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ash o e Y U 3 42c. 38c lb. (This Veal isn’t Western Veal, but Native—there isn’t any better.) Veal Steak, 50c Ib., value 65c—Chops 40c Ib., value 55¢c. Native Skinned Fresh Shoulders, extra value, selling for 33c Ib. Fresh Native Chickzns to Roast, value 65¢ Ib.—Sale 52¢ > Ib. Extra Fancy Roast Beef, no bone, all tenderloin, value order on time. sh Grocery Co. 81-83-85-87 Franklin Street “THE STORE OF PROGRESS” PECIALS FOR FRICAY AND SATURDAY E5¢c—Sale 45c 1b. Pot Roast of Prime Steer Beef, no at 28c bb. Sugar Cured Corned Beef (Rib) 6 Ibs. for $1.00, cabbage ' free. ne, all meat, very tender, extra value for 38c lb. lling for this sale Fresh Beef Liver, value 18c Ib.—Sale 10c Ib. Bzvonsh i 35¢ Ib. Sugar Cured Bacon, value 65¢ Ib.—Sale 45c Ib. Sugar Cured Hams, just out of smoke house, whole or half, value 45¢ Ib.—Sale 28c Ib. Native Pork to Roast, value 50c Ib.—Sale 38c Ib. Western Fresh Shoulders, value 30c Ib.—Sale 22¢ Ib. Best Frankfurters, value 35¢ Ib.—Sale 22¢ Ib, Scotch Ham, value 65¢ Ib.—Sale 55c Ib. We have Fresh Ox Tails, Sweet Breads, Lamb Fries and Calves Liver, at all times. we will give one pound of sugar free. e free. free. sugar free. A SPECIAL SALE OF FANCY WHOLE GRAIN’ 1 RICE Large Whole White Grain of Fancy Blue Rose Rice that cooks dry and flaky. Rice is cne of the most nutriti- ous as well as the most in- expensive of foods, value 30c lb. 10 lbs. for $2.98, 5 Ibs. of sugar free. Fresh Roasted Coffee, 60c value—Sale 2 lbs. $1.00, 1 Ib. of sugar free. Teas—95¢ Ib. value—Sale 1 Ib. for 75c¢, 1 Ib. of sugar Cocga, value 35¢c—Sale 4 for $1.00, 1 Ib. of sugar California Prunes 30-40 — These Prunes are large and meaty, not all stone, but all prune, extra value for 45¢ lIb.—Sale 35¢ Ib., 5 lbs. for $1.75; 1 Ib. of White Rose Rice and Milk, value 20c can—This Sale 5 cans for $1.00, $3 lbs. of sugar free. FRESH NATIVE SPINACH, ORANGES, LEMONS free. AND APPLES. Pure Food Groceries Evaperated Milk, tall cans, value 19¢ can, 11 cans for $2.00, 1 Ib. of sugar free. Armour’s Pure Lard, value 35¢ Ib.—Sale 5 Ihs. for $1.70, 1 Ib. of sugar free. Quaker Oats, new lot, value 18¢ package—Sale 5 for 89c, 1 Ib. of sugar free. Evaporated Milk, small cans value 12¢ can—Sale doz. $1.40, 2 lbs. DOUBLE TRADING STAMPS Free Auto Delivery 2 JOHN S. CONNELL, Manager. STORM CAUSES CHURCH MEETING TO ADJOURN There were ust enough people pres- mt Thursday evening at the United r ional church to adiourn for St Ry meeting adourned ‘We will have 4 extra deliveries on Sat- ‘urday, so as to enable you to get your We will be open Friday night until 10 P. M. If convenient for you, kindly phone, mail or leave your order Friday. OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT Legs of Genuine Soft Spring Lamb, value 50c—Sale Ib. Forequarters Genuine Soft Spring Lamb, value 40c Ib— Sale 25¢'1b. | Native Milk Fed Veal for Roasting, value 50c lb.—Sale re Sausage, 1 pound box, value 45c—This sale All meat orders of $5.00 of sugar Sale of Joy Wuhmg Pow- - der, value 10c package— Sale doz. packages 90c, 1 Ib. of sugar free. Appricots, extra value 40c 15.—This Sale 5 lbs. for $1.98, 1 Ib. of sugar free. Baked Beans (small cans) 6 cans for 45¢, 1 Ib. of sugar free. 20 Mule Team Borax Soap, 20 bars for $1.00. The finest Potatoes in the country, selling for 75¢ a peck. 5,000 Pounds of Granulated Sugar for Our Customers—Sugar Is Lower. ALL ORDERS OF $5.00 OR OVER WE WILL GIVE v a week the adjourned annual meeting that was to have been held for the election of church officers. The pastor, Rev. A. H. Abbott, and | haven’t had quite so severe cold as a few more members of the church|we, up here among the hills. But I through the -snow to the |judge, from various reports in d made up a quorum that } Bulletin, that you .too, the meeting for a week. treated to something THE WINTER HITS (Written Specially For The Bulletin.) The late lamented P. T. Barnum, exhibitor of, wooly men, bearded WO men, Chinese giants and ‘‘genuine’ mermaids, showed himself a keen ob- server of human nature when he said: “The American people dearly love to be_humbugged.” o ‘Which is why there are so. many, ‘“weather prophets.” i I don’t mean you people on the hills who have to use your own eyes and brains to form some idea of coming sweather from such indications as your own experience has-shown to- be significant. That is just plain “bus- iness”—your farmer business. It you'll be perfectly honest with your- self and admit to yourself, all the time, that it is only more or less shrewd guessing, nobody’s got any| fault to find with you. ! It's the