Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 16, 1918, Page 4

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’.—-n-m—: Bot-a menth; $5.00 » . Mitersd 3t he Postoffice st Norwich, Ooon.. s mcte-clum matter. Telehoee Cats. et Office 480, Biftortal_Reoma 353, Bullatin Job Offten 35-2. Wiiimantic Offics, 38 Spring St Telohooe 3M4-2 R —————————— Norwich, Saturday, Nov. 16, 1918. T RTINS TR AL BN FMIIE OY | MEMBER OF THE ASSOOIATED PRESS, The Asecisted Press Is exelusively entitied W e g for repabiieation of all news dempateh ® erefited to it or ot cherwise credlied in @4 pager and alse the local news published AL fghts of republiestion of wecial desatch- o Berein are slso reserved. “e CIRCULATION Nevember9, 1918, 10,463 - Right is Mors Precious than Peace” HIS PLACE IS AT HOME. To go or not to go is the question hefore President Wil the present time relative to atiendance the peace conference. The date not een fixed and the place has not been son a at nined but Is of e general impression held in séme one leading allied ¢ ient oun fa mpertant ] and it is 6 be mpcrtant m: this country ene il 1E8 4D n the peace The president will all thing consid- des e d o stay at heme. | of others who ean| t the country and its § the peace table, but " . duties here | NO LETUP ON SHIPS, Whe M. Sehwab, directing the istruction this countrs, deelared at accord ously set| recognized forth and wh: is needed by sive it such 10quires. Up to the present the country a merchant in marine as order to it time there have Neen constructed 397 ships of a total dead-weight tonnage of 3,500,000, Dur- ing the past month there was put in- 10 service a tonnage of cver 400,000 which Mr. Schwab does not look upon | as the limit of production under the| present organization. He figures that| % haif mililon tons can be bullt and he is optimistic enough to think that it will be done this month. This| would be touching the maximum pro- duction that was looked for in order to meet the war requirements, Now that the war has been stopped it is probable t it will not be long before may be some curtall- ment in connection with the large ex- penses for extras and overtime work, This may mean some slowinz up in the output and may exténd the time in which the total programme will be carried out but it cannot and must not mean any interference with the plan to furnish the country with the ves- there " can be little question but. what. the ports of south- rn TH0#SIS Wil eagerly weicome the of merchant ehips with such ‘supplies. as they need for Whieh they will be glad to release their grain. The opening of the straits to the Black sea should quickly put an end to any opposition which ' thie fleet therein might be disposed to show. Though the bolshevik influences may prove a differént obetacie they are bound to Dbe brought to a realization of the folly of standing out against the ailied pol« icy and efforts. REALIZATION. Tomorrow is the day which has been set by General Foch for his entry into Metz and the occupation of the prov- inces of Alsace and Lorraine, the for- mer French territory which has Ween resained as the result of the war. It will be no new experiente for the head of the allied armies as he en- ters that fortress for it was tn Metz that he spent many yéars of his life. It will thus be & case of going back home and under conditions which he realized should exist, that is with the territory which belonss to France un- der the French flag. It will therefore he an occasion of more importance 'an might be attached to the en- nce of some other fortifled town hich had been turned over as the re- t of attacks or by the terms of the armistice. Put it will not be to General Foch alone that it will be a memoradle day and oc m, for all France will e joice at the attainment of its object and the bringing back to it of the provinces on which €0 much depend- nce has been placed for its riineral alth. And while France rejoices must be realized that none will view the gccupation with greater ex- ultation than the very people who are residing there, who have for nearly half century been under the control tof Germany but whe have been anx- ou and waiting for the day when they could be placed again under the fia of France. It means the resliza- tion of hopes lorig déferred to them and the beginning of a new epoch. It/ may be and it is probable that there will he no great celebration because of existinz conditlons but it impossible to resteain the jo: Alsace and Lorraine pe: ization of a long anticip; MORTON F, PLANT'S WILL. the will of the late Morton F. Plant which has just been probated in i3roton as been cle aemon- 4 that his interest in this p ¢ Connecticut His publié bequ as chara ion of large estat as sincere and s we zod in