Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 16, 1915, Page 12

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(Written Spectally’ for The Bulletin) ‘Well, the winter’s v £ the mountain. andall ‘sawed up in- stove-lengths. ~ Not to This wirter’s.is in the woodshed; We alway coal all hollo QOne it foned New the charac- old-fas efore they arise. One is tha Afford to stop in late summer or early after wood to start th days ‘withs &, as we have: to jme xon+ hand, it comes handier Yiave’ it all ‘on hand. - Another af“we get better fuei. that way. Thi rewood is-down this winter’s od, if you please, but next winter’s. i has en there since last June, drying.out and curing into a fuel that beats-your v to keep vear ahead on the wood supply: for tork England abit of getting ready for emergencies t we can’'t first is to tell’ with exactness how much;there is.in any certain pile. We guess at it, and then have it shwed by the. hour, Wwhich prevents any . disputes ' and malkes it/pieasanter all ’round. _I-have;no saw-rig of -my own, and hire one-from 'the village.. . The man has a good little gasoline engine saws pretty- nearly all the time winters.for variqus - customers, .and. is, therefore, expert not only with his.machine but in the handling of the wood. - Ho-can sense it if enything is beginning’to go wrong. with - engine or belts:or saw, and remedy the trouble before. it d: velopes'into:a disaster.: ‘Moreover,:he can handle ‘crooked sticks 'su- as : to turn themn into very creditably straight fire wood. - What is still more.impert- ant, wood which ‘has just been sdwed. up he has . trainedhis: eye so that, il mow he split. and piled—not | Deing. told:that you want the Sticks:to ped—outdors where:it will remain | Tun about ‘sixteen inches. long, he’will o ater ot & seasoning, i e, | S8\ most:of them that length. I have wing the sticky sap washed and,had. wood sawed by .inexperiehiced ed out of it by melting snows and | handlers so-unevenly that ‘it was next ring rains. Then, when the sap is |to:.impossible to pile it, sticks varving s removed, it will be re-piled in the | from -four” inches -to. two. feet long. syered wood-shed where it through the summer dryi he water out of it. will ‘Te- lle, irewood that sap Tent proposi- t green is apt to have a good deal of both. setting ' the s getting That makes a bad job in'many ways. It takes two men besides myself to manage the sawing with such a' ma- chine; the sawyer to handle it on the frame, ons man to take it from the saw and throw it out of the way, ‘while I pass the unsawed sticks to the sawyer. Sawing by the hour,.as we did; it tuok five - hours to clean up: the pile: Cost for saw. and helper 36. We. picked a be +dried with the sap in. In | €00d, fair, warmish.day, one without ill burn slowly and|SnOwW on the' ground:or on the wood Shar oring, rather | to make handling cold and nasty. The an ng what the |Job went off ‘smoothly and ‘comforta. “Qead” fire. Also, it | bly- - It was done almost aa soon as De seasoméd bt dried, ' in | Was bégun. ch case it will arn slowly, a: 2 e other wet thing does, to, the ex But it was not always thus, -Years peration of the woman who ~wants { 280 < there were. no gasoline engines sr tea-kettle to boil quickly. and no traveling saws going from one good; live, hard wood first thoroughly sea- 1 well dried, it makes %, for handiness man: , cloginliness ~ and comfort coal” that. ever was-pi ut of a mine. It’s all sawed up now and the split- ty ints @ ting and. piling can be done at my ure, as the weather -perr and when other th are out of the w: twelve cords o wood “to cord- use, first, it There are some ‘te; t cut my in the forest C to-cut it with an axe‘than . and, second, because t deal more he saw kerf it into ed-Tengths,” t feef, which when of anv are as long as can be handled ymfortably on a saw-frame. But, of e are Some pieces that are an that, and some that are Uneeda Biscuit Nourishmente-fine fla- .vor—purity—crispness —wholesomeness. - All for 5 cents,. in the moistuge-proofpackage. GrRAHAM CRACKERS A food for .every: day. Crisp, delicious-and strengthening. Fresh baked ‘and :fresh ' de- livered. -20.cents, A @dlightful new bis- cuit, with a rich and deli¢ious cocoanut fla- - Crisp and always 20.cents, wor, fresh.. Buy biscuit baked by NATIONAL BISCUTT COMPANY Always look for that Name ¥ no advertis; onnect1sut eqit Edness resull AR t farm. to: another to cut up.wood . we had to saw it with the buck-saw across the old saw-horse. And if-ever there was. a discouraging” job' for:a farmer- man’it was to start on a twelve-cord pile of wood with' that pesky buck- saw! "Rasp, rasp; grate, grate: .the saw_pinching ‘in-one. stick and: “run- ning” in the mext: the woud generally snow-covered and: dirty, so that the knee -holding ‘the stick "on the saw- bucic soon, ‘got wet ‘and chilled; 'the saw-dust regularly. once in' so. often blowing up into.vour eves and tem- porarily blinding you; arms -aching With the sconstant - push-pull. ' of - the saw; spine creaking with the intolera- ble bending back and forth—oh, say, it was work, and I don’t forget it! When a’ short winter's day had come to end, and you looked at. the huge ile still’ remaining, and the, teenty- ty:little heap of sawed sticks your labor had" effected—well, it u inclined .to be impatient ur -wife pat a fresh ‘st into ove. You wondered’if: she'd.use it.so.recklessly, if she knew how. much swedat and soreness and weariness had gonz o the bucking up. * What with other - things - to. do, with the :short hours available for work, with; the oe- casional n ity of filing up thevold h “the interruptions. :of. ‘bad eic., I've ‘Knpwn ‘it -to tale particular John' Farmer a fuil to get his. winteér wood ' sawed it and piled. Now, the sawing "takes one . short day, and the splitting and piling about three more. Thén it's done with. And, if you'resshrewd, you-can usually pick good. weather to do ‘it all -in. .¥ou don’t ordinarily, need to’work in either sncw or mud, There were lots of really good things about the “good old days® which some £ . my = gray-haired ' contemporaries praise so highly and.regret. so keenly. But_bucking” up. wood by hand wasn’t lone of them. Not by a long shot! I remember that.l came from a ped- Aling trip, ‘one. day last summer- quite disgruntled ‘and 'a.. little discouraged. It was one:of those-days when every- thing seemed to-go’ wrong. First, a horse cast-a shoe ‘and 1 had'to’go off my - route and wait' an hour-at a blacksmith's ‘shop ‘tohave ‘that re-set. Then, 1 stepped-:on-a .miserable little cobble ;in. getting off the “wagon :and turned my ankle, so: that-I.had'to-hob- ble on‘one leg till T could get to'a-drug store-and ‘have”an ‘ankle 'supporter strapped : on.. ;-Mioreover, .. something sesmed’ .to ‘have gane wrong with'all my. best : customers.. .One: ‘was - sick abed; another 'had: gone-to 'town for the . day, ‘one; wanted .réd. potatoes— which I'didn’t happen to:haveithat'day —and ' couldnt be hired to" take: white ones: -ope: found fault ;because ‘the Crosby corn’ waen't sweet ienolgh ‘and one becanse. the: Golden: Bantam | was So sweet.as to be-“sickish:”one who had -ordered "a “dozen ‘earlys cabbages had.changed her.mind and wanted, in stead, something’ I hadn’t brought tie: 2nd -0 on -and 'so-on: * Oh,31t) was 'a Dblue day -ail ’round,; and-Iicame home with ‘haif my load' unsold .and. ‘a mighty-small amount’of money actual- 1y ‘taken in. + .° It was as:bad a'day, business-wire, as T happen to remember.. Yet, .bad as. it was, that one.day’s . poor-busi- ness.more.than-paid the’ entire-bill’ for sawing .up my wpod-pile. That is, one day's woTk on.the, road.,and- that &n exceptionally pooriday, more than paid for ‘the work which,” if T, had" tackled it alone in’ the ' old-fashioned:. way, would have taken.me fully two. weehs to .do, under the most favorable.cir- cumstances. * (1. still_have my busk-saw.and my saw-horse. .1 use them, occasionally, to saw up old stuff: which-hes more‘or. less palls:in if, and which the caréful sawyer detlines to put up .against his buzzer. But'I don't want to go back 1o it for.a.regular winter's-companion. No. thank.you. ‘It is:handy for:emer- gencles, but -I prefer the newer ¥; Hcation, There'd a ‘advics of* the t16 “{o the " Thoswa. -lonians. “Prove. all things; hold" fast fh;fiw&itkfi:fim«!’."