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&erwich Bu iletin il nud Goauried. e 117 YEARS OLD. S"u‘flsflflptlcn price, 12 a week; 56e a $600 a y- Lntered.at the Postoffice ar Norwicn, 1., as second-class maiter Telephone Calls letin Business Office. 480. Bulletin Edliorial Rooms, 35-3, Sulletin, Job Office, 35-2 Willimandc Office, Room 2, Murray Building. Telephons 210. Norwich, Tuesday, Aug. 12, 1918, The Circulation of The Bulietin The Bullctin e largest eip- culagimm of amy paper in Eastern Coamesticut, und from three to four times larger thun that of awy s Norwdes. Ity deliveréd 1o over 3,000 of the 4053 howses im Nor- wich,, read oy minety-theee pex cest. of the people. In Windbaw it i delivered to over UOU houses, Danizlson te eve: all of thewe places I idered the loeal daily. eticut has forty- office district rural free delivery r he Bulletn i sold In every town amd om all of the R. ¥. N rouics in Eastern Conmectiont CIRCULATION ceeees.. 4412 5,920 Week ending Aug. 9... 8!600 Have The Bulletin Follow You 1901, average.... 1905, avorage...ooeprsnere Readers of the Bulletin leaving the eity for the seashore, mountains, rural resorts or Europe can have the Bulletin follow them daily and keep in touch with home affairs. Orders should be placed with The Bulletin Business Office. NEW ENGLAND AS A SUMMER RESORT. Tt s estimated that recetves from its annudl summer vis- ftors $60,000,008, and it is hinted that t sum co d be adily doubled & spreading the famw its delightful mlaces along the coast, beside the lakes 4 among ite hills, New England There are coming this way now not only summer visitors. but people from other parts of the country who are kimg for homes beautiful in loca- n #nd profitable because of their to ready mark Tt has on repeatedly shown that New Eng- iand land when intelligently worked es results second to nome in the untry—and its compact settlément 4 short hauls ¢ produce to market = something few pz of the country an offer 1o such a pointed ou more small w beautifully s 1 are needed at give good country food instead restawrant bills of fare to guests. Good country food ething to hank on with those who come to enjoy life. 2 mogt needed for this sec- n O-0pe ve hoom of our attractive resoris backed by. eves: vested interest NU" THE REMEDY. ¥t 1= well known free trade 1s not prometive -raising in this country. but g check to it The old Wilson *, which was two per o© gher the new ta r the sheep In the country to the extent of sixteen mil- jons in fonr years, because of the free wool use whi bout to be re-emac or from 52,000,000 te 36,000,000 v reduction as that joesn’'t temd 1o make the price of amh and mutton vheaper except tem- porarily. for the lessened supply under every rile of trade must work the er way This country is not producing enough beef by a third to meet the demand, nd 2ll agencies are at k to in- rease an herds and to reduce prices b ing the demand for fresh meat. Free foreign meat will reduc ces for awhile, and also remove the imcentive for ineressing the herds n this country in other words it will reduce the home supply and make the sjtuation eventually worse than it is today. BETTER PAY-BETTER MEN. The people of s state are te vete on a constitutional amendment on the first Mondey in October which, if adopted, vill increase the salary of members of the 1 ature from $300 *3 3500 and atlow each way 25 cents a mile sion, for the regular ses Boubtless much of the grafting in legislatures is due to the inadequate pay which has beem givea the mem- berg. Three hundred dollars for five monthe’ ettendance at Hartford fs Ty far from being a liberal allowance and 15 insufficie ure represen- tative men {0 give their time and minds o state affairs. An addition of fort per eent. to the salary would resn in the procurement of represen = who are « taking eare of the affgirs of sis rendering effective seryice 19 the interesis of the people It 1 wel e pay an amount equivalen he duties 1 of the meabers, and then to of tham a8 geod service as they are will- ing to re v