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Soap showld be used very carefully it you want to keep your hair looking its best. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkall This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins it. The best thing for steady use is Mulsified cocoanut oil shampoo (which is pure and greaseless), and is better than anything else you can use. One or two teaspoonfuls will cleanse the hair and scalp theroughly. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in. it makes an abundance 6f rich, creamy lather, which rinses out eas- ily, removing every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive oil. The bair dries quickly and evenly, and it Jeaves the scalp soft, and the hair fine and silky, bright, lustrous, fluffy and easy to ma You can get Mulsified cocoanut oil shampoo at any pharmacy, it's very cheap, and a few ounces will supply every member of the family for months. SHOE FACTORY SYSTEM We renew your high price Shoes to Norwich, Tuesday, March 9, 1920. e T e TR Y VARIOUS MATTERS Light vehicle lamps at 6.17 o'clock this evening. Th formal opening of the Spring Style Days will bring many visitors ‘to Norwich today (Tuesday). Be sure and see “The Flame of the Yukon” at Davis today.—adv. It has been announced at Trinity Methodist church that the Every Mem- ber Canvass Sunday is to be March Automobile wheels were balking worse on the ice hills about the city Monday than they have all the sea- son. A movement has been started in Rockville for the adoption of a Thurs- day half holiday a week through the entire year. The road from Waesterly to Watch Hill is in good condition for travel, except a short stretch near Thomp- son's corners. What the Norwich public can do in keeping free from fires has been dem- M. original appearance, with our New Factory Prooess. Goodyear Shoe Repairing Co. 86 Franklin Street NINO DI PALMA pring Opening at the TEMPLE F FASHION 112 Main Street $1—Introduction Special—$1 One dozen Photo Cards of the Baby. Sittings day or night, rain or shine, while you wait. Amateur Printing and Developing. 24 hour service. MODERN STUDIO 18 BATH STREET P*ACPHERSON’S “FOR QUALITY” FINAL CLEARANCE ON FUR COATS We have just a few Coats left| and in order to clean up our stock we have marked these! Coats at prices that are away below the wholesale costs to- day. It is to your advantage to investigate, MACPHERSON QUALITY CORNER Opp. Chelsea Savings Bank CUMMINGS &RING Funeral Directors and Embalmers 322 Main Street Chamber of Commerce Building Phone 238-2 Lady Assistant Foch Thanks Knights of Columbus. Marshal Foch has cabled a congrat- uvlatory reply to the Knights of Colum- bus of America in response to thetr anouncement that he was to be the subject of one of the four bas-reliefs the organization is to erect in Metz next September. The other bas-reliefs will represent General Pershing at Lafayette's tomb, Columbus discover- ing America and President Wilson reaiing America’s declaration of war. PR Py BIRTEECT S SRR SR R R T SR onstrated during the severe cold of the past month. The pastor of fhe Central Baptist church, Rev. A, F. Purk ., is to_be in Hartford today (Tuesday), on New ‘World Movement business. Long clams for frying or steaming. Round clams at Powers Bros.'—adv. A Washington dispatch Monday stated that Homer S. Cummings prob- ably will be the democratic nominee in Connecticut against Senator B farm in Franklin. Moodus for a few days’ visit. Elmer Lord of Hebron ha- bought & ‘William Davis of Bolton has been in Harold T. Robinson of eity. Delwin S. Martin of Baltic, who has been seriously’ ill with influenza, is slightly improved. Mrs. Herbert W. Hunt of South Glastonbury has been spending a week in Norwich, where Mr. Hunt has been employed the past six months. Rev. John H. Broderick, rector of St. Patrick's church, who has bgen ill for five weeks, was able to be stairs in his study at the rectory Monday. own- Miss Doris Auclair, a student at the Academy of the Holy Family in Baltic, has heen spending a brief vacation W ith her mother, Mrs. Elizabeth Au- clair, in Danielson. Mrs. Helen Gage has returned home to Hamburg, having been away since Christmas, visiting friends in Norwich, ‘Willimantic, Warren, Mass. and South Glastonbury. Hartford ANDOLIN CLUB CONCERT - FOR EPWORTH LEAGUE It was a large sized and apprecia- tive audience that filled Trinity Meth- odist church, Main street, Monday ev- ening, club, ‘assisted by - Libcius Fairchild, impersonator, most creditable when the Crescent Mandolin of Boston, concert presented a programme under the