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COVERNOR'S DAY AT NIANTIC CAMP Customary Honors For State’s Chief Executive and His Staff —Combat Exercise By Battalions Was On The Pro- grarume For The Infantry On Wednesday. The tactical talks by the . regular army officers which have been given after the morning work and in the evening, were deferred until even- ing. The weather was ideal, there being just enought breeze to temper the heat of the sun. i Officers of ‘the Camp. Brigadier-General ' George M. Cole, the adjutant-general, is in command of the camp, with Colonel W. E. F. Landers, adjutant-general, as adjutant. Colonel Hickey’s field and staff con- sists of Lieutenant-Colonel R. J. Good- man, Major, Edward E. Lamb, Major John L. Purcell, Captain Philip 1. iss, adjutant; Captain Wilfred H. quartermaster; Captain Mi- chael F. Owens, commissia Lieute- nants F. W. Pinches, J. H. Dowd and J. E. Mahon, battalion adjutants; Lieutenants Ulris E. Rivard, Edward C. Farrington and Harold G. Hart, bat- talion quartermasters, and the Rev. Dr. Michael Sullivan, aplain. Major H. A. Tyler, M. C., and Lieutenant Hugh F. Flaherty are attached as med- s lical officers, and Captain Roland F. | Andrews, an ordnance officer. The Sig- al corps company is commanded by n i‘('u])ti‘un Frederick W. Prince and Am- GOV. SIMEON E. BALDWIN. bulance company No. 1, by Captain Governor Simeon E. Baldwin and |Otto G. Wiedman. ~ 455 members of his staff on Wednesday | Three regular army officers, First | came to the state camp at Niantic, | Lieutéhants Townsend Whelen, Twen- | which is mamed in his honor, to see | ty-ninth infantry; Walton Goodwin, | the infantrymen of the ‘Connecticut | Ir. Fifth infantry, and Himer F. Eice, National Guard-at work and to spend | lr“\t’ een detailed to ors. 2 night with them under canva The governor and' his party were met at the raiiroad station by Gen. George M. Cole, commander of the camp, and h staff and escorted to the reservation where he was received with salue of 17 guns, and othep marks of recogni- tion, due his positlon‘'not only as the chief executive of the but as commander in chief of the state troops, On Tuesday, the progressive instruc- tions in infantry combat, leading up to the battle which is scheduled to con- | clude on Friday the heavy work of the | week for the infantrymen of the Con- necticut National Baldwin, entered its second stage. The men were marched out from their little tented city with its tan colored pyra- state | Procesding $he -arrivel i€ Governor | Mid tents about 7 o'clock i the morn- | Baldwin, which was about 1 o'clock, | ing and put through a series of stiff | comparatively few visitors for Gov- |drills to impress on them what they | ernor's 'day - had® come to the . camp,|8hould do in actual fighting. They | but it was expected that during the|Mmarched in extended order, but were afternon the numbers would have 8rouped by companies instead of by materially increased. jequas dayiand Hibtmit, The "trops had ‘already put in ;\‘;" ‘l'”‘.‘-y ling, taking cover, good morning’s work before the gov- |l10ading, firing E h ; | ernor came. The da procedure was | When they returned to camp in the chiefly that of com exercise by | lite forenoon the men were dismissed | battalions against an outlined pesi- | Put the cers, commissioned and tion, this being the third 2we of. in- | Don-commissioned, had to attend a se- struction in infantry fi i by the regular army offi- fire controél and | were in prep- - the field workt of the after- ‘h included company drills morning the First regiment was left in camp, while the Second hiked three miles to the northwaest where it was divided into battalions on approaching noon, a rise in the land and those divisions | 210ng these lines sent charging suc ively up the hill | Health of Camp Good. against an ememy, which was sup-| The health of the camp has been posed to be entrenched at the crest.!excellent. The Fir: medical officers | On their return to camp the men|have had to