not on the they are wearing over- £ vegetation from iminary to cold feet 1own that Present re working effectively in Were not the prohi- s in the fleld evelt support- England who have been He has reeognized 'he value of it and |somewhat prominent in politics, we no- auge | fice they are men of many disappoint- a fraud and the e is no evidence the price of swer to the progres- o tme. roaiiaing it it 1o (slve phrty than to any other. -Thal sam e 1 put into the primaries this ngt gain thelr electicn by the generous ' path along it to the Forest, and on, where they see active among | yge of money would only come to the to the clear star-lit sky, the well meaning and high-minded re- | forq now, they might becomo as dis- | Roosevelt still | T 5. Roowevelt pona“or tin “1 hereby re- | camo daneing along. . republican | Twelve in.avery row, and they went, the Colonel's in. | Rules for Young Writers. 1. Write plainly on one side of the paper only and aumber the pages. - 2. Uso pen and ink, not pencil. 3. Short end pointed articles will be given preference. Lo not use over 250 wards, 4. Original stories or letters only will be used, 5. Write your name, age and ad- dress. plaiuly at the bottom of the story. Address all communications to Un- cle Jed, Bulletin Office, omebody did a golden deed, Somebody proved a friend in need. Somebody sang a beautiful song, Somebody smiled the whole day long. POETRY, Put-Off Town. Did you ever go to Put-Oft Town, | Where the houses are old and tumbie- down, And everything tarries and everything drags, With dirty streets and people in rags? On the street of Slow lives Old Man Wait. , named Linger and Late, With unclean handa and tousled hair, And a_ naughty little sister named Don't Care. Grandmother Growl lives in this town, With her two little daughters; called Fret and Frown; And Old Man Lazy lives all alone Around the corner on street Postpone. Did you ever go to Put-Oft Town To play h the little girls Fret and rown, Or zo to the home of Old Man Wait, And whistle for his boys to come to the gate? To play all day fn Tarry-street, Leaving vour errands for other feet: To stop, or shrink, or linger, or frown Is the nearest way to this old town. The Wind. Who has seen the wind Netther I nor vou; But when the leaves bow down their heads The wind was passing through. INEZ MESSER, Age 9. Norwich. UNCLE JED'S TALK WITH THE WIDE-AWAKES. We told you last week how to study birds. Now, gentleness and quietness and stealth are necessary to observe a which excites fear in a creature re- tards true knoweldge of him; and fear 2 protective quality. Birds are not- ally afraid of boys and girls—their ral enemies. There are -various ways of identifying birds; by their form and plumage, by their song or cry, and by their flight. Birds like the pewee, the chebec, the chickadee and the Phoebe bird call their name, so you would know them if you did not see them: but in order to identify them when they make no noise you must take into account their size, col- or and flight. Tars do not hear alike, and birds do not say the same thing to all, since the imagination plays quite u; na }a part. For instance, to some the quail calis “Bob White," to others More Wet,” and to still others “Good Wheat!” But you see the sounds iden- tify the bird, however the listener may interpret them. One of the vireos is alled the Preacher bird, because his notes sound like: “You see it—you know it—did you hear me? Do you be- lieve 1t?" And then the Teacher bird cries “Teacher, TEACHER, TEACH- ER!" Some birds make themselves appear to be where they are not by .| their song, which they manage like a o are ¢ an has the credit of having | to the fore who into a cocked ventriloquist. There are seed-eating birds, insect-eating birds, fruft birds, animal-eating birds, fish-ez birds, and birds that capture and eat other birds. and scavenger birds, After vou know a bird by sight and by song nd by flight, vou must know his hab- its and the place where he makes his nest and him, This study not oniy giv knowl becomes more acute and your sight keener, and it adds te your skill, your knowledge and veur pleasure, LETTERS OF ACKNOWLEDGMENT. Helen L. Ashli was very much & you a dge of birds, but your hearing of Plainfleld: 1 prised last Thurs- day to See my name in the paper as one of the winn Boys and Girls Department recefved my book. Friday, and I com- menced to read it r?ht away. I like it very much, and you for it. I am Iinterested in the ‘Wide-Awake stories. you for my interesting Dook away on'my vacation or I would have thanked vou before. “Gilly Flower." by Toosey’'s Mission.” 