Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
* und g.-aue 123 YEARS OLD - Brics 123 & wevk: 360 & mesth; $0.00 ! aied af e Pestolis s Nervich Comk. @ mater. Tetoghene Cefte. P o yaGulist Sunes Ofics W8 ——_— ‘salietn 350 Ofics 35-2. ? A% euimantie Offfes I3 Chuveh St Telephone 105. 75" Norwich, Thureday, Aug. 14, 1919 ‘e WEEK ENDING AUGUST 8th TAKE THE BULLETIN ALONG Subscribers and readers of The Bulletin leaving the seasen, or a vacation, can The Bulletin sent te their address by mail for any specified period at the regular rats by notifying the business depariment, telephone 480 KOLCHAK'S COLLAPSE. The fruits of irresolution are seen in the fate of Admiral Koichak whose ~desperately struggling army in Si- “Iberia is now reported on the point of "collapse. And the wavering and irreso- lution have been on the part of the al Yes. Belatedly the United States is to Send 75,000 rifies to the admiral's army, - which is in such straits that it may - be gobbled up by the Bolsheyik forces before the sorely needed war equip- thent can arrive. "' The plight of Siberia suggests the /" Btory of the once prosperous merchant/ Whose footune was swept away and who started in to recoup his lost es- ~tate by opening a veal pie stand in sthe financial district where omce he > had been a king. A friend of his for- ‘mer prosperous days stopped to com- miserate with him. “Hang your sym- pathy, man. Why don't Veal pie?” was the rejoinder. The allies. have offered much well wh meant sympathy, but have bought ‘few veal pies for Kolchak and Si- “Beria. _ " There seeme to have been no de- .cisive policy of intervention or non- .antervention. Troops sent in have - been under orders that made them = practically impotent and keot them from any armed clashes with the Bol- ‘¥heviki. The admiral and his army “ seem now to be in about the same po- sition as Grarnd Dike Nicholas when he had to fAght the well equipped German army with little more than scyvthes and pruning hooks. The Siberians have had their ex- -~ perience with Bolshevism and they want no more of it, but they are help- _less to do anything but retreat before the well armed invaders. After a vear of peace in which the most populous part of Siberia had rees- blished its civil gevernment. -this tpost against Bolshevism seems Westined to be enguifed because help ill come too late. If this tragedy comes, as now seems bable, it should lie upon the con- iences of those.whosé wavering at- ude and tardy action is so much to ame. SETTLING WITH FRANCE. The cry that French war ciaims n the United States would be und to be excessive seems to have n definitely and very satisfac- ly disposed of among the details the final agreement between this ntry and our ally. Alarmists who the ery of “rent for the nches” find little to console them- Tves in the report that the claims {Made by France for damage to French perty and to eivilians - will not ount to more tham $2.000.000. This fis about 31 per capita for each man {62 the American forces engaged on the iolher side. ZiIn the final settlement of our ac- {Psunts with the French government, /the amount of about $400,000,000 is ithe sum to be paid by France on long igredits for all our war materials left {gyer_there, which we either cannot or jeare ‘ot to bring back. With charae- ‘teristic thrift, it 13 to be expected that the possible salvage work will be “tirned to very neat account by the “French as they resume the industries of peace. __We can all be well satisfied with “the spirit of fair play in which these Degotiations have been carrfed on by Lieut. Col. Robert B. Burkman of St .. Louis, and the ledgers are bal- anced this business deal is closed * with mutual good feeling. ‘While tales of overcharges to sol- ediers by the French storekeepers were 'traquenuy heard, it was not neces- to go to France to find that the ‘man in khaki or blue freques itly com- “Plained that the uniform invités high -prices. The men of the service will =tell you that teday ef American shopkeepers. For French valor and r-endurtnes that stood steadfast from|American privilege of