auspices of the Epworth ‘| League of the church. The pro- gramme, which was given in two parts, was as follows: 1 (a) march, The Talisman, Stahl; de- | (b) valse, Twilight Dreams, Brunover. gee. Crescent Mandolin club. II (a) I'm The March White Ribbon Banner |Mighty Glad T'm Living, (b) The memorailizes three tic W. C. T. U. | Gramephone (character number in workers, Mrs, Wil Mrs. | makeup), (c) As Fife'y Says, Lucius J. Alden Rathbun and Mrs. Marceilus Bailey. Although the mercury lingered be- Fairchild. IIT Mandolin solos—(a) Cu- ba (Spanish 'dance) arranged Santis- teban; (b) Berceuse, Op. 16 (unac- companied) Stoddard. Frank C. Brad- !the rooms on State street, at 2.30 o’- low 30 degrees even at noon-tide Monday, there was something in the | DU sunshine which gave promise of | B¢ spring. 1 Thus far in March the number = tramps given shelter at the Norw police station has heen but 19, while f Balfe-Armstrong; ry. IV (a) Bohemian Girl, selection, (b) Dance of the owns (an oddment) Trinkaus, Cres- nt Mandolin club. V (a) Father's Talking Now (in costume and charac- ter makeup); (b) Uncle Hiram and - the Cab; , Luciu i L. ter- { nthe same period last year the num- { ['f, Cabaret, Luclus Fairchild. Inter. ber was -90. § Part 1T—1 Banjo solos—(a) Ragioso The regular tuberculosis clinic will| Rondo, Marks; (b) A Spanish Ro- be held in New London Wednesd: th clock, Dr. Hugh B. Campbell, of Nor- | Se n charge. Extra choice fresh fish daily at Osgood’s wharf; lowest prices. | —adv. By request of the parish Ho! society, a requiem high Patrick Sullivan was sung in St. rick's church Monday at 8 by Rev. Myles P. Galv The Norwich Free Academy nal offer of two prizes of $2.50 each for the best and the best article for the Science Department, writte by a pupil of N. F. A., closes March 12th, At the United Congregatoinal church, Norwich, Tuesday afternoon, Marmh 23, there is to be a meeting of all women of the to consid- er the advisibility of forming a Guild. At Deep River, at a meeting of Me- dora Rebecca lodge. last week, Hattie Fisher, of New dent of the Rebecca 1y Name | B2 for Pat- o'clock Jour- as Hi pa To de Bradbury; haracter makeup); ver (French character); D. Pen: Cres The personnel of the Crescent Man- doli Theresa Hilderbrand, Eloyise Dav Loretta Lamphere, Robert Gray, Her- Guitars treasurer, musical d mance, (mlmsn’lw descriptive suite in rce movements! 1 The Carnical; 2 renade; 3 The Dance, Frank C: I (a) Professor Bug (in (b) Goodbye, Fall (¢), School vs, (in character makeup), Mr. rchild, IT (a) Waltz di Concert, In ve Mood, Stahl; (b) Southern arranged: (c) Lot o' Pep, Weidt, cent Mandolin club. cl lin which is rapidly gaiming recognition in local musical circles is follow. Mandolins—Misses Nora McCrohan, lda Rossoll, Miriam Bergstresser, cNeely, Banjos Ti Raymond Smith. Misses Bertha Hahn, Bea- ce Green. Elizabeth Denison, my Me. Piano: Miss Mary Gray. The officers of the club are: nt, Robert Gra: secretary and Miss zabeth Denison; rector, Frank Bradbury. Presi- Mrs. Grace Wiley, of D om,m were The Epworth League committee in present. charge, of the arrangements consisted A heavy surf prev Ocean | Of Miss Isabelle Shearer, Miss Eliz- i e T water{abeth Lane, Miss Bertha Hahn, Mrs. Peter Roberts, Miss Mary Gray, Carl was as high as it hds any | frann. time this season anc the | Ty 0 Miss Isabelle Sherer and floor of the bathhouses near the large| siock were in charge of the tioket ta- pavilion. bles an those who took tickets were The current Catholic Transcript|Arthur Botham and Andréw Bovens. announces that Rev. Otto S. F ter, assistant pastor at church, Colchester, is g successful series of Lenten at Thomaston. Dorothy Dalton, in “The The Yukon” arrived late owing to railroad conditions and will be pre- sented at every performance today at Davis theatre—adv. A New London young woman. Miss Mary C. Bro of Mr. and | Mrs, Isaac S. Brown ved home from Cobl Ger) tnce Oc- tober, 1918,_she lias been abroad in Y. M. C. A. work Farmers in the suburbs find cattle and stock show being shut in so many weeks, due not so much to the cold as to the risk of letting animals into icy barn- vards and driveways. . Hugo Erdman and have been stationed for the past year at Fort Mansfield, Watch Hill have left that post for Fort I Wright, Fishers Island, where are to rective their honorable charges. Announcement of a gif! d S. Harkne S0 sermons Flame of 4, 1 fo in that the effects of in C. do for John Vinney, I G.11 they dis- FIi street, New Yo v to | unable to encounter the heavy dr: the Mount Holyoke colloe $3.000,000 | an iy retarn from