long-distance ‘“prophets"— ! the fellows who assume to pre-an- nounce the weather of weeks or months ahead or that of a whole sea- son in the future—they’re the ones. ‘Whing-whang 'em! Also blosh-blim take their charlatanism for knowl- edge, and their superstitions for séi- ence. There’s the fellow who looks at a goose-bone and tells you, right smack, fwhat the weather will be for a whole summer, and the one to whom a hog's milt reveals whether the spring| shall be wet or dry. And the other who foretells an era of thunder- storms from the orbits of the stars. | And the one who knows it will be a dry month because he could, hang his water-bucket on the horn of the new moon. Oh, quacks and mountebanks and jugglers and tricksters and jockeys and cheats and pretenders and impos- ters and humbugs—your names are legion and your tricks are manifold! But you don’t begin to count up in the census with the innumerable Sim-: ple Simons who take your chaff for corn, your vagaries for wisdom, and your humbuggery for prophecy. Storms and disturbances of the air, etc. They are the results of condi- tions. And those conditions often manifest themselves in more or less noticeable symptoms before the real| storm - breaks. A good doctor can| often tell you that you're going to: have the measles, even before they | break out, from the symptoms. A good weather observer can frequent- | ly diagnose near-at-hand weather | from natural symptoms. That's fair | game. Fair, that is, provided he does not set up as any sort of prophet: does not arrosate to himself of any | degree of infallibility; and does not| laim' that any diagnoise, whether of | disease or of weather, is anything :more than a shrewd balancing of | probabilities. Generally, i. e. in most cases, a red sky in the evening portends a fair | tomorrow, and-a red sky in the morn- | ing promises a foul day. Generally, | anchor-ice is formed before a thaw.| Generally, the swallows fly low before a storm. Generally, we have a “line storm” the latter part of September. Generally, there is brief “Indian summer” in late November. And so on and so on. We've talked about ally these things before. They and many other “signs” are the results of ob- servations, long continued but never | recorded or tabulated. And they are! none of them dead sure things. Any | one is liable to go back on you just when you're denending on it. They are often’ helpful, -and every farmer keeps an eye on them, He has to. He is' playing an exceedingly ‘“chancy” game, at the best, -and can’t afford to lose any of his chances. But these fellows ~undertake, by ! some wierd process of imagination, to) develope regulations for the weather months in advance—they're cattle of | another breed. H For instance; all last fall we heard from them that this was going to be a “mild, open winter.” They knew it | from the snuirrel they knew it from | | the woodchucks; they knew 3t from the wild geese: they knew it from the moon and the stars and a’ score of other “unfailing signs.” Now, | sincerely hope that they're all right here in New England en- rjoying it' I hope that they're hav- ing to shyvel paths and open brooks! and dig out fodder-stacks/and milk shivering cows in real country barns and take their hens into the kitchen every night to save their combs from | freezing off! Sometimes, in moments of peculiarly inhuman ferocity, I hope they’re having to do it all in slippers and pajamas and without mittins, as would befit a “mild, open” season, For the winter thus far in my par- ticular neck o' woods has been the | coldest—and the blowy-est—and the reezing-est—and the chilblainey-est— and the ear-nipping-est —' and the rip-roaringest, all 'round, of any win- ter in my memory. To begin with, we didn't have any real “line-storm” last September. We didn’t have any ‘“Indian Summer” last November. We haven’'t had any “January thaw” this winter. When winter set in, it did so with a snab that was almost venomous. In oné night things changed from Mirly nor- mal December weather to Arctic. The mercury dropped with a really “sick- ening thud” from well above freezing to twenty-three below zero in six hours. And it has staid mighty close by that figure ever since! The thermometer at my north door registered 32 below zero twice; 28 below zero twice, 23 below zero once, 22 below zero four times, and something below zero seventeen times in January alone. For seventeen days it never once got as high as freezing; for three consecutive days remained well below zero, even at noon with a bright sun shining. And the wind! It has blown and blown, generally from the open door of, the