many in- ances but he sh 1 nevertheless s deep conc for ih ccesstul aintenance of the enterprisés in h d become interested. ar of the fact that many not been carried on may never ba bhrous how a better desire the bene sistenca t than th ings be maintained. M n ved him: a nol lenef: on and New Lon- don during the last of His money has accsmplished 1l through the ugé to seve his life magnificent iie has made provision whereby t work 18 to be continu. he has gone. Both Groton lon have much which wi a monument to the decea him they unquestionabi not have been obtained. That he wa it concerned with the profit there- from is evidenced by the losses which he has shouldered and which he ha made provision there is every the farming interests of t part if n6t the whole st: e greatly benefited by the work has been done in its behaff. A ix loss has been sustained by q death but his good work promises to g0 on zo0d for for in the futurc, =nd on to belleve that of ch EDITORIAL NOTES. The fact that the German army w il 10t have to live on the fat of the land since it is not fighting ought to mean o littie ralief to the eivilian popula- tlon. Dui how the soldiers will kick at being cats! None will look forward to the re- ults of the peace conférenmce more cagerly than the mapmakers who forced to curtail on their {lave been dealing with uncestatnties for_a long period. Those who kick because their fab- wlous wages are reduced-may have had an idea that the war was going 10 be continued for their benefit. while the boys In the trenches riskel every- thing for a dollar a day. Do not let the united war work fund lag. Phe goal must be reached and cveryone should be anxious .to he identified therewith, The man on the corner says: Try- inz to make the way of the transgres- sor easy is & job for the angels. Possibly you have neticed the re- turn of our oid friénds, white dread, steamship arrivals and uncensored sels which are needed by it to take)Ne¥s items. care of its overseas traffic during peace times. Instead of building for war needs we are as Mr. Schwap says “going tobuild for economic per- manency,” and it must be reallzed that that duty cannot be slighted. The demand for ships, &hips and more ships still holds goed. PREVENTING STARVATION. In connection with the task of pre- venting famine in Europe, in conmec- tlon with which not a little responsi- Bility rests upon the allied nations, it 18 apparent that all the resources need to be drawn upon. It is not to be ex- pected that this country must do it all when there are other sources of supply which can be and should be tapped. In this comnection it is to be noted that the statement has been made that it will be necessary tc open up the Black sea in order that the large feod stores which are said to have been accumulated there may be ob- tained for the purpose of giving the desired relief to other sections. The obstacles to this distributien © es in the bolsheviki and the Black sea fleet. It is to be moted, however, that allied warhips have arrived at Censtantinople which makes it evident “hat.the Dardanallen hasa basn & The Vorwarts of Berlin considers the terms “terrible” but declares that they must be loyally executed. Cer- tainly, there's nothing else to b thought ‘of. Germany 'must now pay the fiddler for its war dance. When the soldiers and sailors went away they had faith in thoss they went to fight for. Don't let them say that we have failed to do our part. General Foth will be qualified to act hereafter as international -referes on all_terms of surrender. Colonel Roosevelt can reflect that ¢ isn't the only one who has been put to bed by eciatica. With the kaiser on its hands and fears of bolsheviem, Holland's trou- bles are certainly increasing. Abdications are getting to be quite the rage-among the crown wearers of central Hurepe, though they can hardly be sald to Wave become popu- lar with themn. It is getting down to prettv humble pie when Germany sends out a fran- tic appeal for food to keep 't from starving. There remains much to be done to raise the local quota in the war work fund. Don't let us fail to measure up to our responeibilities. ‘The one gréat surprise is that Hol- land shodld not have drawn the line bafare this &t undesiradle aliens. To geot out of life what will best suit us we must be careful what we believe! We need not accept any othe: fian's fear for our own regulation. With twenty-four distnet names for Deity each one of us has a fight to select his own, as Victor Hugo did when he wrote “and the finest of these are Love and Mercy!” You can see the tribe of Israel calling Him Ven- geance. was moved by the fierce spirit which controlled them: the tribe call- ing him Love and Mercy were moved from their confidence and truth; and