his: rosie Sunday endowment fund was made Monday and delighted Connecticut Holyoke. alumnae of hi The ushers Charles Haddad and William John- adj memt ve rship campaign which laun, post mother, Mrs. morning. were Edward Bollara, n. ‘AMERICA‘\I LEGION PLANS MEMBERSHIP CAMPAIGN State headouarters have notified the jutant of R. O. Fletcher Post, No. American Legion, of plans for a big will be ed all over the state May 1, and ten da The goal is set at 000 members by May 10. Fletcher will consider preliminary plans r the local drive at their next meet- g, date to be announced. Home After 16 Months Overseas. M Mary C. Browne, who arrived New York, Friday with the Y. M. A. reached her home in New Lon- n Saturday evening shortly be- re 6 <o'clock, accompanied by her Isaac S. Browne, of New and brother and _sister-in- and Mrs. Harry Browne, of ush ng, L. I Tke Only Way Out Albert Gottier, 2 milkman, living out iwo miles from Rockville, was don In order to get home he un- tched the horse, left the wogan, milk cans and all, in the middle of the road. | Since March 1st th He succeeded in getting home with the added to the Merchants horse tween New York and Boston —_— car at the head of the train and a| - i i remodeled observation car at the rear. | Mofday £ xmaing IWhist, Zach car contains two sections equip- | The Monday Evening Whist club ped with tables. Work is_progressing rapi piant of the Tidewater O one of the Best equipped in this part of the country. is at Scotch Cap, near Quaker village, and has been under tion for the last two years. Charles Phelps of Rockville is to address the special commemorative meeting in honor of the landing of the Pilgrims under the auspices of the New England Southern Conference of the Methodist Episcopal church, at Plymouth, Mass., April 9th. Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Browning. of Kitemaug, who have been visiting their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Carleton P. Browning, = at Britannia Beach, British Columbia, write to Norwich friends of the un- usual winter there, with no snow and no cold Announcements have been received of the marriage, February 25th, of George §. Brown of Portland, Oregon, The plant Hill construe- ra ind ca day, New Haveén road, due Monday night, was an hour and cign- teer held at. Worcester for connec! met this week at the home of Miss Hazel L. The Colberg. was served. Fletcher on Lincoln avenue. prize was won by Miss Naney After the whist a luncheon March Starts With Good Rain The rainfall for Friday and Satur- the first time Norwich has had in this month, amounted to 1.06 ches, accdrding to the measure- ments ‘taken at the water office. Worcester Boat Train Late The Worcester, boat train on the here at 9:47 mindtes late, because of being ns. Miss Porter’'s School in Farming- ton, where Miss Mabel S. Webb, of Norwich, today (Tuesday) for the Easter va- is art instructor, will close tion. son of David O. Brown of Winsted, but formerly of Tolland, and Miss Dorris Elizabeth Padgman of Port- land, Oregon. Mr. Brown is working in a lumber establishment. At a benefit entertainment at Mt. Holyoke college, Friday evening, the lines of the marionette show were written by Miss Frances L. Wa of the English department author of “Endicott and 1.” Miss Warner is from Putnam, elder daughter of Judge and Mrs. Edgar M. Warner. In spite of the recent return of puh- lic carriers to private ownership, im- plying that government control had ended, carriers are forbidden to charge their rates or prevailing regulations, under which they have been operat- Ing before September 1, 1920, under the transportation act just passed. Nearly 200 parishioners, including members of the Young Ladies’ Sodali- ty, who had requested the memgrml. received holy communion at 7 o'clock Monday morning at a mass offered in Bt. Patrick’s church by Rev. Peter J. Cuny, for the repose of the soul of Rev. BEgh Treanor, a former rec- tor. — To Heal a Cough Take HAYES' HEALING HONEY. 