facing a Jury of -August, 1914, till the day of final vic- fory we can have only the sincerest iration and we shake hands over wish that we shall ever remain o MRAr. ‘SEGREGV‘AND THE B BREMEN. ‘Whether the crew of .the merchant submarine Bremen has ar- rived at Berlin or not after three years of imprisonment in a British ! prison camp, the report recalls an event of strong local interest in the days before the United States entered the war. _British naval pelicy was to conceal néws of the fate of enemy subma- rines, captured or destroyed, a policy ahll:h is said to have been highly de- ‘moralizing to the nerves of German sailors and civilians. The Bremen a sister ship to the Deutschland, ,.>hose mysterious comings and goings, first to Baltimore and then to New “10bndon, filled columns in “the news- papers from July to November, 191, ..*U later. Night after night vou buy a|has been shown, had a neat little ball- he would never admit th capture. Soon - back for his home .Ort fl u—u with the ml‘ A From to time m ‘were ' re- Bremen had been seen or Scotland, but . Held " tight th ity could net be drawn one way or the swhen . its ruthless submarine campaign, was transformed into an armed undersea pirate under a nig, who doubtless treasures to this day the gold ‘watch that was present- ed to him by the people of New Lon- don at-the banquet they gave to sig- nalize his feat of pileting the Deutsch- land to that port and opening the new state pier to transatianfic submarine DMENTS. Bombardment by propaganda is one of the daily experiences of every newspaper office. Tons of mail of this character must be distributed on .ev- ery delivery by Uncle Sam's letter carriers. As fast as a new cause arises, there develops the anti-party and each turns to pro: to extol its own virtues and blacken the claims of opponents... 3 Oceans of ink, forests of W”‘ whole ‘batteries ' of typewriters - an linotype machines are thrown into the breach, while the propaganda writers pull their employers’ legs for sums unlimited. Ready made opinion can be had at a price, and the individual “angel” like Henry Ford or the or- ganization intent upon its eunp.t‘n furnishes the price. Advocates and nnpenenu the League of Nations have probably half a dozen propaganda mills in opera- tion, the packers never lose a chance to counter each new threat of inves- tigations with a propaganda cam- paign, and at least three distinct Russian parties are at work to prove to the American people that each is ost deserving of support, while the ther two would get their just de- serts if they were led out in front of a firing squad. President Carranza, it bearing propaganda factory oiled up and ready for operation in New York, and the little new nations are all hard at the task of trying to manufacture sentiment in their fa- vor. Germany stands out as a herrible example of failure by the most co- lossal propaganda plant in the world, that located at Berlin be- fore and during the war. If in- dustry with the pen and printed page could have won the conflict, the 8- sian performance was all that could have been desired. But the Americans learned’ immunity against it all. 1s there a lesson in this for the propa- gandists of today? HELPED TO WIN. We get an idea of how much the American = shipbuilding plan and achievement helped to win the war when we learn that the emergency fleet corporation laid the keels of over 000 vessels with a tonnage of 11,400,- 00. of which 1,500 have been launched and 1,100 delivered. To build a ton- nage which is about equal to sixty per. cent. of the tonnage of the British merchant marine before the war is an accomplishment that would have been pronounced impossible, but American war production found the way and contributed this no inconsiderable fac- tor to winning the war. The rapidity of American shipbuild- ing was a mighty factor in convincing Germany that the submarine cam- paign was a hopeless failure. It took its place beside the safety with which American troops were transported in proving that the full resources of the United States could be brought to bear across the sea. Happily this is one kind of war pro- command of Capt. Koe-| nicely | great convenience or not. have talked her brmm She has lived in Chicago fifty years, || ulnlqn whvmwm and bailland she told me a lot about the inter- & ;-m: ‘things that happened after ‘the wx|fiver “Probably she was born where the With s aizablé | Auditorhin novw is nd picked violets bark account. This has nothing to do|in the wooods around the cormer. Tith_getting asrested. .though, T can > 'Xon. can laugh,” Leretta said coolly. “l'lunk fortune! Safe for another "But she was intensely interesting. day!