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country affords. 2 \'fi‘; It is through the coming of at Nerwien, | vssqmns AN 1908, average..eessoeesas 5,920 . 8,979 Have The Bulletin Follow You Readers of The Bulletin leaving the city for ‘vaeation trips can have it follow them daily and thus keep in touch with home affairs. Order through The Bulletin business office. July 18, THE WESTPORT COLLISION. 1t would seem that Westport has ‘Been the scene of enough fataiities and ns, following railroad tron. 1o clearly set forth the value of safety firet, the observance of signals =‘-— speed ocentrol, especlally @ large number of lives are con- but the lessons thus furnish- od | to prevemt the deplorable accident. trolley cer ‘Whatever may have been the real vention of others Air in ‘the same manner. ed whether it the signalling equip- judgment of the motor- was surely wrong in is in operation. ice which is not to be couptenanced under any conditions ¥ or regular pa- nsported, but un- ' when several ‘children were be. i the greatest caution was , Whether the schedule was being maintained or net. It would been far better to have delaved party a few minutes than to have any chances which might have danger and result, as that did, the loss of four lives and injuries to & large number. Some important Temain ‘to be determined con- cerning the actual circumstances sur- ‘rounding the collision, but it must be that that section of the state mot to do fer the safe opera- of trains and trolieys. HIGH BEEF, Nothing excites much more discus- sion these days than the high price of beef, and its tendency to hold its Jofty position, and for that reason there is bound to be deep interest in the repert w’ieh will come from the eommission /rom the agricultural wnt new investigating the eon- It should be abie to present the facts in an unbiased manner and furnish an impetus for the relief of the situation. Bven with prices where they are and the statements which are being made from time to time by the packers, it i8 {mpossible to clear the mind of the comsuming public as to the actual causes for existing eonditions. For in- stanee the devlaratian has recently ‘een made by J. M. Cudahy that “as A matter of fact, packers are now losing money on beef, and this In spite ©of the fact that they are getting rec- ord prices for hides and all other by- praduets. It is when meat products are low that the packers can make the money. The average cost of beef on the hoof is higher now than ever before at this time of the year, and I do not lask for any cheaper meats until the production of meat animals has eaught up with the ineresse in on. “This, 1 believe, will nat many years." though the consumer main- ideas of his own on this sub- Ancreased uction is what has required for a long time and it what has not been obtained. If government Investigation ean im- this upen the country as faet and create a greater interest | eattle raising it will apply & need. yemedy and bring about much re- INCREASED IMMIGRATION. the reports of the immigration it is to be gleaned that this Is mot suffering in the esti- of those in forelgn countries are seeking the opportunity to themselvs The past eleven have esteblished & pew record ntributed abnormally to the of the country’s population it 18 Alaclosed that there were ‘m“ guarter alieng received paLey e to suppose that a ‘?-u been contem- o e kept ng t e et teracy | L ‘with ) tegether by My, Bry; lgrge numbers that the problem of ] “which their coming mts, Jooms up in its real size. Thes are bound to play an important part in the 's future, but it is goin ip be to the greatest Eood through preper distribution. i HABIT WHICH SHOULD STOPPED. This is the season of the vear when | being said aboat keeping the [ ° much i beaches at the seashore resorts in tidy condition, and there is a whole lot which can be said and repeated, whether it does any good o not, for the relief of the conditions which re- sult from thoughtlessness, It should not be forgotten, however,. that what is true of the beaches is also true of every city, and that, like 3 training in individual Interest in the #ppearance of public places should be- =In at home. If those who sre dis- Posed to throw bottles, hoxes, Dape banana skins and other litter In ‘the first place which comes handy in their home city regardiess of cans Which may be placed at convemient points for the reception of such waste, it s but natural that such