Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 14, 1920, Page 7

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—_— ! At once! Reliefwm\.{ “Pape’s Cold Compound”’! —_— The first dose eases your cold! . Dozt stay staffed-up! Quit blowing \ and snuffling! A dose .of ‘Pape’s Cold Compound” taken every two Bours until three doses are taken us- ually breaks up a severe cold-and ends logged: ostrils and the air o -up n and: the pas- sages of vour head; 6top nose run- ming; relieve the. headache, dullness, feverishmess, sneezing, soreness ‘and stiffness. Pape's Cold Compound” is the quickest, sarest relief ¥hown and. costs only a few ceats at drug stores. It acts without assistance. Tastes' nice. Contains no quinine. Insist on Pape's! IF KIDNEYS ACT BAD TAKE SALTS SAYS BACKACHE IS A SIGN YOU HAVE BEEN EATING TOO MUCH MEAT. HENS CAIN WELL IN TENTH WEEK AT STORRS | ¢ of the ng A . won a yield of 45 ds_or vari- . Lane’s Rhode Is- m Southboro, Mass., won f he week with a Oneck Farm's . Westhampton 2 pen of Reds enter- e of 4 ¥ Dointed o ears and years of rec- furnjsh pretty definite 300" egg hens are very between. This one fact ver, - to e when it is reme fe same records which have been re- ved to also definitely show that the m 5.000 hens during the s has averaged 156 eggs 30 do 'ggs from each en birds. With prices that ¢ been obiained during the past ear the product from ten hens would Tetall for $75; whereae it uld cost leas than 3$35'to feed these ten hens. The three best pens in each of the srincipal varieties are 2 follows: Plymouth Rocks. Merritt M. Clark (Barred, Br fleld Center, Can. ... 3 Oneck Farm (Barred ton Beach, L. L -{ mecial BEWARE OF BORAX. Borax has many valuable uses but e of the soil, apparently, no effects- of borax in fertilizers came strongly to the attention® of the gov- ernment and state authorities the past summer when certain potato farmers in Maine suffered a serious set-back to their that seemed traceable to_the fertilizers used. nivestigation reveaied that injury was due to an excess of borax in com- fertilizers. Scarcity of pot- ash during the war led to the develop- t of Américan sources to re- lace the German potash formerly im- ported in great quantities. Two of thess American sources have been found to carry borax in sufficient ‘'amount to endanger plant life. Little, if any, of this difficulty was reported ‘from Connecticut during the past year but Maine, especially, and some other states, suffered consider- ably. The United States Department of Agriculture is now out with & warning to farmers agaist this dang- er. The Extension Service 6f Can- netcleut Agricultural college is tak- ing steps to acquaint the farmers of the state of the potash situation. The U. S. Department of Agricul- ture malkes the following statement, of interest to all farmers who use com- wmercial fertilizers carrying a consid erable quantity of potash: In order to protect the people of the United States and to conserve the food supply, the department, on Oct- tober 24, 1319, addressed a letter to all brokers, fertilizer manufacturers, and dry mixers, who are undet license un- der the Control Act of August 10, 1917, otating that the department would not permit more an two pounds per fon of anhydrous borax in mixed fertiltzers, unless the presence of an excess of this amount is plainly indicated on _the container. It was further stated that tNe purpose of is regulation was to insure that no fertilizer _application _which would add more than tw6 pounds of borax to the acre would be made by farmers { without their knowledge. The secretary of agriculture, on December 6. 1919, issued a formal or- <der prohibiting the sale of mixed fer- izer containing borax in excess of one-tenth of one per cent., unless the containers ate o labéled as to show the percentage of borax present. This action was designed to protect the fafmer in the use of as much as ton of fertllizer per enre, apniled in he drill, or to give him fotice {hat the matarial contafned borax. If the fer. tilizer contalns more than two poun of borax pér it s thousht that it ¢ be safel d. provided proper tion is given to the method of application and the amount applled ver_acre. of borax. 