Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 17, 1914, Page 4

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nud Goudies 118 YEARS OLD Subscription price 12c a week; 50c a tonth; $6.00 a ye Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn. as second-class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Business Office 480 Bulletin Editorial Rooms 85-3 Bulletin Job Office 35-2 Willimantic Offics, Room 2 Murray Building. Telephone =~ Norwich, Tuesday, Feb. 17, 1914, D —— The Circulation of The Bulletin The Bulletin has the largest circulation of any paper in East- ern Connecticut and from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses ia Norwich, ai i read by ninety- three per cect. of the peeple. In Windham it js delivered to over 900 houses, in Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100 and in ali of these places it is consid- ered the local daily. Eastern Connecticat has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty-five postoffice districts, ard sixty rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town and on all of the R. F. D, routes in Eas Connecticut. CIRCULATION BVErAgO.attenrenn, .. 4,412 -+ 5,920 1901 1205, average..... February 14. % % MUNICIPAL FINANCES, There is no city which cannot profit | from the municipal financing of others but h regret that h examples of the manner in wh affairs are administered are constant- 1y appearing. The manr citles rush headlons into debt witho: any provision for meeting t tions when they become due tice w bould be thought by every commun ample of such finan by Jersey City wh = bond issue of floated mains. paid in mill for t new Since nte water their face value business on ot ve been pa st feature the date for the x nds and no provision made for meeting the payment thereo The deBt still hangs over the city with the large yearly interest The wisdom of establishing a sinking fund for the meeting of those bonds when they fall due should have be foreseen: It is just such methods a this which ;calls for the Introduction of business and efficiency into muni- cipal government. Such are not the methods which are pursued © ess houses. To operate ness along such lines would | There are many sues which have been floated and maintained under sim circumstances as that at Jersey < but each and every one should awaken | a city to importance of proper and businesslike financing. ing well for it the firs but PRESENT DAY THEATRICALS. Tt is a matter of frequent comment that there bhas been a decline in the- atricals in the so-called night es and expressions of urn why been Te that an is anl and shows mmed up in the m’u ed picture houses providing entertainment for twenty this Tt he price, States t and cents on people at very day with suffici ha on the r decidedly f companies moving plet a widespread terest asionally | big attra but it | auite evident that those from whom | nall amount of patronage Is looked | to make the legitimate dramas go e mot received their 'fill of the Until they have and there is genuine and widespread yearning the star plays the old time the- al days are not likely to return, they do. number of picture houses the owners thereof are ca tering to the demands of the people. It is what the great majority are after and as long as it is, the necessity of supplying it is simply taking care of business. The moving pictures wield a strong influence and can be made of important educational if they | are maintained at the proper standard, 1t will be onl gh decay and in- idicious use that their popularity will re houses to make app o people. 1 is oc d in the fons over 'he large value SAFETY, OR THE RULES, "hen so much is left to good judg- | t in the matter of navigation, it ather difficult to understand the | tion whereby it was possible for captain of the ill-fated Monroe | to have intimated that it was his ac- tion in observing the law which caused the lors of forty-one lives, or that| those lives would have been saved if he had aisobeyed the law. If such a knowledge of the situation was in the possession fonroe's cap 't the tain in time to have made such a cal ilation before the accident, no chance for the making of such a statement cught to have existed, The disobe dience of the rules on the side of safe ty is too seldom recorded, Rather is it that too little consideration of the rules and regulations is the great cause of disasters on and wen Such disasiers as the collision of tha & land | werd) v | sh Nantucket and Monroe filustrate the Importance of not only one but of all navigators carrying cut the Tequire- ments of the law, and the exercise of the best judgment when occasion Tequires. Caution was required