‘; ST “ = . erein is the very. i conscrvatlam, whidh . condists’ _in. & malnteranes of .averything oW “which a mainténance of . it; not. be- 'Q aring o ‘' ghae | aities for vio old" but because: it is gene, |. i o) : Th ‘. is_ the.yery eassnoe of ing ali t 1 nd “then b se they,ar demonstrate while. _Indeed; therein is the essence of :?mme‘n sense, which “seldom goes to ther extreriie-but holds’ the mitddle of theiroad, | - ¥ 3 A . I¥& a common fault, among farmers that they areiapt-to be extremists; one way or the qther. Some ate either so ighty pro: at thelr farm ificome “can’t kéep. up’ with their out- o for the latedt novelties and newest nostrums; - or _else “they ‘are so rooted them.into any new line. AT aR - Yhether it is a. little ‘matter Iké safing wood, or a big.ene. like crop rotatien< or farm fertilization or 'dairy upbuilding, the only -wisest’ basis_for action is found in a sane radicalism which proves all things before it ac- cepts ‘any, wedded- to 2 sound con servatism which holds nothing merely because. it is -old :but’ only. when. it, too, has demonstrated its superior ef- ficiency. « s, e, City. Brook Dalay. Algerman ' Altor at the last meeting* of -the court.of comnion- codncil. a’plan. for the future layout of streets which; if carried, into eftect. will resuit ‘in runiform: streets that ‘add toithe’ attractiveness. of new citles or tile new sections of old cities, and will make’impossible-in the future such: ~ crooked : streets. as- - Darrow, Orchard and ‘many otliers ‘in 'di sections. - of the’ €ity, where * Iy lots have ‘Deen’laid aut in a.wa: would: produce’ the most building sites and’ witholt: resard to_ street lines. No 'doubt ‘the' sldérman’haa . in mind the act entitled an ‘Act 'Increasing the Powers of:the City:of' New, London, passed by the : general; assembly. - of 1913, but ‘which .is-not ‘known to: the people of New London generally. Here is ‘the text: of “the ‘act, printed"in newspaper for the first time: Be it enacted by the Senate sentatites in Ge convene nd House neral’ As- . court of - common councilof ' thee city. of New London shall have-powr, ih the manner here- inafter jprovided,. to blish building lines on the lands tting_on any street, highway, or lic tween which - lines and highway or public place no building part ‘thereot- shall be erected. Section 2. ‘The mayor of ‘said: eity shall appoint’ a commission’on build~ ing lines which shall consist: of three members- who shall bé taxpaying -ci zens - of ‘sald” ¢ity and 1¢ be . a term -ending " Jai 1914, one’for a.term ending Jan- and one for a term' end- 1,:1916. and-in the month 1812, and annually there- after he ehall Sppoint ‘one. member ‘of aid ‘commission -for a-term. of three vears from- the first ‘day ‘of January next succeeding bis appointment.” Not more than.two of said commissioners shall at any time: be ‘members of ‘the same- political “party.® - The members of 'sajd commgesion’ shall ‘serve “with- 6ut vay. The action' of-a majority of said conimi hall be the'action. of said commission. Section 2. Said . commission mav. and upon direction .of ‘the mayor. and court’ of common couneil, shall estab- lizh such building Hnes,“and may em- ploy engineefine ot other servives, for said purpose and €X' the compensation therefor. % Section 4. Béfore said commission shall establish’ such building lines, it shall apponit-a tinie and place when and where all.pariies in interest may appear .and.be: heard. relative {hereto; and shall cayse: notice describing, in general term&gits proposed action and <pecifying.the time and place appoint- ed’ for the hearing thereon, whioh no. midjority - of Section 1 pointed, one for ary 1 than -tw. newspaper vublished ih. said cit least. .five da befora ‘he time ted for on shall e said hearing. Such pubiic allpersons iegaland sufficient notic or corporations whose land i to be af- fected .and ‘to- 2l othier ‘parties in’in- terest. /At the time and-place so ap- pointed, and at any. meeting adjourned therefrom, id commission shall hear All . parttes in interest,who, mey. ap- pear to.be heard in relation.therete, and said commission shall make a re- port. of ‘its: doings 1o said- court of Commen - council, which reporf- shall embody. ptive sur of said building :lines., 1f. <aid court of com- ! man council shaji accept:said report-it return th me -t6 said for - reconsideration, )f -common cour tinue -pre « 1t said ¢ port, it. ma¥ commission »én so, acepted and in shall hav such, building lines "shall, all spects, be-deemed -to have been: legal- re- 1y established; - provided before such action - establishing such building lines shsll be finally binding as against the owriers: of any interest therein, affected Dy the.court of commen, council shall pro- ceed to:assess damages and:benefits,in a.manner drovided- by and.subject to the provisions: of‘ Sections 27, & 297and 30 of an revising the- char- ter «of sthe city: of . New London, ap- proved. Jusie ‘20, 1995, = - - Secttion; 5. If-at'any time ofthe esr tablishment of any biilding line, there shall.be-any b‘slng or part(of ‘build- W ing . betwean sdfh line:and any: strest, highway, or:public. place, said ;building commission: may 'at the time of ‘such establishment, . or,‘at 'any ~subsequént tirive, *order : the. removal-of: stich build- ing:or:part thereof, provided the action of_ said . comimission; in ‘ordering. such rerhoval’shall e, supject to all of. the provisions of -seg¢tion four hereof.. . Section 6. The. power to establish building.lines,as_ provided herein. shall include.the’ powar. to: modify ‘or rees- taplieh, such: lifes. 5 Section’ 7. Any, person who. . shall eréct or permit’to be‘erectéd ahove-the ground, ‘any building’ or 'part of build- 1Ag, on or over ‘anyland 1¥ing between a_buildlng line established as herein provided ahd ‘apy’street, highway, or public-place, shall+be fined not more than $100; and“eacl- twénty-four: hours that. any. .butlding ‘or.-part.of -building erected in.viclation; nereof shail be al- lowed to. rémain on: oriover such'land ¥hail ‘he'a separateioffence. Any bulld: ing or- part: of building erected,’ sta- tloned,’ or; allowed to.remain ‘in viola- tion of the provisions.hereof, mey .be revioved by -order of the court.of com- mon -cohncl) at ¢ the » owner’s ‘expense. and. such/expense; shall become ‘a’debt dties, a.ld.-cfly.‘lg?d, shall'be added fo, the tax. BiL for the’ property «on’which the same {8 situated nextito' ba.made out and’ rerifiéred by |the"colector. of taxer of" ‘olty and: shallibécome a part de for-tiin- entorcement of the ety WL yp o O A el ot Bection 10. - The!beard of 4 -of ithe ity of N o park Tondor nd | ] That newer way, s -cheaper, easier, in |thereof,' and. -lmh‘-prq&e&.w s be every way mbre, satis ic{ury‘ s held. tor 4ts ént-1ithe same. man-~ ; 4 ner as the'r ddr.of ithe tax, bill: . - Nawithin: risy. eocat il ot : of | Section 8. -Heption thirty-one:of saic rather ‘thin-spun taikee-talkes about,a | 205 (8. Hereby repeslod.. .~ .. . | very smail- matter. Truly it is a.wmall | Section -, S, Ay, oy m{g métter. ' Truly it is. e small. one - in | S0CS Provide f6r ths regulation ot the actuallty. But the: infe which it | STission of smoke from:any’ chimney conveys ‘and- the £ in.- | Smokestack," & ?3;!; souree withir | Volves: are mot small matters, g AR SRy, pan- | | came. of v - NEW LONDON STREET LAYOUT Alderman ‘Miner: Wants ‘New Plan: Pat Into Operation— Wants Crooked Streets Abolished and Building Lines Established — Congressman - Mahan’s Appointment — T." Miner advocated | be held,after 'the approval of this-act, in_the. manner. provided by law. One of said members “shall ‘be chosen. for the term .ending on the date 'of the council - meeting in- October. 1914, and the other for!the;term ‘ending on the date of the council:meeting . in° Octo- ber, 1915. The term of office of each member ‘of ‘said .hoard, except. the mayor, chosen to succeed:the present members - of said board and the two members- herein provided for, shal for a term of five years and uniil his pegessir shall”be chosen’ and qauli- Section '11. . Tt' shall be the duty.of said board to prenare a comprehensive plan for the systematic and harmoni ous “devolopment “of the- city, amd 'to that end said boarg shall have. power to employ expert advisors and to pay iherefor and for stch.other expenses as may be necessary, not