North Pole’s coldest icehouse, after day and week after week. One morning, when I went down to the kitchen to start the fire, I found the water left over-night in the tea-ket- tle standing on top of the stove frozen solid: likewise the sink pump in the neighboring pantry. Aftér thawing things out, making myself a cup of hot coffee ,.and doing my regu- lar morning chores, I-took a look at the thermometer and found it, then, 28 below zero, Where it might have been before that, I don't know: Fifty or a hundred below, I should say, it it _were left to my feelings! Probably you people, living within THE HARD! affected. i nv_month.” ! the. thermometer, |and I anyway, make up our minds | membership in the fraternity in this | breal day | WEATHER PROPHETS ! rately described as a “mild, open” winter. And, of course, thege are places where the cold has- been still more intense. One village up in the Adirondacks has reported a tempera- ture of 54 below zero, and one outin Dakota or Montana of 68 below. 5 When Sir George Nares and his British expedition wintered off the most northern shore up to that time discovered some 500 miles this side the Pole, their thermometers regis- tered 74 below zero, March 4, 1876. For the entire week ending with that day the mean temperature was 60 de- grees below. That is, it averaged 60 ‘below for' the entire week, including both the * highest and the lowest points. That was some weather. In those temperatures whiskey froze so hard that ¥t could be broken off :u‘ul eaten. Glycer.ne froze perfectly solid. Rum forty above proof became like thick molasses. Chloroform was the only substance in the stores of the expedition which didnt seem to be It is possible‘that some surviving oo - . .ol member of this expedition, recalling, Why not? 5 e ————— e ———————— Ei ke they auldn b doddl these facts ;might olass our. present| “Gefi-IL" the never failing, guar- a 14 New England® winter as, compara- tively, “mild and open.” But I can’'t imagine anyope else who would. | Friday, Jan. 30th, was one of the very few January days when it thaw- ed a little, on the south side, in the sun. And one of these unblest long- weather cranks, stopping at my lane to pass the time of day, remarked: “This is mark day for February, ye know. Means that'll be a warm, sun- I sure hope so. make a first-cla; But Feb. 1st didn’t beginning at it. For that morning, fol- lowing a night of almost intolerable cold, stood at 35 below—the coldest vet: worse than anything January| gave us, ! Well, as old Mr, Manning used to say: “So it goes, and so it is” I think that I, for one, should be al- most willing to accept this phenome- nally cold and blustering winter as a blessing if it ‘would have the effect of forever shutting up the ‘“prophets” whose prepheting has been proven S0 untrustworthy. Or even of con- vincing their weakly credulous qupes of the foolishness of the whole busi- ness But one has small hope of any such good luck. Doubtless the goose-bone augurs and the woodchuck watchers will continue to prognosticate and thousands of other folks will continue to hear or read their divinations with absorbeq interest. But, say, brother, why can’t you that, hereafter, well pay no more at- tention to their soothsaying than to any other ill wind that blows no g00d? That would be somethin, make a start towards common sense; perhaps be a nucleus around which other possessors of reasonable intelll- gence might gather. THE FARMER. MASONS HAVE LARGES';' MEMBERSHIP ON RECORD Reports presented Wednesday at Hartford at the 132nd annual com- munication of the Masofiic grand lodge of Connecticut showed a larger state than ever before, The grand Secretary announced that 2,562 can- didates were raised in 1919 and that the membership at the close of the year was 31298 a net gain of 1,925, Contributions for the Masonic home building fund were $114,371.91. Grand Master Wallace S. Moyle of New Ha- ven presided. Grand Master Moyle in his address onicled a busy year in which he visited lodges in all parts state. Grand Secretary George A. Kies of Health Boards Give Warning of Influ- enza Danger Ask People to'Be Careful and T ak e Proper Treatment Promptly. Many Pneumonia Cases Follow Influenza. What to Do. prepared for the serious out- 0L Influenza and Pneumonia that are now sweeping over the entire country and that have seized on this community Public Health Boards everywhere are issuing. cautions and instructions to the public not to ne- glect treatment at the frst symptom of a cold and to cooperate with the board and physicians in stamping out the spread of the disease. No disease develops