Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 14, 1918, Page 4

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123: YEARS'OLD - " -v-.. 1,500 0 L o . Cotlay | HSE Bullettn Business Office 480, Bulletin Bditorial Rooms 35-3. Bujletin Job Office 35-2. Willimantic Office. 635 Maln Street. Tolephone $io-5. { Norwich, Wednesday, Aug. 14, 1918, CIRCULATION e 4812 §,925 -10,105 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assoclated Press is exelusive- Iy entitied to the use for republica- tlon of all news despatches eredit- ed to it or not otherwise eredit- od in this paper and also the local news published nerein. All rights of republication * ot pecial despatches herein are also egerved. 1901, average ... 1905, average Augtist 10, 1918... *Right — COMPLIANCE WITH GOVERN. MENT ORDERS, conservation orders of the Priorities board of the War Industries Control, requires all papers to cut down their edition for week days 15 per cent: and 20 per cent. for Sun- day editions. The paper mills are under govern- ment control and this amount of pa- per will be redyced from regular con- tracts in order to make this ruling apply alike to all papers in the coun- ry. The changed appearance of The Bul- letin this morning is for the purpose of pgetting the greatest possible amount of news in our allotment of space. This order will reduce The Bulles in's smpply of paper about 50 tons & year and it must govern itself so that its patrons may be served with all the news which can comfortably be crowded into the reduced space. s More Precious than The STOOD IMPARTIAL INSPECTION. It is mot strapge that lighters con- taining 130,000 feet of planking built in 24 hours, and 8000 ton ships built nd launched in 24 days, and destroy- nto service 70 days from the ying, when it was never be- f lone in a year, excite distrust as to their durability or serviceable- ness But the first quick-built ship to Atlantic, was of 8,300 tens n, built at Seattle; and on her arrival in England a committee of British ship builders asked permis- sion to inspect and they went over her with dilizence. or as the aptain puts it, “searched her with a microscope: and had nothing but the highest praise for her stunchness and seaworthiness. They O-K-ed hor as the equal of any Clyde-built ship much longer on the ways American ships are hitting the wa- ter just now faster.than the ships of any other nation, and they are as good as the best OUR GREAT ARMY. America now has quarter of fighting nd a million a million and a men in Fy ance; men at h e who will be constantly ‘under arms for anv de- fensive movement, and hundreds of thousands of othér troops who are Gestined to be in the advance upon Eerlin We do nt think of the quieting force of this permanent million of ome soldiers known as the Home Guard, who are ready for any emer- The Bridgeport Telesram is risht when it says No one can doubt that the Con- necticut home guard has been a_most useful body. It t that it had to do serious serviee, it was at hand tosact if the emergency demand- ed. It represented preparedness at its best. If Britain had been able to throw a million men into France in- stead of sixty sand at the start, war would have been over two vears ago. S0 with the United tSates. With a million men available in 1817 the German sprinz offensive would not have been possible. Decause we had the Home guard in Connecticut many a disturbance by the secrot plotters was no doubt prevented. Do not forget that” ‘While many are inclined to hold the Home Guard in light esteem they are = dependable patriotic deterrent fores to whom we owe much even though they are never ealled to active ser- vice. A STONE-WALL. It was near Sergy that the Ameri- can forces and the famous’ Prussian Guards, as dependable German shock troops, first met: and there that our men won their first compliment from the mest formidable force the Crown Prince could throw against them to #ave Sergy from capture. The fierceness and valor of these hardened troops is symbolized by a death-head, badse worn on their hats indicatingthat they die but never re- treat. They