6—Lillian Brewstsr, of Norwich,| “The Young Whaler,” by George 8. mal life of any kind. Anything| wises his youns, to know | want to thank Lizzie Budeit, of Lisbon: I receiv- ed my book & few days ago, and thank you very much for it. I will try to write more stories and win prizes. Ada Marriott, Oneco: Please excuse me for not writing sooner. I am busy helping my mamma, I thank you very much for my book, “Billow Prairic.” In some parts it i ing. My little sister s Blizabeth Marriott. She is two months and two days old now. sad, but Interest- ‘s name is Violet Alice Gorman, of Versailles: I re- ceived vour prize book. I thank you very much for it.” I enjoyed reading it. Mae Estella Leach, of Wauregan: This is the second prize book I have received. 1 want to thank you very ) much for it. It was a very good book, and I enjoyed reading it on my vaca- tion. James 8. Moran, of Norwich: I thank 1 was Julia A. Maertens, of Lisbon: T wish to thank you for the prize book you sent me la 3 prise (0 me, for I thought I wouldn't get any. 1 think it s fine. st Thursday. It was a sur- Harold P. Osterhout, of Mansficld Depot: I want to thank you for the | beantiful book you sent me. 1 have iread it and prize 1t most highly. Annis Johnson, of Baltic: Many thanks for the book I received. WINNERS OF PRIZE BOOKS. 1—Edythe Grant, of Uncasville, “The Seven Malds,” by L. T. Meade. 2—Elsie La_Bounty; of Montville, “The Time of Roses,” by L. T. Meade. 3—Sarah Swartzman, .of Norwich, “The Jolly Ten,” by Agnes Carr 4—Agnes Nelson, of Norwich. 0dd and the Bven,” by L. T. Meade. B—Gertrude Marsh, of Norw the author of “Miss Coomer. 7—John P. McVeigh, of Norwich, | “The Boy Explorers,” by Harry Pren- tice. 8—Elmer D. Burbank, of Oneco, | “Floating Treasure,” by Harry Cas- tlemon. Will Thomas Bell, to whom a book was awarded two weeks ago, please | call at The Bulletin office and get it. ‘Winners of books may call at The Bulletin business office at any hour after 10 a. m. on Thursday for them. STORIES WRITTEN BY WIDE- AWAKES How a Girl Helped the Scouts. One day in the first winter of the civil war, General McClellan called half a_dozen of his brightest men and told them he wanteq them to go out and make a map of the country. This | was so he would know where to move his forces. The men were dressed as citizens when they started on their journey. | They had to be careful not to let any- | body know their business. In the meantime, General Beaure- gard had sent out men for the same purpose. At last they got their draft- ing nearly completed. They were Confederate soldiers. As they rode along they came to a Confederate house. They stopped there ang fin- ished the other drafting. They rapped at the door and told their business. There was a little girl there named Molly, She wes a unionist. She fc lowed them Into the drawing room. Boon sie asked them what the maps were for. They sald they were pa- pers to show where the Union forts were. At that moment she saw through the window some Union soldlers com- ing, She told the Confederates. They escaped by the back door, leaving the papers. Molly then hid them. When the Unfon soldiers came in| they asked Molly to watdh at the win- dow that they might not be discov- ered, As she stood thers she asked one of the men to take her place. This they did and Molly ran and brought the papers. She was praised for the | papers, which helped them more than | their maps EDYTHE GRANT, Age 13, Uncasville. A Robin's Accident. The other morning before breakfast my mother was looking out of window and saw a peculiar looking object out in our apple tree. Going out she discovered it was a | robin hanging by one leg. I suppose s of u prize book. I}it was going (o build a nest, and while 1t was the last night in the old y from house windows, telling that ther were E watchers waiting to se the Old Year fade and the New One and taking all his own things with dawn. Such a time filled many hearts with | thoughts, hopes, and prayers. At a tiny little villa, overlooking Forest Tane, there was a light in the ry partisan delegate may |lower window, which revealed a hus- the professed type by the band and wife sitting together, talk ing of the hopes of the coming year, The moon was casting its rays upon | the upper windows, and lit up the face | of a little girl, who was looking with WHAT PEGGY