things should occur at the shore, but those Whe cam- mit such offenses against good appear- ances are those who seldom pass that way, who give little thought to their acts and are neither called upon to clean them up nor permitted to spend Sufficient time where they can recog- nize the contribution which they have made to an eyesore. Clean beaches are greatly to be de- sired, but so are clean streets, parks and public places which at times, ac cording to appearances, are made the convenient depository of almost every conceivable bit of refuse. When the habit can be cultivated of overcomins | such heedless actions at home, then can it be expected that it will be done at the summer resorts. The idea has also been allowed to prevail teo long that anything and everything goes at the resorts, WELFARE AND CHILD LABOR WORK. None perhaps better then those en- gaged in it understands the obstacles which are put in the way of welfare work. Such is true even when it concerns children and the kind of re- sponse which s being made by the south displays the slow manner in which such reforms are adepted. There is cause for satisfaction, how- ver, In the reports which are made by factory Inspectors in that part of the coun when it is decided that despite a number of pros- ecutfons there exists a good spirit of scooperation hetween the mill man- agers and themselves, and that & number are starting or extending wel- fare work. Such is all bound to have its good results in time, though slow progress 1s being made. Public sentiment has not seen the advisability of estab- Iishing as stringent child labor laws in some states as others and for that reason the same reports show a small increase in the number of beys and girls, both white and black, betweea the ages of twelve and sixtsen, in the factories of South Carolina. With such a condition accompanying & de- crease in men and an increase in ne- &roes and women of both races, it is plainly indicated that the opportuni- tles are as great for improved con- ditions as they ever were. - The in- creased interest in welfare work de- serves all the stimulation that it can receive and the increase in the amount of ehild labor particularly under four- teen vears of age, ought to be turned in the other direction. EDITORIAL NOTES. Strikes never were satisfying for @ crowd of baseball fans. Speaking of bosses the New York situation discloses that it isn't so much the question of bosses as it is which boss, It is safe to say that the hamking institution which reaches the century mark s not a follower of wildeat financing schemes, Frost has been reported in merth- ern Vermont, but that is what the New Haven stockholders are getting as a regular thing. The appearance of the army werms in this county leads to the impres: sion that they may be looking fer the nutritieus navy beans. There 1s little hope of any decrease in the canoeing accidents and fatali- ties. A Maine canoe factory is in- creasing its piant and eutput, The man on the corner says: Peo- Ple must be seeking other forms of entertainment when statistics show that lynching bees are deereasing, Seme women who are figuring prem- inently in murder cases seem ta hava ready, e — With an increase of seventeen per cent. in the wheat preduction this year it ia to be hoped thai it isp't uged as fuel rather than submitting to a drop in price, —_— Sympathize with the fellow who his vacation expenses, enly to find aut om his return that the eellar lights had been burning for two weeks. 1t is & fortunate thing for the state secretary that he isn't ecemcern- ed in many ef the automebile aeci- dents about Comneeticyt. Ope hear- ing of the kind just closed is enough. 1t the British Empire ean escape from this Hindu camping on the Can- adian doorstep, by setting it down to & family squabble which will adjust itselt, it will have cause to congpnt- ulate’ itself. 5 Even though the backhone of the Haltlan revolt is broken, the spinal eolumn of the government iteelf is #olng ti reanire some rugged nste- apathic treatment before it gets prop- erly straightened out. Surprise 1s expressed that the sec- retary of state should declare far votes for women when the president has £aid it should be left to the party. oyt it must be remembered that plat- form material is furnished and 15 pul an Yo : “—:h&?