exceeding the amount appropriated for. such. purpose at any time: by the city of New Lon- don. Section 12, All questions méerning o ‘location ‘of ~any strect enue nighway, boulevard, or parkway 'sball be referred to said board by the court of .commbon couneil of said city for consideration and report before -action is takes Section' 12, id board shall or cause to-be made a map or ths entire city of New London sho the various’ pronerti and all the streets, , bou t, avenuc, hi Y. boulevard, or parkway n grades thereof, and may such ‘engineer or engines and emplovees as it may deem necessary in ihe making of such ay or maps. 4id map or maps shall be approved by the yurt ‘of common council. The court of common .council shall-have moweér to change said map or ‘maps from time to time. For the purpose. of making ‘said nip or mabs, said board, its engineer or engineers, servants or agents, are, authorized to enter upon the land of any person. Section 14.. “After said map or maps has or have been approved by the com- mon council-no, water or ‘sewer pipes all be 1aid by the bYoard of water and sewer’ commissions, except. tpon such streets, avenues, and highways, boule- vdrds.'or parkways of sald ¢: as are shown on' said- map or maps. Seetion 15. . Said ‘map or maps.sha. be, ‘Used 'By ‘the, board of as=essors ¢ said: city, to-aid 'thém determining the property’ owned by any person or corporation, and for such other. pur- pose_as_may..be necessary- in -making the. proper assessments taxation. urt’ of ‘common ithorized to pur- manufacturé, ‘house, Section 16.- The council is. hereby : chase, - harvest, ang; sell:ice, har vested from voir ‘of the - ¢ity. of- New other :source, asit' may advis able, or.to establish- a -plant for the manufacture. of ice-and 'to” do-all other | acts incident to ti facturing, or. selli authorized. . ha ng. manu- herein 1s That Congressman’ Mahan proposes to get’all ‘the fruit withih reach.is shown " in, t recommendation made of William € h of! Néw London for ‘he "position cial ‘agent of the census departme: Connécticut for the depariument manufactures, and it the - hope c great majority of ithe democrats of-the city that the appointment - will-be made. Mr.. Figh, like:the. < b e of New London and jalways . known has beemr apt- expert spon: ed for the posit. bookkeeper and positions with the C.'D. toe ” Central Vermont - r ad - com- pany, and with. the - New 1 Gas lectric .company and ™ its:sac- Power - com- ¢ Connecticut ast employmeni. Soon after n ownership.tite compar 'y men commenced. work New Londop.with, the.result t nairons have, to.pay more-ror vice than .ever .before and 'the customer has to pay-at the beginning for. the prividege of :becoming a patron. The changes-along this line no.doubt is ‘for the beénefit of the company, but at the ‘expense of the .people. The ,time was right here in New London_when :the city book,;so-called S¢and -des- 3 public: in- spection within.a: few weels-after: the reports;of the' various. city-departments Were presented to-the court, af-conimon council, ‘and ‘the-book - was. out mever later than November lstiof eath-year. How this thing has.changed! Here it is'well into the month.of January and no Dbook-in sight, and no, prospect Even all the 5 of immedlate production. reports are not submitted t> the coun cil, bt g0 -to- the. printer. after: bein edited ‘by a.specially selected- person. There, is . something - radically -wrong about the printing ‘or rather the com- pletion ‘o.fthat city 'book,- the. valde. of which - 18 108t by the unusually’ long. deiay in getting:it to the.people.. There have been delays. and . delays . before but. mene-to:compare with' the, present time. - Somebody is responsible for tire delay and perhaps it is just as Well‘m’ he out'{t-up to’the printer, whoever mav. he..-fust as .did ‘' the writers for newSpapers vears ago, when every error. that appearea in print'was charged up | | | one or | rector ONLY OSCAR S Yellow JIDAVIS TH ket” is” aGreat - Drama, Truth to-Actual- Cenditions Prevailing Now in Russia. EATRE} F?'