cornerations for ample « 1t Undes cat aliowances we eam expect nothing of mewbers of the leg- igture_and thar 13 sbow: what we realize Trom their prescnce in Hart- ford, The express companies realize now az 47 had made their rates low- v and dividends smaller the zovern- ment would not have been carrying oarcels at a third the price the ex- press companies used to charge. The hog 1s destined at last to be kifled. What has the new heuy of ihe weather bureay at agalpst New England?! Affer giving us & dAy twenty-three dezrees high he oPems up with a frosiy morning, He muse stop doing rhall = S e proposed I‘ Fashinglan goi ETHODIST NATIONAL cofivzu-‘ TION. There is more than usual interest in"the Methodist national convention which is to meet in Indianapolis dur- ing the week of October 28 to 31, when three tHousand delegates composed of mipisters and laymen will consider the question of missionary work unitedl. Phe object of this convention is to increase missionary intelligence and to deepen the spiritual lifei to present the definite responsibility of Metho- dism both at home and abroad in re- lation to other . denominations and Christian agencies; to adopt a pra ticable denominational programme and poliey of advance; to emphasize the prineiples and practice of (hristian stewardship as adopted by the gen- eral conference, to discover and enlist | more men’ for missionary and evan- gelist ryice, This eonvention Is the outzrowth of a mew awakening and a broader in- terest in missiopary work, which Is not only manifest in this, but in other denominations: and it is expected to lend new encrgy and enthusiasm to all fields of missionary endeavor. MUNICIPAL “GOQDS.” When it is said that a city has good markets eyerybody sits up and takes nofice wherever the statement is made, for markets which are so gauged that they please the seller and the buver are real eity up-builders. Good roads are alv dation of a city because cheap hauling and excellent riding to business and society: and goad sidewalks by their breadth and levelness and cleanliness contribute to the good name of the city, and this is | why property-owners should be quick to respond to the effort of Mavor Mur- phy te haye the walks of Norwich in | the a recommen- they mean pleasure first-clase condition on or before first of September. The Rose of New | England wants both. Then there is good water, good fire protection and good nolice servic gond schools, good libraries, good churches, which give a golden glow to } the reputation of any city, and Nor- wich has them all. ¢ We may add good shipping rarrnrl | i ties, good wages and zood fellowship, are’ three other good things which never come amiss in the upward trend | of u leading community. | | rwich wants all the good_ things and should do all she ean to procure | them, EDITORIAL NOTES. polies yer dreams alone he sets up 4-11-44 day. that When stands winner next We like the person best who with when we are we are doipng wrong. anything right about G w York his enemies cover what it is. he the agr consclous If there Sulzer of unable to d are There are a few men who are S0 | devoted to Raechus that they have forgotten how it seems to draw a sober { breath. St. Lou supports baseball teams in three le and stands last in one and next in two; but she still looks on with hope! If the oet should set aheut | recting us of our fool ways as |see them through our ills they soon be out of busine eor- they would The bov-seout movement 18 recog- |nized as a mood thing hy eleven na- tlons because in principle it preserves | peace by preparing for war. Towa gives notice that she has money { enough of her own: but adds, it Uncle m wants her to keep some of h surplus for him she is willing. Omaha has just got dollar is fizhting fo eent wat nce 1t considers more than that for one thousand cubit feet as robbe: The man in the beaver hat says: good sidewalks lend a charm fo a cit that is more to its credit than a p: system, if you cannot have hut one. Since the name of the head of the | gond roads commission of Nlinois | Gash, the hope is expressed that will cut a figure instead of bleeding | to death Now that sknnk-raising is te be recoznized as a vocation we see it armounced that ope Kansas man has four pole-cats and thirty-ejght pole-Kittens. | At Attanta, an elevator boy Te- | ceives pay one hundred dollars more | than that paid to feachers in the | graded schools. They have a political wage le there, all right. | Ambassader Wilson on his refurn | from Mexica found the weather cool enoiigh at Washinzton, The coalne of the president could nat be wholiy attributed to his duck suit 1 A Pittsbuygh waman has resily heen | frozen out. applicatio: divorce she th is “a man He ought te h been apprec as this, iated during such a season beea annownced on the 1 thorit tabiet that | the eated by a woman, a | we R paragrapher says thai e~ counts for its not lLeing perfeetly Yound. SCIENCE NOTES Fransportation of live 1:5% g expens. ve because it requires from one te four gallons of water to each pound of fish. Much more economicai is te freeze the live fish in blocks of ice. The fish are at first contained in a large amout of water, the whie the {tar placed in a cosel shace, axvgen | under pressure arrives upon the water |50 that the greater part cas now he drawn off and the fish remain in cood condition in a very smgll emount of | water. s the oxvgen supplies their | tiox is now done hy | | pluging the vessel with the fish into | gerating tamk and in this way | if ohtained in which the R, hut will come (@ life in whea thawed out. Uuon arrival al their destinglivn the flsh are put through a ve ! v slow thawing process, | which last ¢ for about ten To sWell the harrors of a i agter at night the lights are ag | PO out by the Hopding of the ¢ | geReraling plant. Hxperimen(s ay ing made now on a arge { th s ubder con, gusoline elecipic plant (k { plased on the lidge dec | will Bat only supsly (be lig wireless {elegraph avparaty uBtH the very momer! of com mergence of the ves ratifis set will be used omly That aetipn upop variou aniine apnesys (o ve ¢ vavered (hyt aniling co gemeral act to destroy m exen m greater degree than Phenic | agid. O .the diffevent bacteriz exam ined the typhus baciius is the most | Feadily afiecied i !side porchi lto say, and yet the shadows had not | dance! g | though 1 had to sit out with that aw- { fud bore, Ned Dal | forted her self {most unlike him,” | his small boots the hammock, beside me." came nd a shiny new dime The littlé man eame slowly forward, | was shut in Freddie's palm, hig face under the wide sun-hat as| The little boots clattered down the | sober as a six-year-old’s can be. teps, the gate bapged, and the two | “Why, Freddie, what's the matter to- | grownups looked at each other and The government has begun suit 1o (be a gaod policy hge a sort of | disselve the great telephone merger. | protocol in the bus of investigat- | if it would sue to compel a reduction |ing. The country ha sme some- | of telephone rates the move would be | what dulled by the s proces: | enthusiastically hailed by |h._> long- jof congressior indiffe; suffering public. This disselution Lus- {to them. Th e any goose- Leouise stepped back from the mir- d.na," he explained,” and yesterday I row and gave one all-inclusive glance | thought I'd feed the cai so Nora ai the givl within. Then she picked ! wouldn’t have te and it was the break- | up her magasine and descended to the ) fast meat I gave her, and the ,dog {grabbed it from her and they nM an {awful fight.” The memory of it brightened him a little, "Mother didn’t like me to help Nora again,” he re- sumed, “But that isn't all, Aunt Louise, “The day I went on your errand,”—here his eyes fell—"I saw deaf Mrs. Ray pull- ing her garden hose round the corner ef the house, and it caught on the rese-bushes each time. So I touched her on the arm, and she turned so quickly I got all wet—seaked—from the nozale. She was scared and I couldn't make her understand about itY He cast & mournful logk at his aunt, “You certainly have tried hard,” she comforted, patting the hand on her <h; 0 don't worry, dearie.” “But that fsn't all, Auntie, I got all wet, you see, and—and—I forgot your Well, that’s the | errand!” 