® is a very bld n, but as lively day.” o Take “She dldnt invite you,” Loretta said “T ‘went downtown this m “This starts out like a romance,” her brother said. crushingly. “After my lunch I came “T took a seat at the front of the|home on the bus. T sat on top and car,” Loretta went on calmly, “and did{I had hardly sat down before a ;lrl not particularly notice the other per- began asking me questions about son there.” | places we passed. ‘We tafked about 'oh did you sit rl:ht on the pooreverything under the sun until T got crea out. As I walked along our street “In the other half of the seat,” here, thinking I'd had a real nice day, retta went on, “until she spoke to me.|T met Mrs. Dunbar's niece, who has She said she noticed I wore a military | just come from New York. She walk- pin and she wondered whether T knew|ed along with me and told me she was ‘where her son’s regiment was now. very indignant. It seems a woman “It happened that I had read some-|had tried to talk to her as they had thing this morning in the paper. It|come along from the car %nd she had mentioned that very regiment as get- | told the person that she was not ac- ting ready to sail. In tok the woman’s | customed .to conversing with strangers name and address and promised to|a wished to be alone.” send her the clipping. We had a long ‘Rather strong hint!™ talk about a lot of things all the way| “When I left her and came in here T down, the two women in the back seat| wondered what was the matter with | Joining in.” me. T have tried hard ever since to id you serve tea and wafers?" scrape up a bit of hauteur. I never “A ll!lle later I was at the ribbon |think of beginning a talk myself, but if. counter,” Loretta continued, “and a|people talk to me I can’t help liking pretty customer standing next to melit. I think it is a compliment myself.” asked my advice about a certain shade —Exchange. uonA with headaches and dizzy speils. Wwithout any trouble at all. in a long time, feels the good results we have received is well worth 2 JOHN F. GLLBER‘!' for nearly seven months with rheumatism. CY: “I had been 44 myself a number of year ago, but was _mever troubled so bad until th ‘bother me. 1 was troubled wi rheumatism began ' to ‘headaches, they would ‘stem to be right at the front of my head, thé pain was Quite severe and lasting these headaches would make up night three or four times to My limbs, hands and arms would stem to go at times; at times with palpatation of the h n; out of bed in sore. week until T My wife hi letting peoble know,about. 1 read of GOLDINE 10 give it a I was short of breath and also rt. 1 could the morning I would be so stiff &n the papers and de- used that medcine a vement in my condi- al. 1 had n cided i saw a 1do m“m‘#l up as I did before and 1 am not troubled as I was My rheumatism is a lot better. 1 feel better than I have felt a8 also used this medicine and 1 Bet up now Remember we are pwbn hing uumaflu of people | right here in Norwich that are being benetited remedies. th X men No bod- t back until after IN THE DAY’S NEWS Claims for Thrace. ‘“Ancient Thrace, one of the ing lands of the world’'s history, parts af which Greece has presented m To mE EDrrOR the sails of these members who had | $ - planned a A Free Country. during the nro ve weeks’ recess. Some of the le‘ters of|There was much bitterness over his the people are sure interestir spe- | demand that congress stay in session cially the one from Friend Bill. who,and wait for him to address