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WHERITED VIGOR NECESSARY |about tw IN POULTRY. Breed For Vitality PROF, H. R. LEWIS, producers, and no one oald result I better birds and profit than mating and C b ers for vitality if for teristic. A good hen Jay in ome year five times weight in eggs, which means about three days, and to ac- ene egg every lish this-she must consume ‘Signs of Lack of Vitality. The following are some of the New, Jersey Agrl Experiment Station. Constitutional vigor means health, to strong, of which ac per pair of birds yearly, which made more no other charac- is enty gosling a year. The breeders are apt to be those be- tween three and four years old, and it is a good plan to mate them sometimes before the laying season begins, us- ually one gander te four geese. It will @ ‘g00Se a month to her eggs, and ot takes a Eood twemty- four hours for the bird to get out of the ‘shell satisfactorily, My friend also found a very profltable source of in- come from his fine se feathers, claiming they yielded him about two | Woman Out of Jail On Bonds—Mrs. Bone by Fall—Thirteenth Company Sixth In Target Practice. § Elizabeth R. Woodworth will club at her home on Hawkins street March 3. Frank C. Morris of Bridgeport was a. visitor with friends in Danielson Wed- esday. 7 Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bigelow of ‘Worcester were visitors with velatives in Danielson Wednesday. Miss Mary Whalen, who has been ill for several weeks, remained in an un- changed condition at her home on Cot_ tage street Wednesday. Seventy-Six Prisoners in Jail. There were 76 prisoners at the coun- ty jail in Brocklyn Wednesday at noon. Large congregations attended the Ash Wednesday services at St. James’ church, morning and evening. very substantial addition ;rom derived from each bird. MULE VERSUS HORSE POWER. A Long Lived An Economical east. N GEORGE H. DACY. to the to and Mules are more Intelligent, efficient and generally more satisfactory for farm work than horses and for their weight are superior in drafting ability. They wax fat on grain and roughage that most horses would reject, consum- ing about four-fifths as much food as con- Game With P. H. 5. Tonight—Chaplin | hi.ee the members of the Nadel Arbeit tributery causes to lack of vitality: Increased preductiveness without prop- er care, too clese imbreeding without regard for vigor, the use of pullets in- stead of mature hens for breeding, heavy feeding or improper methods of hatching and fajlure to use due care in selection of breeding stock which possess superior forcing foodstuffs, excessive crowding or congesting of breeding stock( lack of exercise for Preeding or laying stock, careless and similariy sized horse: Contrary to are tractabie, docile and easily ban- mules will ordinarily wear out the av- erage team of farm horses. under treatment that would worry and fret a horse almost to death. At pres- ent they excel horses in value on all the leading markets, popular opinion, the majority of mules dled In the field and stable, while ford heavy work and continuous service Mules are particularly adapted te a change of drivers, as they flourish and a pair of _ Ten Below Zero. Thermometers at various points in Killingly read 10 degrees below zero just before sunrise Wednesday morn- ing. q 1 Game Tonight. % The opening game . of the special series between K, H. S. and P. H. S. basketball teams will be played in Put_ nam this (Thursday) evening, not Friday, as stated in Wednesday's physical vigor. The action and movement of birds probably indicate best their physical eomdition, as the physically weak are genrally mope inactive, dull and around rather than range to any ex- tent in search of foed or scraich for young, well broken 1,200 pound mules standing sixteen hands high wili com- mand from $450 to $700 and higher, and their immunity to foot and leg ills, which so vitally affect the efficency of many horses, is another strong point in favor of this race of hybrids. The | Bulletin. Moral Wave Sweeps Over Borough. There has been no session of the town. court for more than a week, but this is not recorded in a spirit of re- gret. Pupils in the fourth grade of the arains which are fed in litter for the mule is the offspring of the mating of a jack and a mare, and is incapable of School street school and their teacher, Miss Elizabeth R. Woodworth, were express purpose of keeping the birds busy. Weak birds are usually the t on the perch, going on early at t and coming off late in the