deal only with one mild were taken to the pits where they |case of heat prostration and one &b- inspected a model entrenchment, while | cess, the latter the possession of an the company commanders explained | enlisted man who said he had ben | it in detail to their men. | trained to swear in seven languages | Meanwhile the First regiment had|and would do so as soon as the | put in the morning with drill in shel- der straps got out of hig agitated ter tent pitching and in forming sup- | neighborhood. He did. | ports to an outpost, including guards | Well Fed. | | and patrol. During the afterncon the First regiment marched out to the hill three ‘miles away -and went through similar work to that of the Second | regiment, while .the latter body put in | the afternoon on shelter tent pitching | And the of the pe men are well fed, too. One company cooks, who in time of e, is a wholesale meat sales riat was buying expensive hind- | ] quarters of beef when good solid and other drills. | ¢chucks would do as \\'0|l.g'l“xk|ng the fine weather, the lightened work ,the | fresh air and the inc ing instrue- tion, the guardsmen have found the | | first half of their week in the field | very pleasant, indeed. A DOUBLE ‘ BARRELED [ GUARANTEE TUBERCULOSIS COMMISSION. Votes New Equipment for Two San- atoria—Hartford Working Men Plan Reception for Gunshanan, Former The readers of THE BULLE Commissioner. TIN are asked to consider the : = two-fold responsibility - behind The state tuberculosis commission the many produc of wide repute advertised loc nation- 1 in arded the contra ment for the for electrical ddition to the in- the newspapers and offered for firma t the Hartford County na- sale by the leading merchants torium. The bid was $485. The com- of this city. | mission has voted to buy an incin- First and foremost, our read- ||| erator for the sanatc Meriden. ers must know that advertising ||| It Will be large enough to dispose of has arrived at such a sound | the sputum and garbage of 300 people. basis that it is a rare thing now- ||| It will cost $1,785, adays that an advertised article ||| The working men of Hartford are v dagivoads e up to the ||| formulating plans for a public recep- standard established by its ad- ||| tion to John F. Gunshanan, former tu- Vet ;:])(-rr'uir«))sxs Semodiseion Committees ch B 3 ave been appointed by several o Secondly, to secure the en- ||| orzo PR SPFOIRICd B \.«kr'nl «; s dorsement and co-operation of tive in the worl of our local dealers, manufacturers b vl guighiiie s worth of their product. Building Trades alliance, which is Thus we find the manufactur- ||| composed of more t outdoor er's national reputation fortified ||| wage-earners of Hartf, This or- by the local merchant'’s home ||| ganization has always taken a large reputation. | part in the advancement of the move- It is quite likely, therefore, ment since the creation of the work- T P AR el Gl g ingmen’'s. free bed fund in 1905 and won and we look with favor up- ||| has contributed several thousands of 8 10 Wass neosssastes of I dollars for the care of persons who G Tob Bade vadot mUch might become aflicted with the dread- suring auspices and advertisea ||| ¢d disease . in newspapers like THE BUIL- |||, It is expected that men prominent- ey i ly identified with the labor movement R i e in the state will be present, but the advertising for natfon S { reception will not be confined solely | sing for atfor pro | to the labor unions. Employers of labor ducts are requested to e to {who have co-operated with their em- the Bureau of Advertising, { ployes to further this great cause in American Newspaper Publishers 1| Connecticut are also expected to be in Association, World Building, ‘ w York, { attendance. aptain and labor will thus he pres- | ent to show their esteem of one whom they believe has done much in this state to minimize the effects of tu- berculosis | Many Poisoned by Tainted Tomatoes. Bellefontaine, Ohio, July 16—H. k. Slater is dead in Cook County hos- pital, C. H. and