those who designated Him as “I Am- that-I-Am!” give very good evidence of being agnostics. In each name may be discovered the quality of the namets. It is decreed that every man’s measure may be the measure of himeelf. No truth is of any value except we possess it and it possesses ue. Life's best gift to man is Truth, to be had for the seeking. What an easy thing.it is to grum- ble. It takes no science whatever to find fault! _Taking life as it averages who s gatisfled® Everybody is just gotting along, and some are succeed- ing better than others;.and mark you, those who are doing well are not those who are jawing most; and most of those who afe doing the complainin are not suffering most. Good pluck is_more than half of life, and he who has it cannot be robbed of all his pleasures. Those seem to succeed best who grumble least. There is power in_silent persistence; in the steady push with hope and faith back of it. If old Grouch is ever discovered roll- ing in wealth it is probable he soured arter his success not before it. Brace up. in the face of all opposition and do not let a grievance get the better of yoeur smile. Mrs. James G. Blaine the front in national soc she had Herself to confess she never a society woman. In domestic affairs she was an all-rounder. most expensive thing t to be tim e days we: enough, or the nights s She recognized that it wa tune to be bofn a manazer: tnat t only mascot Awas Responsibility like her letters ¢ had the and her courage of cxhaust_represents freedom of mind. Her letters were modelle ter Jane Carlyle d afier re them she said: “I feel better acqu ed with her than with Au usan if there is a person I know through and Aunt Susan!” “My very through it ,” she says, “trying to get od_for an opén fire sawed an cnt Home is home even enhaloed in dust” There are nc movi es which can excel nd sunpaint kinds © one rich > encw-s T i e n beawiiful pietare rolled into han ot vinds of fate are alw: wbove. “One thing alon this: The winds of fate m How -muich 1 of tho sights n 1nd we scar At Ni T sin In many > be sorrow has row its purpose, hy anothe: the serv- ine; mv burden i of home ana hea cueen of Love's where of éd proverb, that “what 11 owned and had is never lost A good © we ail say s weap, one of the w rassed the soul of any man. Tnstead of bei r to consciencs it is hotter to be boss of | it. Tn most thin boss instead of o Hobbes said in “Let vour co But keep your fr horn to ev. As John Oliver A Bund» of nce go to the dogs!| siness! Virtue nev- s man er yét Atoned for wrinkies! Those who know her know that she had a good conscience and honored it: but Jike many mistaken mortals she never permitted herself to be oo conscious of it. Some people make 1 bug bear of conscience instead of an example of their conduct; and make the worst of stumbling Dblo of a gzood thing. Many people who talk by their con- scicnce act worng and advise wildly, A good conscience like a zood tooth of no bother. There seéms to be no doubt that the] winter birds nrepare for the winter shelter as: well as the squirrels and | other wild animals. The old bird-box | on the Sheldon pear- tree, first occu- pied by bluebirds and then com- mandeered by English sparrows, and abandoned during the winter of 1917- "18, is being cleaned out by a fore- secing, thrifty sparrow who sees that it is sheltered from the north and northwest winds, not @afty and well ventilated, and will make a good abid- Ing place with' a nearby feeding place. Almost the only thing which has made me tolerant ®f the Bnslish sparrows i€ their sauciness and the oft-repeated inqui “Why I didn’t get out from beneath their tree!” Their manifesta- tion of proprietorship of property 1 own, and their artistic game of bluft and general pugnacity. Do you realize that the word/health applies to both your physical and mental condition? It goes without saying that 4 man mentally wrong is of little earthly good, simply because a heaithy body must be harmonious; 50 to beé healthy we all must not only look out for our food and our dress but also for our thoughts. One great balancing human quality is_calmness, and there is nothing which will fit every quality of the human soul bet- ter, for exeitement i3 always closely akin to insanity; and fear is one of the most unhealthy of influences. pectation is a great force if properi handled for good—never expect seri- ously what you do not want, for this is a nerve-stimulating force represent- ing a real law of nature. It requires a good deal to keep well and thrifty, but it pays to be awake to health requirements and our own power, e b CASTORIA| In Utfi;avn:rggv:ars the i and i s impossible and fre- {but it contr expresse opinion victory 20.000 | {hat the enemy f 1 never be men that'abie to