1.000 pounds per acre may o used in ihe drill withont exceeding the 2 pounds per acre, the indicated E olerance, It it contains 04 0 nounds in the Arill wanld not exceed the avparent limit of safety £ on the other hand, the fertilizer roadcastad and eontain< 0.5 ° ne- cent. Borax. than a fan =av he anplied without exmeadine the limit of 10 Ths. per acre of arhydrous Farav. the in- @iratad Jiv't of cafaty for thie mode of applieation. Tf it contains 10 per rent. of boraz, then an annieation ~f .| 1.000 ponnds per acre hroadeast ani’d ha made wit hout exceedine the indé ? gafety for this method. WO DRONZ=S KFPT IN A PROFIT- ABLE POULTRY FLOCK. A flock of hens ~ae oo £ the was noer lurk, Ja nd The chances were ed for mest were (o but it wasn't known untl ther were dressed. Modern poultrymen do not permit luck to enterd into the number of ezgs a flock produces. Tt fs a matter of selecting hens which will lay and seiling or using the others for meat. In Blackhawk county., Towa, where nineteenn flocks were cuiled hy the demenstration agent in Sep- T, 2,149 hirds were examined and out of this' number the death sentence wae passed on 542 The worker hen — tha fowl that préduces persistentiy and economical- ly—usualiy carries ragged, worn plum- is a late moulter; has a red, large piump _eomb, and white, thin. anka, heak and ear lobes ie the pelvic bones are faithful la s | thin, pliable and wide apart and the skin is thin, loose and shows no in- dication of hard fat. The space be- tween the pelvic bone and the end of tie breast bone i wide. The breast bone is soft. pitable and prominent. Shirker hens are characterized by neat. elean plumage; early moulting: a pale, small. sarivelled comb; yellow, round and foll shanks; yellow beak, treamy ear lobes; heavy, right and close together peivic bones. The spread between the pelvic bone and the end of the breqast bone is narrow, while the small bones on either side of the breast bone are hard and well covered with flesh. The skin is thick, hard and underlaid with fat. Tn making physical examination of the fowls for production eficiency, hoid the hen with the breast bone in the palm of the hand, with the flesh part of the legs held firmly on either cide of the forefinger, The feeling of the breast bone in the paim of the hand will indieate the quality of the skin, while with the other hand meas- ure ‘the distance between the pelvic bone and from the pelvic bone to the rear end of the breast bone. Also ex- amine the plumage, comb, shanks, one of them. The injurious |\t £ it contains 0.2 per cent ! beak, ear lobes and thus accumulate accurate information for,the diagnosis of ‘conformation and production abil- ~It is essential to consider all points in respect to their importancs, and not place too much: dependence on one or more prominent characteristies. HOW TUBELCULOSIS SPREADS. Farmers Bulletin No. 1069, issued agriculture, should be in the hands of Connecticut farmers who are fighting tuberculosis in their herds, Elimina- will help the public to safer milk but will bring profits to the dairymen by increasing the efficiency of his herd. “The tuberculosis cow is the great- est source of danger (o healthy cattle” reads the bulletin. “Any reacting cattle not promptly removed from the herd constitute a constant source of infection. ' “Tuberculous cattle, sooner or later, begin to give off the germs of the dis- case.. These germs escape by the mouth, ngse, and bowels, in_the milk; and other discharges. The discharged germs are carried in the air for a time until they fall to the ground. “Animals in agjoining stalls may. take in the germs in the feed they eat and thus contract the disease. Con- tinuoug«water troughs in barns con- taining diseased cattle are a source of danger. Drinking holes containing material from infecteq animals are likewise dangerous. “Failure {0 clean and disinfect the premises occupied by the diseased catile constitutes another source of danger. Infected. milking tubes and the practice of feeding calves with ray milk from tuberculous cows are other means by which tuberculosis spreads in a herd.” IMPORTANCE OF LIME. Continued high prices of all feeds make more important than