Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 1, 1918, Page 4

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lshow my superiority, 4 “Wait bet you got some sandwiches || g i H i 3 1 from Harrews is .long winded and, so in. stead of stating distinctly that I hadn't even got downtown. I merely nodded at Harrows and said,Uh, huh.’ Just those mongrel words. 1 started to pass on, but Hi toward the cigar lighter and blocked my way. “Have any trouble?” he inquired, cordiall; Honbstly. - ‘Not aabit.’ ws cried, ex- “Well, you're the first fel- low Tve met who didn't! You must appreeiated that the change ought to|) 0 "l "e® t Jeniane! Go down bring about the desireq reilef, or £0|on the train a long way toward helping the situa- | ‘Un, 1d T again, desperately. asked Harrows, inter- t to aid the agrieulturalist | estedly. nd wh | “T leave it to said the Hyde a en it comes to urging the pro. R L B / man, duetion of more goods it can be real an% Coull T pause at thig point 2 n my career and say, ‘Honest, tows, I was only fo ! courss not. 1 said, Oh, I just didn't nating time required to make deliver- | know—somewliére around the middle fes and permit him to use that timelof the morning. thus saved in giving added attention| “‘That’s funn: said Harrows. ‘1 to his farming operations. Whether|Waited two hours for the train, from 9 the advantage will acerue in lke pro- |9 11, and it queeg I didn't see you portion to the consumer can be told s s g gl Gt b . 5,9 ;::t; more certainty after a proper ::'.?e :c c;?f;%n:ndengegtmé?%lm form. In view of this ‘been increased so the lmit for the PRight is More Precious than Peace” —_— AN INEFFACEABLE BLOT. It makes no difference where it place, it matters not in which “‘Maybe.' eald Harrows, dubiously, and stepping over to the soap case RESTS WITH THE PEOPLE. In spite of the instances where neighboring states receive such de- to dé‘:lx merely looked superior and nod- “‘How could you’' Harrows de- manded, ‘when I came home on the first train through and just got here? u couldn’'t come on a different o— 3 “‘No, I said, firmly and more des- perately. ‘1 really must be getting along, Harrowse——' a minute!” he insisted. ‘™ downtown for safety's sake and ate ‘em on the train! Why didn’t I think of thtat? Great idea!’ “He was grieved over his lack of foresight and changed the subject. “‘Say, he began again, 'you remem- ber that corking drift just outside the station downtown “< should say I did!” I responded, enthusiastically. I might as well turn on some steam. ‘Never saw anything like it! Saw one man take a headsr into it and thought he'd never get dug o ‘Haw! Haw!’' said Harrows, and just then Imogene literally blew into the store. “‘How do you do, Mr. Harrows!’ said Imogene in her . dreadfully cordial way. ‘1 remembered 1 wanted some dental cream and I'd forgot to tell Henry whem he left the house! It's been so nice to have him home all day—you can't imagine! It would have been perfectly foolish for him to have gone downtown today, don't you think ‘so, Mr. Harrows?" “Grabbing Imogene by the arm, I pushed her out of the store, protest- ing things about the necessity of dental cream and I suppose the rush I heard behind -us was the populace hastening to pick up Harrows, who must kave succumbed on the spot un- der the mental strain. Well! Re- member this! 1f you are going to lie and éxpect to get away with it sée that your wi is locked up before you begin!" “I certainly shall!” solemnly prom- ised the Woodlawn man,—Chicago News. serving censure for the toleration of the lynching bees, and where it ean- not help being realized that a total disregard is being shawn to law and order, other southern states continue to engage in such practites whenever the opportunity cffer: Tennessee and Texas have recently figured in the lynching of residents for causes ranging all the way from robbery and attempted kid- napping to murder. The Eullty Dar-|iging ‘the Allies would now be beatem ties, and in these Instances there ap-|to the knees and America K;e chains. pears to be every reason for believing|if the that conviction for thelr erimeés could easfly have been cbthined, havé heem taken from the hands of the authori- ties and strung up fo 4 tree or burned’] at the stake. And yet in spite of these horrible examples of mob rule and a ‘began disregard for the laws of the states,!ganda has Been ma 2 mob in Batnwell county, South{our defenses. The enemy suits the lie Carolina, as if inspired by such ex-|to the oecasion, amples proceeds to do the same thinj We have endured all sorts. Some It is not surprising therefore that!few have been captured and shot at the Charlestoi News and Courier in|sunrise, but rhost are still