pierce the aly n a wee | Happy the person who '\ hundreds of es a life- | As Taul Dunbar sa Al is but & little thir | what joy it is fo sing £ toil it gives - me rest, and when ‘ e I long for i when e come | ot | NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, NOVEWBER 16, 1918 GENERAL FERDINAND FOCH General Ferdinand Foch is of struggle had before them nearly Basque origin. He was born at|200.000, including the Prussisn Guatd,| Tarbee in 1851, but was raised at|{nd *0 VT Cq” the thin lime must | Metz. Rather than become 2 German | presk. - after the annexation of Lorraine, Foch preferred to réturn to France and help to prepare France for the struggle with Germany which he belleved would ultimately take place. He entered the Polytechnic School | “They are so frantic in their at-! tacks,” said Foch, “it must be that things are going badly with them else- where. So let's hold on." At another stage of the strusgle aides came up with the disquiting with the number 72. He left it the |pews that both the right and it 45th of his class—a rank that was 1ot | wings had been obliged to give considered as justifying hopes of a|ground. great future. ~ He never dazzled |” “Tn that case” said Foch, “there's| by his brilliance, but he showed that | wonders could be accomplished by | application. He never ceased study, except to teach. \ Foch began by mastering the strat- egy of the war of 1870 in its minutest details. Knowing the mentality of the Germans, he counted upon their re- peating in future conflicts the man- euevers that had suceeeded. He also| expected them to make some of the old nothing to do but smash (hfl!n in the center. Order up the Moors.” * General Dubols, With the Moors on his left, smashed the Germafs so hatd in the center that the Prussian Guard was thrown back upon and into the Saint Gond marches. Von Hau- sen’s right wing was obliged to retire in unison, and Foch was able to re- cstablish his line. After the Morrqean fiflemen by mistakes. In his teachings at the |(ics furimes charbes had captured Superior War School and in his|ihe chateau of Mondement, reports writings he held always to the idea|brought by aviators showed that in of an inevitable aggression by Ger-|their retirement the forces of Von F many sprung with lightning-like rap- | ihelow had left a gap botween their | Matinee 17c iafty, after long premeditation, and|lert wing and Von Hausen's right. most minute preparation—the swift1i was by promptly profiting from thunderbolt of the opening to develop into a struggle of colossal propor- tions. & \To parry the blow, Foch said re peatedly, France must have a staff working in the same direction, prac- ticing the same doctrine under a vigorous and audacious chief, shirk- ing no responsibility, preserving the equilibrium of his mind and the force | of his intelligence under formidable difficulties and exercising without hes- situation, in masging his troops t Von Hausen's exposed_flank, that Foch disentangled General Langle e Cary's troops on his fight and eon- hutéd largely to the defeat of the German arms After the battle of the Marne Foclr was given command of a group of jes operating in the mnorth of rance and prometes_to zrand officer lin the Legion of Honor. King George onferred upon him the Ofder of the e itation the most redoubtable rights|math, first cly over his subordinates. Tall, thin, elesant—with a fine head Foch w Joffre as clearly as|and features—General Foch is simple he fore: the war of 1914 arising bearing but authotitative. Trom rom the same motives as the war of 'his gray eves chine the intelligence 1.developing With the same ob- and will power of a real chief. I ¢-n- e thought he a different diffic | versation he shows his military train- issue {ing by directing the course of his talic to estimate | Jiite a manoenvre. would be OPENING SKATING RINK . OLYMPIC HALL Thursday, November 21st DANCE in PULASKI HALL November 20th SWAHN’'S ORCHESTRA THEATRE 4—8HOWS TODAY-4 130, 3, 6.15, 815 ANNETTE KELLERMAN in $1,000,000 Production “Oueen of the Sea” Hearst-Pathe Weekly and Other Subjects Special Bargain Prices Evening 22¢ the value of the service he rendered | When in May of last vear (Genersl REE & to France by communicating his con- { Joffra was succeeded in {he command 3%;3“ m‘:,,“,;‘,, b e W O dence to the young _officers. ~HiS of the I'rench armies operatin on | ithin a certain léngth of time after| work at the Superior War School con- | the Trench front by Genéral Fenri 5 e mater tributed French army w plined” than the held by him to be cated. rizely he perfect of the | Philippe Petain and General Nivella “disci- { was placed in command of a group of was | armies, deneral Foch succeeded Patain ‘edu- chief of the zeneral staff of the ministrv of