35e v Bastern Connecticat aqual to ’.I’I' Bul- suis. -| " THERE 15 1o aaverniun; m ia in %o- heciness re: Hartford Frederick Conlon and P. spent ‘the week end at his home ln this iand Ellen Smith vs. J. S. Tillinghast. | Leroy Harwood of New London, receivers of the Groton Iron Works, have filed an lelmflon in the superior court for order authorizing the sale of the Groton and ‘Noank yards of the Groton Iron works. The Noank yard, they say should bé sold at the earliest possible opportunity, but the Groton yard in the months of June or July, 1920, at about the time the work in this yard will have been completed will not interfere or prejudice the collection of claims against the Unit- ed States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation. Six steel ships of 8,800 tons dead weight have been built at the Groton yard under one contract and delivered. On another contract for six steel ships of 9,400 tons dead weight, three will be ready for delivery before the end of June, 1920, but the contract on the other three was cancelled by the U. S. Shipping Board Emergency Fleet corporation. No work except minor jobs and the completion and launching of one wooden vessel has been done at Noank yard by the re- ceivers. The Noank yard with equipment appraised at $256,540 and has a $30,- 000 first mortgage on it to the Sav- m“ ANT TO SELI. GRflTflN SHIPYA ings Bank of New London. The Groton yard with equipment was ap- praised at §$3,142212 and is encumber- ed by two mortgages to the U. S. Shipping Board Bmergency Fleet Corporation of :$1,800,000 on whichj there is now due $1,716,666.67. Charles D. Rood of Springfield has secured a foreclosure judgment of second and third mortgages on the Noank yard but the receivers have issued $1000,000 in receivers’ certifi- cates to the First National Bank of Joston to redeem the Noank plant from Rood’s foreclusure. The sum of $94,488.87 is now due on these certificates. Receivers’ certificates in the sum of $140,416.92 have been issued in order to carry on business at the Groton plant and are held by the Emergency "leet corporation. Bonus payment claims by employes have been allowed by the court in the sum of $53,983.42 which are payable next after the pay- ment of administration expenses. The receivers also owe $316,000 for materials and supplies purchased for the ship building. Creditors’ claims against the re- ceifership amounting to $3,400,00 have | the receivers do not | been filed, but believe more than $2,500000 of claims will be allowed. LITTLE BALTIC' GIRL AND MOTHER BADLY BURNED Teresa, the three year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Lemoine of High street, Baltic, narrowly escaped being burned to death on Monday moraing when her clothes caught fire from a comb which ignited while she was playing with It near the stove rs. Lemoine was attending to her housenold duties and was paying slight aitention to her daughter. The child was playing with a comb of in- flammable composition and stuck it through the grate of the kitchen range. The comb hurst into flams, setting fire to the child's dress. The cries of the child attracted the attention of Mrs. Lemoine who caught up the little girl in her arms and ran into the street crying for help. Mrs. Joseph Holmes, a neighbor, hearing her cries started to go to her assist- ance. Charles Macht who was dri ing a team by the house saw the pre- dicament and taking off his coat he wrapped it about the flaming clothes on the child, smothering the flames. Mr. Lemoine was notified of the ac- cident and summoned Dr. Bourrett, who dressed the burns of the child and mother. Teresa is badly burned about the back, neck and arms, and is in a very critical condition. Mrs. Le- moine’s arms and hands were badly burned, it being necessary to cut a diamond ring from her hand to, avoid tearing the burned flesh. Mrs. Le- moine is resting as comfortably as can be expected. GROTON TOWN COURT BINDS OVER BOY BURGLAR Abraham Markowitz, a Stamford youth, was arraigned in the Groton town court Monday morning, charged with statutory burglary. Probable| cause was found and he was held for trial before the next term of the su- perior court in $500 bonds. In de- fault of a surety he was committed to Jail. Markowitz and a companion were detected in Mystic by Officer Smith as they were abnut to enter the store of Orrin Stamord, the window having been forced. Markowitz's companion made his escape. Markowitz is wanted In Stamford, where he is accused of having bur- glarized several stores it is under- stood. | TURNED OFF ELECTRICITY WITHOUT GIVING NOTICE An employe of the Norwich gas and electric light plant stated Monday evening that the cutting off of the electric light and power last weelk from the Shore Line Electric Railway Co. office building in Main street wa because of repairs to telephone wire: that were being made in Park street. As a measure of fety the current was cut off from this building while | the telephone men e at work. He thuoght it last ted T only two days , he said, to the Line office that the electric current was to be cut off or of the reason for i Common Pleas Court. At a short calendar session of the common pleas court here Monday