at large, deploring that affair should declare|Wworking mischief in their own subtle. that the governor of the State owes|SPcrot ways. They vary in import- it to his people, the south and the ua- |30C% thosa lics. They run the gamut tion to act promptly and_vigorously et WiLh Comaser Has-No-Quarrel-With-Germany down to bring the men respomhible for the| to the —iitte . Sheakig - Taver | lynehing to justies. It well concludes| Starving-in-Cantonments. And -every that “If the law in. South Carolina is|lie has its day. There's a regular not to be trusted to punish a Neagro|mode as to German propaganda, afid, guilty of the unprovoked murder of a|looking back when the war is done, We respectable white citizen it is not to|Shall discern that each season of the be trusted at all” struggle was represented by its own It is not to be forgotten, however, mhr style of lies. But there is ), the greai-grandfather of them :n m;’ll“fla responsibility rests upon | ail, that has never, since hits first e pe le. If they do not do their|appearance, been off duty. It is, I utmost to uphgld the law and to see|think the General Staffs favorite. that the atthorities enforce it, it can| I refer to that scarted but still in- be expected that lynching and other|domitable old veteran, A-Wall-Street- violations will continue to increase, 3«: It is, perhaps, the most Puerile tainly the ‘bardest worked. It has EDITORIAL NOTES. never had & off since it marched Germany knows of course that tak-{to the fromt, and just now, it is es- ing anything fromr Russia is like get- | peclally promineat. Its duty, of ting candy from a child. course, to divid@é public opinion in this e country and to, Jonier dmmion be- 4 man corner : tween capital and or, between em- ihinks ‘could be acoompahed. in thi | Plover and SRaLrel And lm evary success, no matter how slight, delays world in the time taken to make ex- |y, progecution of the War, T 1t never had leg to stand on, but in some miraculous way it s endures. Ot course if Germany is waiting for | 4" gcheolboy could effectually ‘”‘K;" the allies to institute the drive it is]of it without any trouble, but, perhaps probable that it will not be kept walt- | merely because it is béneath con- Ing long. tempt, it has been allowed to go on e its silly, sneaking way. A ‘Wall Street In view of the way in which the|War! Yes, if ‘Wall Street arranged Germans are pushing into Russia {sn't|thé sinking of the Iusitania, caused it about time for the Kaisr to ery|Ji° Yape of Besielun and wicte the “Onward with God?" g’::fl c:"{',?”' if you fifln credit .l wit] ing so-unselfish as to Camoufiage may be all right dbut it | renounce the rich profits it was gar- s et intended that slate should | nering. - e palmed off for coal at the rate of| ~Germany propagandists weep croco- ten to twelve @ollars a ton. ?:1: ge;;. for the 1:}-..,.-1;;‘3 ma}\, But —— laboring man himeelf is far too Letters have been digcovered which|busy to- do lng“lnlflln& Since the tend to prove that Berkman and GoM-{ war began he been enthroned e Eolen. " The ‘Stmctomnre cometity simma | CEAT T ‘Spite.de. Iuareased. soun ot tes. o eples. The disclosure certainly causes| [EAb I ¢p mh“n';r‘mr o e S piaceim in @ postion of prosperty Tn view of the Iargs nusaber of opl ':“ scarcely dreamed of before, lisions which are occurring over awi« ation fields it looks as it is going or whether it con- sick and injured, it is tmpossi- to look upon the torpedoing of a ship as anything but an ab- disregard for the rules of na- ‘warfare an employment of ‘which any self-re- would do its utmost Views of the Vigilantes GERMANY'S FAVORITE : LIE. By RALPH fimy BARBOUR of The Vigilantes If this war could have been won by il E that is the policy which has adopted by Germany in its des- determination to carry out {ts Should such methods be against that country it can that Germany would it as the most horrible sort and endeavor to have an it even as it is now seek- to have the nse of poison gas dis- because it fears the effect the use of it in the future will upon its own forces. Just as however, as Germany can con- such methods without exper- dencing similar treatment it is deter- mined to do so. I i i - reach across the Atlantic, but the German lies can and do, and ever since the war ‘breaches in ggll iy however, mean one less vessel in the possession of enemy and for that reason alone s willing to continue its unjustified Mperations and to take the lives of the and Injured and those whose duty > Jation which can never be effaced. PRODUCE MORE PORK. There ought to be little need for Mrgping. the people to engage more ex- $emsively in the raising of pork if the ter is given proper study and it. In spite of