C. A. Wallin and Da- vid McComb are dying here today as the result of ptomaine poisoning, in- curred at a dinner in a local restaurant last Sunday. Fifteen others are ser- iously ill and because nine laborers employed on the new federal buil were ~poisoned, building operations were suspended today. Tainted to- matoes are reported to have been the cause. MUST York, July 16. Liverpool for Steamer Maure- | i New York, sis- lled 853 miles e: Sandy Hook | & good, rellable Comvany In which t0| a4t 5 p. m. Dock 8 i G take out Fire Insurance. If so, T can, Sable Island, N. 1 write you a poliey in a.Cempany that will give you a Square Deal in event of loss end for such a small premium | that ¥ou will not ge any lenger with- out Insurance. ISAAC 8. JONES er Celtic, Liverpool for New York nalled 734 miles f Sandy Hook at 6.45 p. m Friday. Johns Released from Jail. Wilkesbarre, Pz July 16.—Herbert Johns, who has been in jail for more 1 1 Insurance and Real Estawe Ageat,|i). 1™ "o in connection with the | Richerds Building, 91 Main St. death of Alice Crispell, was released | late this afternoon by Judge Fuiler in the Luzerne county court, after hedring testimony in the habeas cor- pus proceedings instituted by Johns' counsel. Steel Best For Mine Timbering. By the use of steel in place of wood New York to Bermuda i da;y for mine timbering, waste due to fi'° to mnet_een tours, decay, framing, end fitting, fire and 1 insects, is entirely overeome, says all expenses , “Coul Age” Steel mine timbers also eall for less excavition, cost less to erect, have a greater endurance, and tend toward beiter ventilation, Whils the first cost of steel is nearly twiee that of the weed used for timbering, the uitimate eost is lower, as steel lasts much lenger, It ean be used again and again, and if erushed it has @ salvage vaiue, from $27.50 up JOEN A. DUNN, Agent 50 Main Street | God, to Thee, and The Shiring Shore. eix ’M[)’ and Mrs. { 000 pounds a season, |and evinced a very marked devotion | BUSTER ELIONSKY | PROPOSES HARD SWIM. Will Try te Navigate the Narrows at New Yerk. Henry Elionsky, sen of Inman EH- onsky of New Londen, has gene to New York to make an attempt te swim frem the Battery to Sandy Heek. Buster, as Ellonsky is better known, has made a number of long distance swims, but this is a feat far more dif- fleult than he has ever attempted. The distance is 24 miles, and in the Nar- roews there is a tide at times that has' baffled many a powerful swimmer. Elionsky is a powerful young man. He is but 21 years old but weighs | in the neighborhood of 250 pounds, and | has wonderful endurance He has been' called “the human fish” because he spends all his spare moments in the| water. In the summer he is at Ocean| Beach practically al jay every day, anad| no one who bathes there enjoys the water more than he does. Elionsky swam las: summer from Norwich to New London, making the journey in good time. He announced | |a few weeks ago that he intended this! fall to try to swim the English chan- nel. FUNERALS. Mrs. Jacob Sautter. Tuesday afternoon at 2.30 o’clock the funeral of Katherine, wife of Jacob Sautter, was held from her late home on Wilbur avenue. Many relatives and friends were in attendance and there were numerous floral offerings. The service was conducted by Capt. Charles T. Potter, superintendent of the Nor- wich Holiness mission, and hymns were rendered. The bearers were Wil- liam Lucas, John Johnson, Mr. Cham- plin and F. J. Langenbach. Burial was in Maplewood cemetery, where a com- mittal service was read at the grave by Capt. Potter. Undertakers Church & Allen had charge of the arrange- ments. Henry Denison Maynard. Services were held over the remains of Henry Denison Maynard, who was found dead in his boat at Bolles cove on July 11, were held Tuesday after- noon at 2.30 o'clock in the chapel at Brewster’s Neck. Relatives and friends coming from out of town were in the large attendance. Rev. C. Wilson Har- rison officiated at the service and Mrs. Clmer E. Tubbs