morn- ing_and in extreme cases spending ® which is off the perch first in the of the day on the perch. most »ird morning and the last one on at night is in every case the one to kee) breeding and laying, and the lou frequent crowing of the male and the eackling of the female are indications of physical and superiority, ere are certain body signs indicat- ing lack of vigor, They .are a long, shing neck; thin, long beak; narrew head: a long slender body lacking th: long legs and thighs which give the bird a stilted appearance,, knock- Rknees and sunken or depressed ey *The strong bird at any age shouid hav ® bright, prominent eye; well develop- ed body, which is deep and wide, glos- §v, neat plumage, bright comb and Wraitles, erect carriage and should be ®etive and sprightly in all ias move- ments. and THE SUCCULENT GOOSE, " ®ne Way to Enrich Pecr Pastures B, KNEELAND, A friend of mine was always com- glnl‘&nlnt about his poer pasture land, for réproducing himself. Mule Raising Profitable The owner of a good jack and sev- eral typy draft mares can make an at- tractive income from mule raising, as weanling mules bring abeut $756 per head, yearlings $125 to $150 apiece, while two-year-olds sell for $175 to $200 and mature mules bring upward of, $225. Thus the mule breeder is quickly able to realize on’ his stock raising operations. Ordinarily a desir- able jack costs from $300 to $1,000. For general roustabout farm work the mule is excellent and after a wearisome day’s work, when free of his harness, first takes a good roll, drinks a little water, then eats a little feed, and in this way he pases the night. The next morning he is ready for another ten or twelve or even fif- teen hours of hard work. Mules are also their own doctors and will not gorge themselves with food nor flood themselves with water, as will horses, for you never hear of a mule being foundered simply because he knows when he has had enough. The term “stubborn as a mule” would be more appropriate i1f it ran “sensible as a maule.” Again, the mule has the ability to endure heat and are far less liable horse to injury from sunstroke. more_ compact I 2s he never seemed inciined to remedy matters in the ordinary way I wsked one day why he did not put 8 flock of geese on it and make good Wacney, not only by having fine birds #a sell for market, but aelso to enrich his sofl, as stocking land with geese is excellent way to enrich land quick- . He was a little doubtful at first, Put it turned ont admirabiy, and now s fine Toulouse geese are sought for some of the fancy butchers in high priced markets, and. in thres years from the time he bought his flock his pesture was as as any on the ‘His growing pride and interest in his flock well repaid him for extra labor, and some of the facts he learned in regard to them were that geese are less liable to disease than any other a point to be appre- ciated In cultivating the hoed crops where the rows are narow. Lastly, the mule makes a very serviceable road animal and will go along with a right good will for hours at a stretch, SPRING GARDEN PLANNING. Order Seeds Early And Test Them. E. K. PARKINSON. February is garden planning month, for there are the seeds to be ordered, Dlans to be drawn, manure to be pur- chased and“a plowman to be engaged. To derive the greatest pleasure from a garden it should be a permanent ona and the spot most carefu! selected. A level piece or one sloping gen domestic fowl and are longer lived. toward the south to be preferred, Some breeds lay forty eggs during the wseason, and one curions phase of this bird is that the ganders are as good, and sometimes better, mothers than the geese, being watchful and careful with the goslings. Two days after Rhatching the young ones should be given plenty of green and tender food, and if possible a windbreak of ever- greens should be set out on the north side, and a low hedge of barberry might be planted around the eage of the entire garden, adding great beauty and providing bright antumn coloring. Fer illustration we will lay out a gar- ®such as gress or lettuce, and, although den for a family of six and divide in at first they eat little, especially in jummer, gradually they become ready for all you can give them. It is about two months and a half before they are ready for market, and, besides t he four parts so that any or all could be used. Mark out, then, a square 200 feet on each side, with & winabank of trees or wall or board fence on the north side and a low hedge of bar- ‘berry on the