by the rules in that very situation, but, according to Captain Johnson it was the lack of caution and the observance of the rules which prevailed. Such Instances indicate that there Is too great a disposition to take chances in directing steamboats in the fog and feel justified if everything comes out alright. It is therefore a peculiar plight when the master of a ship sends his vessel into danger bechuse it is the rule knowing full well that by do- ing otherwise he could escape. THE CAMINETTI ACTION. Just how much embarrassment or trouble may be caused the administra- tion by the statements of Commission~ er General of Immigration Caminetti concerning Asiatics, after Secretary of State Bryan had requested that such questions be not raised while import- ant negotiations looking towards an adjustment of the Japanese matters were underway will depend upon the notice which is given to it. When Commissioner Caminett! de- nounced the Japanese laborer and re- ferred m as a menace to the entire country he did so doubtiess in Te- sponse to the attitude which is main- ed in California and with consid- tion for the state’s situation rather of the country and the re- of the cabinet member who has been highly commended It is true that Mr. ivocated the exclusion of As whether they are Hindus Japanese, but at this time it was, opinion of the sedretary of D to frritate unneces- e spot. through a son of Commis- sioner Caminetti and the influence the mm er was able to use that two er of the cabinet were unfavorable light just iing of the administra- His action now in the face of warning another and leading r of the cabinet is n the way of smooth oper- governmental departments. Tn e existing circumstances his s headed not only against ary an, but against the pres- can hardly be expected to tai e th ques but by the president. mi all the mem n membe an ob a ourse nd te, thationy CANADIAN PARCEL POST. compliment to the manner in el post has been inaus- extended in this country da moved by the impres: de upon the dominion s and puts into oper- For many years the such an addition to its postal as been advocated, but it was demonstrated ie and poss oper recognition across has not only been ir efforts but it has our experiences and has em in motion upon the it must port- is that rates are some- of weight are ditional charge fern T isre are taken on ad; is a which determined v nt pon ed withor ry at the time mportant ion with ice at the present been put into opera- has been made and i ual operations and test be best conditions of the co xpect the country but - belief that it will pro; successful there as it > the the inter- t was i adian in connect the can nt olume Sf here change EDITORIAL NOTES. ent events the ground- ade a timely home run. now for the high is that it is too cold to T hog certainly = The only price of ice harvest New sho still getting not all the re- had her kissing her. ho: A woman has Probably s to o onion sandwiches. o it 1s time days. short all th former ma plans for big business in and jumping ropes have aside for and s bee reformers who belf n the word n putting the The only inference from the ac ondition the York state treasure that are much worse even than been painted. have The man on the col limelight of public seru pended is always record er says: ny can be de- upon to find the candidate who pointing with pride to Lou age of sumer cuse to na berry raisers fear a short- ates and boxes, but the con- prepared for most ex keep the prices up, even with a record crop. The growing po: the comi home ought to Dbe a strong Charles 1 position in New ibilit! rule indy s through | n Ireland | ement to | a Shy York. The issn let by 1ce of a ninety page book- the government to clear up m stand over the income tax need the income tax- of assistance. in what payers are The Wisconsin candidate for gov. ernor who plans to make his campaizgn by walking through the state ought to know that it a hare and tor politics. re ing that the revenue from tho ! tex will fall short about eighty there 1s & chance those zolng be disappolnted over ekipped will get & chance yet. miltion that who are being Those three alded 1l home D ter Har, ber ing workers Ohio wome from ho were thei and milkman, can feeling ™ morn bet- of nde 2 tme early REPE e like placing | time | serious | The his | to desert his uneasy | is naver safe to plan on | burning | Gertie Kyler—"Mamma, Archie ‘Westover . wants to take my photo- graph with his new camera. May he?” Mrs. Kyler—“But, Gertie, you have- n’t got on your PMKL\EHL dress.” Mrs. Artigue—"My\ dear child do you think it is conventional to have your photograph taken with a young man whose existence you were not aware of till he got off the boat yesterday?” Gertie—"Why, Archie is one the young men to whom I am almost en- waged. It seems as if we had known each other for years.” Maddern—"What is out of place in letting the young people take photo- graphe of themselves and of Lone- some Hollow if they want to” Mrs. Artigue—“Oh, nothing; only I wouldn't allow any one to take my | photograph.’ Mrs., Kyler— attempted to. | perfectly safe.’ Mrs. Artigue—“I knew a yourg girl about Gertie's age—only ~she was pretty—who had her vhologranh taken one time by an almost strange young man. She forgot all about the inci- dent till one day, months after, she fainted dead away in a grocery, for she saw her likeness on a soap wrap- per. The young man had sold her photograph to an’ advertising concern e Mrs. Kyler—“Do you mean to insin- | uate that Archie “would do such a thing with Gertie's photograph?” Maddern—+You never can teil.” Mrs, Artigue—“Nobody could such thing. The other girl quite handsome.” “Where you have week- been a My dear, no one has Indeed, 1 think you are do was Mrs. Kyler ended before there must have low aggregation.” Mrs. Artigue— Maddern, listen to the way Mrs. Kyler speaks to a, woman who has summered at Carls- | bud, Brighton, Lucerne and Ostend— | not to mention Lonesome Hollow.” Maddern—“No, 1 wouldt mention it if T were vou.” Mrs. Kyler—“You'll have a nice time explaining why_you came to a place like Lonesome Hollow after go- ing to all those fashionable piaces. | It's an awful dro Mrs. Artigue—*“Madam, 1 came here | to see the gorgeous sunsets. A china painter friend of mind told me that | I'd never see nature’s masterpiece, painted with her own pigments, till 1 witnessed the evening sun dipping into vonder forest.” Maddern—"Gorgeous? it slid down behind the smokehouse on‘the next farm yesterday it was a sight for the gods—If the gods weren't particular, Mrs. Artigue—*It reminds me of the Pyrenees. | Blooey! As | M yler—“When T think of that remark about Archie selling Gertie's Photograph for a soap wrapper I can scarcely control my indignation. I suppose you can see deceit and ne- forious designs in that handsome young college man, Alfred, who waits on_table. Mrs. counsel,” Maddern—"The only against Alfred is that quartet that makes | than it w Mrs. Kyler—You probably know music when you hear it. Alfred sings an excelleni tenor and those other boys have wonderful voices.” Artigue—"I headed the peti- hat requested the proprietor of Lonsome Hollow to,have them sing in e woods and warned him that if y didn't we'd all leave.” faddern—My name was second on list. If I hear them again, I'll use physical force.. They have -voices like four diffgrent kinds of auto horns.” | " Mrs. Kyler—People such as | are a menace to good music. Those boys sang” with tenderness and feel- ing_that lifted one above this sphere.” Maddern—*“Especially Alfred, b Artigue—“I keep my own thing I have he got up the life here wWorse vou the he , handsome s. Artigue—“Please don't recall thelr awfui efforts, Mr. Maddern.” Mrs. Kyler—“Pach! You don't know from the rattie of break- hes. Those college boys fur- wonderful example of vocal Mrs. You have Alfred is re: Artigue—“My dear woman, no reason to believe that v a_college boy. Maddern—*T don’t doubt that he is. s more interested in what he eats han in the money he gets. And he doesn’t break enough dishes to qual- { ity as a ter.” Don't you remember l OTHER VIEW POINTS I Rl et A O ford's municipal expenditures are thousands of dollars higher than need to be. Every citizen and taxpayer knows it and knows that if he conducted his business as the city busines conducted he would *a bankrupt in five years, if he could stand the pressure that long.—Hart- ford Post, Our courts nstantly r | appointment the govern the Loca of common pleas were sed in dignity when the of their judges was given r of the state. This took judges immediately out of poi 1 courts would fncrease in stat ft judges were appeinted by the governor and thus themselves ban- ished from politics.—New Haven Jour- nal-Courier, The fllumination of houss in some of the larger cities has solved one of the most vexing problems of municipl life. Hunting for a house by its number in the night season ordi- narily tends to curdle the milk of human kindness to the point of coag- ulation, Under the new system human- ity is plucked from the pit of seeth- ing wrath and helpless but explos: desperailon and given an even chance life, liberty and the pursult of happiness.