4 end of all interest in you, John Stev- . Aunt Louise’s hapd tightened. on his. ens!” ou didn’t take the letter to Mr. And here the adows settled down | Stevens' house " she demanded, a new o thick and dark that there was every | note in her voice, s ndication of a desperate storm. One| “No'm," wailed Freddie, with a sob, Here, in spite of the new, soft, rose gown and the general exhilaratien of the early spring landscape before her, she gettled inte the gravity that had marked her for its own all day, “When you feel blue, put cn your pretiiest gown,” her mother was wont lifted” about “her, h dear me,” she fretted at last, hy can't 1 stop thinking about it any more? But I told him I was on the committes for the serority dance, and then 1 sent the Invitation by Freddie so he’'d be sure to get it. I don't know why he ignored it s To ee him there with Evelyn Thayer, too, and have him ask for only one | Thank goodness 1 refused it, tear was smoved before its "I just took it now, before 1 came mate eoul Louise sat upright | here.” § \\l\ll a j i “Oh, Freddie, you little lamb, just “I'm ashamed of you," she raged to | stop crving at once, pet. Auntie isn't hersel 't a the world had | angry, dear, so don't cry,” and she gathered the little figure into her '_o. “He said he'd be right ove,,~ whis- pered Freddie loudly, when his voice returned, “Who, dear?” “Mister Stevens,” answered Freddie, vhat I topk the note to.” And he glid out of the protecting arms as a sound of footsteps on the veranda again announced a visitor. His aunt turned hastily to see John Stevens, hat in hand, begide them. “I thought I would answer your note advised herself, But this good advice |in person,” he smiled, as Freddia had something so unlike the desired | peered anviously out from beneath the effect that the second tear appeared ! wide hat to see if all was weil befora the “bracing-up” was complete, | “Freddie told me he had just deliv- Here, fortunately, u quick patter of ered i,” sald Aunt Loulse brightly, feet on the sidewalk broke the after- | “and there was so good a reason for noon guiet and a elick at the gate an- | his forgetting it, last week, that I nounced her nephew Kreddie, before | know you will not mind not receiving luttered up the cosey | it in time' ' this inter- | “Freddie,” sad Mr. gone to piec phointment.” ‘Hut it seem Ixm.m:e you've had a so unlike him spect, “You couldn’t >c that he was not a genteleman.” t you've been insulted and igno: ed and you have a right to feel angry she stormed again, “He always has been well-bred be- fore, and those honest eyes,—yes, it is returned the other for o ice, “Now brace up and forget it.” she corner, Louise welcomed Stevens careless- ruption with relief, Iy, “do they have good ice cream at “How d'vou do, dear,” she ealled out | the drug store on the nevt corner? pleasantly, “Come right over here in |l saw Roberts going in as I day? You look as sober as a judge. laughed. | Come over here and sit down. Now 1 do mind,” he said finally, “because | tell me all about it.” I couldn’t understand what I had done & | But Freddie only looked so forlorn |to be ignored by such a lovely that Aunt Louise’s heart was full of | “After all, vou had a pleasa pity. i though,” said Laouis | “Well, what is the matter?” persisted Thuyer is a very charming g | she, “jt isn't like my boy to look so— ! John Stevens smiled tenderly as he | | sort of sorry heard the little note of wistfulness m“ He lifted grave, steady eves to hers. “If’s my Good Deed Week at Sunday hool.” he said solemnly, “I have to do one every day to someone, and they don’t always like it mothered her desire to ed proverly puz s a nice idea,” she said how ou go about it?” the seat “I have to do something to lift bur- ' Freddie the voice, “She is ' he asented, that he is , Phil Stevens, rried in June.” 1id Louise gayly, “now I un- completely,” And the clouds | ht and mind as he took beside the hammock which had rejected.