the fact that the is - increase in . product 4t pught to be apparent that something 38 wrong. The one conclusion which Sught to be reached under such cir- Sumstances is that the opportunity for ning the existing condition and #0 at a good profit to the raiser Was never better. in urring those who can engage n £he hog raising industry to sit up and notice & Georgia authority points that when 34 Georgia pigs sold for bring a total of $1,386.24, or mn average of 3$36.35 each, pig ralsing on may be said to have e point whers the financial compel recognition. it is likewise pointed out that £ ! -4 zg! i g inch the argument, but the. is by no means confined th or to any one section. pigs are sold for from $10 those for slaughter at $100 done in this vicinity, the engaging in the prodnction the more apparent. the matter is that there more favorable chance this industry along fhe production of other farm then right now and there @ determined effort on the of those who can do &0 to make of jt for national as well as benefit. ‘WISCONSIN'S ELECTION, el ity ! i s i H f fe: i p Sy that the infuence of Instead of it belng 8 case of “ajfuturs of this and all other countries Separato peave or a fght to the finish” Wil Be. all’In- Mg favar, as Trotzky says, it is a case of “throw| This war ig neither a rich man's WAr nor a4 poor man's war, neither a of Capital nor a war of Labor. he American. war tor' ‘ol lfi“’m Up your hands for we are goinz {o take all you've got anyway. % P While the New York school echil- drén are belng tawght to cross, the fought street in safety, it might be well to|j and spend a little time teaching the reck.|that will less drivers how to avoid the childrem. | until it is petastdoddi o Rodigiy allowed to end; It would doubtless cauee the kaiser|German - great distress of mind to learn ganda. L Nicholas Romanoff wonid never think | #1d battered, but dtill active, of permil ‘himself to be Pestored o ey e e When My, Garfleld adviges the pur- chasing of next winter's it Is proven beyond a shadow of a doubt, 2s has been so often claimed, that doesf't te Wi Ei 1 | ‘h-.\g-l-hn they make in any’s first-line lies, but cer-; | | these systems has been impaired by but #till active, A-Wall- | Joke, but | sparkle, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR A Correction. Mr. Editor: Beécause of the acci- dental substitution of one word for another in your report of a sermon before the congregation representing Christ. chureh ang Trinity church re- cently do please grant me this space. Your reporter evidently had to hur- ry to another field after a single para graph ox so and both missed the point of the sermon and invited severe criti- cism. for the preacher. As i was once A reporter I have sympathy for the man, But to report that I said that Jesus Christ was not tempted is as remote from the facts as to deny that Ger- many entered Belgium, The preacher was not re-writing Gospel history. The point of the forty days in the wilder- ness was the unsuccessful effort to break the dinlessness of Christ, name- ly the temptations chiefly of three kinds. Sin and temptation are not the same. Perhaps just here your well- intentioned and cver-driven reporter fell. A moment’s thought and many temptations are rfecalled which were promptly dismissed, not dallied with. Because Jesus Christ took, our na- tyre upon Him He necessarily en- red temptation. Lent means what it does to thousands for the reason that it shows ms, how Christ being tempted, tested, met the temptation or testing, how He triumphed in our pature in all points tempted as we Are yet without sin. §. WOLCOTT LINSLEY. ‘Webster, ‘Mass., Feb. 27, 1918 Automatic Sprinkler Systems. Mr. Editor: The coal shortage has révealed the reliance on automatic water sprinkler systems for fire con- trol. The effective maintenance of |treezing in many MBuildings lacking fuel. Because of the temporary loss of this protection conflagrations be- came imminent possibilities and the peril appalled the fire underwriters, and because of it fuel administrators sllowed use of coal to prevent freez- ing of sprinkler systems. And from thesa reports the idea has gained currency that the impairment of sprinkler protection by freszing has been due to inherent defects in sprinkler systems, Nothing could be farther from the truth, The impair- ment hasg been because the water in the “wet pip® sprinkler systems re- quired by the fire underwriters in heated buildings has been allowed to freeze and more or less cripple the systems; or else the water has been hut off and the pipes drained-to pre- vent freezing where heat could not be maintained because of lack of coal. In unheated buildings where water is liable to