(JQH'A'V "A. H. WOODS PRESENTS By MICHAEL MORTON Theatre, New York City - Produced in 20 Years STRAUSS, Statesman and Philantro THE YELLOW TICKET Direct from a Run of Over One Year at the Eltinge .ThersandPuHicAgreemlitistheBestDmm Mail to the ignorance of positor. It is time is to.print-that book finished the job. WOMEN WORKERS IN THE STATE (Continued fro tables in.i department, ‘in piz trial your inv henorable * b 1l the igator that she do. this wc junction with the i which bure st_in it vointment be thre the ter n iy labor ore fire extinguis PRICES' 25¢, 35¢, 50¢, 75c, $1.00, $1.50 the intelligent com- that the party who m Page. Eleven) be required; 1o hat n vi now W > provide: of esent s be bdy: before in con- irean of lai eau she work that n Music, ce; o _FEARLESS' IN 'ITS INCEPTION—UNIVERSAL IN ITS APPEAL Seats on_Sale Wednesday, January 20th, at 10 A. M. Orders With Remittance Filled in the Order Received JACQUE and FOLEY Singing and Third Episode of That St WARRE! TERENCE O’'ROURKE Impersonations Mat. 5¢ and 10c - . Eve. 10c, 15¢ and Z fODAY The Greatest Bill of the Season SPECIAL! SPECIAL! CHAS. CHAPLIN IN A 2-REEL KEYSTONE, “HiS PREHISTORIC PAST” "NEW IDEA TRIO Greatest_Singing Act in Vaudevill A Tremendous Hit Here MARR and EVANS Jolly Acrobatic Comedians "”i; Sy FLORETTA CLARK .. ||| Selected Mutual Movies A COMING MONDAY e 3—BIG ACTS—3 MUTUAL MOVIES AND KEYSTONE COMEDIES Coming Next Monday, Tuzsday ;0 The AUDITORIU Vi and Wednesday THE SEASON’S SENSATION Weston’s Models 3-—BEAUTIFUL ARTISTS’ MODELS—3 A Perfect Women in Perfect Poses -oner Perfectly Draped in Perfect Pictures I::;L HuYLE-R-— | Wonderful tling Society Drama With N KERRIGAN as GENTLEMAN ADVENTURER | The Funniest Fellow in the World' The Funniest Picture' Ever Made Foot Juggler IRY 3 e g work dore | IZADI hy the has worked | overtime th rvice. of th state e safeguarding its Mterest and one much . good . work not reported as is. detailed | ING . BU; She has. obtained- 28 women,. secured many ages t fers from degirable places fculties, nation 7 Induced . one lunch room .wi ~mployes: the same: night in t town, with the .me te wor W the tabli 2 data without reco: ures or. failure tire -Tunch “hou creased, and , th in_several install re of lad they. wer tharitie: mak in their - system le outla; In view of these facts and gard ‘for the of both employe | and employer, eartily recommiend her reappointment if she desiras to continue in the position. ¥ KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS REFUTING UNJUST CHARGES | (Continued from Page ion n_on isting of five to conduct - su der- the direction and: to to b do tow; {1ig menace to perity of: our land The, comr resoluti, in the of the order in-th ada will follow t! ee-with a te Cross cot ber of copic idea of gi Rel rd eliminating the m eata deal off which. England adiusted several [AUDITORIUM, 3-SHOWS TODAY-3| tUSCAL +OLLIES OF 1915 SINESS TWO SHOWS TONIGHT—6. PRICES AS USUAL, MUSICAL COMEDY and VAUDEVILLE INTERSPERS RECORD BREAK- MATINEE AT 230 CHILDREN P. M. PECIAL ADULTS 10c. 5 and 8 % 10c and 20c ned several and d- in COLONIAL. Two Reels—“THE SENATOR'S BROTHER"—Two R with Leah Baird, Wm. Humphries and Vitagrach “GIRL AND THE MISER,” Biog. “THE BUTTERFLIES’ WINGS,” S TOaEATRE ,‘”r 'f",al‘;““p “Slippery Slim and the Impersonator,” Roari Essanay - Comedy el pn o5 |1 Coming Tuesday, Jan. 19th—THE LAST VOLUNTEER in Five irse to legal = any instar ¥. Bass-Clef Concert SLATER HALL, FRIDAY, JANUARY 25th GRACE KERNS, Scprano, Assisting Artist. Associate Members secure tickets Memberéhip Cards now at Davis’ Boo kstore. at a reduced rate and before sale begin. o8 00 | | i | > Orkr officials nd, t Seven) timbe me ch_investigation of board ¢ un-) upiec 1ovs he rs. nd Port piant svees | gy are | | sinle, FOR FLETCHER'S Children Cry CASTORIA - ington: can the peace and p d, is contry and"Ta e work . of tk interes 1néil -ordered a nu mphilet with:the " general “ciret i | i naval vie-| REUTER’S FOR 140 Main Stree TODAY ONLY Big Violet Special Regular $1.00 bunches, 50c ] Best Quality | ation: thro ction of e per Double state. 54k | Regular 50c bunches, 25¢ | v Houses - of Driftwood. ! sery Sl gt e i Telephone and have yours reserved. Phone 1184. t

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