other three sides. Divide grit and water which they necessary should always have within easy reach, this square into four equal parts b & good fattening food is cornmeal mix- ed with water until it is crumbly and 1 per cent meat scraps added to it Keeping the Goslings Dry. Never let these young goslings get wet, and they should not be allowed 4o attempt swimming until the breasts are well feathered out. February is the month geese begin laying and the larger breeds are not apt to lay until a full year old, but then will average s tmparted to hole flock by the Mhfls’:fl:‘-flsfld/ or Phgs. 25¢, $1.00; 25 Ib. 8 Get Prattes 160 Page For sale by J. P. Holloway, James C. W. Hill & Son. walks ten feet wide and where they €ross in the center build a little arbor | on which to grow vines. Each of the squaes will be ninety-five feet. On the east, west and north sides set out fruit trees next to the hedge—apples and cherries twenty-five feet apart, Dears and peaches about twenty feet and plum about fifteen feet apart. Laying Out the Garden. On the plan mark the plots 1, 2, 3, 4. Use the northwest plot, No. 1, for per- manent crops, such as grapes, small fruits, rhubarb, asparagus, strawber- ries and herbs, leaving a five foot strip on the two sides bordering the walk | for perennials—peonies, i j sweet William, etc. the north side, rape vines, twenty-four blackberry plants, thirty raspberry, eight currants, a short double row of six gooseberries ach, a row of rhubarb, five rows of | asparaguscon taining about 120 plants set three feet apart in the row and five rows of strawberries set two feet apart. Let the vegetable rows run north and south and border the plots on the walk sides with flowers. The cost for vege- table seeds will be about $13. Buy of & reliable firm and never experiment with cheap seeds unless willing to test them first, which may be done by fill- ing shallow pans with damp sand to get rid of pimples PIMPLI«B and blackheads di unsightly complexions sores, etc. Stops ment. These soothing, healing prep- [tching instantis. H arations do-their work easily, quiekefy o e and at little cost, when even the most 533”75 aresid by _expensive cosmetics and complicated :"’n"ql:{{‘s."i;fi..: beauty treatments '’ fail. iz Bulthmore, Md, tlean, clear, and velvety, and hair i health and beauty are promoted by the 3 regular use of Resinol Soap and an oc- . casional application of ResinolQint- ol way sappear, become For 18 years Resinol bas been a doctor's prescription and houschold remedy for eczema, ring- worm, rashes and other skin eruptions, dandruff, burns, out for a sleigh ride Wednesday after- noon. Lecture for Night School. Principal Albert A. Ames is to give another lecture illustrated with belle- opticon views at the session of the night school Friday evening. Mrs. P. B. Sibley, who has been vis_ iting in Northampton, Mass., returned here Wednesday to attend the funeral services for Mrs. Ella B, Pilliard of Broad street. Chaplin Woman Released From dJail. Mrs. Edward Davis of Chaplin, who has been held at Brooklyn jail to an- swer to a charge at the March term of the superior court, has been releas- ed under bonds of $500. Mowry Ross of Woodstock was & visitor with friends in Dantelson Wed- nesday. . A number of Danielson peopls went to Putnam Wednesday afternoon to view the damage done by the fires in the Bradley building on Front street. FUNERALS. James M. Hopkin: Funeral services for James Milton Hopkins, who died in Foster last Fri- day, were conducted at the home of Miss Bva S. Hopkins in that town ‘Wednesday at noon. Burial was in Foster. A. F. Wood of Danielson was the funeral director. Mrs. Ella B. Pilliard. At the home of her daughter, Mrs. Harold F. Glendining, Broad street, ‘Wednesday afternoon at_4 o'clock, a prayer service for Mrs, Ella Baldwin Pilliard was conducted by Rev. James H. George, Jr. pastor of St. Alban's church. The body is to be taKen this morning to New Britain, the native town of the deceased, for burial in A. M. Tillinghast Fractures Hip | PUTNAM Second Fire in Bradley Building Early Wednesday Morning Does Heavy Damage—J, F. Trinder to Address Business Men's Association—Short Calendar Cases for Friday. Rev. G. G, Scrivener, district su- perintendent, is to be at the Methodist Fairview cemetery. Teachers’ Meeting Friday. Supervisor A. S. Ames has announe- ed a grade teachers meeting to be held here Friday afternoon. The matters to be discussed are: requirements of the state board of education, registers, plans, programs, etc. work