—Ansonia Sentinel, umbers | i ‘Why not issue a map of the plan defining the position of state roads: #howing where they run: how many have been constructed; what it is pro- posed to do during the next road build- Ing season and what was accomplish- | ed last year? Connecticut is in size but a pinch of snuff compared to the rest of the Union. It ought mot | be a difficult matter to give the {1lic 2 map of the plan. | pub- | then the work intelligently ism wh can be a and much ussed more hostile { is the re- | e the public i iddletown Sun. | _ Bristol hereby serves notice on Con- | gressman Lonergan, Mahan, Senator Landers, the New Br tain Herald and all other canal root ers, schemers and advocates that she politely, firmly, frrevocably refuses to occupy ‘the position of head of navi- gation, or to In any way give ald comfort or assistance 1o the little ditch, Furthermore she wishes 1t known that her opinion of the officlals numed is not strengthened by their altempts to punch a hole in the U treasury in order that some of the golden flood may be diverted into Connectlent via & ibway or some other devise intended to make them * with a cerfain class of vote project simply politi intanded float entitled to Bristol Press 1o i tien. nat serious considera, T R It this 1a done | | | moves is as bad as a fire,’ | flat e that when the old professor's week the old profesor in his power at last, he brought nothing from the kitchen that wasn't cold or burned to & cinder. Oh, T remember it well.” ¢ Mrs. Kyler—TI11 tell you people something. Alfred fell »-violently in love with my Gertle the moment he saw her. Then he came to me and confided that he is the youngest son of old Col. Bondstock. He came out here to prove to his father that he can live a week without overdrawing his allowance. If he succeeded in doing s0 he will be made cashier of one of his father's banks.” Mrs. Artigue—"Really? mantic: Maddern—*“Hum! I think I'll try to help the young fellow along.” Mrs. Kyler—"Gertie 1s inclined to care very much for him. Stilk so many young men are captivated by mere beauty. We shall see how things turn out. Already Wwe are arrang- ing a party at our town house when we return.” 1 might have invited you two it you hadn't been so— Alfred (enters with lemonade pit- cher and glasses)— How do, every- body?” Mrs, Artigue—“Oh, Alfred, we wers just talking about you. Won't you get the Dboys together and sing for us? You have such a grand voic Maddern—"Belleve me, Al _you young fellows have any professional guartet I ever heard beaten a mile."— Chicago News. How ro- WATCH YOUR STEP! BY THE CONDUCTOR Flats. “Did you ever move? Well, then, you don’t need me to tell you. ‘Twe they say, but me an’' Lizzle ain't been married long, so we ain’t got much junk yet. I'Ve had to give up all idea o ‘livin’ in a house set on th, ground, an’ gone to live like all th' other muts in a house. I been used to goin' up- stairs to bed an’ goin' downstairs to eat an' goin’ down cellar to get a bucket o’ coal. It's gonna go hard with me to cut all that out. “Wouldn't this be a healthy old | world if everybody had been brought | o stairs, | nats. don't | | ingy ! | sibilities. | [ | | | | Congressman | up in a city flat house, up four flights lookin’ out in a brick area- Way with a fire escape to exercise on? “You don't read no poetry 'bout All th' dooks is full o’ songs| like ‘Over th' Garden Wall, an’ ‘Yo Can't Play in My Back Yard and lidin’ Down th'Cellar Door. “Us kids was raised in houses that had fences 'round ’em and gates you could swing on, an’ pumps in th’ back yard, an’ & rain barrel at th’ corner o’ th’ house. We had a back alley an’ a front post. You had to clean your feet off on th’ door scraper, an' they was a smokehouse back o' th’ kitchen where my granddad used to cure hams. “If you'd go to talkin' 'bout them things nowadays, th’ poor simps that live in these here flat houses think you gone nukey. they wasn't any kind o' place to live in 'cept better flat houses than their'n that has elevators in 'em. Say, them people don’t know what life. is. Th’ high cost o' livin' 'd get a belt in th' neck if ail th' people livin' up- stairs in flat houses’d move out to where they had a back yard an’ & picket fence. “Look whers you're steppin’t there EVERY DAY REFLECTONS Possibilities. he great saints of religlon tell us an important thing, when they they say that we are intended for eternal and the divine, and can never find rest in anything that is lower than these. It is not given to all to be impelled by such an ideal. are content or force themselves to be content with a smaller realization. They take what they find possibie, without testing further spiritual pos They are not to be con- demned—perhaps not even pitled, if they are receiving the best of which they are capable. But those who have the eternal un- rest look on them with wonder