did not expect to lose Sergy to our American troops, but they did. The Prussian Guards find in the Amerieans men worthy of their steel, and they were defeated. Sorgy was Jost to the Germans after the con- says things the of Germany find celler he sueceeded in getting a promise from the Kaiser would held hiy pease—that he would speak through his ministers, and not talk to others for publication, but he broke his promise. His coneeit that ha is God's per- sonal representative on earth—a part- ner with him in power, i natural to the family. His great grandfather, George Third of Pungland, talked of d ‘God or God. and himeeif st of his primie ministers, himselt ai to the dis Pitt and Fox. THE IN have played sentatives who crd. doreement as servant,” “y because he, had people. that patriots not right and hit har There today many For the past f bullied every sm: o her ravished. in't a master of she has their industries, while in the thefts and atrocities northern France, Russia. Poland, Uk rania and Rumania: millions of cattle from these pations, seized their stores and their crops, and — THE KAISER'S TONGUE. The Kaiser of Germany has 4 tongue he is net the master of. He intelleetual it diffieult “-‘“-'?’:; that Nohody loves money or power more than the Kaiser, and his taunting of Americans as worshippers of the al- mighty dollar, comes from ome of the¢ greatest profitears of the present aze. He profits by the wat as well as by all great German industries and nat & few foreign investment vesembies the pot witich tawnted the kettle, with being black. DICATIONS The political indieations from ail parts of the country are that men who against the welfare of the ceuntry in eonsress are deomed. The people of America are in no mood to fool with semators or Fepre- in times like have made no recerd, er a poer rec- Missourd, for instance, in the Fifth district rave Champ Clark a great en- faithful same_district Congreseman Borland was knocked out good and misrepresented Borland is charged with having done more than any other ten men to fuin Washington by creating dissatisfac- tion among the government workers. The country ia awake to the faet stumbling blocks are needed in Washington, demagqgues of whatever public life have got to go. The only Ameriean peliticians who are popular now are these who hit and stripe GERMANY AS A NEIGHMBOR. country upon ea who would care to have Ger- for a neightor. our vear; all she nation adjae that she has not robbed and She has treated Hoiland and Den- mark and Sweden as if she wes their sorts in Belztum, committed ail che and imposed fi The Kaiser these has has forced The advantage of the long-desired and lonn-delfied unity of command has been clearly shown in Foch's new attack on the s front. As the #oing became harder on the Sojssens- Rheims line—ng longer the Marne sa- Lent—the allies' great leader shifted his attentions from the crown prince, to his royal cousin, Prince - Rup< precht. Rupprecht’s army had al- ready been depleted of several divis- ions in answer to the desperate call of the crown prince further south, and possibly this accounted for the German withdrawal behind the Ancre aild the Avre rivers even before they were attacked. Thess two little streams flowing from -the northeast and the southeast respectively meet the Somme a few miles east of Amiens. From before them the Ger- mans were in position to make an- other try at Amiens and the share of the channel; their abandonment sig- nified the abandonment of any fur- ther Gierman offensive in this region. A few months back the ailies would have been content to let well enough alone, but now things are different. Thursday morning the British army north of the Somme and the French 10 the south started forward. No ar- tillery bombardment announced their coming, merely the barrage that res- ularly precedes advancing troops. But as at Cambrai last fall there werg tanks, not the few dozen siow clum- sy creatures of the earlier battle but fleets of fast powerful cars that coult Keep ahead of the infantry and flat- ten out all opposition. The Germans were taken