“‘l Zot a treasure of a taken the quite necessary precaution | to have a lot of good photographs | economized on his smoking to meet | , Addles mother, cqnsid. tser a very fortunate n he married her Mrs. Be ered Fraank [ n:“ confdentially _tolld pgmr. those wiseacres, knowing b:l:’d. lnhlllu:* \m;(ancy scrubbinz and splck-and-: Clonnness, dolefully shook thelr heads emong themselves. Frank - took his Young bride from her home to an ad- olping town, where he had a 100-acre farm and a remodeled house—the lat- ter having been made over expressly for his wite. The old folks Ived on a farm about one-haif mile away. At first Frank was very pfoud and pleased with his wife's immaculate neatness. When she ‘nsisted on plac- ing a towel over the sofa pillow, and & newspaper under his feet every time he lay down on the couch to rest, he treated it as @ good joke. Net so his wife. Her husband's slack. carel WAyS sorely tried her over-neat soul. She always met his entrance at the door with a brush and dustpan with which she brushed up apy srains of dirt he tracked in. Frapk's lmperturb- able good humor stood the ordeal for a while with no complaints. But be- fore long he began to chafe under the rigid, cast iron rules of his wife' normal fussiness. One night, after an unusually hard v's work, he went into the parior and down, the room being the coolest In the house. He had taken the precaution to remave his boots and change his soiled overalls for a cléan pair before lying down on the couch, He had even remembered to place the FAMOUS' TRIALS TRIAL OF JOHN BOYLE O'REILLY. The name of John Boyie O'Reilly, the sweet singer of Ireland, is familiar from one end of Ameriea to the other, and his poem, “In Bohemia,” is one of the most popular in the"English lang- uage. O'Reilly was so long identified with our country that He seemed like ene of us. He adopted America as his home when the tyranny of the British government drove him from his be- loved countrn John Boyle O'Reilly was one of the most romatic figures of the past cen- tury, He was idolized by his ~own countrymen and admired and respected by the people who adopted him. He ‘was born in Dowth castle in 1844. Early in life he went to live at Preston, Eng- lan¢, where he learned the printer's trade and for diversion took to soldier- ing with the 11th Lanchashire rifles. About ‘this time the famous fenian movement was beginning to develop. These fenians were sowing the seeds of revolutien in the British army, one- third of whem were lrll&\men. O'Reilly thought he could serve kis country best by jeining the British army, and so he went to Ireland and enlisted in the 10th Hussars when he was only 19 years of age. e quickly became a favorite with Dboth .officers and men and began in- teresting his lrish comrades in the fenian movement. generation can /scarcely realise what this movement meant in 1868 when O'Reil was drrested. It shook the British empire.: Fully one-third ef the men In the Bfitish army of 300,000 were in_ sympathy with the fenians. These, of course, were Irishmen which the British government had been steadily enrolling in the service since the famine of 1348, ' ‘The fenian movement itself grew out of the failure of the vyoung Ireland mevement in 1848. The hundreds of thousands of Irishmen in America not only gave the movement moral sup- pert, but substantial support as well. The British government watched this mevement with great anxlety. They decided it was time for them to act. On the 15th of Beptember, 1885, the blow fell. The newspaper, thy Irisir People, which had been for tw: vears the organ of the movement, was ipized by the police and its editors, Luby, O'Leary and O'Donovan Rossa, ‘were arrested. On Wednesday, June 27 on the evi of his 22d birth , O'Rellly’s trial b; coyrtmartial began in the messroom of the 85th regiment at Royal bar- rack: The charge was, “Having at Dublin, in January, 1366, come to a knowledge of an Intended mutiny in| her majesty'’s forces in Ireland, and not giving information of sald intend- ed mutiny to his commanding officer. The prisoner was defended by Mr. O'Loughlin, and_pleaded “not guilty,’ Cabt. Whalen of the I12th degiment opened the case. A number of Irish spies who had joined the fenians testi- fied against O'Reilly and other prison- ers. The trial was a farce. Before- hand every effort had been made to induce O'Reilly to inform against his fellows, and having not done so he re- csived no merey. He was found guilty and on July 9, 1866, a forma) sentence of death was passed upon him. It was anly a formality. The same day it was