SAW. By Gertrude Harrison-Smith. T, and almost 12 o'clock. | The little village of C— lay half hidden in the trees of the forest. Lights like glow-worms glimmered lowly they came nearer, till Peggy could read some of the labels which were hanging from each basket: Cares, 1911;" “Troubles, 1911;” “Joys, 1911;" “Pains, 1911,” and lots of oth- ers which Pegsy could not read. Why, it’s the Old Year going aw things up in “Perhaps if I I shall sce the Baby New Year. troubles, joys and pleasures of 1911. out: ger eyes on to the forest glade. ‘Oh, Gerald, do wake up,” she cried, turning to her little brother, who was sleeping in his cot. “Do come and | !sce the Old Year go and the New 1t ail the candidates who have been | Year come” but a low grunt was the mentioned shy thelr hats into the ring | Only reply. for the second congressional distrfet there'll be a merry time. King and Pegey did mot trouble much at her i brother's lack of enthusiasm, hut set- {tled herself more comforfably and|wishes, | turned again to the window. Peggy leaned her head on her hand, |and suddenly caught otsteps, Pesgy walied, speilbaund, | It was Roosevelt’s recommenBiation| After a few moments' pause, the amongst them, - ) that made Tafi the republican nemi- | music became clearer, and down agiin | written the desds of everyone In sil- ‘The militant suffragettes hold the tha I was his erratigamethods | C0me the long army in twelves, as be- | ver, or, alas! in hlack or faded coler, i tor Test were carrying heavy parcels. on | silver path, and some flew rather than climbed to the strains of | Then as thiey grew more distinet, n elfs, fn blue and green, ¢ tils (me they walked slowly, X : and Pegzy saw thai two were helping discretion which wili make Taf('s elee« | ulong & very very old man, and- the ly stole into bed,—~The L,‘hlld"fl'll | Realm cels to?" But Peggy, still alone, heard more | As she peered into the road the wondrous music, and saw a band of | If the states In which senators do moon sent a ray of light like a silver white robed fairies fiitting along the At the top they stopped, the tap of soma tall trees, There, from a snow-white nest, they | distant music, and the sound of light | brought down the New Year child. With joy and gladness they danced back, the way they had gone before, and Peggy saw the sweet, pure child, and saw also = book which ghe held in her arms, On the cover was 1912 and as the | wind blew back the pages she saw & silver name on each—her own Beneath would be us the vear passed away, “Oh, little New Year, cried Pesgy, let mine be ull in gold,” and she sofi- “THE SUNSET GUN The Marvelous Pathe Weekly hoops, while the dinner was burning in_the kettle, ** . Patriotic —and— ¥ Edith was the course, she didn't know any better, 80 she was not the blame. who foins is given a club number, The | very pretiy objects of the club ar f I—To encourage the love of nature, | £1ad school is out II—To encourage the humane treat- | 1 carry my father to work and go ment of all dumb animals. after him cvery day. T1-—To help to make & happy fire- | 1 have a litfle calf to tend to. He side by kindhess to ofhers and being | Will Tun and jump when I take him good and useful qurselves. “T8 |out and tie him up. 1 have a littie To diffuse our knowledge. garden of my own and my sweet corn Your nephew, JOHN P. M'VEIGH, Age 7. |8&arden and Tlise were twins, old, and they knew better than that. Now, as it was growing iate, their parents came home, They felt quite ashamed at finding three ‘of their big girls rolling hoops instead of tending house. Now, children, twelve | years do you expect to get what vou want when vou don't mind what is told you- SARAH SCHWARTZMAN, Age 11, Little Bird. One day Jast summer 1 was walking in Mohegan park ‘with parents, when we heard the cry of a We hurried to the Dear Uncle Jed: My school 18 out. The last day we spoke pleces and sang songs. After we spoke we went in the | | grove in front of the school and had | ice cream and cake. There were a great many people there and we had a fine time, teacher gave the echolars a souvenir of the school with his picture on it, and the names of all the schol- ELMER D. BURBANK, Age 14 ars and the committee on it. it is| Oneco. bird In distress. spot and thers was a snake trylng to get a little oven bird. The mother ‘of the bird was trying to get the attention of the snake away from her little one. a_stone and The mother bird was so happy that| My mother threw FEAFORMANCES DALY AT I like my teacher very well. I am 18 inches high. 1 like to hoe my 1 am going to visit my uncles in A tleboro Sunday. I will go on the steam {cars to Providence, them 1 will take the electrics to Attieboro. 