—Boston Post. “and I am happy engaged to my and they are to 1augh | derstand faded out of politel may see who has a United States note | n his pocket to consult.—Waterbury |} OTHER VIEW POINTS § American. i i e, | The New Haven spoke of James M. Sulll = | You may not know it, but in the mer New Haven !naval_war manceuvers now taking |ford Couranet scoffs at this and claims place on Long lsland Sound the Con- 'him as a graduate of the Courant | | necticut shore towns are now heing 'school of diplomacy. Bverybody | hombarded by a hostile fleet. Call oui |knows that the greater part of hi | the Fapt Guar ew Haven Union. |formative period was spent in Water- — | bury journalism, Rockville claims | big piece of him. He p: s now f.»r} Mr. and Mrs. Waiter Green of New |big piece York, will paddle their own canoe ' New Yorker. In fact Jim, who ance 7,000 miles through inland waters to had hardly a place to lay his head, at the Gulf of Mexico. Mrs. Green will |times, now gilds the fame of half a| fly a suffrage pennani en route. The dozen ci s by simply having shaken cauple will paddle yp the Hudson riy- the dust of them off his departing er to the Hrie capal and through the shces—Waterbury American. | great lakes—Meriden Journal. ranii | When this is over, it might perhaps much like putting quinine pow- it dissolves, but iness der in the lemonad flesh of horror and indignation by the | |crimes and abuses they expose. New Haven does get!—Waterbury Republican, Glastonbury, on the Connecticut [river, will have a Glastonbury day, ,\V«dnemld.\'. October 1st—a regular home-coming .day. If all the people ! |large its corporate boundaries to hold { world around; { which —Ansonia - Sentinel. We have not been favored, as has our esteemed Ansonia contemporary, from whose editorial columns we quote the above, with “Kind Words for Gunshanan.” However, for Mr. Gunshanan th® Union has always en- tertained the kindlest opinion. He | undoubtedly made an enthusiastic and energetic tuberculosis cemmissioner in ‘DISCOURAGED ‘Mrs. Hamilton Tells How She Finally Found Health in Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- ings when I would Y| stoop over, it hurt me to walk any dis- tance and I felt blue and diseouraged. 1 began taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and am now in good heal If it had not been for that medicine I would have been in m ave along time ago.”’ —Mrs. ARTIE MILTON, R.F.D, No. 6. Warren, Ind. Another Case. Esmond, R.L—*“I write to tell you how much good yeur medicine has done me and to let other women know that there is help for them. I suffered with bearing down pains, headache, was ir- regular and feit blue and depressed ell the timme. I teok Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and eommenced to gain in a short time and 1 am a well wo- man today, I amonmy feet from early morning until late at night running a Lonrding houss and do all my own werk. I ha; that muny suffering women will y Tt makes i '—Mrs, ANNA words to that effect? What minilters‘ who have known of Glastonbury, since its first survey in 1638, and when it was incorporated in 1692, and all the |’ varied scenes and incidents since in | history we are strongly of the opinion that Glastonbury would have to en- all the home comers. Glastonbury is | famous as the home of Williams shav- ing soap, which is known the whole and incidentally Glas- tonbury is filled with ancient iore and romangs, that makes all the old-fash- ioned Tales of what took place a few re ago seem like mere idle talk,— Middletown Penny Press. That Gunshapan. “Kind Words for (junshanan” is the | heading of a booklet received at this | office, containing press comment upon the action of Gov. Baldwin in failing to reappoint John F. Gunshapan to the State Tuberculosis commission, upon he had served with what ap- | peared to be commendable fidelity and efficiency. The reason why the gover- nor did not reappoint him remains a political mystery, and the booklet may help to put some keen-scented news- | paper man on the trail to ferret it ouc state, sed if and we would have been, baldwin had seen his clear to reappoint him to this which he > held so lo"% and so i .