it. The has his own ideas regardless of the democrats shared this resentment ful- strike. ly as much as the republicans for the His uen!lmantl are mine exactly. Let, movement was led and endorsed by everyone who has the price and feels;Clark and Kitchen, who had made like riding on the cars do so, thereby'BDCBChe! in its favor. Moreover the helping to keep them running. Auto-|railroad and high cost of living ques- trucks might do for a regular- thing,|tions are already before congres- if we never had cars, but I hope we Sional committees and congress feels aré too far advanced and intelligent|that the _president is stealing its thun- to be satisfied to use them continually.|der by going before the country as Come, fellow citizens. it is your nick- | the originator of determined action to els which are the governing factor as|protect the public. But the house at to whether we are to be deprived of a|once agreed to his request that the recess be abandoned, although it is of the oninion that the work urged by ithe prefdent would have been has- tened h#1 the committees been per- mitted to work in recess without thc interruptions of routine busines: General March and other officials of the war department apnpeared re- cently before the foreign relations {committee of the house regarding bringing back the bodies of soldiers who died in oversea service. From S mT T e e o e s e e might H8e’an thewn. | 71,000 American soldiers lie dead This is a free country in that re-|France and the auestion of bringing spect. therefore if anvone is offended|tNem home is now the subject of di- | by your ridfhg on the cars. laugh xul”"mt‘“c T e e e. 7 = o6t inetinndisto L. WILLIAMS. lerences to whether the dead should Norwich, Aug. 13, 1919. I'be brought back to the United States or buried in the proposed great W N American cemetery to be establish- (Special to The Bulletin.) Washington, D. C. Auz. 13—Re- ed in France. To these 71,000 letters publicans are looking with consider- 19.060 failed to reply and of the 52,- 000 answers received 39,000 favored able Tatisfaction on the record they have made ifi the short time the 6&th bringing the bodies home and 13,000 congress has heen in session. In less | preferred France as a place of burial, as did Roorevelt who said regarding his son “let the tree lie where it fell.” The state war and navy departments than two months théy organized bothyare actin® concurrently in the mat- senate and house after eight vears of | ter There is no dcubt but that France democratic control; they passed all the necessary supply bills for the fis- cal year 1918-20: they passed the wo- man suffrage amendment, the house is #xceedingly reluctant to have the bodi® exhumed and this applies not cleaned theé prohibition enforcement bill from its slate, and a score or only to the American heroes but to those of all the allles who ave buried in France. The number reaches sev- en million and France fears the un- more or other important measures were acted on. They saved the coun- try not less—than /two billion dollars in the suppiy bills, as previeusly es- sanitary conditior which might re- ult and aiso the depressing influence timated and demanded by the demo: crats last winter, when the bills failed the removal of so many would have on the people. The United States will to pass owing to republican Hlibuster. The republican party is working bring home the dead where it is ex with its customary harmony despite et WEEPING EEZEMA We are warned that if we do not ride the cars will be taken off: then there will be anotker howl and kick by those who absolutely refuse to ride,| and therefore spite themselves more than anyone else. Don’t let anyone tell you how and when' you can ride. Don't let a few tell vou .that you! must boycott the cars, even though| places of business mizht be so threa nomenon was duplicated, age, on the eastern side of the Balkan pen mobile Thrace. the coast cities of Thrace, on what now are the Marmora, seas, for trading stations. “Thus and thus Greece early came into pos- session of the peninsula now ecalled Gallipoli, five