1 like to ride on the cars. 1 am going to stay a long time at my 1 am going to learn to ride & e this summer. I want a bicycle very much My uncle eame up to see me from and be wasn't home but three , s his house burned down. Your nephe Vacation, she sang a sweet little song for us, to show her thanks ELSON, Age 13, “I know of a position you can have in my city office, because we need su and remember, my boy, honesty always rewarded. HANNAH L. M'VEIGH, Age 13. Which s 1t? As T was golng to Colchestor woman and a child about four years| The child was dressed as a boy, ex- on girl's shoes. beautiful long brown curls, so it look- LETTERS TO UNCLE JED. Lucy's School. Dear Uncle I am a little girl iting, arithme- geography and | studies are reading, lived on the shores of the Mediterranean. ful In weaving. There was a shelifish in her father used to ge to visit my grand- | | Remnants and Odds and Ends This is an Odd Sale of Odd Lots and Odd Prices. It is a sale of hundreds of odd lengths of gopods which earlier in the season cost you much more than you will pay for them now. It is a sale of small quantities of merchandise which we want to get out of the way before the Fall stocks begin to arrive. Every depart- ment has its bargains, but we urge upon you the desir- ability of coming early as the lots are small. 0DD LOT PRICES IN WOMEN'S WEAR From the Cloak and Suit Departmqnt Good wishes to all, from ¥ LUCY GRAY. wool Tyrian purple, and Arachne used | LUCY GR. to weave it very nicely to her to have her w e A Visit to New Haven. taught by the goddess I am going to tell Arachne said she owed woman camé to her and tried to per- t my cousin May's house visit- | | suade her to be respectful to ne said only boas Then Athene and Wweave a tapestry. Arachne began v both had long in her thoughts, {in her tapestry. that Arachne . w: One evening plant on her, and changed her into a Harvard stu- Arachne still weave webs of wondrc fineness, but beware of their bit cause they are always ready FRIEDA RETHVOSKE, Tooi Bl troliey AN ODD LOT OF WASH DRESSES se Dresses are made of white and colored linens and In the lot are also included some pretty lawns and tissues in striped and ked designe. Th are all pretty Dresses of latest styles, daintily trimmed, and are Found Guilty. Once, when we we New York City, we saw dred sparrows in a big tree. ed as if they were quarr stood and watched the birds. once the birds flew wards the ground, reaching it valued up to in Bronx park, | BREWSTER, Age 10. Her Trip to the Race. Dear Uncle Jed papa and mamn made from dominating colors in this lot I [ and lavender on white ground. Value $.0( a and little sister weitt down on the Wandes launch owned y Yale-Harvard | race.We anchored by the bridge at New | they had flown away tree and foun laying under the tree. | us that this bird had done something for which the other birds had put him WOMEN'S WASH They all have a deep flounce and are finished tucking. An especia 1 you could have seen all | were surround ROBERT KIRCHNER, South Windham. the sailors belonging | WOMEN'S Honesty Rswarded. “Here, Tom, take these goods Tom started on I When he arrived he Walker's room. Walker sald: happened was | cplosion on the How much will it be?” “One dollar and a half Tom measured 40 yards ana was given the money ODD LOTS OF ODD LOTS AT LADIES’ AND SPECIAL PRICES CHILDREN’S HOSE IN THE KNIT womex's Brack corrox | UNDERWEAR DEP'T. HOSE in medium weight with dies on board. went to the beach The restaurants and His business with Mr. Wallk finished, he went back to th met Mr, Coit » them look very pretty We were all tired but happy toia | 19¢ WOMEN'S VESTS double heel, sole and toe. Sold il white. lbad Yol regularly for 12%e. These are the vests for the “Good boy.” he sal “But you surely don't Intend to kee WOMEN'S light Summer weight Just the thing for this hot weather. shirt msachn We have e Regular price 25c. knee pants (o match these Another Uncle. I should have got.” poken these ¥ when Tom had sel started off. three subjec was displeased at me of his club is the PURE SILK BOOT HOSE | A GARMENT 19c Fireside club. were not satisfaci Yes, sir, but’1 overcharged you for lisle heel, toe and garter top. B SWISS RIBBED VEST The colors are black, white In th and tan. weeks