if not with scorn; sometimes the scorn may almost pass into envy. It is better to be glad and satisfied with a little, than it is to be always longing for more? Is it best to take and enj the small thing, or to pass life hunger- Most of ‘em act like | Many | AT 1 e e i BRI ,,1 i You may suffer from some form of indigestion without realizing what the real trouble is, and if you have dull, aching pains in the head, a gnawing or ‘burning sensation in the region of the stomach ‘o heart, accompanted by an indisposition for exertion, physical or mental, & troublesome dry cough, and an impaired of which are symptoms of indigestion—you will find Pprompt relief in a single dose of Phos- pho-Pepsin, the new remedy that posi- tively makes a sick stomach well and makes it possible for you to eat just what you like without unpleasant re- sults following each mouthful. Phospho-Pepsin {s entirely unlike anything you have ever before used. It is a well balanced prescrip- tion, sclentifically correct, and em- braces all the elements necessary to produce a healthy, active normal con- dition of the stomach and digestive tract. It contains no oplates or habit forming drugs and is as harmiess as 1t s unfailing inits action. It is read- 1ly assimilated by the gastric juices, and by them is quickly carried to the digestive tract and so stimulates the organs of digestion that they can per- form their functions properly and na- turally. Phospho-Pepsin is the one remedy that quickly relieves the uncomfort- able feeling and corrects all stomach disorders because it neutralizes excess acld, absorbs the gas and stops fer- mentation. It is not temporary In its effect, but banishes this condliion for all time and does not make the diges- tive tract dependent upon artificial aids. Phospho-Pepsin is especially in- valuable in routing billousness, ‘sour stomach, palpitation of the heart, beiching of gas, water brash, and oth- er symptoms of a deranged stomach. Phospho-Pepsin ‘is in handy tablet form, pleasant to take and convenient to carry. It is for sale by all good druggists, such as Thee Lee & Osgood Co. We have some of the greatest | shown in this vicinity. TERMS, STRICTLY CASH. M. J. CUMMINGS Our Annual Clearance Sale . WILL OPEN FEBRUARY 19th, 1914 Bargains in fine footwear ever| Prices Greatly Reduced on Boots, Shoes, Rubbers 52 Central Avenue, Norwich Telephone connected Acne (pimples and blackheads) s developed by the accumulation of | waste matter and unhealthy tissue in | the pores, a perfect home for germs. The skin quickly becomes irritated, in_ fected and inflamed. Skin eruptions are relieved by SUL- PHOLAC. It contains sulphur. Many | previous attempts have been made to | incorporate it in & cream. Here it is Sulpho\ac Aids in restoring health to the skm combined with a highly prized germi- cide that reaches and destroys the cause of the trouble—the germ Preseribed by phy ns. Ask your druggists for SULPHOLAC. Invest §0c, in a good-sized jar, with full di- rections, and see how it clears your skin. & C New Inc., York. 149-161 West 36th Street, SAVE YOUR HAIR! MAKE SOFT, LUSTROUS AND BEAUTIFUL. T Try as you will, after an application of Danderine, you cannot find a single trace of dandruft or falling hair and your scalp will not itch, but what will Please you most, will be after a few weeks' use when you see new hair, fine and downy at first—yes—but reai- Iy new hair—growing all over the scalp. A little Danderine doubles the beauty of your hair. immediately No HAIR STOPS FALLING, DANDRUFF DISAPPEARS--25 GENT DANDERINE difference how dull, scraggy ,just moisten a Danderine and caretully through your hair, strand at a time. cloth with draw it taking one small t The effect is imme- diate and amazing—your hair will be | ught, fufry | and wavy, and have an | appearance of abundance; an incom- | parable lustre, softness and luxu | ance, the beauty and shimmer of true | hatr’ nealth. | Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's | Danderine from any drug store or toilet counter, and prove that your | bair s as pretty ana that it has been neglected or injured by careless treatment—that's all. THE DEL - HOFF European Plan Rates 75 cents per day and up HAYES BROS, Telephone 1227. 26-28 Broadway ing for the greater? Certainly best, If the greater is wholly | eternally impossible; it is best: lesser contentment makes us happy and useful, while the larger longing | renders us’ miserable and morbid and | tnactive. | No man can judge ff another: it is diffcult even to judg® for ourselves. But the ideal that can stimulate an: beautify need be no vain dream; It may become life’s noblest r . Yet, noble as they may be, there is aiway a danger in ideals, especially In rela- tion to our human companionships. It is always likely that the r fall short of the dream, the attain- ment fall short of the imagining, it 1s and if the y will | that cannot be exceiied. Phone your order. Prompt service. LOUIS H. ERUNELLE 10 Carter Ave. (East Side) The Greatest Charity. Politics Is the g world. York. Well, it tude of sins A Real With strong, fla to be had at 49 ce gether too many precoci girls.