ever the production of clover hay on the farm. Extensive observation of limed and unlimed clover seedings the past year indicate an almost universal need of lime throughout the state, says Hen- fy Dorsey, of the Agronomy Depart- ment, at Connecticut Agricultural College at Storrs. . Many seedings in oats show good clover stands to the point where the last bit of lime was spread. Beyond this point the clover is absent and the grass stand usually poor. These observations have been made where t rmer purchased his own lime. They have also been made in a few instances where lime was supplied ssociation the past esponse to lime indicates its great need for one would hardly expect results from a lime treatment within, the first six months after application. I spring. In purchasivg lime, the farmer shoulq study the anal of the goods. That form is best which fur- {nishes the largest number of pounds for a dollar of oxide of calcium on the land. 1f ground limestone is bought, attention should also be given to its i This material shoulq pass a sieve. Caustic or hydrated s di effective in The farmer should apply a ton of ‘me or two tons of ground limestone. i into the This should be surface of the sol seed bed. Before repeating the appli cation threo.to five vears may elapse | when the same amount will again be Ineeded. Liming the land should be- coms & regular practice, and its appli- cation should come at & reguiar place in the crop rotation. This will mean larger crops of better quality. 1 worked by the United States department of}] tion of bovine tuberculosis not omly | GIVE THE FARM A (I‘:!AME.‘_‘:":‘t Many of the farms of Connecti have been nanted, the title taking form from some natural characteristic Or from an historical or a literary source Advertising value of a distinctive name is a point not to be overlooked by the shrewd farmer. . Now, it secems, the movement for naming farms is becoming nationwide. The following arguments for naming the home farm were issued under the name of the Kansas State Agricultu- ral College but they are equally ap- plicable in other states. “In town the houses are numbered as the convicts in prison. Tn the country the home may be known far and wide by some significant name if the farmer but wakens to his oppor- tunity. Tt will be a guide to the tra- veler; and may go down in history cven as the name of Mount Vernon has done. “The farmer should take no risks of having his farm designated by the public in any such manner as the ‘Old Smith Place “Having once chosen a name,the farmer should announce it to the world. He may have it on his letter heads and envelopes, but he should also have a sign as the business man of the clty has. “This sign may be in the form of an attractive gateway, built of stone and arched over the entrance with letter- ing of stone. Or where farms are electrically lighted it may be built in such a way that it may be illuminat- ed at night. But if either of thesey plans is too elaborate the sign may be painted in bold .outstanding" letters upon the barn or sign board.” SKUNK PELTS VALUABLE. The skunk, one of {he most common fur bearers, is found in every state of the Union. skunk _skins wi bring the trapper from $4 to . this season. The weasel, of one varie- ty or another, is to be found in prac- tically all sections of the sidered Worthless, but with the rise in fur prices brown pelts should net the trapper 20 cents each, while the white pelts will bring from 50 cents to $2. An animal not to be found in large numbers, but native to regions north, south, east and west, is the mi When in prime cofidition its skin should brinz from $5 to $10, while & skin secured in the south should commang $3.50 to $7. Likewise, the raccoon living in the north produces a better pelt than the one living in the south. Prime raccoon skins are worth from 83 to'$7 each to the trapper. Many pecsons, particularly those of our readers who live\néarer the larger centers of papulation may be sur- prised to learn that foxes still are trapped in this country. Red fox pelts, obtainable in widely distributed in the northern and western should bring from $10 to $ each this season. while the gray fox will bring from $1.50 to $4. o “HANDLE WITH CARE." At a recent conference of the inter- national egg and poultry instructors d investigators held in Landon, a resolution was adopted calling upon the transportation companies of Great Britain especially, to employ expert freight handlers on cgg shipments. It is claimed that rules of the transpor- tion companies are such that | American, Canadian, Danish and Irish =00 e rem o0 @ t0wm o0 Little Babies sleep better and cry less when they are bathed with -LACO CASTILE SOAP{ The Real Spanish Castile % - coamocmssammot s te. 2 1 Columbia, S. C.