in lower grades, preparation of papers, monthly plan reports, limits of work accomp- lished, supervisor's book, requisition of supplies, examinations, penmanship. Fell, Fracturing Bone In Hip. Mrs. Ardelia M. Tillinghast fractur- ed a bone in her right hip Tuesday ev. ening when she fell while coming down stairs at her home on Reynolds street. Mrs. Tillinghast, who is 82 believed she had reached the floor level when she was really two steps away from it and the next step downward that she took caused her to fall. ‘The noise caused by the fall was heard by an occupant of the adjoining apartment, so aid came quickly to the injured woman. Wednesday afternoon it was said by Mrs. Tillinghast’s brother, Ev- erett O. Wood, that she was resting comfortably and that thers was no ap- prehension but that she would ulti- mately recover from the injury. Coasters Take Big Risks. The fatal coasting accident in Greenville Tuesday has directed atten- tion t6 the’ chances of grievous injury that some of the children in Danielson | are taking during these days in get- ting pleasures with their sleds. In this town the danger is not from being run over by electric cars, for the hills on which the sliding is done are on streets away from the tracks, but the little people are taking dangerous risks in sliding across busy streets at points where they are liable to be run over by an automobile or other vehicle. Thirteenth Company Holds Sixth Place | In a recent item in The Bulletin the percentage attained by the Thirteenth company, C. A. C., in target practice with big disappearing guns at Bat- tery Dutton at Fort Wright last sum- | mer should have been given as 17,845, | holding sixth place among all the | planting in the seeds and keeping them moist and covered with a cloth for a few days when the seeds worth while i will start to grow. With suc a gar- den, well prepared by deep plowing, thorough harrowing and pulverizing until the soll is fine and mellow ard liberally manuring it, ore may derive not only great pleasurs, but a nice profit as well. THE FINEST LAXATIVE iN THIRTY CENTURIES. Kellogg’s Tasteless Castor Oil is Truly _ Tasteless—Not Flavored or Disguised. For 3,000 vears castor oil has been the world’s best laxative, but until now an offensive, sickening taste has limited its use. For. 3,000 years chemists have tried to_remove the taste. Kellogg's Tasteless Castor Oil s just what the ‘mame means—a pure, Clear, refined oil without any taste. It js the newest product of Spencer Kellogg_& Sons of Buffalo, large re- finers of vegetable oils. Anybody can disguise the taste of castor oil by mixing it with alcohol, wintergreen, peppermint or other fla- vors, out It remained for the Kal- loggs to keep the oil pure and make it tasteless. Kellogg's Teeceless Cas- | tor Oil works even betier than the old, evil dose, withoui pain or griping. Children take it easily. S Sold now in all all drug storés. 25c and 50c. Ask for Kellogg's Tasteless and lgok for the trade. mark on the label-%a green castor leaf, bearing the Kellogg signature. Made only Spencer Kellogg & Sons, Inc., Buffale, “¥or sale by The Lee & Osgood /c,. church in West Thompson Saturday afternoon. County Commissioner Frank O, Da- vis of Pomfret is one of those who is giving some of his time to feed the birds during this period of heavy snow. H. H. Davenport and Antonio Vito have gone to Buffalo and points west to purchase horses for use during the spring and summer season, Mrs, Mary Farrell of Rockville is visiting Mr. and Mrs. John Gahan. Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Cornell, of Brooklyn, N. Y., are visiting with Mr. and Mrs. Morse of King street. ; W. C. T. U. Meeting. The W. C. T. U. is to Hold .2 meet- ing with Mrs. Mary Gardner Friday afternoon. Killingly High school's basketball team will be in Putnam this (Thurs- day) evening for the first game of the special serles with the local school team, v Lost Ring Returned. The Elks’ diamond ring which John B. Byrne lost while at the Bradley block fire Tuesday afternoon, was rer turned to him Wednesday. It was picked out of the snow in the gutter by Frank Baker, one of the members of the fire department. Had Narrow Escape. Ralph Thurston, manager of the plant of the Putnam Light and Power company, had a narrow escape from serious injury while at the first fire in the Bradley building. The head flew off a fireman's axe, crashed through a skylight, and dropped close to Mr. Thurston’s h Mail Not Claimed. Letters addressed as follows are un- claimed