there He handed Mr. Wal er the money Health and Beauty Hints women. These' are pure silk with embroidered instep ~or entirely plain. Sl Bl injure your skin, even though it cate, if you apply a spurmax lot spoontuls glycerin Fine hen the spurmex lotlon him; and, of course, the men go in| twelyes. They have packed all his| months,” cried Pegay. stay here a long time ou will find that The spurmax \en on and i tions. is_invisible w On. on they came, these little men, carrying away all the trlals and | These are a 25c quality | jow neck and siceveless Union but subject to slight imperfec- | Suits with either tight or lace ? | timmed knee. 0DD LOT PRICE 15¢ ODD LOT PRICE 42¢ | e WOMEN'S UNION 8UITS § BLACK COTTON HOSE « high grude, low neck, sleave night apply lash roots with and they will come in long and Your eyebrows will grow in mediym weight. These are Jess | ribbed and to be bad in all gizes from 5% to 9% Value not expect to have skin so long s you con- Just @ the last elf was passing| away into the darkness Peggy called | heavy by rubbing on pyroxin with fin- Ful ‘and don't gel any Wiiere hair Is not wanted. the pores w cream-Jeily, ation of the (see answer to C. “Mr. December, where are you go- ing to take the Old Year and his par- followed by an app Dorothy D.: No harm results Just make a paste with sor delatone and water, spread over haiis and in 2 or 3 minutes remove, wash the skin, and every trace of hair has vanished. Rarely is it nece use more than one application of dela They belong to Time and Eterni-{ iy, with the other years that are gone,” | was the reply. Then the church bells began to chime, and doors flew open and peo- ple greeted one another with good| "add 1 ounce Let stand for several hours, ti sage in well HOSE in black only. They 1y will rid the are fine ribbed. Sizes 4 to 6. TWO FOR 28¢ sallownsss and oth of course you your hair look bright and praty cause soap was never s it causes the hair to y and brittle. Teaspoonful canthrox in a cup hot wa- ter and you will have enough m,x for a delightfully soothing and int)y- orating shampoo by canthrox allays scalp irritation dissolyes dandruff and exces: after rinsing well |ure clean und sweet, Y quickly, with ai even, rich color Nothing comparea The discomfort you suffer be easily rcme- from overfatness can died if you will get 4 ot rfstenice ot weight with knes irimmed MERCERIZED HOSE f"’r with one inch lace, Sizes 26 Infants, These are ribbed in | pl's black, white, tan, sky and BO6ROT SRCE 184 pink. Sizes 4% to 6% then take a tabiespoonf IN SOCKS with your weight to whe alr calp 3 the halr and 'scalp L B results from using he parnoils tr . ‘and-there need be no fear of tie om wrinkles and benutizul gloss. with canthrox fat_ feturnin L.: An_excelient tonfe for summer months indicate & polcon- ounce quinzoin to % pint al- nd you can hope for.littie rellef until the polsons ar the system, pour 1 aunce karden cupful sugar o most Instantly sopthes the hurniy tublespoonfu euch meal and yos Thls tonje will clear ou heaith u k be kept Landy In Lae louie, quinzoln tonle once or twice each Wotk. h Fusiness 3 Korwich SEVEN-DAY SALE OF 00, ODD LOT PRICE $4.95 F. SHEER LAWNS D) tle Drestes, lawn in neat stripec ed patterns. The pr ES OF FT obDD made PETTICOAT good v ODD LOT PRICE 48¢ TRAVELING OR A s mohair is of good quality and the with patch-pockets and buttoning « ODD LOT PRICE $7.50 ODD LOT PRICE 9 sweaty weather, ODD LOT PRICE 8¢ | 25c. WOMEN'S VESTS, either | “high or low neck with long or BLACK HOSE in a T PRICE 19 AT e ¢ 0DD LOT PRICE women, These have the | ginviprm rix I OF IMPORT- t there {8 a splendid variety of embroidered fronts and they are all trimmed with luce edge. These should have sold for 798¢, 9%¢ and $1.50. ODD LOT PRICES 59¢, 79c, 98c 3ic WOMEN'S LOW NECK ummer ODD LOT PRICE 7% | weight and ribbed. These ars i a splendid value. They have ROERIZED HOSE, the lace trimmed knee bbed with seamless foot ODD LOT PRICE 25¢ ODD LOT PRICE 3%¢ ILK HOSE f BLAC sizes 6 to 71z and O and e WOMEN'E UNION SUIT fon Bult with tight or lucy trimmed knee, 0DD LOT PRICE 506 MISRES RIBBED vV TS. 0DD LOT PRICE 18c | White Vests with Jow neck in dzes 26 and 28, Regular (FANTS' PURE E&ILK [ Price A 0DD LOT PRICE ODD LOT PRICE 15¢ | y1ss5 RIBBED K NEE PANTS in a fine Summer 0DD LOT PRICE 18¢ B OYS8' BALERIGGAN SHIRTS in. o lurge size, sob TASLE These durable Summer ANCY TiNLS is . have b quard tops. ze 34 only 0DD LOT PRICE 19¢ ODD LOT PRICE 21e TANTS'