—*“I contracted a zold and hard coughso I could notsleep nights and soon found I was in a weak, run-down condition could hardly keep around. Vinol built me up and my cough disappeared after other medicines had failed to belp me.”’ — Mgs. ELLEN COLLINS.- Your money will be returned if . OUR COD: LIVER ‘ANDZAR(R inoligu : STRENGTH CREATOR'KNOWN A constitutional remedy that removes the cause by building up the system, will stop a cough and break up a cold. These elements contained in Vinol— |§ Beef and Cod Liver Peptones, Wild Cherry, Iron and Hypophosphites—soon create an energy that throws off the cold and prevents its reoccurrence. Here is Pros? that Vinol is & Great Remedy for Coughs and Colds Manistee, Mich.— ““Iwaginaweak, run-down condition as the result of a chronic cough and cold, so that I of ten bad to stay at home from work. ‘Vinol stopped the cough and cold and built me up after other medicines had failed,””— MARGARET DALE. Fer ail run-down, nervens, snaemic conditions, weak women, overworked mea, feebie ol people and delicate children, there is no remedy like Vinol. Dinol fails— IS THE ‘GREA% Engler’s Broadway Pharmacy, Norwich. Vinol is sold in Danielson by Ser- thiaume’s Pharmacy and Druggists Everywhore z Sealin From Short Coats for motor wear MACPHERSON’S “FCR QUALITY” e Coats Modes To Those k of Longer Lines The youth-giving Furs, Squirrel, Nujria, Beaver, are often combined with the Sealine in the way of colfar and cuffs, still others have Skunk Fur. of the sturdy furs which promise good service under harder usage, - J. C. MACPHERSON QUALITY CORNER : ezss roads only at the shipper's risk. country. | Formerly the brown pelts were con- | can be ‘shippeq on English rail+ The matter is Tendered acute by the fact that England and Scotland | | to Remove Wrinkles are hard driven for sufficiént eggs now that the great Russian trade has been shut off for several years. HBsgs are high priced in England and conserva- tion .in shipment is necessary. Poultrymen realize that the same problem exists in this country, even if not so acutely as in England. The nation’s annual bill for broken oggs is enormous. Better packing. of course, would help but to pack eggs carefully enough to run the gauntlet of some of our “baggage smashers” would add greatly to the ultimate cost. Greater care in freight and express bandling is needed and considerable progress has been made. Farmers have long winced at the sight of egg cases, poultry coops, and containers of perishable ~ products hurled off and on freight and bagzage cars at the way statlons and points of destination. ~ The bill for breakage, eventually, comes out of the pockets of producers and consumers, The far- mer pays in lower prices received and the consumer pays.in higher prices charged. VENTILATION AND SANITATION. The relationship between the venti~ tation and the sanitation of soils is very close. It is recognized that the activities of the proper lower organ- isms are fnvolved in the liberation or making available elements of plant food in the soil. Below the first eight inches of soils in good tiith they de- crease rapidly poriance. In soll that are compact er ' How to Bathe Fece Since its remarkadle astringent and tonic properties became known, clever ‘women all ower the country have been using the saxolite face bath to “tone u their faces, remove wr.nkies and draw fiabby cheeks and neck back to normal After using the solution, the face im. mediately feels much firmer. 