at the Putnam postoffice this week: Miss Minnie Mead, Mrs Mary Morell, Miss Julla Alston, Mary Hu- dolo, C. V. Paine, A. S. Hilton, guton J. Woodward, The Molosoine 0, FUNERAL, William A. Butts. Funeral services for William A. Butts, who died at his home on Elm street Monday, were held Wednesday, Rev. George D. Stanley of the Meth- odist church officlating. The body was placed In the tomb at Grove street cemetery. L, E. Smith was the fun- eral director. OBITUARY. Mrs. George Mills. Nellie, wife of George Mills, died at their home on Eden street Tuesday. Mrs, Mills was born in New York. She was a resident of Thompson for a long time, but came here with her husband a few years ago to make her home. - ‘School Grant $3,307.50, Based on the last enumeration of children attending school in the town of Putnam, this tewn will receive dur- ing the coming month the sum of $3,307.50, the amount due Putnam from the state school funds. The amount allowed by the state for each pupil is $2.50. Lose Through Fire, More than a score of clerks employ- ed in the Woolworth store are tem- porarily thrown out of employment by the fires that wrecked.the store. Tt is understood that the company will re- sume business at the earliest possible time. TALK ON TRADE SCHOOLS. To Be Given by J. F. Trinder, Before Business Men’s Association. J. F. Trinder, representing the state board of education and an expert on the management of trade schools such as is soon to be established in Put- nam, will give an illustrated talk on trade school methods before the mem- Ders of the Putnam Business Men's association In the assembly hall of the high_school bullding this (Thursday) evening. It is expected that the re- cently appointed membership commit- tee of the organization will report the addition of more than 80 new names for the rolls, SHORT CALENDAR ASSIGNMENTS Announced for Session of Superiar Court at Putnam Friday. The following is the docket of the short calendar session of the superior court here tomorrew (Friday) at 1 o'clock, Judge Edwin B. Gager pre- siding: Short Calendar—Charles H. Jensen vs. Henry L. Spalding: Earl N. Gal- lup vs. Nathaniel G, Willlams; Dick- ran Boyagin vs. J. B. Tatem & Son; Edith G. Phoenix vs. Emil Bonat et al.; Eliza Murray vs. Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen: Alice B. Edwards et al. Appeal from Probate; Claude R. Moran vs. Lillie May Moran, Uncontesfed Divorces—Nevada H. Van Valkenbuagh vs. Philip Van Val- kenburgh: Agnes Houle vs. Victor Houle. Trial List to Court—Anna Rosen- zweig vs. Town of Canterbury: Tillie Rosenzweig vs. Town of Canterbury; Charles W. Green vs. Amy E. Green. By order of Judge Gager, civil bus- iness will be taken up the first week, criminal business the second week. A jury of 24 will be drawn Friday, February 27th, at 1 p. m. BRADLEY BUILDING FIRE. Breaks Out Again at 3 O'Clock Wed- nesday Morning — Building and Stocks Badly Damaged. ‘With the temperature 10 degrees be- | low zero at 3 o'clock Wednesday morn- ing the members of the Putnam fire department svere called out for the second time within about twelve houws to fight a second stubborn fire in the Bradley building, in Front street. As was the case awhile after the fire of the afternoon of the previous v started, it proved mighty difficult Wwerk for the firemen to get at the blaze, which was eating its way around between floors and ceilings and par- titions and for a time the shivering groups of spectators, braving the Arc- tic weather to see the fire, felt that blains, Colds on the Chest (it prevents Pneumonia). Noth- jng like MUSTEROLE for croupy e Tso dad special and 50c jars, and a large hospital size for $2.50. Accept no substitute. If your druggist cannot supply you, send 25¢ or 50c to the MUSTEROLE Company, Cleveland, Ohio, and we mail you a jar, puua L (60) S. J. Buchanan, swellville, Ohio, says: “We bave been using Muster- ole for two or three years past and find it very good. It is always in our medicine cupboard.” the building was doomed and that other !Lruc‘\lru in the vicinity must Unlike the afternoon fire when all that the crowds could see was great clouds of smoke, this one shot out tongues of flame that threatened the Bugbee store building and persistently gained in advantage in spite of every effort to overcome it. It was again conquered after an all night fight, however and the adjoining buildings were not damaged, although some wa- ter did get into the Bugbee store on the east side. This second “fire completed the ruin of the stocks in