completely by surprise and the British made a record for a fust day's attack by gomng through them for a_ clean seven miles. The Freneh to the south were not so suc- cessful, hut the British from their he German line that it had to fail back | before the French as well. Five hun- dred guns and forty thousand prizon- ers were talen in the first three davs. By Saturday Montdidier had fallen and pow Noyon, Rove and Peronne are again being mentioned in the day’s news, towns from which the now victorious allies were so summar- | ily swept in those terrible days of last March, It is one month today Germans struck south across the Marne, sanguine in their helief that the Frenoh ware done for, the Amer- icans few and insignificant. Paris in their grasp and final victory in sight Their adyance carried them across the vital raifiray line between Paris and Verdun. just as their suns opposite Amiens already dominated tha Par Calais line. These two important railways extending from Paris at rigit angles have now heen completely re- stored and, running unmolested be- llies' lines for their entire T sure and easy aay dis- of troops en which Foeh ay decide. The men, the means, the | ative are at last all in his hands. Even the rabid Junker papers Germany ar: admitting the: army has suffered a 'serious reverse and are venting their spite on von Kuehlmann and politicians like him, by doubting the po: P uitimate military success, have weak ened the morale.of the Other the since the the in rth ent newly-won position so outflanked the | An English fisherman writes to the London Times this story of ancient methods of taking carp: One end of the big. shallow pond lies ciose under the west wall of the house; and here the water is invis- ible for vellow flags, water-lilies, and some large-leaved aquatic plant’ that we have .not yet identified. THree- quarters of the surface are clear; and at the far end the little stream that bounds the garden flows through the pond, keeping it clean and bringing in food fer such coarse fish as may Hive in it. The house is old; the new- est part was built in the Protectorate, and much of it is centuries older than that. And the pond is probably older than the house: the reason. why the house was built here. We learned very quickly that there were plenty of perch and eels in it; but we had also heatd tell of carp—carp, as we liked to think, put in by some four- teenth or fifteenth century inhdbitant of the little house, carn which, as the squire’s keeper assured us, ran to 10, i er was all wrong: it was a brilliant da; with a stiff breeze blowing. And | for some reason (perhaps because all| the Dirds in the coynty seem to live i b pant with the newest part of dwelling; and in that book the BULLETIN, WEDNESOAY, AU bait. them) ; larder immediately were fishing deliberately for the lard- Whether in the fourteenth or in the seventeenth century, the pond was stocked for ‘the larder, in days when the only fish vou could get was the And now- adays, for economy in money, trams- port, coal, and fisherman's lives, it is again a duty, as well as a pleasure, your carp. ‘We could not rise to Izaak Walton's re- cipe as readily as the carp had risen He mentions eggs as if in King Soloman's er. to catch to his paste. they we dis- |ca y, cast and all, with one sudden!wiil be too much for them y fick, snapped from a running line. But, at least, we were able to prove the new book wrong about the weath- er, and the old book right about the The catch was a brace and a half, each fish over 33 Ib. have been much bigger, but we have no place yet in which to keep the fish alice (and somehow do not fancy the monkish device of laying them in the ceilar on wet moss and feeding and these were all that the needed. For we sh caught close at home. and cook were silver ight of carp from their lack-beamed dining-room. te netwos K of scales It might to 20. yes, to 30 1b. And carp, that|days, and wine, and butter, and be- summer morning, was what we|wildering variety of herbs. But. well strolled out to seek. stuffed and well baked, one of the According to the book