mile neck of the isthmus to keep he Thracians within bounds. “Shrinking chauging time Xerxes abandoned it, the | part of it with Macedonia and soned the rest, |strut car men by paying 40 per cent. cnnrldes in peace as we have been in |more for riding. German | With the goods. duct whose usefulness is not ended by | speaker, tne floor leader, the steeming peace. This great tonnage means |committee and chairmen of major that the world’s balance will be more | Committees are pulling well together quickly restored, that the whole world | With the rank and file of members will be better fed, more comfortable | 0lIOWiDg them. Now and then a new and ‘mie sasi o man. or a disgruntied old member, re- i fuses to pull his share of the load and sits back in the traces, but such in- Stances are rare. One thing that makes leadership difficult,at this time is the great number of new members who came in without legisiative e: perience. Some of them had been lo- In, whispers | caj Jeaders at home and do not know the need of following a fixed and well established policy of legislative rou- tine. Plane for change and reform in leg- TR T islative mefheds are fairly bulging Thrifty New Yorkers are now en-|from their heads. They had told the joying their matinees on the side- |folks at home they “would show con- walk. gress a thing or two” but after being here a while they are apt to see things Of course Chicago cemldn't let New I a SWersal e wnd they. Jdarn York enjoy a monopol. astors' | that the routine work is based on a trlko.m ” Vo e T8 | general policy that has been tried out by vears of experience. Most of these ngressional reokies are already fn.! ing into line and by winter prac®; iy all of tHem will be doing their p-.rt to preserve party harmeny. The president tock the wind out of EDITORIAL NOTES, Carnegie tried hard but didm’t suc- ceed in dying poer. Money talks, but onty when it is hush money. Lodge told it to the marines and the senate heard the answer. Plumb’'s Purple Pellets for Plute- crats is the way one contemperary | oq put it ——— Somebody asks. if America is only jlzl:ln‘ ‘when it should be sawing Woo art o R Ban Johnson is having the great! his peers. ‘Omaha has just averted a strike ,of ‘When it comes to speaking ill of their neighbors, most people are there QUISITE BABY DRESSES AND LITTLE TOTS. How does Japan relish Being classed by von Reventiow as the nearest ap- proach to kultur? Will You Have a Cup of Tea? Cupid attends to those who want to get married; the diverce court to those who don't want to stay mar- ried. A Lynn engineer has just perfected the most powerful of all mll. Just in time for use en the profit- eers. X ‘The mnn on"the corner says: When Mayor Hylan's great pnpand ‘bus system goes- on strike & New Yorker wants to know if a municipal roller slate guatasn would be ihe Baxs Wilson says) upom Four O'Clock - helpful a cup of tea is in toning gxmhall’s Tesxtile §hnp OFFERS MERCHANDISE OF SUPERIOR QUALITY AT VERY MODERATE PRICES—CRETONNES, RUGS, LINENS, EX- NOVELTIES FOR GIFTS. An jdeal place to shop and you may ask yeur friends— pear otherwise. Of course fl'ere are many personal differences of opinion, but they are not fundamental, and the A Perfect Treatment For This Distressing Complaint ‘WasiNG. *“I had an attack of Weeping ‘Fczema; so bad that my clothes would be wet througl at-times. T suffered terribly. I could get no relief until I tried ‘Fruit-a-tives (or Fruit Liver ZTablets) and ‘Sootha Balva’, The first treatment gave me l relief. Altogether, I have used three boxes of ‘Seotha Salva’ and two of ‘Fruit-a-tives’,and am entirely well’’, Both these remediesiare sold by dealers at &0c. & box, 6 for $2.50, or sent by FRUIT-A-TIVES' Limited, OGDENSBURG, N.Y. “Fruit-a-tives” is also put upina trial size which adk for 25¢. OTHER CUTE THINGS FOR The sociable custom of serving tea in the afiernoon will, it is predicted, enjoy a much wider vogue in the United States than hitherto. The army has put its emphatic “O-Kek” (as President Tea. The war demonstrated as nothing else could have done, hew up ome who is exhausted. ICC CRREAM AI..O sEnvgsn I:oAN OPEN (BUT SCREENED) A pleasant place to kmow about. . 