the Woolworth store and in the cigar store and pool and billiard rooms of Patrick Brady. It further badly damaged the building, making a total additional loss esti mated at from $10,000 to $15,000. Be- tween the fire of Tuesday and that of Wednesday morning the books from the law offices of Attorney Ernest C. Morse had been removed, so he suf- fered no additional loss. Others who had offices on the- second floor also removed some of their property Tue: day evening, so the loss to them was got made much greater by the second re. Two firemen, Henry Burdick and Henry Myers, who had been left on watch duty for the night discovered the second fire just before 3 o’clock. It was working along between the celling and the floor over the Wool- ‘worth store. An alarm was pulled in from Box 41, for it was soon evident that the services of the department ‘would be needed, and the tired firemen, up until late Tuesday morning at the firemen’'s ball and worked out by fight- ing the first fire in the building, came out on the jump for another long fight in the bitter cold. They found hy- drants that had been working during the afternoon frozen so that the mechanism could not pe turned and a few valuable minutes were lost while the hydrants were being thawed out Several streams of water were soon pouring into the building and a line of hose, the house line,Was run out through the south balcony exit of the Bradley theatre, which backs right up the damaged structure, and used with no effect. Rows of brick were pulled out from under the eaves of the burn- ing building on the west side and tons of ‘water poured through these aper- tures. The firemen worked coated with ice and suffering from frostbitten fingers and ears, but they fought with right good will, and kept at it until ENAMELED quart—S8ale Price. COFFEE_ POTS, pints—Sale Price. Price. o SERVING TRAYS—Sale Pri MUFFIN TINS, hold six— Sale Price. FOLDI { nickel-plated—Sale Price EGG BEATERS—Sale Price GOLD DISH CLOTHS Sale Price..... FELS NAPTHA SOAP— Sale Price 2 cakes for..... IVORY SOAP, small— Sale Price 2 for.. SCOURING BAR— 8Sale Price 2 for........ X_RAY STOVE POLISH— Sale Price......eee.. WASH GOODS 15¢ DUCKLING FLEECE, styles and colorings— Sale Price........ they won out. During Wednesday an effort was be- ing made to clean up the interior of the offices and stores. The building is now bgdly gutted. The exterior at the north side, is coated with ice and the whole structure is badly wreck- ed, although this is not apparent to an’ observer who gets only dn ex- terior view from the street side, PATRON GETS A YEAR. Former Putnam Resident Sentenced for Perjury. New York, Feb. 25.—For committing perjury in a fraudulent suit to obtain 75,000 damages from the Mason-Sea- man Transportation company, Nellie Grant Guertin, a Boston detective was today sentenced to eight months' im- prisonment in the county penitentiary, J. Addison Patron, a railroad detective, convicted with/ her on the same charge, received a sentence of a year in_the same institution. In the suit against the Mason-Sea- man Transportation company an_at- tempt was made to prove that Miss Guertin recelved severe injurles on May 9, 1911, while riding in one of the defendant's taxicabs. The defendant proved that the injuries she complain- ed of were counterfeited and the crim- inal indictments followed. MRS, PANKHURST 4 APPEALS TO KING Asks His Majesty to Receive Deputa- tion of Suffragéttes, London, Feb. 25—Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, the suffragette leader, has written to the king asking him to re- ceive a deputation from the Women's Social and Political union, to lay be- fore him their claim for the parlia- mentary vote and their complaint of “the medieval and barbarous methods of torture whereby Your Majesty's ministers are seeking to repress the women's Tevolt against their depriva- tion of citizens' rights.” Mrs, Pankhurst, in her letter, argues that it is futile to seek interviews with the ministers because they are the men whom the union accuses of betraying the women's cause and tor- turing its champions and also because the women refuse to recognize the au- thority of men who are elected or ap- pointed to office without their consent. She concludes: “Because women are without the vote there are in our midst today sweated workers, white slaves, outraged children and innocent mothers and their babes stricken with horrible disease. It is for the sake and in the name of these unhappy members of our sex that we ask Your Majesty for an audience, and we are confident that it will be granted to us.” & Rebels Bar a Japanese Count. Nogales, Ariz.,, Feb. 25.