commuted to life imprisonment, and finally to tweny years' penal servitude. On Monday afternoon, Sept. 3, in the Royal square of the Roval barracks, in the presence of the 5th dragoon gunrds and a number of other regi- ments, O'Reilly had his sentence read to him, was stripped of his military uniform, clothed in the cenvict's dress and escorted to Montjoy prison as con- viet 9843. After a few days O'Rellly was marched through the streets of Dublin, chained. and shipped to England to Pentonville prison, and from thence to Milbank prisen to undergo a term of selitary. confinement, preliminary to the severe physical puniehment or- dained in_the sentence. A r attempting to escape O'Reilly wan R o MIIbARE o Forts | mouth prison and finally te Dartmog This was the worst prison in England, and here O'Reilly ‘was compeiled to wark from morning till night knee deep in water in the drains of the mersh, Fipally he was sent to the penal colony in Australia. where ha became such a favorite with the ards that he was ailowed unusual privileges. He escaped from Australia on the 18th of February, 1§69, en an merican vessel flying the stars and tripes, and engaged in whaling. He landed in Philadelphia on the 23d of November, 1863, and the following day {paks out his first papers of naturaliza- tion. From that on he was an Amer- iean, heart and soul A Useless Procedure, But what geed would it do Congress 0 bring John Lind before it, anvway.? It is pretty generally understood that the man can't talk—Philadeiphia In= quirer. Learning Somsthing Every Day. It the President keegs on hearing from Business men there may be a hape that he will kpow something whoul business after a while—Phila- ‘ENI Pross rig! 12 50, spents, tingm Tanignt et ot 1 and brought ber lips together in a way That ‘hespoke il for the Euddeniy re- comfort after ail. The climax was rveached one day when he came into the house at noon- timie and threw himself down—dirty boots and all—on the living couch, “Frank Sweetser,” sngpped his wife, “you go and take oft your dirty buots." Without a word the man arose from the couch anc staggered to his fest. "Then, for the first time, his wife noted his sick and flushed appearance. Al- though somewhat concerned about his 1ooks, she was more concerned for her precious eouch. Frank picked up tha pillow from the sofa and slowily walk- ed out of doors to the back ide of 1} ho e threw his piliow on the grass where he stretched himself out with a slight groan. “T wonder what ails him,” his wife murmured to herself. “I hope he won't set any grass stains on that sofa pil- low. hien dinner was ready he hardly ate a mouthful, which caused his wife some alarm, although she said nothing. When he came in at night, there was no question but what.he was a really sick man. Neglecting to even wipe his feet, he made for the couch. “Gh, " cried bis wife, “If you don’t feel able to take off your boots, sit down in a chalr ané I will pull them off. Where are you going?’ as he turned to leave the room. “Home to 1 thickly. dirty boots. Trus to his word, he inanaged to reach his old home. Before night he ‘was delirious with fever. At night his wife frightened at what she had driven him to, hurried over to his mother's, who met her at the door with a grave face, and led the way to the room where the sick men was raving. As Addie sat by her husband's bed- side day after day, and listened to his ravings about “Addie’s fussbudgetness,’ she realized for the first time that her extreme orderliness had been al- most a crime in the sense of making her husband’s life unhappy. It was & very severe, though really needful les. son for her. And when Frank opened his eyes one day and spoke weakly to her_ she was all ready for confession. “Oh, Frank.” she cried, “can you for- give me for being such a neat erank? T'm going te let you do as you plase after this.” “My dear” replied her husband with his oldtime imile, “let's both strike a happy medium. And they did.