7Tne skin tightens evenly all over the face, thus recucing lines and sagginess. The for mula is: Powdered saxolite, one_ounce, dissolved in witch hazel, oné-half pint. These ingredients are of course per- fectly harmless and there is no diffi- Culty in obtaining them at any drug stori — e run ‘together they are compelled to conflne their work to s shallower layers of soil, due to the lack of oxy- gen or air carrying it. Larger quantities of mineral matter will be furnished to the crop in a heavy soil that is well aerated, due to a good condition of tilta or structure, than to one that is not, inasmuch as oxidation assists in their solution. The distanee that rain water will penetrate into the soll is largely gov- erned by the physical condition of structure. It is difficult for water to enter some so0ils on account of their becoming s0 compact. and conse- quently considerable of the rainfall evaporate into the air or dra The latter is more ewisica] & 5 in numbers and im- |t that are rolling or sloping. Tn su cases the crops su B et Tor the growing of sugar Deets, tur. I/ THE plainly seen that good prime importance in_ soils health which is very poor. ORWICH ELECTRIC C( 42 FRANKLIN STREET nips and the like, heavy solls in good |days’ vadation. . anq poor tilth realize at cnce the im- portance of a mellow soil, the roots|open a club room in the Bee penetrating more deeply. This condi- | building soon. fon will yield largér crops and. the quality will be better. It is therefors house filled, some already. have tilth s of |houses filled, and others are that - are|busy as the ice is very nice just now. Mrs.' B. M. Yeomans bas gone to! East Hartford to her sister's to ‘seé if 2 change will not be a bBenettit to her Miss Clara Thompson has resumed her duties at the post office, after 10 The Men's club of Andover is or E. M. Yeomans is having his = il Many an artist's model wouldn't make a model wife, E —_— Children Cry . - FOR FLETCHER'S = CASTORIA Domestics and White Goods COTTON HUCK TOWELS Value 85c—— - ECONOMY PRICE 25¢ WValue 59c— ECONOMY PRICE 42c HUCK TOWELS — Half Linen. §5c Value— ECONOMY PRICE 6% $1.00 value— ECONOMY $1.10 value— ECONOMY PRICE &80 TURKISH TOWELS Value 15c— ECONOMY 33c value— ECONOMY PRICE 75¢ PRICE 100 PRICE 250 $7c value— ECONOMY 4bc value— ECONOMY 53%c value— ECONOMY PRICE 43¢ £ BLEACHED CRASH—Cot- ton and Linen worth 42c a PRICE 28¢ PRICE 350 yard. ECONOMY PRICE 33c 44c Crash—red and blue plaid. ECONOMY PRICE 3% ALL-LINEN CRASH — Brown Value 40c— 3 ECONOMY PRICE 35 Value 420— ECONOMY PRICE 3% ALL-Linen - CRASH—Bleached Value 41— ) ECONOMY PRICE 360 43¢ value— ECONOMY PRICE 3% MERCERIZED DAMASK $8-inch, value 90c— . SALE PRICE 75¢ 5 lue $250— T3-inch, ?ALE, ERIcE $150 85c NAINSOOK. . ECONOMY PRICE 2% LONG CLOTH 45c value— ECONOMY PRICE 3% 43¢ value— ECONOMY PRICE 37s 40c value— ECONOMY PRICE 350 .50 BLANKET ROBES with cord and tassell to.match. ECONOMY PRICE $3.50 59c PILLOW CASES—Size 45 by 36— ECONOMY . PRICE 43c 75¢ PILLOW CASES—size 42 by 36 and 45 by 36— SHEETS AT SALE PRICES $200 value 72 by 90— SALE PRICE $1.50 $2.78 value 72 by 99— SALE PRICE $225 $2.00 value 81 by 98— SALE PRICE $250 $9¢ BLEACHED SHEETING SALE PRICE 75¢ BLANKETS AT ECONOMY PRICES. WHITE AND TAN COTTON BLANKETS. The largest size made, heavy and warm. .A wonderfully pleasing offer ECONOMY PRICE $4.00 $7.00 and $8.00 BLANKETS in gray, tan or white. Full size, heavy weight blankets, fully worth the ‘original price— | ECONOMY PRICE $6.00 WE OFFCR ONE CASE OF ‘WHITE AND GRAY BLAN- KETS—very heavy, full-size wool Dblankets which \will give excellent service, and would be cheap at $8.50 a pair— ECONOMY PRICE $7.50 10.00 WHITE WOOL BLANKETS— ECONOMY PRICE $3.00 $1250 WHITE WOOL BLANKETS— ECONOMY PRICE §10.00 PLAID BLANKETS TO USD AS COMFORTABLES. Hand- some plaid blankets which should sell for $6.50 each. The colorings are Vvery, very pleaging— ECONOMY PRICE $5.00 ONE _EBALE OF ARMY BLANKETS, Heavy weight army blankets in dark gray \only. Not handsome but heavy and warm. ‘Size 66 by $3 ang, worth $6.00 each— ECONOMY PRICE $3.95 Hosiery and Underwear Department 45¢ WOMEN'S LISLE HOSE in black, with double sole and wide garter hem. Sizes &3 to 10%— ECONOMY PRICE 3% 35c WOMEN'S CORDOVAN HOSE— ECONOMY PRICE Zc 45c_and 50c HOSIERY, in black, gray and cordovan. Good weight and good wear— ECONOMY PRICE 3% 7se_and $5c FIBRE SILK HOSE, in black or white— ECONOMY PRIGE 650 WOMEN'S ~ FULL FASH- 10NED SILK LISLE, in datk tan only. Value §L35— ECONOMY PRICE 98¢ WOMEN'S BLACK SILK HOSE, in sizes 9% and 10. Made ~ with Seam in leg. .