so quickly or spreads so rapidly. The first sympe tom usually is a sharp rise in tem- perature to 103 or 104 degrees, head- ache, pain in the back, throat feeling dry or sore. less promptly checked by proper treat'nent, the best plan is to go to bed and stay there tor at least 3 week, keeping warm to avoid pneumonia and let the minor ailment fun its course and also prevent the spread of the disease to others. Most of us, in these busy days, can- not afford, if it can be avoided., to lose a week or more of work so it is all the more necessary that at the very first sign of grip or @nfluenza a counter-acting treatment should be taken, Probably no better or inore effective treatment could be followed at such a time than to get from the nearest drug store a complete Hyomei outfit con. sisting of a bqttle of the pure Oil of Hyomei and a little vestpocket, hard rubber Inhailing device into which a few drops of the oil afe poured. Put the Inhaler in your mouth and breathe its air deep into the passages of your nose, thrat and lungs. Every particle of air that. enters your breathing organs will thus be charged with an antiseptic germ-killing bal- sam that will destroy the germs that haye found lodgment there. You can’t do this too often, The Hyomei Inhaler is small and can be conveniently carried in a handbag or in your vest-pocket. Every half hour or so throughout the day take it out and draw a few breaths of = its pure healing air into your nose and throat, Relief comes almost instantly. Throat conditions become normal and you soon are feeling fine. The outfit is not at all expensive for the .rubber To be | tion of officers. of the! s ) " HAPPY NEW YEAR TO ALL OUR PATRONS Furs, Evening Gowns, Gloves * and Slippers CLEANED TO PERFECTION GOODS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED EVERY DAY BY AUTO GIVEUSATRIAL TELEPHONE 7432 150 MAIN STREET Postal Telegraph Office, Norwich Werks, New London—Branches, Mystic and Bristol. “YOU CAN RELY ON SHALETT'S” L “Gets-1t” Stops Pain Immediately and Corns Go Quick. The way to handle corns is the tried and proven “Gets-It” way the way 'that millions have found quickest, easiest, safest and most re- liable. 3 A few drops of “Gets-It” knocks the hurt out of any corn at once and | soon loosens it so it lifts right off without any feeling. Oh, what com- fort! How grand to walk and dance and jump- without a single twinge! granted and the school children wil really be competing for prizes thai were provided by the maimed and in- | jured soldiers, patients at The Walter Reed Hospital, who were wounded on the battlefields of France. There is ne age limit in this contest and the little ceight or nine year old girl or boy in any school in this city has the same chance of winning a prize and taking the trip to Washington, along with their parents, as has the {ig girl or boy away out in California. Contest- ants may either be red or brown, black or white, American or foreign | born, and is open to all schools in the country, with the exception of colleg- es’and universities. Essays are te be written on Friday. February 20, 1920, in the class rooms from notes if desired and no pssay is to-be more than four hundred words in length. Pencil or pen and ink may be used but the essay w%l be writter only on ot side of the sheet or pa-. ssays will be judged sirictly on of originality, expression ané sincerety. E Bach sc¢hool will he.the judge of its own nroduct. The principalgef eack school will appoint a hoard Wf thres judges to select one ess4° as the ent: from his school. He wi; then forward. the entry, not later than February: 27, 1920, ‘to the army recruiting stp- tion. nearest h's school. In the casé of this locality al} essays will be sent to the Springfield recruiting station, ¥ Hampden street, Springfield, Mass. . The d'strict recruit:~z officer wilt then appoinf a_board @ three ju made 'un of prominei citizens Springfield, Mass, to select one essa’ submitted by the schools is di trict. This one best essay will then forwarded to Washington as the dis: trict’s entry. There are fitt recruiting districts iny the United States, and the best essay from each district ‘will be sent to Washington, and from these fifty-six enfries, Sec- retary Baker and Generals Pershing and March will select the three na- tional winners. Little girls or boys who had a big brother in the service during the late ! war, should ask these big brothers to | tell them something about the new, | democratic peace time army or Uncle Sam’s. Corporal Sullivan at the re- anteed money-back corn remover, costs | but a trifle at any drug store. Mfd