rendered Nearer, My The hearers were George, Joseph, Amos and Charles Maynard and burial took place in the family plot at Brew- ster's Neck, Rev. Mr. Harrison con- ducting the services at the grave, Un- dertakers Chureh & Allen had charge of the arrangements, Henry D. Maynard was born June 4, 1833, the son of Latham and Adelia Maynard. He is survived by children. three somns, Joseph and { George of Fishers Island and Willard of Norwich, three daughters, Mrs. | Minnie Fowler of Norwich, Mrs. Eliz- abeth Perkins of Fishers Island Hannah Runnells of this city brothers. Amos Maynard and James Maynard, both of Groton, and twc s, Mrs. Lydia Maynard of this Eliza Neff of Willimau- survive. Arthur L, Botham. The funeral of Arthur L. Botham was held Wednesday afternoon at 2.30 t his late residence in Montville. Rev. tie, also | M. Aldrich officiating. Interment was at Comstock cemetery. Miss Annie Pyne. The body of Miss Annie Pyne, 79 vears old, formerly of Niantic, ar- | rived in New London Tuesday from | Brooklyn, where she died on Mon- | day The remains were taken lo! Niantic Wednesday for committal at | Stone Church cemetery. | GILBERT CLAIM SETTLED. Receiver Agrees to Pay From Sale of | Transportation Co.'s Schooner, Without bringing the matter to a hearing in the United States district court at Hartford a claim held by Smith & MeCoy against Frank 8. But- terworth, receiver of the Gilbert | Transportation company, was adjusted | by an agreement that the claim shall be paild from the avail of the sale of the schooner” TFredericks Schepp.” STORIES OF PLACES. Without the use of nails an entire village of houses has been built in Al- berta, Canada. These houses have been built by Ruthenian immigrants and their architecture is novel. The first attempts at house building are usualily of the kind they had been ac- customed to in Europe, and their build- ings are of the typical Ruthenian style —Ilog, piteh roof, thatched and wide in the eaves. In many cases these | buildings are put up without a dollar’s | worth of hardware. The door is of hewn logs, nafled. The roof, as the favorite Russian roof always Is, is a wonderful fabric of poles and cross | woven wheat straw, ten inches thick, packed tight and solid and laid with such care that it will shed the weather for twenty years. Recently there died in Belgium the ! last of that generation of railroad con- | ductors who dnnounced the departure | of the train with a blast from a bugle. The custom was suppressed in 1860, but up to that time all railroag con- ductors were furnished with the wind Instrument, on which they were re- quired to become proficient before en- tering the service. Extremely pic- turesque was the departure of a train from a small station, where half the | village turned out to see the train and | its occupants. Three notes were sounded on the buglae and they had many significances, from the mere starting of a train to the call for help in case of an accident. Punta Arenas the southernmost city in the world, at the gateway between the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, now has a population—decidedly cosmopol- itan—of more than 12,000. It is listed as one of the big wool shipping ports anq sends out something like 16,000,- It is well lighted by electricity, hag waterworks, two theaters, is well supplied with schoo{s asd has quite a number of public buildings. The severity of the climate has not been allowed to keep it back on the read to prosperity, and some | private residences especially testify to | the the substantial and permanent character of civilization in thig lati- tude. The Virtues of the Samoans. The most interesting thing about Samoa is not its fair ‘scenery and tropic flora, but its people, who have often been described as the most no- bie race in the Pacific—simple, honest, affectionate, and above all, hospitable. | Judge Dwyer of Pago Pagu, wno is visiting Sydney, stated recently that all the natives were now Christians, | to their church, ®ven though they did