freeze sprinkler eystems are installed “dry pipe,” i. e, instead of water the .piping contains air under pressyre which Tholds shut an auto- matic water control valve. This valve opens and admits water into the pipes when the pressure is weakened by the ¢#cape of air through sprinklers open- ed by fire. Many sprinkler systems were re- siofed by making them over tempor- arfly into “dry pipe” systems. And an interesting fact to contempldte is KEEP LOOKING YOUNG 1t's Easy—If You Know Dr. The Genera/ somethi hese down. middle of Sul advent I canne for* not A co my chi General ting pl: burstin ample off' thei turned That —Obse: to the men. Alcibia, Sheldo: among nation. Dpacuni: reputal the “Hate A fe fiction are T tender made There made Mauris him, name from The tion i staffian paoportions”; and he had alsc in spealing of his physical disabilities. T may gather from a story Lord Esher tells in the * Morning, Post”: In the throes of the Battle of Ypres the French troops, under a punishing fire, began to retire. They wers met by ‘General Grossetti. propose to do with me?” he callad out to them, I am tired to death, and I miist sit stool was brought by a soldier, down he sat, quietly to fling huniorousjokes at the men as they passed. ep past, hugging the walls of the 3 cking huses. Are you thinking of leaying vour old ped¥ petrified at sceing Grossetti sit- amid showers of shrapnel. Retreat the, story of the battle of Shrewsbury. Among English novelists, Thackeray has drawn fhe greatest Irish personages, mot always, countryman, Christian Hero,” and he holds a place the faithful Jack Finucane, Thackeray remarks, “I never knew an embarassed Irish gentleman he had without redaaming featurés. Thackeray's attention was first drawn to Tretand by his wife. stor Trollope’s coachman reveals hi outlook ve hate the of recruits, and Kimball O'Hara, who will be more promptly recognized as him, among Mr. Kipling’s creations. must have felt as happy as Thackeray did when the title of 'Va,fil\' T suggested the subject of two of Trollop's best political novels. dith’s. Diana Warwick, whom every Irishman must be proud to claim 2s a fellow - —London Observer. Proclamation read to the inhabitants of Jerusalem Arabic, Italian, Greek and Russian. To the Inhabitants of Jerusalem the Blessed and the People Dwelling in the Vicinity. by the troops under my command has resulted in the occupation of your city by my forces. now, proclaim it to be under martial law, under which for mof administra- tary considefations make it necess: However, lest any of you should alarmed by reason of your ‘experience at the hands of the énemy who has obituary notices of the late 1 Grossetti speak of his “Fal- ing of the wit of the fat Knight were the only affinities, as we “What A0 you “f am too fat to run away Get me a chair.” A solid camp and resting in the of the shell-torn street—-a.sort bliclan bridge — awaiting _the of the enemy. He continued “I am an unlucky fellow; ot retire. You see, I am goad hing but to sit where I am.” mpany in Indian file began to “Where are you off to, ldren? Is this really a retreat? 1 in the lurch ” The men stop- acidly on his camip stooi, shells g round him, gutting the houses, The ex- was irresistible. The men took ir kepis and cheered him lustily, at an end, . The men and began to advance. is much better reading than w rvator. numker of ndeed, complete satisfaction of frish- Bar Lyndon, “tHe Tipperary des,” is a blackguard. Captain n has all the charm of his Sir Richard Stect “the the jounalists of fiction, as does for, as but. owr. t, n aide-de-camp of cewise in circumst ary discomfort” ‘Even ble Captain Costigan Perhaps At any rate, of his conversation with “Ye hate us, Mr. Thack Irish,” sitd the old you?” was The answer. 'w otherrish men and women in can only be mentione erence Mulvaney, that“grizzled, and very wise Ulysses,” who soldiers of so many generations is' Trilby O'Ferral, whose name such an impression on Du s mind when it occured to “l1 at once realized that it was a of great importance. 1 think I itself to him.” # There is And there is Mere- countrywoman even in fiction, of General Allenby the _steps of Hebrew, the Citadel, in English, French, defeat inflicted upon the Turks I, therefore, here and t will yemain so long as mili- *fe been down. better the s] You Olive Tablets The secret of ‘ashington the: fuel situation really is In New| England, 2 LR s bt the wine 2. It's 8 thri Tows _— Postrhaster General Burleson is t§ Washington and New York April The mail service in most sections i that in Canada sprinkler systems have as been on the job while the one farthest south has been cold feet. much better maintained than here—up thers they aru much acquainted with Jack Frost, and prinkler system farthest north allowed to got GLEANED FROM FOREIGN EXCHANGES .