aft- ernoon with Judge C. B. Waller pre- siding judgment was rendered in the case of Dolly Rogers vs. George C. Young. The case was defaulted on January 29th. Answers were ordered in the cases| of L. E. Conway vs. Harry Zavorit The cases assigned stand and these assignments were added to the list: March 23, Max Richland vs. L. Burdick. March 29, Walter Dyer vs. Nathan Geer and others. March 29, Fred E. Hoffman vs. Ferino, April 5, G. A. Dewell vs. Sands, Anthony ham E. Shapiro. Court adjourned to next Saturday at New London. PENDLETON TAKES APPEAL TO SUPREME COURT Notice of:appeal to the supreme court of errors was filed with the clerk of the superior court in this city Monday by the defendants in the case of Attorney Benjamin F. Hewitt of Mystic against Pendleton Bros. of | New York, in which the plaintiff was awarded $760 damages. The suit was for $1,250, for professional services. Shube-Rabinovitch Betrothal, Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Shube, of Brooklyn, N. Y. announce the en- gagement of their daughter, Frieda. to Nathan Rapinovitch, of 246 West Main street, Norwich. S. . Rose Lucy C. Creciechi vs. Abra-| Many a woman who is unable to drive a horse can lead her husband around by the nose. .months’ FORMER GOODYEAR RESIDENT WANTS TO FIND MOTHER Joseph N. Thibault, 28 New street, New London, reported to the police there Monday that he is anxious to find his mother and two sisters whom he has not seen since last summer. At that me they were living at Goodyear, this state, but same time since lasi summer they left there and he has not heard of them since. Three yvears ago he ran away from home and came to New London. Since then he has married and has two children and he is anxious to find his mother to have a family reunion. OBITUARY. William H. Eagles. m H. (Barney) Eagles, veteran printer and best known in recent years as the publisher of The Gazette, a ekly news sheet that was in circu- ion for a number of years, died at his home at 349 Main street on Mon- day evening, ending an {llness of many duration. Mr. Eagles has health for about been in poor recovered. Since his boyhood d s he has been in ‘the printing business, ng for many publications nad at times running his own shop. He learn- ¢ trade in St. Johns, New Bru where he worked for Leaving New Brunswick, he went to Boston, where he worked on several of the larger paper: inz to Norwich about e was employed by the Norwich Advertiser, en. an_ evening publication that was in existence only a few years. When the Advertiser went out of business Mr. Fagles went to work for orwich Morning Bulletin, where 8 ved until 1895, when the linotype machines were put into use. From The Dulletin he went to the Morning : hed here for a paper | established office of his own, which he conducted for a number of years. Since that time he was emnloyed in the various ing houses here. About ten 3 S 0 he began the publication of The Gazette, discon- publicatibn bout two ¥ when his health < matter and va- 1 news 1((2'!1& which were of man interest type and furnish- ading. los was a strong supporter nd for many years during h an organizer for the State of Labor. His work in s city was the organiza- tion ¢ carpenters’ union, the street employes’ union nd various other At one 3 Norw!rh on. vhich or; much to bring I’\bor tral head. He was a f the Norwich Typographical 100. and was one of the £ members of the orzan hongh not a charter member. Frederickton, New ears ago and for the ‘“1‘ resided in this citv. did Everett two da Tisbon ew TLondon. and . Mrs. J. C. Phillips of Robert H. Byles of leaves a brother, Wa Tmr Eagles, and Mrs. " George Munro Warwick Unable to rall three weeks' duration, George unro Warwick, aged 45 vears, died Mon- day afternoon at 30 o'clock at his home, No. 114 Br treet. Mr. Warwick born in Corn- wall, Ont., : of Mr: \fid the Norwich m1d he had been Falls cotton for the past few superintendent of the vears mother, M John wife, Arthur and John R. Warw one daughter, Nora Isabel There is also a sister, Mrs. T. . Vickar of Regina, Saskatchewan. brother was killed in a fall recently during the fire which destroyed the Lorraine Hotel, Providence, where he was a guest. Mr. Warwick was ‘well known and held the respect and esteem of all his acquaintances who feel deep sympa- thy to the bereaved family. Announces Engagement York city announces the engagement of her daughter, Lucy of New York, formeriy of Yantic, to John R. Hart of Yantic. | HEM-ROID, and tried it In 1,000 cases Mrs. Sophia Spencer Bishop of New | Ad;nflykemovuflnu (Beauty Notes) Merely applying an