which, un-|carp and the roe made a good War- useq to the ways of carp, we had not | time meal for seven people; and as been too proud to consult, the weath- |we ate it, the ghosts of our pred- ecessors in the house to smile on the pond_being once more eaten in their stone-foored, in the wood beyond the stream, and | Between the joy of caiching and the cannot satiate their appetites on our |joy of eating had come the joy of strawberries and currants and_peas) | looking. Of all fish fhe carp is the worms aré very hard to find. But|most bautiful. Critics tell us that there was anotier book on fishing in |of all arts Chinese is the best; and the house, a book called “The Com-|“How Chinese!” one exclaims in- pleat Angler,” of a date very conso- | stinctivelv in seeing the zolden- bronze hue of the hody, with the deli- (which Izaak An Airman With 75 One of our famous al down 25 German mack course of single m total up have. ot ov to the victories ers with credit fightin; anifestiution is_golng oo na with other is the vol- vork which lery to troog general branches of nd. quality ke it STORIES OF THE WAR |- Victories. vit n enemy got over it ames. A lttle isoiated enemy. He and, after a short bu an went vertically, nose Then it wa: the patrol of and the four 10 ingled ov t its win, his ved on 1 out her ee of together urning home. they papers, arrogant in days of p rity now frankly pessimistic With troubles gathering {hick and fast on both east and west, the truth can mot he concealed much lenger What will the Germans do when they realize that they are not only beaten Lut bankrunt? Alrcady the national nes | amounting to five hillion delars, at least; and as the result of her heart- | less and worthless policy it Is esti- mated that as many pheple have died of starvation or malnutrition in these countries as have fallen upon all the flelds of confitet, a fumber believed debt is 38 bl ten times th Interest on t ordinary pr will take fou whole nationa illions of dotlare, e debt of the nearly United States at the close of the Civil war. his huge sum, pensions, war peace-time expenses or billions a vear. The 1] income of the German to exceed ten mil love her neighhor whele thing. Y to be. Mr. Hoover ministration searching fere teils is for oppe caliy possible, war that swn neaple malntained.” ahd he thinks there offices. He' e recognized as Mast of our =ol rated as “just fol out them ways has somethi « breath from H An may discover Germany has age. greater than Kaiser. Germany stole all 0. K. he believes the by all forces at triotism, racy right on the Eugene Fields' in the market. ing war-call and the apart. lost a miltion of tending parties had captured and lost & =ins times, and the tenth time ’ camp. industry and the trad preoccupation is, so far as 1s physi te soften the shocks of the food suppl The American forces om the way A captured German Lord Lansdowne's pacifism Ifke a misfit beside Liova George's pa- lions. Christian duty requires Germany to but the Kaiser directs affairs very much like the man who sold the lion’s kin while as herself; Don't get the notion America ls the | She fsn't and fsn't Nke- She furnishes the Pep! ad- | s us “the food not a busy-bo ortunities to its s s the allies may A Canadian editor confesses that is a great deal common sense outside the newspaper broadminded enough to a_superman! Idiers are 1ks,” but the The man who has nothing to do al for. A cool wave helps one imagine what ng to be sorry eaven may be 1i how old she is? notified Ameriean fishermea to be on their guard, and they will be In future. It il not do any harm if we get time to eat all the fish in cold stor- It is time we had a new start.