war, a post he hes held an to the present. all the while work- “SBuch far . s of a general were given n armj % and the command of the |ing dilizently upon the strategic moves Superior hool, where he left |in which the French have been €6 suc- his mart Preferring a|ccssful. In addition he has taken part | jGrot, o more active command, he resigned inlin conferences between the mifttary | oE0 Ot nded Successively the |lunders of the enfente Yowers and al- | SCho%) eth army corp f th ors who er of men in; ne, the Amer ; with General Per: an eémmander-in-c formation of the Infer-nllied Military smmittea he was appointed a mem- v of that body. and later attended o meeting: the Sunreme War Conneil -inVersailles. some time hefore action was oiten ig for themseive poticed by rmed na on. profes hang " efficient The wa adquarte corps found Foch at N the of the Twentieth corps. | attache and Hi 15 mcuntainee: i new army con- nied them by the center of the! i} ng to oh leeiung: ehe to the Belgian and his skill 2 *lably never the ide te Albania! at a_Ger- abior traditions of their descent honest and hospitable. ties pretty land commentators usually refer to the }Albanian mountaincer as but in reality h well have been | men, up to ago, armed In the d upon the strictest possible w vang latall) vance of law—a tribal law found- pre hold office a most distorted idea of per- S e and family honor. o smailest infraction of custom— blow struck in anger, an unwitting in a crowd—inevifably led %o the cclaration of a blood feud, and the|f of the injured party was sullied juntil he had slain either the actual ofiender or some male mémber of his |family. The relatives of the slain indi- {vidual were then compelled to- take up he man hunt,-and thus the feud pread. “So fatal were these feuds that in ome mountain districts it is said a cid man is seldom to be ehcou spite of the traditional lon : Albanian race. The men were ministra ished an; x: r courts methods of pro- , wherever p spointed to ognition of the ation of authority satisfaction. nd that 1 of the simply as Al- hout 1 to_religiou es. No inig s distinction | le between Orthodox, | is now m ople el chur e o to ur militar: are tr under the mild ans th nians ) law s the Ta th off before they attained pa- Saaati s al years, pect urally | “Many arve ihe curious customs and the G aturally n Reigh 1 in the Moslem, | Fituals growing out of the blaod fouds. 4 o ilt is the unwritten law of the land “The Albanians are regarded as the|tia(” o man must not he attacked most ar ace of southeastern | while accompanied by a woman, and Europe. There is no record of their|froquently a wife, daughter, or er arrival in the Balkan peninsula, 1O |{i.jows her menfolk on ali journe elating to their origin. They | tjrough the mountains in order, ught to be descendants of the |jer presence, to furnish protection earliest Aryan immigrants and with|fom an implacable foe. Formerly in praiseworthy persistence have retain- | ccrtain districts, it was possibie to ed their mountain strongholds throush |y r immunity from the vengeance of many ages. an agsrieved Albanian, the price vary- xcept for Bymon'’s casual tribute from $50 to $80, according to the in ‘Childe Harold,’ the Albanians, un- lity. like other peoples of the Balka: ve| “A rigid code protects a guest in not n P d in song or story. In-|the mountain® fastnesses, and if &« deed, they appear to have received but little attention from the world, ex- cept to be characterized as a turbulent raveler has slept under the roof of Albanian the host, actor@ng to tri- law, is obligated to deciare a i e e e e e e . bal “Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is certainly o most pleasant and cfficient solution of the ‘castor_oil problem’, that confromts most mothers.” ; (From a letter to Dr. Caldwell written by Mrs. Chas. Daly, 412 Shonnard St., Syracuse, N. Y.) For most children a mild laxative, ad- ministered occasionally, is all that is necessary to assure normal regularity and {consequent good health. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup® Pepsin is a pleasant-tasting combination of simple laxa- tive herbs with pepsin that acts gently, yet ef- fectively; children like it and take it readily. DR. CALDWELL'S Syrup Pepsin The Perfect Laxative Sold by Druggists Everywbere 50 cts. (=) $1.00 A TRIAL BOTTLE CAN BE OBTAINED, FREE OF CHARGE, BY WRITING TO DR. W. B. CALDWELL, 459 WASHINGTON STREET, MONTICELLO, ILLINOIS s Bt | signasare of ics. the Albarians t peace. The ol1 conditions will prob- Light is coming ety fashion shows, ba i he has been entertzined. is a pieture drawn of the people of Albania les, h it is in steiking contrast to the country as 1 saw it a few weeks ago, der the control of the Trench and The cha: ixlly conspicuous in that part of Al- bania_which is under Ttalian admin- There tiie children are sent R0 natives ars vaid more living wage for work {le benefit of the people the country is efiseuvely soldiers: , except of the Bandes, i§ seen from one end =% the occupied ter- ritory to the other. “Tf feuds still exist they are nful filled and secret, for thé arms of tie have been talen from the troop: and a urn. OTHER VIEW POINTS Let us hope that after ¢ boards keep up their good race of mountaineers, whose ptincipal|Work, and that no l0nger ¢hall crops [6zcupation been to fight among |Spoil for lack of help while in the in Albania. | not ensaged in fight- e bodied men sit on the park bulletin issued | meone els But, like éen Journay ngton headquar- these rude, untutored sp whea he learns, Eraghic Hociety many primitive virtues. soon nuist, that women's skirts e e served with remarkable ve to be less then thirts mferent he fasbioners of ihis Sarment ng been spent in con- ned it will. It is the toddis 1 hature In its most | ekir t lest we' he conelu spects, they have been [sion that t device of o) pen vt from infancy to fight against|ceriin to pent in the. Balkans on an of- |men as readily as against the watfing|hobble be F: elements of the air. . 3 these bd fashion- 2 Saaae | “ - f re not intended to be {more properly a racial custom ob-|Dbe £0, we shull se fow of them. Amet- |served for many centurie: avelers | fcan Womankood has left bridge par- the rear months.—Bridgepbrt TeleXram. is the man who doesn't wite a truthful story of his own life. the Quality of our hen a deeade nge is espes- witich and mot an ameng them- re 1ctically war the c6 of the b s and parties ihese past NOW-A-DAY FOUR LADIES IN A NOVEL UP-TO-DATE S$INGING OFFERIN® KON BT WM. DESMOND in Beyond :fio:wfn, FOUR SHOWS TODAY Mandas, Toesdadi Weestay 130, 3, 6,15, 830 WILLIAM S. HART N THE HELLHOUND OF ALASKA The Fight For Millions WITH WM. DUNCAN FATTY ARBUCKLE N “THE BOUNCER” DOLLS Given Away FREE at Today’s Matinee THE VICTORY SPECIAL Private Harold Peat in the Phots Brama Based On His Gun B “PRIVATE PEAT” A Five-Part Arteraft Picture Bes Mow Ametican Grit Beat the Hun That's what this picture is. Private Peat simply shows you the sort of thing he went through in Franee “-gives you a pretty vivid idem of what it is like to be actually in the trenches—through it all is woven. a beautiful romance, U. S. Official War Weekly MARGERY WILSON In the Five-Part Drama “MARKED CARDS” IN PRICES From the Consular Reports. There are in Italy 2031 establien- ments confieoted with the silk indus- try. OF these 209 are devoted to cul- tivation of silk worm ozgs, 1,703 to spisning and 169 to weaving. & Foreign trade of the Philippine islands in the fiscal year énded June 30, 1918, éxceefiod $200,000009, ~ Im- ports were #82,700,000 and exports $116,600,000. NO ADVANCE From the Commerce Reports. The Grenoble district in France is [eginming- to interest itself in the in- troduction of power - farming ma- chinery. It seems that only American machinery is seriously _considered Prominent men in several communi- ties are encouraging the movement. A new and valuable copper ore has been disoovered in the district of Varmland, Sweden, Reéports from the ficld indicate that Paint to Think Of. ‘L’l:es(;{ie:;la(flc:nj;nt crep this year will Talking of Fules for Christmas pres- | ents to the fighting men in France, ever stop to think that at the allow- anee per man it will take the biggest ship we have to carty the packages allowed, even if she carriés nothing more ?—Milwaukee New: Could Believe It An advertisement in a Lowell paper contains the alarming news that eorn- ed beef is 78 cents a pound. But the elevation of corfiea heef to the rank of aristoeratic foods is aceidental. It is, in faet, & ographical —eérror— Springfield Republican. Winter is descending upon Petro- grad, and a vair of ghoes costs $100 in that - What zéledy do the Bol« sheviki propdse for chifblains>— land>Plain Doaler. e RALLY DAY AT THE CENTRAL BAPTIST. GHURCH Union Square Evening Sermon, TWO GREAT HEARTS ‘ A Good Place to go Sunday Evenings The Overcoats offered by us are up tailoring, as fine a stock as we have ever but when you examine them the price is less than you woyld'expect under prevailing conditions—but what we want to impress you with is the fact that offering is up to the standard. to our high standard, in both fabric and shown. Prices higher, of course, OVERCOATS $18.00 TO $50.00 BOYS' OVERCOATS, $10.00, $12.00, $15.00 AND $16.50 SUITS, TOO, FOR MEN AT $20.00 TO $40.00 Same standard maintained A few of the BEACH COATS came in this week THE F. A. WELLS CO. WILL L. STEARNS, Prop. ~ “Good Clothes Store” T i

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