—Boston Post. in Wash Goods, staple and novelty fabrics, in short lengths and full pieces. SPECIAL OFFERINGS in Silks, both black and fancy, in all this season’s newest fabrics. SPECIAL OFFERINGS in Domestics, Cottons, Table Linens, Towels, Toweling, Pillow Cases, Sheets, Bed Speraeds, Efc. SPECIAL OFFERINGS in Dress Goods—Cream Serges, Plain and Hair- line Stripes for skirts and coats, Mohairs, Pop- lins, Etc. SPECIAL OFFERINGS in Men’s Wear—Underwear, Shirts, Hosiery, Night Shirts, Clothing, Etc. SPECIAL OFFERINGS Underwear, Etc. SPECIAL OFFERINGS - SPECIAL OFFERINGS OTHER VIEW POINTS EVERY DAY REFLECTONS Men of the present | —. The' Monay Myth. If there is any one truth among the vital truths of life that hide them- selves as gravitation and eteam and the other natural forces so leng hid themselves, and one truth that needs t0 be brought to light for the help and guidance of men, it is that the ulti- mate tregsure in ‘any man's possession is his personal character, and that the net ‘result of any man's final effect {upen the world is measured solely by the influence of his personality. Beside the net result upon the world {of what & man is, what a man has is {of small importance, The whole gos- pel of the power of wealth and of the ability of a person to push mankind up or down, to save or to ruin, by means of money and the power of monsy, is fallacious. Money can do many things; it has its peculiar dynamic, but in the mak- ing of the world better, in the inerease of conscience power, of ethical energy it counts mot at all. Your first impulse will be to deny this, to declare It a crasy ereed It is natural that you sheuld think that if you had a billion dollars you could do an incaleulable amount of good. But you are mistaken. The sum tatal of your good-doing capacity lies in your naked soul. In fact if you are going into the “uplift” business the nearer you come to having nothing at all the surer is the probability of your success. The hurt of the world cannot be poulticed by morie; The progress ! of mankind cannot be alded by money. Truth cannot be advanced nor hind- cred by money. It moves in the hearts of the peaple, and the enly power that can aid or impede it is man po Your motion that you ‘“could do so much good if only you had meney” is an error. All the good you can in yeu, in your spirit duce seme happines money; vou ibly de lies u eoyld pro- or misery by ®ht relieve comditiens hefe and there; but no real mood was ever done people that they did not do ‘or themselves, and the only way to ‘do good” is to induce the people and to show them the way to do it for themselves, Feudalism, paternalism and the like are as specious in morals as im peli- ties, Democracy i mere terribly true in the moral realm than in the politi- cal. Sales naturally go dewn In ] summer time because cheaper things are used and there are fewer wants to be satisfi But wise storekeepers reglize they can utilige the warm weath- e to bulld business. A customer who has a_small summer need well satisfied is apt to remember it and return later when desires are more im- portant. Up - to - date merchents g0 after business in & definite, af gressive way in the “dull months." Evidence of this progressive spirit will he found in the ad- vertising in today's Bulletin. The men whose names are printed there want business and they intend to make their ad- vertising pay by supplementi; it with good Sen'ltl." e | When you read about charity boards at this sesson of the year, and go around with money in your hand and beg people to work, it causes that feeling so well known to a large per- centage of the thrifty peopl: of the land.—Middletown Press. The government proposes to stop the publication of the board of trade quo- tations on butter and eggs, on the ground that it is a means of boosting prices. It should do o on the better ground that publishing the prices of butter and eggs tends to incite riot.— Waterbury Republican. If there is a director or past offi- cial of the New Haven road who has not been honest in his trust out upon him and -give him no quarter ex cept that which s his by decree of Justice that hews to the line, but let us all reserve our judgments until we have heard from both~ sides—New Haven Times-Leader. There are mighty few towns In the State where the State police could not make as relatively a goed show- ing as they did in Meriden.’ And the curious thing is that these raids do fot necessarilly reflect on local offi- clgls. By virtue of belng strangers the State officials usually have a dis- tinet advantage over the Tesident po- lice when it comes to enforcement of laquor laws, and those laws might easily keep the State men buay every Year. There is plenty for them to do. —Eristol Press. Nature never intended that a bath- ing beach should be paved with banana gkins that have outlived their useful- nese, discarded peanut shells, crusts of bread that proved too @ry for pic- nic consumption, newspapers and plain papers, sardine eans, boxes that will never smille again with the luncheon that js past—and others endless des- criptions of trash. Nature intended that @ bathing beach shouid be just plain sand, with now and then a shell ity of Bowels Very Im- portant to Health at This Time. At mp time of the year should peo- ple be mon careful of the condition of their bowels than in hot weather. Many things may cause constipation in summer, but whatever it may be the trouble should be promptly remedied. A constipated person lays himself or herself open to serious and often fatal diseases. That feeling of congestion. Inssitude or dull headeahe is the first warning of trouble. Don't try to remedy it by the ex- gessive eating of fruit, which usually s @ laxative effect but lacks action in extrejue cuszes. What is needed is a reliable but mild laxative-tonic like Dr. Caldwels Syrup Pepsin. Take & { dose of it at night before retiring—it i pleasant-tasting and free from grip- ing—and by morning your bowels will be emptied and your head clear. You will- feel energetic again. You cannot obiain such results with cathartics, purgatives, salts or pills, as, unlike Dr. Caldweil's Syrup Pepsin, they are without tonic value and en tirely ‘tgo harah. Ambag the thou- s of dependable converts to Syr Dein’ are the tamities of Mr. F. €. Harris, Live Oak, Fla.. who now finds | his stomach better than it has been in mym;mmr.p,bm. in Women’s Wear—Millinery, Waists, Coats, Suits, Wrappers, Petticoats, Corsets, Muslin in Summer Underwear and Hosieiy for Women, Misses, Children and Infants. in Gloves, Handkerchiefs, Ribbons, Laces, Em- broideries, Small Wares, Toilet Articles. e e thrown in for ornament, and a few cobble stomes to make us remember the frailty of human understanding.— New Haven Register. For some time Reilly has been g tomobiles and bination destined te improve both the rural free delivery service and the inter-city mall service. We do not know he has ever receded from his position in this matter or greatly mogd- ified his theiroles, and now that the Connecticut Company has balked upon carrying malils by trelley cars, .it Wwould appear that the time for apply- ing the theory here in Conmecticut ig ripe. Conneetieut has furmished roads. Now let the Government sup- plv the automobiles.—Hartford Times. Hartford has put in practical opera- tion an ordinance which could be ap- plied to Main street in Ansonia with profit to the public. That is the mu- nicipal law that forbids automeobiles being left on any of the main thor- oughfares more than fifteen minutes at one time. Herve in Ansonis with Main street mangled almost beyond recognition one can see often auto- mobjles occupying what little of the street is left for traffic purposes the whole of a morning or afternoon. This is entirely too much of a good thing. The autoists, who do not care to use their machines for half & day, should park them somewhere eise than on Main street and give ordinary traf- fic the right of way. 1f they won't 4o it willinglly they should be made to da s0 by traffic rules.—Aneonia Sentinel. A Mattress on a River's Bed. Willow mats of huge dimensions are used by the United States Government to prevent erosion of the banks and bottom of the Mississippl River. These mats are woven on long se- curely moored transverse to the river with one end close to the shore, and are constructed in lengths of 1,000 feet When finished they float, but in der to make them effective they must be sunk so as to fit the contour ef the river bed and form a protective coat- ing over it. The floating mat is towed by barges into its preper pesition and Congressman advocate of au- 28 & com- Constipation and Heat Often Fatal 83 b e t 'verious digestive troubles after all the doctors hat she knew had failed. A hoitle can be ob- tained of wny drusxiet at ffty centy or the latter size for Results a8 are money be sateguard of B i thodsands. of n the good American families. Families wishing to try a free ple bottia ean obtain it W a De. "'W.I W0U FL U GRARGE (s MAKS Stery of “Her Neighbor Next Deor,” Biagraph, Excrutiating Punny Comedy “BEANS" Produced Spain, Staged ~-xv-oua.:'-“tm-,fi-r' by Essanay Cast WATCH HILL anp BLOCK ISLAND AN AN 585 9:15 1925 1045 L L 1130 1200 Due 105 139! M PRM L *Paily. exoept Sundays. i Block Island, . . Wateh Hill, New London, . Nerwich, . . . Due “*Puadars only. SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS WATCH HILL rE¥URN 25e. e STEAMSHIP'CO. 7 Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays BLOCK ISLAND =" Adsits, T5c; Children, 40c. Beach near landiage warty rates. Wateh Hill at sifice of €. J. ISBISTER, Nerwich, Agest is then ballasted with broken stone |plete an electric current through their llg it is gubmerged. e protection of Slough Landing Neck consists of a stone and willow mat covering the slopping_sides and bottom of the M ippi River for a width of 250 feet and s lensth of 5,000 feet up and down stream. It was built at & total cost of about $175,000 and involves about 26,000 cubic yards of stone and 19,000 cords of willow brush. It was built in full width sec- tions about 1,000 feet long, secured at the upper end and floating until, the weaving was completed. It was bal- lasted and sunk &t an average rate of about 100 feet per day by a force of 200 men cperating a $260,000 plant. —Engineering Record. Free Refrigeration, The Louisville & Interburbam Rail- lies and thus become their own ex- ecution, Pierre Loti on Morocce. Oh, sombre Moghreb, do thou remain, ‘for many a long vear vet, immured, impenetrable to things that are new turn thy back on Europe and immob- lize thyself in things of the past. 'Sleep on, sleep on, and continue thy old “dream. so that there may be at least one last country where men lift Fup their hearts in prayer. And may L Allah preserve to the sultan his un- conquered territories, and his solitudes earpeted with flowers, his deserts of daffodils and irises that he may ex- percise there the agility of his cavaliers and the muscles of his horses: that he 'may wage war there af once the pa- ladins, and reap there his road. Louisville, Ky. gets its “refrig- erator” cars iced for nothing, or rather, gets paid for permit to be iced e this eur c iy cheap at SeRtz, P & oYl B people on the countey lines are buying ¢ in quantities. The company hauls great guantities of ice out early in the morning on what it calls its ice cars, which on the_way back bring the milk the surrounding coun- Geing out, loaded dred three 3 wiocks' ot ¢ hundred-pound 5 o « kept tightly closed S e R o S before they start on the return trip. Thus the produce and milk which are brought back to the city, & great deal of it lced at its' point of origin, vir- refrigerated cars—Bleetric ournal. An Elestrical Rat-Killer. «l device for electrocuting rats recently by the crew station at Fort Wayne, believe in “doing it Thvod ihe asemant of (e mew station mt of the b the coal chute and gave trouble until the stationmen got to gether and copstructed an electric chair espec for rats. The “chair” as in the Electrieal ‘World, eonsists of an iron plate with spike above it, doth e T, being contected the two wires of an electric cireuit. W e‘; ted with a plece ‘them is ex- le in view | I double strength othine: jof rebel heads. May to. the Arab people hdreams, its disdainful immobility and S8 pray raga. “May he préesvre io the "Bedouin bagpipes their mournful, har- frowing sound: to old mosques: their ' inviolable mystery—and the hroud of white chalk to the ruins.— |From “Morocco,” by Plerre Loti. Why Net. Baseball Umpire? With the passing of the dime muse- um barker George Fred Williams seems at a loss to find an adequats outlet fer kis talents—Chicago News. FRECKLES Don’t Hide Them With a Veil: Remove Them With The Othine Prescription This prescription for the removal of freckles was written by a prominent physician and is usually so successful in removing treckles and giving @ | clear, beautiful complexion that it is sold by drugsgists under guarantee to refund the money if it fails Don’t hide your freckles under a yeil; get an ounce of othine and re- move them. Even the first few appli- eations should show a wonderful im- provement, some of the lighter freckles vanishing entlrely. Be sure to ask the druggist for the it is this that is sold on the maney-back guarantoe. Clearance Sale 18x33 24x33 24x37 28x37 worth 25¢........ worth 30c........ worth 35¢......... worth 40c......... HUMMER WINDOW SCREENS ) i‘ 3 3] LAWN MOWERS reduced to reduced to reduced to reduced to. $3.00, $3.50, $4.00, $4.50, GARDEN HOSE 25 ft. lengths, 50 ft. lengths, 50 ft. lengths, 50 ft. lengths, 50 ft. lengths, % inch, 5-ply. % inch, 5-ply. 34 inch, 4-ply, 3 inch, 5-ply. 34 inch, 6-ply. GRASS 280 G BRIRE: iii'cio ) v-soi v 0s'es ves S0c Grass Shears..... PR 13111 SHEARS 18¢ cestagscaray PRESERVING KETTLES