* however, is far from sayving blame Goy. Baidwin for not I'rankly, Mr. Gunshanan, in | post well, nacular of the street, has “no { coming.” There is far less “po- 1 myster about Mr. Gunshan- | an's decapitation than our Ansonia the price of the medicine is added to 15t Zoes working aw the drink—Bristol Press. y tasks and it j§ po | i wouldn't give many minutes consid- | Some say money is tight. But there lon. 1o the sevelNGEA thas A 1 is no evidence of this in Sunday holi- b werw-in Jragus With ibg day traffic. Automobiles humming, | Undertakers slane Addams wes les sputtering, trolleys crowd- : 10 lady AEY with govermment > resorts thronged, restaurants | nVestis: Samiord Bulle to their utmaost capacity, When actually “tight” the zrcal| Rev. Mr. Potaet has pronounced his e s e e xiint ey e ore doins | Views an the diaphonous skirt and the 4, Kneata Beantingd morals of the women of Cennecticut b Ll e i ; | particularly those whom he has seen nce his arrival in New Haven. Of | Ome of the signatyres on the bills | course the whole country has had the | same trouhles aver the fashions of the season as New Haven has, and for maiter the fashions are not much dif- of our curreney will continue to be that of a negra, although the administra- tion is democratic. The office of reg- {ister of the treasury has heen in the |ferent than they have been for three or hands of a4 negro ever since the days |four summers, only a litile more wen- of Blanche Bruce and perhaps | erally followed. But it would have been longer. President Wilsen has just [a wonder to Connecticyt if Rev. Mr. named Adam E Patterson of Okla- | Poteat left without leaving some such homa to that office, He succeeds | memento, Who was aid that he C, Napier of Tennessce, wha would he a better pla to send a good hand, as any one ' yeung man to than Yale university, or m' lnslsl Up@n cznune FIORLICK'S GENUINE Aveoid Imitations—Take Ko Substitute Rich milk, malied grain, in powder form, More healthful than tea or coffee. Forinfants, invalidsand growing children. Agrees with the weakest digestion. Pure nyrition,upbuilding the wholebody. Keep it on your sideboard at home. Invigoraics nursing mothers and the aged. 4 quick lunch prepared in a minute, Special Sale of Pictures and Art Goods Beginning Thursday, August 14th, and centinuing 30 days, our fine stock of Pictures, Mirrors and Art Goods will be marked at 25% below regular prices. The same discount will be allowed on Piciure Framing during sale. Full line of Mouldings te select frem. FRAMED PICTURES At reductien of ART GOODS fse. MIRRORS foe 30 daps S frem August 14th PICTURE FRAMING E. H. Mathews Art Shop | pye-ruiie 'PONEMAH MILLS dormerty B Artistic Picture Framing, Regiiding, Pictures 60-64 BROADWAY, NORWICH, CONN. friends profess. If they are really in doubt on this score, their friend, Judge Studley, can tell them a few things, and John Gunshanan himself if he wants to. can let them into this dark and mysterious secret. Of coyrse, it is hard fer some '0 reconcile George Shandler forgiven ' with John Gunshanan and Willard Fisher punished, hut we guppose that it is easier for the governor to forgive the foe than it is for him to forgive | the revolution in the supposedly friend- | The governor is human, like the rest of us, and Jehn Gunshanan not only knows it better than any of —New Haven Union. GRACE THE FACE WHEN YOUR EYES trouble you or you are in need of glasses, don't overlook the fact that| we have been established for years and have made a reputation by givin quality and seryice that are unexcelied, Hyes examined with modern sclentific instruments and all defects of visien ! corrected, Lenses matched frem broken parts, Repalring of all kinds done neatly and quickly, If you have | had trouble with your siasses call and ' see us, All examinations free, Satls- faction guaranteed in every case, The Piaut-Cadden Co. Optical Department 144 . 