342 WASHINGTON STREET | “Sleeve Protectors claims to the peace conference, affords a parallel nce or to Alalktldetermmauon to the difficulties of self- already experienced along the eastern shores of the Adri- atic,” says a bulietin from the Wash- ington headquartees of Geographic society. “It will be recalled that the spirited the Nationgl Slavia and Italy g0 arose from the fact that Italians were predominant in coastal the hinterland was undeniably Slavic. The Latin peopls of Italy had gone across the Adriatic in past centuries, settled along the east Adriatic shore: but were pushed well out to islands ax}g peninsulas hy the influx of Slavie tribes. cities while “In much the same way this phe- in an earlier sula., where lay the extremely The Greeks colonized Black and Aegean not for settlement so much as Constantinople was founded, building a wall across the and expanding, and its conformation time and Darius invaded it., Philip II. united garri- the Romans organized again as come by our They are proof that we have a remedy that has wonderful merit and producing amazing results. We have no cure-alls, no dope, no patent medicine; but two honest herb and root remeédies that have dueing resalts ing results righ and ne: dies en’ pro- throughout thé country and are produc- therein Norwich amongst your friends If you want to hear more of our reme. f you are loaking for a relief from stomach, nerve, kidney ore rheumatic troubles remedies have done for others and can do for yo ENGLER’S BROADWAY PHARMACY pressly desired, but it is apparent th. government favors letting the rest on French soil in the splendid cemetery which is planned. ies will be bro: demobilization is completed. nd let me show you what our 1 will meet you daily at it as a province, Thrace dropped at last into the capacious maw of the Turks with the fall of Cnn.untlnoplol n Later the westrn part, that Philip | joined to Macedonia, fell within the limits of pre-war the rn Rumelia, which was given to Bulgaria at the London settlement of 1913. The rst re- mained with Buropean Turkey until the world war exploded that domain and left the pieces to be the step- children of the allied nations. “Adrianople, once- the Paris of Thrace, and later the Versailles of the Turkish sultans, is a picturesque, if somewhat unkempt, reminder of the ancient days. But more familiar, per- haps, is the name of Philippi, in the center of the rich gold mine district ot Thrace, and near the hill of Dionysius, which owes its fame to neither of thoge facts as to the visits of Paul, who wrote letters to his converts that were incorporated in the Bible as the book ‘of Philippians. “Dionysius, or Bachus, as the Rom- ans call the god, typified the loose mo- rality of the wild and barbarous in- habitants of Thrace originally, for the Thracians of historic times already were a composite people. “Every girl passed through a period when she was the common property of the maje community before she mar- ried onelof them. Even in Grecian days the worship of Dionysius consist ed of wild nocturnal orgies. There the story that three women who de- clined to join in the revelries were transformed into doves, and a king of Thrace was reputed to have resisted a visit of Dionysius to his domain. The god escaped by a plunge into the sea, but the king was stricken .with a blindness and ‘a frenzy, so the myth relates, that caused him to hew down his son, believing him to be a tree. “At one period Thrace had an alli- ance with Greece; but the relations of the two nations at other periods is a THE MAGNETIG HAMILTON e IN— - “IN HIS BROTHER’S PLACE” A METRO COMEDY DRAMA OF MANY TWISTS AND LIGHT- NING' SURPRISES ALBERT RAY - WITH ELINOR FAIR —AN— N O Al\"‘l‘)JIUSSlC BY” A HEART INTEREST STORY OF TWO AMERICANS DAVIS e AT R Toeday—Mat. 2.15; Eve. 645.8.45 JACK.SHERRILL IN THE SCREEN VERSION OF THE FAMOUS NOVEL ONCE TO EVERY MAN By LARRY EVANS 6 Part Picture With a Punch INTERNATIONAL NEWS Pathe. Colored Revue EDDIE POLO IN THE NINTH EPISODE OF __The Lure of the re Circus VOD A-VlL MOV]FS 481G TIME_ACTS_IN PICTURES WISE WIVES LYONS.MORAN COMEDY NEW S8HOW TOMORROW moot question. Certain it is that the cultured Greeks regarded the Thrac- ians as a rugged and semi-barbarous people, just as they regarded the eli- mate of Thrace severe, and belleved it to be the home of Boreas, the north wind.” Patience Has Its Limits, A distinguished centenary speaker held with some show of truth that the Garden of Eden was at Wichita Kan.