| they will wonder why, when meat is 1|scarce and threatens Help me, when all I ever loved on earth was Trish.” Tnere | - - retired, 1 hereby imform you that it is my desire that every pefson shall pursue his lawful business without fear of interruption. Turthermore, since your eity is re- garded with affection three of the great religions of mankind, and its soil has ‘been conseerated by the prayers and pligrimages of (evout people of these three religions for many centuries, therefore, do I make it known unto you that every sacred building, monument, holy spet,.shrine, traditional site, endowment, pious be- quest, or customary place of prayer, will be maintained and. protécted ac- cording to the existing customs and beliefs of those to whose faiths they are sacred. Guards have been placed at Bethle- hem and at Rachel's tomb. The tomb at Hebron has been placed under ex- clusive Moslem control. The heredi- tary custodians of the Wakf at the gates of the Holy Sepulchre have ‘been requested to take up their ac- customed duties in remembrance of the magnanimous act of the Caliph Omar, who protected the church. Proclamation issued by the head- quarters of the German Military Gav- ernment at Udine to the inhabitants of conquered Italy. A house-to-house search will be made for all concealed arms, Weapons and ammunition. Al victuals remaining in the house must be delivered up. Every citizen must obey our labor regulations. = All workmen, women and children over 15- years old, are obliged to work in the flelds every day. Sunday included, from 4 a. m. to §,p. m, Disobedience will be punished in the following manner: (1) Lazy workmen will be ag- companied to their work and watched by Germans. After the harvest they will be im- prisoned for six months, and ' every third day .will be given nothing but tread and water. (2) Lazy women will be obliged to work, and after the harvest Tre- ceive six months' imprisonment, (3) Lazy children will ‘be punished by beating. The commandant re- serves the right to punish lazy work- men with twenty lashes daily— London Chronicle. Most people will agree with Sir Arthur Yapp that “it would be a great thing if we could possibly estblish a great communal rabbit farm;” and to be scarcer, the authorities do not set about it at once. The rabbit is a by-word for fertility: and it is reckoned that, un- der favourable circumstances, —the progeny of one couple would amount in twelve months to between one and two hundred: Such multiplication might not be accounted vexatious by the January of 1919.—London Ob- server. According tp Herr Potthoff, cor- ruption is devastating all classes in |Germany, and employees, not satis- fied with demanding extravagant wages, are now taking ‘“erooked {paths” He proceeds:— The chief of these crooked paths ig bribery. Throughout broad areas of our economic life bribery of em- ployees has becorhé a recbgnized trade custom, without which it is impossihle to obtain eithér ap order or tho de- livery of goods, A eecond method is embezzlement or theft. I sheuld not like to go so far a5 to eay that em- bezzlement and theft are already recognized as a. trade [ustom, but anybody can see that respect for the property of others has been badly shaken. If a wagon is left for a short time unguarded in the street or on the railway, it is certain to be half plundered. ~Consignments. of food, fuel, and all necessities of which there is a shortage are reckoned as “falr’ game."—London Times. “Debrett’s Peerage” for 1918 points that up to the present time the roll of honour includes one member of the Royal Family, twenty-oné thirty-one baronets, eleven kmigh eleven members of Parliament, & hun- dred and thirty-five sons of baronets, and two hundred and eight sons of knights. The heirs to one hundred and fifty hereditary titles have been killed, and as an immediate result of the wWar the succession to hereditar: dignities either has heen precipitated or the normal descent changed in over a hundred and eighty instances. During the eighteen peers, thirty-two baronets, and two hundred and ten knights were created.