—New York Pr Remedy. -backed hairb yus >r~ma\\< ¥ Janada cl value of yields tivation in the past 000,000 nd as from under CLEVELAND'S %" Baking Powder o You have noticed that some biscuit and cake are light, sweet and wholesome, while others are sour, heavy, or bitter and unpala same flour, eggs makes the arc vsed ; table. The butter and what difference? IT IS ALL IN THE BAKING POWDER Cleveland’s Baking Powder is the great help of modern times to perfect cake and biscuit making, and many a young howse- kéeper has found the beginning of her success in cookery in its employment. ! For free sample write Hudson | faded, brittle and | soft as any— | PIES, CAKE AND BR.EAD‘ THE GREATEST COMEDY ANIMAL ACT IN V. HELLOIT’S COMEDY BEARS 5 LIVE BEARS BRING THE CHILDREN MARION KAY DAN COLLINS Comedienne “The Humorist THE Two Real Feature . . .- COUNTRY STORE MAT. & NIGHT, THURSDAY / - With Paul Brush ONE DAY ONLY—Mat. and Eve. AUDITORIUM WEDNESDAY, FEB. i8th RENFAX MUSICAL MOTION PICTURES PICTURES BOTH SEEN AND HEARD NEW INVENTION NO ADVANCE IN PRICES MATINEE DAILY Fanny Hatfield Co. I JiEpravaTic “THE FIFTH COMMANDMENT”—4 People Brennan & Carroll ' DIVORCE I UNICE HOWH Comedy, Singing Powerful Drama Singing and Talking Reels Comedienne Colonial Theatre MATINEE S5c CHARLES McNULTY, M EVENINGS 10¢ 2000 FEET—“AT CROSS PURPOSES,” IN 2 REELS—2000 FEET A Superb George Kleine Domestic Comedy “THE SENTIMENTAL SISTER,” Biograph With Hlanche Sweet “NEARLY MARRIED,” Essanay -With Ruth Stonehouse “INSECTS THAT SING,” ... Selence-Edutation “NICE AND ITS ENVIRONS, FRANCE, . _Superb Scenic WED. and THURS—“TEN NIGHTS IN_A BARROOM, in Five Reels Better than a Thousand Temperan ce Lectures The Free, llustrated |)).\"J NJLLINSS LECTURE FRIDAY Y0 ¥0Z: FEB. 20th FIRST TIME HERE Northern Africa The Success of the Century NN WILLIAM A. BRADY Presents i LOUISA M. ALCOTT'S Frank Edward Johnson IN THE TOWN HALL, World Famous Classic TUESDAY EVENING, FEB. LITTLE S e, T WOMEN Original New York Co. That Played One Solid Year at the Play House, New York H at. 25, 50, 75, Prices 2070 2375073 51, 3150 Seats on Sale Wednesday at 10 a. m. Mail Orders Attended To in HEATRE 1 | | | | | 17¢h, | BUY THE Big Ben Alarm Clock at Wm. Friswells, 25-27 Franklin Street The Porteous & Mitchell Co. Winter Underwear Men’s, Women’s and Children’s We are closing out all surplus stocks of Winter Underwear —Men’s, Women’s and Children’s. With several months of cold weather before us it is a good time to replenish your underwear supply at substantial savings, These sample items: MEN’'S WINTER WEIGHT UNDERWEAR ~»““11\1"‘_\”1”[])~‘:‘15\A\" Men’s Natural Wool and aw- 3 : = e i g Shirts and 'Dra“ ers, weight Ribbed Shirts good, warm Underwear in a full line of sizes, |regular 75¢ quality at. . and Drawers, regular 39C 50c value at..... Men’s Medium W¢éight Cotton Union Suits, in a full of <]" —these are our regular $1.00 grade— line Clearance MEN'S WOOL SWEATERS Men’ fine quality |Sweaters, with Ruff |neck and Byron collar, |in Oxford, gray, navy and maroon, our regular 79|55.50 and $6.00 Sweat- ——lersat ) § [ S Men’s Coat Sweaters, splendid quality Sweat- er in a visor style a , colors maroon and egular N.‘tvs WOMEN’S 'AND CHILDREN'S UNDERWEAR Infants’ Wool Vests in a Women’s Fleecy-lined full line value i\"cs|> and Pants, regu- to learance 29 | lar and extra sizes, all at C price of sizes, Women’s Extra Size, medium weight Vests and Pants, 50c value at Women's Winter weight Ribbed Vests and Pants, regular and extra sizes, regular 50c QU at . o ookt Women’s heavy weight Union Suits, in regular and extra sizes, $1.00 Ve gl o NN Women’s Silk and Wool Union Suits, regular and extra sizes, $2.00 and $2.25 value at Infants’ Wool Vests, ex- fine -quality, value — Clearance 39c 70¢ p u 1 Children’s Fleecy-lined Ribbed Vests and Pants, both re 'ul.lr and extra 25¢ Fleecy- Draw- 25 C >;mitury and sizes at Shirts Women’s medium weight, Ribbed Under- ear, long sleeve vests and ankle pants, 50¢ 39 [ THE PORTEOUS & MITCHELL O, F. C. ATCHISON, M. D, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Room 1, Second Floor, Shannon Bidg Night ‘Dhome 1083 DR, ¥. W. HOLMS, Dentist ?[D::wl'sa!mn Annex, anm A |

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