inexpenaive paste to a hairy surface, say beauty special- ists, will dissolve the hairs. This paste is made by mixing a little water with} | some powdered delatone; after about 2 minutes it is rubbed off and the skin washed.” This simple method not only removes every trace of hair, but leaves the skin free from blemish. To insure success with this treatment, be careful to get real delatone. Piles Can't Be Cured from the Outside. External seldom piles. Nor do surgical operations. The cause is inside—bad circula: The blood v Ve treatments cure is stagnant, the veins flabby. The bowel walls are weak, the parts | almost dead. To quickly and safely r: piles. on: current through the stag. Internal treatment is the one safe method. Olntments and cut- iting won't do it. J. S. Leonharat, M. D., a specialist, set at work some vears ago to find & real internal remedy for piles. He suc- ceeded. He named his prescription before he was satisfies Now HEM- ROID is sold b v druggists everywhere It is a harmless tab- always b and drug- | dly re- e dis- satisfied Rare Animal Dies in Zoo. The female okapi, an extrem animal, haif zebra, half antilope, recently at the Antwerp zo0ologi gardens, -whose pride it had been two months. The only specimen of it kind and brought to Burope from the| forests of Africa. The okapi never be- | came acclimatized, although its ¢ ters were maintained at a tempera of 45 degrees (C). The animal's body | will be set up near the stuffed male | okapi, killed a few years ago in Af the chief curiosity of thé Tervueren in Antwerp. The short existence of the okapi at Antwerp will prov to have been useful to zoologists having identifi as one of an ancient, rare died ? customed to the vast, tudes of its native habitat, rea cumbed to the spectacie of violence. Bolshevism and unres! sented to it by a world turned u down.—L/Tllustration, Paris. urbing | pre- de Power in a Radium Watch. If you own a radium-dial watch with luminous figures and hands, then you are the possessor of a vast power plant of no mean proportions, says the Elec- trical Ixperimenter. There is suffi- cient radium on your watch dial to haul your train homeward, if it could | be properly applied. As the matter stands, the innocent locking radium dial does not seem to possess any extraordinary amount of concentrated energy, but this is or apparently the case, and not actuall so, for the reascn that while the radi- um paint on the dial small, this ef- fect will keep up for twenty-five hun- dred years, provided the zinc sulphide, with which the radium is mixed so to produce a glow, held out that long. The zinc sulphide in most cases gives out in about eight or ten years. Now, if. we could but find a way to make the radium release all its energy Don’t Spoil a Good Meal With a Bad Stomach 1t is really a pitiful si many thousands of people worr about what they can-eat and what they can’t eat. Dyspeptics, they call themselves, but they streteh the imagination when they do i All mege people need to make them | healthy, cheerful and of sound appetite is a box of Mi-O-Na Tabiets. The stomach of a dyspeptic is over- worked and run down. It needs help to digest the food, but more than that it needs a prescription that will cleanse, renovate, strengthen and put elasticity into the stomach walls. Mi-O-Na is the prescription that will do this and do it so promptl you'll wonder why you didn’t before. It stops belching of & after eating in five minut |doubtedly the greatest stomach tonic { ever given to the public by a specialist | in stomach diseases. Lee & Osgood C cents a large box on the plan. - HYOME (PRMKACED HiH-0-HE) I Ends Catarrh or money back. Just breathe it in. Outfit including inhaler $1.15. Extra bottles 60c. All Druggists. money t to see so | CHAPPELL CO. Telephone 24 104 Main Street or Central Wharf id of spreading d years, it ke a motor would 1 makes for t very g irand R TO@ FAT’ more, und Korcin eystem. CHILDREN / BACKWARD® e ® YOU HAVE BEEN ANXIOUSLY | i By Using Cuticura The Soap, for daily use in the toilat, and purifies, the Ointment: WAITING FOR Cosmopolitan Red Book Classic Metropolitan Physical Culture Photoplay Electrical Experimenter adowland verybody System Adventure Parisienne House Beautifui House and Garden THEY'RE ALL HERE NOW— Also the Fashion Magazine. And don’t let any man say it costs too much to put clothes ocn a woman's back—Just" loock at the mew styles — they're not wearing them on their back. Come in and look. GET YOURS TODAY 3 S By the Year or by the Copy, at Shea’s News Burean MAGAZINE SPECIALIST UNION SQUARE WE DELIVER THEM ANYWHERE