| The wheat crop is 280 million bush- | was last year. Heaven's favors are not all with the it in one vear Mr. Hoover doesn't hesitate to say in the five nations under the German hee! ex- ceeds in number the 10 million killed | starved war, officer Why should there be any exempts from war taxation. Isn't true dem level? little peach of em- erald hue is the most common peach Every fool whe has a scheme is ris- up to eagerly prees it because money is being eo lavishly spent. The | fool call are wide In a year and a half Petrograd has its people. The security of war shrinks a city. “Home, Sweet Home,” is an Amre- ican -product tpat was inspired France. No price can ba put upon what France has donc for America. Any 18 vear old boy looks more at home on his sthool baseball than he does training in any military te: inter- of our denom| ton would not have a safe country with- from Belgium 1,100,000 head of stock. Gues: that maxim of Denmark: “Every Ger- man gentleman is a horse-thief” is sald: looks people before the war was but eleven billions, yet that was in the day of great manufacturfn=. an enormous overseas trade, a raidly Zrowins pop- ulation and the blessings of a lonz continued. peace. With all this gone the beast lived, and was killed while | with the zood will of the entire world hunting him thrown away,” with two millions of — s Fer best men dsad and a8, mary more permanently crippled, with a home ROITORIAE INGIES. population sadly wedkened by hunger. Towa's anti-cedtie clothing proved | privation and disappeintment. ~wiih to be a failure. They still have to m and Serbia tg be rebuilt and b2 Kunted: like the Hune) recompensed, the financial burden will h down the German people for generations to come. Things in Russia are moving fast, including the Polsheviki. Américan troops were among the allied force that has fanded at Archangel and | were greetsd with great enth by the Russian population. Already a stable government has been estab- lished and the Bolsheviki are no lon: er in power. The allies’ arm overcame the resistance of the 5,000 troops at Archangel and 18 rapidly advancing southward alowg the rail- way to Vologda. The American and other ambassadors are now located at Archangel, which with faraway Viadi- vostok will continue to be the center of entente influence and activitv and the source from which the rehabilita- tion of Russia_will proceed, The_ Czecho-Slovak forces in Rus- sia and Siberia are said to have grown to 300,000, all political parties Hostile to the Bolsheviki are joinine them and at last there ssems fo be a nucleus about which the -forces of g00od government can rally with a g0od prospect of success. Many cities of Siberia have been fresd from the incompetent Soviets, which in some cases have attempted to make a stand but in others have simply melted away hefore the organized force of the Czecho-Slovaks. Following President Wilson's de- cision that the United States was to participate in a joint expedition to eastern Siberia, the force for Via vostok is even now making ready. In keeping with international custom, a Japanese will bs in command, Inas- {much as Japan is in position to fur- nish the largest force. Two regiments now in the Philipines will form the hackbone of the Amerlcan contingent, that will number all told 7000 men. A small number of British troops from Honz Kong has aiready landed and French from Cochin Ghina will soon be on the ground. Wholesale assassination of their political opponents has not saved the d; ole be of ke. | to “We are going to win, or going to|Bolsheviki, and Lenine and Trotaky helt™ He mistrust are already in fligbt from Moscow. ! TUsied 26 WhHIoB thA [ i T T aoubiites. MR, aCRER Th the territory of Germany which they have ssrved so well. In fact no less &n authority than the Pravda, the Bolshevik newspaper of Petrosrad, declares that the Russian republic must ally itself with Germany to car- ry on war against its former allies of the entente. * The Bolshevik government such as it is, i§ indeed in an agomalous situa- tion. Nominally at peace With Ger- many since the treaty of Brest-Li- tovsk. the whole country is under the thumb of the kaiser. Presumably in clliance with the entente, the latter's forces have landed on Russian soil and are fighting their way inland. It is a complication hard fo_ match in history. Perhaps the flisht of the ehief villains will serve to clear the situation. 