—London Ob- peers, ts, rs trdly, 1. G. HOAGLAND. New York, Feb. 25, 1918. table for the bite you've the evening. As a & Bevo. Itself a nutritive drink, Bevo makes an appetizing and del b itful addition to. any or avy. Put on the Bevo Gllasses when you set the Cream cheese and eliopped olive sandwiches (on brown bread), Dill pickles, Shrimp salad, Ice cold evo—the lll;yclh'round soft drink, Sotd in bottles only and bottied exclasively by server. Bome of the papers are a little pré- for the guests of for a dainty lunch: meal—hot or cold, have called a simulacrum of a meal and I am sure that no man has ever o e - — KEITH VAUDEVILLE JOHN and WINNIE i HENNINGS oy Exponents of Real Hapmic NEWELL THE MUSICAL COMEDY DUO Constance T: e IN '!';_l'ii:PAHT JOY COi "EPY‘ Current Events FOUR SHOWS SATURDAY mature in assuming the end of the sandwich, for there seems to -be no reason, if a man is so disposed, why he should not expend his whole cereal card (when it comes) on bread, and makes life one long, hilarious string f ham sandwiches. But the ham sandwich is, at the best, only a for- mula, a symbol, what Carlyle would 1; had a genuine . liking for it since the fourth eari of that ilk invented It in order to save himself the trouble of stopping his cards for lunch. It/s at the railway refreshinent bars that the void will be feit. Marshal Joffre has brought back many stories from America. One he likes particularly to relate. He was often the repository for gifts for devas- tated France. They were handed over without any question of receipt. At his reception, at Chicago a rich “friend of France” handed him a beautiful little box with the remark, “There are a hundred thousand dollar: help rebuild your country. journey eastward Joffre opened the box, and to his consternation found it to_be empty. Believing he” had been robbed, he consulted an American. “That's all right” reassured the other. “It's a little habit of ours to give the Wox and send the cheque afterwards—It avoids accidents.” An that cheque duly ‘ar- rived to give substance to the symbol. The pronunciation of quetle as “kwee” ig not confined to Lancashire, writes a correspondent. Indeed, it may éven be claimed as a Cockneyism, as it is said to\have been invented years ago by a Londen policeman whe was regulating a theatre crawd. And after all “kwee” is not an unnatural pronunciation. You have only to linger on the word to get “cue-e” from which there is an easy transition to “kwee."—London Chronicle. On the eve of his departure for Ire- land, Sir Edward Carson made a speech on the war to the British Em- pire Producers' Organization in London. He saidi— “What the Germans are relying upon now is not o much the superi- ority of their arms in the field a8 the fact that they control a digeiplined na- ANNUAL B It is a fact well known to tory always reveals more or tion and produce quick sales, on a wide range of subjects ested in. Sale prices range from 5¢ In the Office Saturday, 70c. | honourable determination. SALE OPENS SA‘IURD|AY, MARCH 2nd SATURDAY SPECIALS You will find these articles in rear of store, In His Latest Artoraft Picture IN FIVE SMASHING BIG ACTS THE-FIRST TIME SHOWN IN NORWICH Matinee 2:15. COLUMBIA U.S. A. GIRLS One Long Soream of Comedy tio.” It will be a fatal day for the liberty and civilization of the world if it proves that democtacy when on fts trial is not egual to the occasion. Can a democracy when attacked defend itself?” Sir Edward said we all longed for peace, and with others he thought that no opportunity from day to day should be lost, and, that every pros- pect ‘shquld be kept in gizht that may bring this war to a suecessful ant 7 ‘“‘But in tié dpeeches that we have heard from Germany lately— and from Austria, too, despite the verbiage that was used—L am bound to say I see no approach on the part of our ene- mies to_an honourable and a lasting peace. What was the good of talking of a Teague of Nations if there re- mained outside one great nation which had proved that two armies could ter- rorize the whole worl -London Chroniele. “Fooéd in War Time” is the title given to a2 special course at the City College of New York. 00K SALE all business men that inven- less merchandise that while perfectly cood and desirable has not been sold and should be brought to the front and disposed of. 'Our inventory has been taken and we find quite a quantity of books we have decided to offer at prices that should command atten- The lots offered include books of all descriptions md from picture books for the little people to classics for mature scholars including art, science, history, travel, religion, poetry, genealogy, educa- tion, fiction, in fact on almost any subject you are inter- _Special attention is called to a mumber of beautifully illustrated volumes, several sets of standard classics, quite a few Bibles, slightly shelf-worn, and quantities of other e books that have been priced to sell at sight, to $14.50. Supply Dep't. High Grade Typewriter Carbon, a few broken boxes, { regular price 4c, Saturday price, 20c PER DOZEN, A big assortment of Memo Books, 4c each. '90c Recipe Index, quartered oak, complete,

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