—in fact, is there yet—but when he_contends that Adam was an Arra pahoe Indian we can no longer foi- low him.—Columbus Dispateh. Looking Forward It is perhaps not surprising that forwara.ooking Japanese statesmen should announce themselves in of independence for the Philippin lands.—Providenct Journal Sometimts a blond woman is really a blond. In Connection With the Anniversary Sale The 9 CENT SALE Still Continues There are Hundreds of Real Bargains to be Found On the Tables in Qur Annex. Come In and See How Much Your Pennies Are Worth. NINE-CENT ITEMS From The STATIONERY DEP'T Bank Note Writing Tablets 2 for Art Loom Writing Tablets 2 for Large size Writing Tablets 2 for Blue Bird Writing Tablets. . Special Writing Tablets.. 2 for White Wove Envelopse, a pkg. Princess Envelopes, a pkg Mi%ado Lead Pen. Automobile Pen Holders. . - 2 for . 6 for 2 for 2 for Autemobile Pencils Special Pencil, Modern Clutch Pencils Banner Rubber Band: Lo NOTIONS AND SMALL WARES Special 9-Cent Burnms Nye's Machine OIl.. Dust Caps ’e Cashiod Bant Hangers.... 2 for %o Wood Coat-and-Pant Hangers.. 9¢ Nickel Coat-and-Pant HIM.I‘I. folding type Shirtwaist Hangers, 3 colars.... 9 36-inch Folding Weod Measures 9¢ Sew-on Hose Supporters .. 9 Children’s Hose Supporters in black or white .. . Strawberry Emerys . % THIMBLES Nickel Plated . 2 for 9¢ Celluleid .. . 2 for % Aluminum . . 8 for 9 Cdr"! Bones and Steeis in all . 4 for ¢ Am lnd. . . 9¢ Celluloid Finger Shislds.. 2 for ¢ NOTIONS—Continued Corset Laces, mercerized....... Shinela Shoe Polish Round Shoe La n all sizes, mahogany, brown and hlack. . Flat Shoe Lac in all sizes, brown and black... 2 pair for Flat Shoe Laces, 30-inch. Collar Buttons Conqueror Snap Fastsners 2 cards for 9c SNAP FASTENERS Hygrade . . 2 cards for 9c Alliance ... See-1t-Spring Kohineer ... 4 cards for 9¢ So-No-More 5 cards for 9c Perfection .......... 5 cards for 9¢ HOOKS AND EYES Betty .............. 3 cards for 9¢ Alliance ..... o BRRE Colonial Black A Black Toilet Pins .. a box % Toilet Pins in black, mat and white ve'ns . 2 cards for 9¢ Cemmon Pin . 2 papers for 9c Baby Mine Gold Safety Pins... 9o SAFETY PINS Clinton, size 3 . Duplex, size 3 Alliance, size 3 Delong, assorted .- % Baby Dimple, assorted . % Defender, 3 sizes.. 2 for 9c Clinten Blanket Pins.... a pair Sc HAIR PINS Hump, sizes 1 to 5........ 2 for 9 Hump, size 6.... Sl Alliance, 1% te <31, 2 wkgs. for 9¢” Regular and Invisible Hair Pins in black- or bronze, 2 pkgs. for 9¢ ‘Pearl Buttons. NOTIONS—Continued Liberty Bell Cabinets.... 2 for 9 Triumph Cabinets ............. % Tiger Common Pins, 3 pkgs. for 9 Sta-Put Pins...... 3 boxes for 9¢ Hat Pins, black or white, a card 9¢ Rick Rack Braid........ a piece 9¢ Bias Seam Tape in odd colors.. % White Bias S8eam Tape.. 3 for 9 Lingerie Tape, 3 colors......... 9% Tintex Rit Dye Flakes 3 clrds fur Pearl Buttons, extra quality.. Coat and Suit Buttons, oddl and ends on cards Packing Needles iy lroning Wax 6 for 9 60-inch Tape Mo 2 for 60-inch Measure, best gr.de Pin Cushions Basting Cotton 400 yards Basting Cotton, 200 yards, 2 for Shamrock Linen Thread Giant Linen Finish Thread, 2for Aunt Lydia’s Linen Finish Thread, a spool . Coat’s Darning Cotton.... 3 for Merrick’s Darning Cotten, 3 for Ideal Darning Cotton 3 for Alliance Mercerized Mending Cotton ... 2 for Coat’s Mercerized Mend ng Cot- ton it £ Darning Wool on card:. ese 2for Dexter’s Knitting Cotton... ball Coat’s Thread in all sizes, 2 for Foot Form Darner Kid Curlers. .. Curling lrons Se Ever Wave Hair Waver, a card 8¢ Live Wire Hair Waver, a card 8¢ West Electric Curlers.... a card 9¢