0c- in- in FREDERICK T. BUNCE Piano Tuner am ang guns Our the enemy bom superior - to ihe num- the numb the number of greater than the ( doing a great prope bembing by day instead of like the enemy, we con drop our bombs' from heights of only a few hundred feet, or even less than a hundred, while the Germans, w rare exceptions, to something 10,000 ft. The in ac- | y of aim and ma. is_obvious. Pracica air_fighting has for well east of the my territory, but of fightirg our bomber push_ farther low-flying mach machine-guns farther and farther back. In the recent Austra onr airmen found diver making thems: tle and I almos ard hombs 2n fighting new ways of | es useful during bat- | to contribute to vic- | tor: is far from being in air| combats alone that they show initia- tive and inventive resource. On the same day he battle patrol of ours well beyond the line: fell in withga party Germa whom they Attacked. out-man | oeuvered and out-fo them, de- | stroying four before the res{ got| away, ana all our machi came | Home unhurt. Three days before that four of our machines zot mixed up with 40 Germans in the Proyart area. and one of our pilots, whom we will call Captain X,, that day had a bus time. Heqwas out alone, when he met | DANCE TONIGHT Wednesday; Aug. 14 ASHLAND PARK PAVILION music BY PICKETT'S ORCHESTRA OF WILLIMANTIC | | Thes i “ht THEATRE Today and Thursday Viola Danal T — A Sparkling Comedy S| iy Sheriff Neil's Tusl REED) OPPORTUNITY Brimming With Fun and Appealing Romance. Polly Moran & Ben Turpin fighting machine, attacked first the to r ma- g0t e an Albatross ke | to om con- tion of gave | behind e A New Mack Sennsit Comedy PEARL| WHITE N THE HOUSE OF H A THRILL A MINUTE TODAY AND TONIG BIG DOUBLE SUPER-FEA BILL WILLIAM In the Five-Part Triangle C Drama “CLOSING IN” TheAllizd Nation® Official Moving Picture of Boys” Over There. Burton Holmes Travelogue THOS. H. INCE Presents Enid Bennett In the Six Part Paramount Picture THE VAMP A Story that Every “Plain” Girl Can Draw a Lesson From. DESMOND _ ATE TURE omedy sWarRetiew “Qur O AUDITORIU TODAY ONLY SEE Southern Mexico in all its splendor. Mexican Beauty in all its allure- ment in “THE PLANTER” A Seven-reel spectacle adapted from the famous novel, starring Tyrone Power CHARLIE CHAPLIN IN EASY STREET SCREEN TELEGRAME M Phone 838-2 £ Clairmount £ve. LATEST WAR NEWS AUDITORIUM Thurs., Fri,, Sat. Satan's Passport! g hig tail, shot T‘g' thflq.)!\irev now used up ali came home. The experiences of our airmen are full of this sort of thing. One them was recenfly attacked by three enemies. who were in suéh a hurry to eat him up that two of them came into collision. The wings broke off, and it went down lke a stone; while the other started down- spiral. Our wards in a slow Wwent after it, and, when he it, it broke into enemy- scouts, but itself seen. chine. which went down to crash belplessly below. then attacked the second in the line and shat that down and the enemy hit t] jumbled mass. man two-seater came again our patrol leader dttacked and sent it down. lessly beiore. wiving back to collect his patrel and bring | them home. Anq these thinge are only, as Has been saia one datail, almost an inci- dental detail, of the real work of the Royal Air Force. What the Germans are up to has not yet been shown, but ana crashed. On July 6 one of our patrols was out a2 nelght of 10000 &, and sav #i3 ha We attacked, our patro} lead- er picking out the third enemy ma- t German leader, and both went to earth together in one The other thre. ene- mies got away, but just then a Ger- By this time he was really feeling like fighting, and when he caught sight of thres ememy ma- chines together he went for them: but they would have none of it, and he chased them for thrée miles fruit- OTHER VIEW POINTS of one Two Test Cases Show Gains of 23 and 27 Lba, Respectively : Who” as strong and well for the past twelve man fired into Editor of “Physiclan’s Who's Whe” Makes Imporiant Statement. veazs v ‘This 1 es agt. Been 3 b with it & ® T ike Judging from the coyntless prepara- | heajth. 