—Count Ito, a Japanese official, .was refused entry into Mexican territory controlled by constitutionalists last Monday. accord- ing to information that became public today. Ito crossed the line to visit the Amecrican consul at Nogales, Sonora, and was turned back by constitution- alist immigration officers, in accord- FATERTS Protect your ideas. Handsome 6€0-page Guide Book Free. HARRY E. BACK, Attorney-at-Law. Windham County Savings Bank Bidg. Danielson, Cona. ectiTuThS designs—Sale Price intended for sale at 15c a —27 inches wide, Sale Price. and 32 inch widths, fast c &l Sale Price..... [ enameled, MEAT BOILERS—Sale Price.- BREAD TOASTERS—Sale Price-8c 12%c and 15c GINGHAMS, —Sale Price............. P 15¢ RIPPLETTE in short lensths —a crepe width in staple de- gns—requires no ironing— Have You 2 Dime? BRING IT TO THE BOSTON STORE © AND INVEST IT Receive for the dime about fifteen cents worth of mer- chandise and in addition one penny in change—a cash return of ten percent of your investment. The amount is small but the percentage of saving is there. Come this week while the sale is going on. KITCHENWARE DEP'T. SAUCEPANS, 5 9c 3 ENAMELED SGAP DISHES— Bale Prico...iee.eeeesscsenes El;AMELED PIE PLATES— % ce.. 90 "% So TOILET PAPER HOLDERS— Sale Price....ccocemectammecen 9o ceen 90 s 90 cces 90 ~ees 0 « 9% all 9 12%c OUTING FLANNEL, heavy welght in solid colors and fancy BEAUTY CREPE—a new arrival yard fast colors, beautiful printed designs— 27 olors 8o NOTIONS AND SMALL WARES' HAT PINS, values up to 15 Sale Price. ASTRA COLLAR SUPPORTERS —Sale Pric 9 CHIFFON COLLAR FOUNDA- TIONS, sizes 12% to 16— Sale Price........cccvennenee. 90 EVER-READY BUTTON HOLES, 21 inches—Sale Price 9¢ MERCERJZED CORSET LACES, flat, 8 yard—Sale Pric SUPERFINE TWILLED TAPE, 10 yard—Sale Price.......... 24 YARD TWILLED TAPE, half inch—Sale Price. 9 ELASTIC LISLE WEBBING, black and white, % to 1 inch— Sale Price.... i FEATHERSTITCHED FINISH- ING BRAID in a variety of de- signs, 6 yards—Sale Price, ALPACA DRESS BRAID in black and colors, 5 yard pieces —Sale Price ceceeeeeiioioea. PIN CUBES, assorted heads, 200 to the cube—Sale Price....... 9o COMMON PINS, 400 pins to the paper, medium size— Sale Price 4 papers for..... 9 AMERICAN PIN CO’S “SILK PINS"—Sale Price....cee.oe BLACK SEWING SILK—"a” 100 yard—Sale Price.. o HOOKS AND EYES in black and silver, sizes 1 to Sale Price 8 cards for......... TUBULAR SHOE' LACES, lengths—Sale Price... NICKELED COAT HANGERS, folding—Sale Price........... PEARL AND FANCY BUT- TONS, values up to 15¢, 14 to 36 line—Sale Price....ccueue.e Qc all Sc 9c Sc 3(6‘ ance with orders relating to the entry | companies would not be permitted for of Asiatics SENATORS CRITICISE PARCEL POST CHANGE Contend New Rates Are Unfair to Places Having Short Hauls. ‘Washington, Feb. 25.—Critic Postmaster General Burleson's in abolishing the fifty mile parcel post | sms of zones and extending the service's low rates to territory within the 150 mile zones blocked the passage of the pos office appropriation bill in the ser today. Senators Bryan and Bristow attack, senators one by one, places having the short haul “The American people have b te led the the Jatter questioning o as to wi they regarded the rates as fair to the | ther enefited from the postmaster general's change,” replied Senator Vardaman, “and any | way, no system is perfect.” colleague, and declared the Senator Williams disagreed with his | express a minute to discriminate against the short haul as the government is doing. “On, the express companies soaked them on both the short and long hauls when it had a chance” interrupted Senator Lane. Senator Bristow was speaking when the bill was laid aside for the day. Relief of Widowed Mothers. Chicago, Feb. 25.—The relief of wid- owed mothers by the state has been declared perfectly feasible and a proper function of _government by charity workers of Kansas City, Louls, Milwaukee and Madison, Wi This statement was made today = by the committee of the New York state commission on the rellef of mothers which is conducting an investigation of such charities in this part of the coun- | try. w Low Valuation of Human Life was scored yesterday by Rev. C. L Scoho- field, of New York, at the international prophetic Bible conference in Chica- go. Protect . Horicks;e presents Broadhurst’s Masterpiece big New York success at the Orpheum Theatre, Daflicl_son