| Value stsi— ECONOMY PRICE $150 $2.50 SILK HOSE, in bronze, cordovan and white, full fash- foned=— 5 4 ECONOMY PRICE $22¢ 65¢c OUTSIZE HOSE, in ‘gray or cordovan— ECONOMY PRICE 53¢ This January Economy Sale IS'A “COMMON SENSE” SALE The Government in Washington is advising economy. It is advising the purchase of the necessary—the elimination of the luxuries, and the co-operation of manufacturers, merchants, and the buyng public. We heartily endorse the plan and so far as wé are able will work for the reduction of the high cost of living. This sale is a true economy"Sale: It embodies the ideals of plain common sense and money saving. We are not giving merchandise away, but we are taking the very merchandise that you stand in need of, and are reducing the prices to the lowest possible imit.- Look over the long lists, for in them you will find hundreds of the very thngs you need at decided reductions. ' Spend Money In This “Common Sense” Sale—And Save Thousands of Bargains—Every Department Is Included BOYS’ IPSWICH HOSE— Value 3%¢— ECONOMY PRICE 33¢ ‘Value 50— ECONOMY PRICE 2% Value 50c— ECONOMY PRICE 460 INFANTS' COTTON HOSE, in Dblack, white and tan. Sizes 4% to 63%. Value 29c— ECONOMY PRICE 25¢ WOMEN'S “HARVARD"” MILLS UNDERWEAR — medium weight vest and drawers. Value $1.25— ECONQMY PRICE $1.15 Value $1.50— ECONMY PRICE $135 WOMEN'S FLEBECED VESTS, in sizes 5, 6, 7 and 8— Value $1.75— ECONOMY PRICE $1.55 Value $2.00— ECONOMY PRICE $1.75 WOMEN'S WOOL AND COT- TON UNDERWEAR, Vests, ~ Drawers and Tights— Value $2.15— ECONOMY PRICE $185 Value $2.50— ECONOMY PRICE $225 CHILDREN'S COTTO N VESTS AND PANTS—Med- 1im weight, and s0ld from 65c to $115 sccording to “size— ECONOMY PRICE FROM 55 o 980 CHILDREN'S “HARVARD MILLS” UNDERWEAR-—Half wool and ' cotton Vests and Drawers, in sizes 2 to 5. Reg- ular price $1.35 to $2.10 ac- cording to.size— ECONOMY PRICES $1.20 TO $1.89 ODD LOTS OF WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN’S UNDER- WEAR WHICH WE HAVE NOT ADVERTISED AT SPECIAL ECONOMY PRICES Rug and Drapery Dep’t QUAKER LACE CURTAINS These splendid curtains are all 23 yards long, and shown in both cfeam and white. Patterns are new and pretty, principally in Filet and Kraft designs— i 2.25— Value ECONOMY Valye $2.50— ECONOMY Value $2.75— ECONOMY Value $3.00— ECONOMY Value $3.50— ECONOMY Value $4.00— ECONOMY PRICE $1.88 PRICE $2.19 PRICE $249 PRICE $2.69 PRICE $3.19 PRICE " $3.49 . inches wide— . 0 9 by 12 size= ———— e R e A I TR E AR o ALL OF THE $5.00 TO $5.00 GRADES REDUCED TWEN- TY PER CENT. QUAKER LACES BY THE YARD— About twenty different pate terns ere offered for youwr . choice, and each offering is & - bargain— S 45c_values— - ECONOMY PRICE 33¢ - < 55¢ values— e ECONOMY PRICE 44 b TS 65 values— 3 N e ECONOMY PRICE < B 30c CURTAIN SCRIM, o . yard wide, and white only— & ECONOMY PRICE 180 500 SCOTCH MADRAS, #i . natural color. This is 3§ - ECONOMY PRICE 38 ., YARD-WIDE CRETONNES —A good assortment of at- tractive designs and colorings : o ECONOMY PRICE 280 <~ $1.00 quality— TE - ECONOMY PRICE 75 ' . REMNANTS OF QUAXKER _ LACES, MADRAS ® AND - SCRIM, WORTH FROM 35c TO 65c A YARD— = ECONOMY PRICE 190 -~ _ 50c TABORETTES— bl ECONOMY PRICE 2% - - 8%c TABORETTES— 3 ECONOMY PRICE 6% PRINTED LINOLEUM, in & - large assortment of hand- some new designs— Ay Regular $1.25— ECONOMY PRICE $1.00 Regular $139= g ECONOMY PRICE $1.10 - TEXOLEUM—THE NEW- EST FLOOR COVERING— | Py A new process felt base, floor : covering in a good selection -4 of patterns. Regular price is - 90c a square yard— 5 ECONOMY PRICE 720 - $6.00 VELVET RUGS—27 by 54— . ECONOMY PRICE $4.19 $5.00 . BO! - RUGE—37 by qa conLs ECONOMY PRICE $298 - 0 0 GRASS RUGS—36 by ECONOMY PRICE $1.58 $3.00 LOG | v Rugs—30 by Gbosy. DA _ ECONOMY PRICE $2.18 3 $450 LOG CAB] RAG & RUGS—38 by Toe Y g ECONOMY PRICE $379 . $50.00 _ BODY BRUSSELS RUGS. in 9 by 12351£is SALE PRICE $33.00 $60.00 AXMINSTER RUGS ECONOMY PRICE $45.00 . .

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