not always adhere to its tenets. Tak- ing them as a whole, their contribu- tions to religious enterprises far ex- ceeded the Biblical tithe, and, with the exception of the Mormons, whose adherents were few, the missions in Samoa were self-supporting. The people were generous to a re- markable degree, and any stranger— white, brown, yellow or black—was received in any heuse, supplied with food and sleeping aceommodatiens, no yuestions being asked about com- pensation, As far as American Samoea was concerned, there were so few foreign- ers there that this admirable trait had not been stamped out by impesition or abuse of eonfidence, In merality they were superier in manv other branches of the Polynesian and were excelled | by nene, Petiy theft was very rare, and foreigners feund that the leeks | and bolts on their heuses grew rusty threush disuse.—Sydney (W, B, W.)' Herald | has | race D0 YOU WANT IT? You Can Surely Have It By Using Parisian Sage. ‘Whe does net love a beautiful head’ of hair? You may think it is a gift, that some women are born that way. | The fact is, beautiful hair is largely a matter of cultivation, just as you would water the plants in your garden | and fertilize the soil. Parisian Sage is a scientific prepara- tion ‘which the hair and scalp readily absorbs. It removes dandruff at once. It puts a stop to itching scalp and makes your whole head feel better—as if your hair had had a square meal One application will astonish vo it will double the beauty of the hair. If used dalily for a week you will be sim- ply delighted with the result—you will ; want to tell all your friends that you have ‘discovered Parisian- Sage. You should see the number of enthusiastic letters we recelve from delighted users. ; All doubts settleq at one strokc— your money back if you want it. Parisian Sage is a tea-colored liquid —mnot sticky or greasy—delicately per- fumed, that comes in a fifty cent bot- tle. The “Girl with the Auburn Hair” on the package. Get a bottle today— always keep it where you can use it daily. Sold by The Lee & Osgood Co. and ! at drug and toilet counters everywhere. | | | For Cuts, Burns and Bruises. In every home there should be a box of Bucklen’s Arnica Salve, ready to apply in every case of burnms, cuts, wounds or scalds. J. H. Polanco, Del- , valle, Tex, R. No. 2, writes, Buck- len's Arnica Salve saved my little girl's cut foot. No one believed it could be cured.” The world’s best salve. Only 25¢c. Reccommended by Lee & Osgood. —_— At Price 5¢ a yard. At 10c—Pillow Cases, value 12le, At 6/40—36-inch Brown Sheeting, reg- | At 12/ec—Pillow Cases; value 166. ular price $%c. At 15¢—Pillow Cases, value 20c. K At 44c—Sheets, value 5sc, At 83c—36-inch Brown Sheeting, reg- | At 58¢c—Sheets, value T7bc. ular price 1lc: At 68c—Sheets, value 85c. At 73%c—36-inch Bleached Sheeting, | At- 78c—Sheets, value $1.00. The Porteon_s & Mitcliell 7 THE FACTORY END SALE IS NEARING ITS END. ONLY THREE MORE DAYS OF THIS IMPORTANT SALE— Thursday Friday 5 Make it 2 point to attend this sale before it ends. Remem- ber the Factory End Sale extends to every department in the store. FACTORY END SALE OF COTTONS, BLANKETS, ETC. No Housekeeper Can Afford to Miss These Offerings 5¢—36-inch Brown Sheeting—Sale | PILLOW CASES—SHEETS Saturday regular price 10e. 834c—36-inch Bleached Sheeting, BLANKETS—COMFORTABLES CONCERNING THE MEMORY. i Lord Beaconsfield's recipe for a good memory was simply—never take a note. Dr. Joweit used to say: A man should make a compact with his memory not to remember everything.” Great memories like that of Sir Wil- liam Hamilton, are apt to disable judgment. Sheer memory flourishes best where note making is impossible. Dudley Kidd tells how he saw a coun- cil of Kaffir chiefs discussing a legal case. A precedent of sixty or seventy years old came up and the old men, who had been children at that time, reconstructed it to the minutest detail vven to the ‘exact color of the various cattle concerned, with perfectly unan- imity. “Memory is largely a matter of sympathy,” says a writer. “This ex- plains suggestively why it is that in later years we remember our pleas- ant experiences more easily than our troubles. I once visited a village where I found the oldest inhabitant, a frail old man, who regaled me for an hour with his quaint and comical reminlscences of his youth. With each fresh anecdote his reedy laugh broke out. It appeared as though his life had been one long comedy. ‘Did you never have any trouble? 