146 Main Street Mill Ends SALESROOM OPEN 8 a. m, te 12 m. 1p.m.te Sp.m. | Daily except Saturdays Taftville, Cenn, Takiville Take or Willmantic cars The Vaughn Foundry Co. Sensational Vit-'r»b aqq by Ay)‘g. 9‘* “A GAMBLER'S HONOR,"—8uperb Biograph Wastern Drama “A PAIR OF FOILS,"—Pesriess Edison Production 2 “THE ONLY WAY, '—-Vmprlnlu Socisty Dnm ELKB PICNIC PICT! T THE HALFBREED'S MERCY amont Comed: MINSTREL SHOW Gardner’s Lake, Friday, August 15, 1913, at 7.30 p. m. Admission 10c. Public invited. Nos. 11 to 25 Ferry St. MILL, CASTINGS & Spacialty. Orders Recelve Promul Altention Akttt bt A A New York to Bermuda Overhauling and | Repair Work —OF ALL KINDS ON— “UTOMOBILES, CARRIAGES: WA NS, TRUCKS and CARTS. five to nineteen day tours, all expenses from $27.50 up JOHAN A. DUNN, Agent 50 Main Street ;l;\e, Garvagh Taft PALMIST AND CLAIRVOYANT Truthful in her predictions, reliabls in her advice, no matter what troubls you may have with yourself or cthers. Come and will guide you. 204 FRANKLIN STREET Up one flight, over Avery's stors. Mechanical repairs, oainting, teim ming, upholstering and woed work wiacksmithing :n all its branch Scott & Clark Corp. 507 10515 North Main SL AGRICULTURAL LIME. We have Jusi pi.t & carioay into our storehouse and can supply your de- mands for this sure crop producer. lae experis of the oountry sy the ground limestone is better than the burnt lime nd this is w.at we have. Noid by tar NEWMARKET HOTEL, 715 Boswell Ave. First-elass Wines, Liguors and Cigars. | bag, ton or carload. Meals and Weich Rarebit served to i PECK, WWILLIAMS & CO. order. John Tuckfe. Prop, Tel 42-5) feblsd — 50 GIRLS CAN HAVE STEADY WORK AND GOOD PAY Spooling, Doubling, Winding. Will teach you and pay while you learn. Apply at once to THE BRAINERD & ARMSTRONG CO. Unicn Street, New London, Conn. The Porteous & Mitchell Co. Today We Gommence A Clearance Sale of Summer Dress Goods and Silks It includes Light Weight Silks of all kinds, Silk and Cot- ton Fabrics, Voiles, Mohairs, Black and White Serges, Etc. These are broken lines in incomplete color as- sortments, but all are perfect goods and splendid values. It is 2 most unusual opportunity to pick up the material for a suit, a dress, a waist, a bathing suit or for children’s wear—all at a very small cost. Note These fl Olfermg PLAIN AND FANCY VOILES 27-inch Washable Voile, silk !trlpe. in white, lkv lilae and navy, reg- ular price 25c—reduced to. 27-inch White Washable Voile, with eolored silk stripe, in sky, pink and lilac, regular price 39e—reduced to.. 40-ineh Washable Voile, excellent quality and five desirable = color regular price 38e—reduced to... 44.inch Light Weight, All Weel Volile, in black, white und tan colol’. regular price $1.00—reduced to 17¢ 3lc 33c 75¢ NATURAL COLOR PONGEE SILKS 24-ineh Silk and Linen Pengee for dresses or coats, launders buu(l- 29C fully, regular price 39c—reduced to ..... A 27-ineh All Silk Pengee, good dependable uulllty, !'e‘uh.!' price "fl—bsc reduced te -85¢ lz.ipcb Crepe Weave Pongee, light welght, cool and lewlcubll reg- ular price $1.00—reduced to SILKS OF ALL KINDS st drelul'“l‘d Zlc %33 M gae 45¢ white with eolored stripes, regular pries “e—- 69C tor shades 25 and 27-inch Silk Tassah, mostly light walsts, regular price 28e—reduced to 24-inch Feulard $ilk, satin finigh, In dots and figured designs, black and old rose, reguiar price 49c—reduced t0 ,..iorreris white dots, with 86-inch Feulard Bilks, in black and navy price $1.00—reduced to ‘86-inch Corded Shirting Silks, regular price G9c— reduced to . 82-inch §ilk Bhirting, reduced to ... S 8 e aYE R T e 86-inch Black Silk Paplin, ul finish, regulap nri«- 41.00— VIR " o wie 0 g9 MOHAIR BRILLIANTINE FOR BATHING SUITS Excelignt values in Mehair Brilliantine for bathing lu|(l, In black and eelors, alse Hairline 8erges, At 48c—40 and dd-ineh, black and eolprs, fram 8o At 67¢—44 and Hf-inch, black and eelers, frem, §de ¢ At 89c—Reversible silk finish in black, frem 1, 0 ‘ 199—Reversible ik anisn in black, from §1.25 m 1,28—56-inch Fancy Mehair Buiting, from $1.50