by E. Lawrence & Cq., Chicago. Homer Cummings is attending to na- tional affairs. From Waterbury comes' the big ery that Attorney Franefs P. Guilfoile, who has long been prominent in state poli- tics, and Attorney William E. Thoms, or some other local mun, should be given at least a fighting chance in the alleged “cut-and-dried” convention, while Meriden thinks Sheriff Thomas U. Reilly should be given a “look-in. Hartford is putting up the big howl, however. There is a great race on in the Capital City between Thomas J. Spellacy and Congressman Augustin Hartford reported statistics of the! 112 lodges in the state. One hundrea ! and five members were affiliated; 60 reinstated, and 150 demitted. There| were 520 ‘deaths. The four largest lodges are: Hartford, of Hartford, 1,195 members; Hiram, of New Ha- ven, 1,188; St. Johns's, of Hartord 1.080; Wooster, of New Haven, 1,008, The 'average membership of the 113! lodges is 279. The session Wednesday afternoon i was largely occupied witgs the elec- The following were terms now, but if the conern=sman chould he left off feeling might de- velop. The friends of Congressman Lonergan are loudily asserting, it is reported, that their man is more en- titled to representation on the “Big Four” than Attorney Spellacy. They claim he has proven himself the hiz- @est vote-getter and has yet to be beaten, and that the record he has| made in the halls of congress entitles him to membership in the premier quarter, Rumor has it also, that Mavor ¥'tz- zerald of New Haven will fix things up_for his his law partner, Arthur Ar- thur O’Keefe, by seeing to it t}at he s made a district delegate, and rumor also has it that there is anenther hiz finger “sticking in the pie” which will arrange things so that another New Haven man, perhans Attorney Harri- son Hewitt., will be the second district deleate. If 1§ hapnens Mcrviden, which i in that district, 1 he left out in the cold, and it is siid the Meriden democrats are already feeling he “freeze-out.” Attorney Jesse Devine and (ha‘r- m™an John H. Crary of the Waterbury democratic town committee have heen elected to the state central comm’t- tee. This committee will meet in the Elm City on Saturdav next and win set a date for the state convention, which will probably be held in March. There is liable to be auite a little ex- citement when' the state central com- | mitteemen get together in New Ha- ven on Saturday. Who knows but verhaps an attemnt may be made to forestall tha so-called “cut and dried” brogramme? elected: . Grand master, Charles C. Perkins, New London: deputy, grand master, Charles W. Cramer, Hartford; grand | senior warden Frank L. Wilder, Bridgeport: grand junior warden, | Charles M. Beach, New Milford grand treasurer, Joseph RBuths, +Harf ford; grand secretary, George A. Kies, Hartford: grand senior deacon Arthur M. Brown, Jewett City; grand junior deacon, Winthrop Buck. | ‘Wethersfield: grand trustees. Willis | L. Mi New Haven: Isa‘ - Raker, Jr., Hartford; Albert &, Comstock, Nor- wich. The closing session of the grand! lodze was held Thursday morning. Charles Clark Perkins, the New grand. master was born in Noank. on! Nov. 5, 1864. His Masonic record follows: . Initiated into Tnion lodge, No. 31 Oct. 10, 1905: raised Nov. 2. pointed junior deacon 1906: warden 1907: senior warden worshinfil master 1909: district dem- uty 1910-1911. ‘Appointed =rand in- nior steward in the zrand lodee 1912 senjor steward ,1913: marshal 1914; elected erand funior deacon 1915; erand senior deacon 1916: erand fu- nfor worden 1917: grard senior war- den 1918: depntv rrand master 1919, He was exalted tn the Roval Arch dcgree April 1908: anno'nted in or- Anr High Priesthood in New Hoven, Mav 9, 1911: was electad Thrice Tilus- | trious Waster of the Couneil in 1914: { was knighted in Palestine Command- erv. Nov. 6. 1911. He was elected warden in 1012 and declined further junior ! 1908; election in 1916, = ng station, post office building, He raceived fhe Order of Perfec-|CFFERS PRIZES FOR ESSAYS >t slso be . o Omanwes duy tinn, 14th deerée i 1912, and re- BY SCHOOL CHILDREN q gs_xrns ;'s.n 0 give o\fl iterature celved the 29nd Aecoree Mav 26, 1912, { and information to any boy or girl that In formation has heen received at| the local army recruiting station, post { office building, Corporal Daniel A. Sul- livan in charge. related to the nation- wide contest for school children for essays on the subject “What Are the Benefits of an Emlistment in the Unit- ed States Army.” On April 10, 1920. the Anniversary of the Battle of Lexing- ton, Secretary of War Newton D. Baker, Generals John