1 asked. ‘Why, yes, to be sure,’ said the patri- arch, but I've forgotten all they, 'cept there was anything funny about 'im.” Mark Twain told of the pilot who knew every bend, creek, current and shallow in the Mississippi river throughout its whole mighty length, but could not remember what he had had for breakfast. A correspondent of the London Chronicle tells of one man with a memory that apparently collects only figures. He can always remember one's age, even if he forgets the name. He will memorize easily | the times of all the tralns to a given place, but he generally forgets the platforms from which they start. Reel off to him a column of statistics and he will recite them again a month iater without a mistake. Our Savage Kinsmen of Yezo. ! Whatever the ignorant, indifferent, ! regular price 1lc. At 59¢c—Cotton Blankets, value 69c. < At 88c—Cotton Blankets, value $1,10. At 934c—40-inch Brown Sheeting, reg- 4 4 e ST et At $1$.]3-47?“00lnap Blankets, .value At 10lc—42-inch Bleached Sheeting, |At $1.64—Woolnap Blankets, - value regular price l4c. 00 i 3 At $2.98—Wool Blankets, value $4.00. At 11)5c—45-inch Bleached Sheeting, | At $3.69—Wool Blankets, value $4.50. regular price 15c. At $4.48—Wool Blankets, value $6.00. At 25c—9-4 Bleached Sheeting, regular Summer Comfortables, all at re- duced prices during Factory End.Sale, price 2 there are Factory End Bargains in Remember wcy. Wear, Women's Wear Millin: ery, Toilet Articles, Laces, Embroideries, Hosiery, Under- wear, Gloves, Handkerchiefs, Ribbons, Etc. No matter what your needs may be chances are that you can supply them in the Factory End Sale—and always at a big sawing. FACTORY END SALE OF CURTAINS, RUGS, ETC. At 10c—Silkolines, a large assortment | At $1.68—Axminster Rugs, size 27x54 of neat designs, value 12%5c. inches, value $2.25. At 10c—Curtain Swiss, full 36 inches |At $2.98—Wilton Rugs, size wide, value 12%c. inches, value $3.75. At 15c—Cross Bar Scrims, in Arabian | At $3.69—Smyrna Rugs, size color, value inches, value $4.50. 2 At 24c—Scrim Etamines, fancy open- | At ”-19"hAxmvmlster Rugs, size weave, with bordered ef- inches, value $ y Arabian color, value 35c. |At $375—Art Squares, size 9x12 iy 5 & very special value at $8.75. At 16c—Cretonne, fancy stripes and|a¢ $7,69—Wool and Fibre Art Squares, all-over designs_ a variety of site 9x13 feet, value §5.7 colorings, value 22c. At $5.89—Wool and Fibre Art Squares, At 34c—Curtain Nets, leaded glass ef- size 9x12 feet, value $6.75. fects, value 4ic. At $7.35—Tapestry Brussels Seamless| At 39¢c—Bokahara Net, suitable for Rugs, size 7 feet, 6 inches by 9 light weight Portieres and Win- feet, value $8.7 dow Draperies, value 75c. At o At 59c—Cross Stripe Madras Curtains, SSRES, A > in green and white and pink and | 5y s11"9\§-lf§:'x‘:?amens;£k?o' Scotch Art white stripes, at 59c a pair, value Weave Rugs, size 9x12 ieet. high. Uiy class designs and colorings, value At $1.45—Imported Madras Curtains, $13.98. cathedral glass effects, at $1.45 | At §11.70—Tapestry Brussels Seamiess a pair, value $1.69. 7 Rugs, size 9x12 feet, value $18.75. At 95c—Duteh Curtains of fine sheer| 33 | Silk Floss Sofa Pillows, cov- Muslin, at 95¢ a pair, value $1.19.