2nd tions and treatments which are contin- f lack ot wars vertieally, | nally being advertiged for ghsd»u.r?b accompany & dis. Our man |of making thin people fieshy, de¥elop- | appear, Guik and Ing atms, neck and bust. and’ replacing | pale ci o -of h Ufalling | UE1¥ hollows and anglcs by the 35LG [ parfect, 4 R % | curved lines of health apd. b?uuvs,. thera| " Phy e efe are evidentiy thousands of men and|are 1O r 1te women who keenly feél their excessive!use in a¥et s! ed- thinness, erick ?fi 3 New York Thinness and weakness aré usually | PhysiciAn's 3 ®. itra- along. and | 9@ to starved nerves. Our bodies need | Phosphate should b peaserined by g more phosphate than is contained in|every doctar and wsed Iwmm jtat modern oods. Physicians claim there| (o inerease strength ahd BErve is nothing that will supply this - {and to erri¢h the bleod™ olency so well as the organic phospnate! Jaseph D. Harrigan, vielting known amofie aruggials as bltrophas |appcialist o, >irth’ Hhatern Dispansh hate, which i inexpensive and is sold | tory, anvs: “Jat t Are wask, v Lée & Osgood and most al] 3fug-|thin, nervows, Al of run-gawn. gists under a guarantee of satisfaction | faice a natuFal, nAAdul stréngth v back. By feeding the nervesiang tissue buliAig Substanes Rueh as and coming and by eupplving the boa¥ bitra-phesphate and vou will séon ses some astaniahin resoits in the Increase of nerve éAergr. stransti of hody and mind and POwAT of endurance. cells with the necessaty phospliorio food elements, hiro-phosphate quickly produces a welcome transformatisn in the appearance; the increase in weight fréquentls heing astonishing. CAUTION: — Aithough Bitte-Phes- Climicns tosts made in Bt CAtherine's | phate 18 unsurpassed for rai img('“r, hospital, N. Y. C. showed that twa|voussess, slscplessness and ganeral patients mained in weight 33 snd 17| weakness, owing ta it remarkable Dounds. respectively, through the ad-|flesh growing PEbpetties it should not | ministration of this organic phosphaté: [ be used by Afiyéfie who Goes not desire both patients claim the¥ have not felt'to put on flesh. been suggested that this retize- ment, at the Ancre and at the Avre, was made to- forstall & Franco- there is | British pincers attack on the salient. First-class Garage Servica Connectad no reason to doubt the comclusion, |but it may be due merely to the g covered a recipe for making paste.| Walton said were by no means o, be |reached on genefal principles, that|desire to put out troops = for use D. MORRISSEY, Pfcp- And -with Izaak Walton's paste, of |washed off in the cooking): the rich|a desperate effort whl be made (o |elsewhere. German losses are estl. 2, VAL X, op.. honev and bread and flour, we baited |red-brown of the fins and the bread fscore some sort of success to ed by tha British at 330,000. | Phone Shetuckst Steeet the hook, that was to lure the thirty- | tail; the perfect curves into which| hearten — Germany. The . Britisn shortening their line betweén pounders! the leaping cateh will throw itself.|are showing increased expecta- | Soissons and Rheime they save, it We caught mno ' thirty-pounders,| And ail this aesthetic, sentimental.|tion of attacks, but It the Gepmans!ic caloulated, the equivalent of 133- s though one of us is convinced that he |and gast sfaction out of a|make such an effort it would more|000 men: there remains a Shortagé The “m had one heoked. He was, of course, | three-and pounde: What | probably be in Flanders than in the|of somothing like 200,000, which the fish that was lost; and nothing|shall we feel when we succeed In|picardy salient, where they have|may be met in part by retrench |22W ! lesa than a century of years and 30 ilanding ome of the giants who lie|icen abandomihg positions whish | ment clewhere—SpringAeld Repub- 511 Ib. of weight couldgexplain the lazy | there on the bottom, lazily SCOrning (had chiefly offensive valte. It has | lian. | Phose 51 case with which, having tried the|this upstart century and its fisher- 2 : 2 - hook once or twice, he carried it|men? Perhaps Izaak ‘Walton's p aw % at'he joined up| o STAMPS than a dime. Collar Buttans, a card. Sewon Hese Superters Pear! Buttons, a card.. Bachelor Buttons Middy Laces Linen Finish Thread Corset Laces . Eye Shields. Mending Tissue . Tomato Pineushions Dress fasteners in all See-1t-Spring, doz. Hooks and Eyes, best g Common Pins of good Full 360 count. Hair Gurlers, Curling Iroms...... Collar Supporters. 