J. Pershing and In December 1914 he was elected nresident of Actual Past Masters’ as- saeiatinn < Y Mr. Perkins is a_nast erand of Mo- ¥haean Indee. Yo, K5, T. O. O. F., nast shiaf pottlarch of Orion enesamn- ment. Na. 4 and served as district i demnty for two vears. Mr, Porl served ag an alderman from’ the First ward as a Renvhlican may call at the station. Each student will receive a copy of the Come Back newspaper and they will find a great many pointers from which they can take note to help them in writing theis essays. Mothers and fathers should interest their little boy or girl in this con- jtest as it may mean a free trip to Washington with all expenses paid.i it 1 Also there 11 be moving pictures for siv x;mrs.flt’m "ffli':;ic;”q’;m:;; Peyton C. March. will announce the | taken of the event at Washington and T e e @ names of the thres hoys or girls who | which will be shown in the different on February 20, 1920, wrote the best essay. Then on May 5th. next. these three boys or girls whichever the case may be, accompanied by their parents or guardians, will present themselves to Secretary Baker and will be award- ed the prizes. The railroad fare and all other expenses for the winers and also for theéir parents or guardians will be furnished by the government. The first prize in this contest is a gold medal, suitably engraved, the sec- ond prize is a silver medal and the third prize a bronze medal. These He is a memhar of tha chomher r\'l of commarce “Retarv elnh. Fartford | Antomnbila club and Musiclans’ un- fon, No. 289. places all over the country where the contest was held. v Corporal Sullivan has- interviewed: Superintendent of School E. J. Gra-. ham and has succeeded in getting his approval and co-operation in this con- test and the principals of the differ- ent schools will be notified. Mr. Gra- ham is to appoint a committee with Captain- Tarbox as chairman to pro- mote the contest. Numerous other prizes are being contributed by American Legion posts throughout thesstate and also from lo- FEAR CUT-AND-DRIED DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION Democrats of Waterbury, Meriden and Hartford are beginning to scent a “cpoked-up” democratic state conven- tion. It is being voiced rather vocifer- ously there that the fonr delegates at large which the coniention has to|medals will be presented to the win- | Cal and state authorities for the hest name have already been picked. | ners Ly Secretary of War Baker. In | essays from different cities. The mem= “What's the use of a c ion” is | addition to these three medals, there { bers of the Springfield district re- the howl of several Waterbury demo-| Will be also miven three beautiful sil- | cruiting party have also contributed erats, and the same crv is being ut-|ver cups, also suitably engraved, to be | prizes amounting to, forty dollars tered in Meriden and Hartford. It is| given to the school producing the win- | for the best essays from the state of reported the “Big Four” allezed to ha‘\’le been picked are: Hamer S. Cum- mings of Stamford, cha%man of the democratic national committee, Form- ar Congressan (nnwlmgt'nn:dter) f New London. May- fffi:vfi lé??;zggmm of New Haven | the Walter Reed Hospital in Wash- and Thomas J. Spellacy of Hartford | ington, asked permission to purchase (recognized as the state leader), when | the prizes. The permission has been ners. This should be an added attrac- tion for all students to try and get their school one of these silver cups. The contest is under the auspices of the war department, but the newspa- per Come Back, the official organ of Connecticut. e = Root of Generosity. He who gives what he would a# readily throw away gives without gens erosity; for the essence of generosity ‘s in self-sacrifice—Henry Taylor. GINGER ALE Curiosity has tempted many to first ask for this peril:ction in Ginger Ale. . This ouriosity’ has been well rewarded. Harvard Ginger Ale is a true ginger pra- duct—aged and mellow.d—with a distinc- tive, delicious flavor. It should be the first thought when ordering ginger ale at the restaurant and for the home, inhaler will last a lifetime while the Oil of Hyomei can be obtained at lit- tle cost from any reliable druggist. smell of the ocean’ or the Sound, The have been qui Lots of ple already have a Hyo- mei Inhaler., Take it out, chazge it and use it without deiay. 1f you haven't one get it today. ' A few cents spent now may, easily revent serious illness and save gun dollars and he.l:n stam] "m ’lg: seas: spread of the di. rases of Other Nations anu Ferious O ATobs of the Desert Have Frosh Milk From the Camel.