| value | ered with fancy tickings .and At $1.19—0dd lot of Velvet Rugs, size| 50c | cretonnes, suitable for porch 27x54 inches, value $1.39. hammock or boat. or selffish may say or suggest, he who read carefully Japan's ancient records, studied the language, art, and antiquities, not only thinks, but knows —for the evidence is overwhelming— | that the Japanese are a mixed race. That they have in them Tartar and Mglay blood no one doubts. It is cer- | tain, also, that the blood of another of | the most gifted of races, the Semitic, | flows in their veins. Apart from the testimony of language, history records | expecting an ers have been gathering every avalia- ble bushel for shipment to Cuba and New E THE PORTEOUS & MITCHELL CO. porting nearly a million boxes of ei- anges into England. Hongkong last year imported 137,000 increased demand. Buy ngland. that colonies of Semitic sta settled | pounds of ginseng, nearly all from the in the islands. As for the Aryan strain | Every day Oyonnax, France, pro-|United States. in the Japanese, it is very rich, and |duces 15,000 to 18,000 pounds of cellu- possibly even the greatest. Language, |loid combs. mythology, tradition, all show the | = o (o MARRIED. Avran Infusion of words, ideas and | 500", OV 100 SrANEEE OR e | HILL-WGUIRE—In willimantic, July bijod. e names of the mountains| Uo.5 ©olording to a firm of fruit| 8, Elmer Hill of Norwich and . Mi and the rivers tell of the first inhabi- | tants, who were the Ainu, and who are of Aryan blood. A remnant of brokers in Liverpool which is now im- Annie McGuire of Danielson. these white savages, numbering over | fifteen thousand souls yet remains They speak a language - allled with those of HEurope. Their faces, fea- | tures, eyes, beards and mental pro- | cesses are exactly like our own. No ! one versed In even the rudiments of ethnology but realizes there is no such | thing a8 a perfectly pure or unmixed‘ on the earth.—The Christian Herald. FROM THE CONSULAR REPORTS. According to a prominent financial journal of Paris, the consumption of coffee in the different countries of the world varies in inverse ratio to the | import duty. Last year Algeria sent to the United | States brierwood valued at about $68,- | 000, goatskins at $61,000, rags $21,000 | and wine lees $6,000. Farmers around Quebec are to raise | great quantities of potatoes this year, Doctor’s Boyish Face Reveals Skin Renewer 1 heard the other day the story of the physician with so admirable a skin that all his women patients asked the | secret. He told one, who generously | told others, that, knowing the markable absorbent property of or-| dinary mercolized wax, he concluded | this substance would make an excellent complexion remewer and preserver. Knowing the wax could not harm the skin, he began using it after shaving. He soon observed that the old, wither- ed, coloriess cuticle was being gradu- ally absorbed and replaced by voung- er, healthier skin. is was the sim- | ple secret of the silver-haired doctor with the boylsh face. The secret became public property. Now women everywhere use mercoliz- | ed wax, applying it nights like coid oream, washing it off mornings—con- | tinuing until the complexion is en- tirely renovated. An ounce of this wax, procurable at any druggist's, will banish the worst complexion. Another valuable rejuvenator used | by this doctor was a wrinkle-remover and preventive in the form of a face bath, made by dissolving an ounce of saxolite in a half-pint witch hazel. This | also has become famous.—Aurelia in Fashion Review. NOTICE On July twenty-fourth, COXETER, THE TAILOR, will move from 33 Broadway to the STEAD BLOCK, J 208 Main Street, Second Floor Pure Food Specials FOR THURSDAY AND FRIDAY LAMB CHOPS, Ib. . . . 15¢ PORK CHOPS, Ib. . .. 18c BOILED HAM NATIVE CUCUMBERS el e et T NATIVE STRING BEANS YELLOW ONIONS 2 quarts BEEF LIVER, bb..... 12¢ SHOULDER STEAK BACON—Sliced Nicely Mixed—1b.. ... . 22¢ FRESH, NATIVE BEETS BANANAS, dozen.... 18c NEW POTATOCES Cheerful Drop Cregmery CRISCO for Shortening LARGE, SALT MACKEREL, 3 for... 10c Sweet, Sugared CORN Borden’s MALTED MILK gar o0 396 The MOHICAN BEST BREAD FLOUR 1-8 bbl. bag......... 68¢ & () g . 1le Batter YERY 1. 30c i BLUE HILL CLAMS Hire’s ROOT BEER EXTRACT, bottle . ... 15¢ MOHICAN COCOA Velb.can......... MOHICAN TEAS Are Delicious Iced . 15¢c