9 CENT SALE Begins This Morning Nine cents coesn’t sound fike a very startling amount—it doesn’t seem as if there were much in it to interest you—but if you will look over the folowing lists carefully you will be surprised. there are actual savings to be made upon purchases which require ldsp Notion Department Pearl Buttons, 2 cards for.. Lingerie Tape, 2ll colors. Sewing Needles, all sizes. black or white, ineluding Koh- in-noor, Delong, Wilsnap and o T e by g 8hell and Amber Hair Pins..pk. 9% i Shell and Amber Barrotten. ... 9 e Writing Tablets .2 for Sc including Electric, West Midget, Stay Wave, Everwave and Kid.. Sewing Silk in black only..,, In spite of the war and higher prices, COME IN AND SAVE SOME PENNIES ...2 for imantic Thread, 2 - Tape Measures Coat’s and W Hoss supporters in black or for ..... white, five 8izes.............. 9¢ | Linen Finish Thread.. Sachet, Powder. bett Dross Shields, 3 sizes.......... 9 | Thimbles, celluloid or silver |4 & J. Adhesive Tape. ... 4 rol Dusting Caps in all colors 9e | finish........ ceee2 ‘°; Mark Cross and Ever Ready 1 Wax en cards.......... 9o | Bias Seam Tape in 10-yar Safety Blades..... sditi Koy o pieces.............2 pieces for %0 | o et S Eyelet Tape, 6-yard pieces...... 9 range Wosd Sticks. . o Hump Hair Pins, sizes 1 to A Key Rings ... - % e £ ..2 pk. for 9¢ ug Shaving So8p. Socklets, all cofors. ... «ve» 9 | Kirby Beard Hair Pins.2 pk. for 90 Miilinery Pins, all colors........ % | Conqueror Snap Fasteners, 2 Round Shoe Laces, black, tan, cards for % 3 white ......0..... Pearl Buttons \ Irie Safety Pins......2 cards for %o Staput Pins 2 boxes for 9 Nye's Machine Oil...... . 90 Beb White—targe size. Bob White Rells—small Bob White Rolls—large. Handy Package. Fairy Package. Lily Package..... & Warrien * Rells, = Stationery Department Alliance Hair Nets in all colors, sap shaped. My-Te-Fine Ha sizes— Writing Tablets...... Pencils . Peneils . Art Gum—small Art Gum—large size. Dennisen’s Art Paste. West Toilet Goods Department Jergen's Violet Glycerine Seap. %¢ o : Dennison Art Qum. Darning Silk in boxes.......... 8¢ | {ugies “Violet Sec Soap..... %¢ | oenere tak. .. Safety Pins in nickel or git..... % | Acmouvs Hardwater Soap.-..-. 95 | Coweiopes Hair Pin Cabinets.... o B8 R T e Bine TAre S b Coat and Pant Hangers « 9 { Olivilo Soap.... % €0-inch Tfl;' Measures. :: Gill's Peroxide Soap . % Mourning Ping, a box .... Yankee Shaving Soap.. 9e . Departmen! Gold Plated Baby Pins.. % | Armour's Fairskin Soap. . % Kitchenware t Foot Form Darning Last: 9¢ | Colgate's Aliround Soap........ 9¢ | Strainers ...........is P ) Corset Laces..... - -2 for'9e | pyunyon's Witch Hazel Soap.... 9¢ | Shos ODaubers.... L% Clinton Blanket Pins.......2 for 8¢ | Eropy Boards..........a dozen Oe | Potato Machers..... L% Hat Pins. 2 for % | gyipho Napthol. 8¢ | Granite Pie Pans—amall.. - % Finger Shi £ 2 for Se { Aj Float Taloum..... %c | Wire Coat Hangers........2 fer % Asbastos iren Helder 2 for §c ARl Bhampos 9c | Keen Klsener. . ....2 for 9 Hooks and Eyes .... 2 cards for %0 | g . goonges. % | Tin Pie Plates.............2 for 88 Button Mslds 2 dozen for % | v gqling ........... 8 | Closet. Brushes. ke , Pant Hangers.............2 for % | poo4, Brughes.......... 8¢ | lee Plcks...... [ | Commen Pins......4 papers for ¢ | o1, inum Drinking e | Granite Bowis—small % Darning Cotton. -..4 for 98 | oo tal Flass. ... 9 | Clothes Brushes.. 5 % Ironing Wax..... -8 for 8¢ | oo iet Combs. . %o} Aluminum Tea. Strainers. % Toilet Pins—12 on card—black Fias Cinke e | water Fiee.......... % L bke el cendiitor 0 1 Ltlialel Wikienins "9 | Cake Termers.......... = s e i wtacie van | Waol Powder Puft . 9 | Aluminum Saap Dishes b , or white 2 pair for 9¢ | Pumice Stona......... . 9% | Wooden Spoomes. L Middy Laces.. e...2 for % | Thermos Cup Handles . % | Chapping Bewls—amall. . I

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