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other to the conditions that have arisen along our southern border in the past decade. Wiitmantle Dfies 23 Chusn St Teleshone 103 e Norwich, Wednesday, April 14, 1920. ghta of republieation of speclal despatch- beretn are alyp rwerred. CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING APRIL 10, 1820 10,607 IMPROVEMENT NEEDED. Of much interest to the peoplg of WHERE s ignated as a periog in which extra ef- % forts should be made to recognize and|isters of the Northern Baptist Con- emphasize the importance of being|yention, but he -surely is in a very kind to animals. be deliberately cruel to animals. long list of bothersome BE KIND TO ANIMALS. | This is 4 week which has been des- There_is of course no special benefit to be gained if 'such kindness is to be|hearsay for truth. 'restricted to the seven days. That would mean very little relief for the animals. What ip desired by this “Be-kind-to-animals week” | concentration of attention on the im- portance of not only maintaining hu- Wwith mane efforts -but of increasing them mm? o whenever and wherever it is possible.{ pr Aitchison was (It is for the purpese of keeping suchd ch, a desirable matter before the people,|board of promotion by delegates fram of a%ceunglnc it among the children|every state and every co-operating and thought to more readily thereby the many opportunities that rexist of putting such a principle into practice. is the f causing many who give it little recognized There are few so constituted as to In- viably their acts, if they happen to slip up in their duty to the dumb, are due to thoughtlessness and unre- this part of the state is the promise strained temper rather than a hard- which has been cured by spiritéd citizens and officials Highway Commissioner Bennett and Colchester will be made modern highway - duri season. It-is an exten into e piece . of ford-Colchester-New Longon pike, where improved conditions are needed, but there is equaliy good rea-: son why this piece of road should be, put in shape for trafiic to Norwich! and beyond. It will not be a permanent road that| will be bullt on this stretch of six| miles but an improved road will be of great advantage to the travel between | those points, linking up as it will oth-)t er sections of roads which are al-|i ready in good condition. With the completion of this, link,| { slong with the other work that is to|in this be-kind-to-animals week. be done on the permanent road, there) will be a good highway ailable] t from Hartford through Colchester to) U this city =nd from Norwich to West-|t erly and beyond, the long se tion of road now under con struction across this county in a| southeasterly direction, affordi attractive short cut for those de to cover this distance from'the vicin- Ity of Hartford. | But it is likewise going ‘to be of; squal benefit to the towns through| which it will run and to Norwich. It will improve the conditions of travei! to those coming to Norwich and af-| ford the most direct way of reaching! the capital city from this part of the| state. s E The need of the improvement ~ has of been emphasized many times. We! have apparently reached the time when it can be undertaken all of v which is good news until the work i completed. Those who got the com- || missioner's promise dia an excellent Job for which they deserve due credit.| s NEEDS CONCERTED ACTION. With steps being taken by the gov- ernment looking to the possibility taking action in the existing str situation, it shows a consider: for the seriousness of t fairs even though it that it cannot possih succeed. Under conditions prev: the government is naturally looked | to to end such trouble and to make it} © d le state of i ong « o possible for the transportation ser-| vice to be restored, su it food| supplies be afforded for the people | and those who are forced out of work| because of the action of others given the opportunity they are entitled t: But there is also a responsibi resting on the shoulders of the broth erhoods, and all org; | s a, omission as commission and it is all the coming these things which, being brought to work that is to be done 6n the Hart-| educational turn- | causing greater thought to be direct- ed towarq the fact that in return for their service animals should be given good food, good shelter, good attention as well as kind treat- ment whether rendering service or not quire persistent efforts by individuals and organizations, but we know by sad experience that suchfacts too of- ing home the duty our apt sists in sticking with us M spite of the repeated claims that it will force the price to no one dares to prediet. ficulties getting sugar, which difficul- ties are aggravated by the transpor- tation troubles but when the president pany indicates that prices ean be ex- .| pected to go higher as the season ad- { where we have got to make the -be; it may have no effect in keeping dt the price, but if we do not save we raw d labor for| pounds. public, ened disposition ' to injure and mis- from| treat just because animals are con- that, cerned. There ‘are also quite as many the stretch of road between I'itchville| cases of cruelty through errors of eater notice have a mest valuable effect. The need of good ° care, s so apparent that it ought not to re- n have to be hammered home, and t is this very process of hammer- to the faithful riends of mankind that is undertaken It is a matter on which we can well give hought on more than ene week out of he fifty-two for unless' we -cultivate he habit of being kind to animals attitude toward our fellowmen is to go in the wrong direction, et THE SUGAR SHORTAGE. We have gone through all kinds of hortages but.there is one that per- it would And that is the sugar When it will end or where oon be over, hortage, Today we are having di f the American Sugar Refining com- nces and that we should use less r it doesn’'t present a very prom- ng outlook. In most instances there has heen a | decided curtailment in the amount of ugar consumed. It was necessary because it couldn’t be obtained. Tell- ing people to eat less means to de- ease the amount of candy, rinks and ice cream used and to a onsiderable extent there has been a reater consumption in these lines since prohibition became effective. It is apparently a state of affairs f the situation. Even if we ski m :ay get less sugar than we have been ltowed. Some idea of the situation is fur- nished by the reports of receipts of sugar ‘at three ports which in three months were larger than the ame period a year ago by 400,000,000 This doesn’t quite offset the that matter, to see that the ille allegeq shortage of 400,000 tons in the and unjust actions of the strik cane supply, but in view of the diffi- fying all rules, regulations! culties getting it and the prices be- zation and act ar ing paid it show- that either we are olutionary manner, are properly an ! consuming much more, Joarders are promptly suppressed. |at work or else large }&anlmes are It is a case where it must he deter-| being exported. 5 mined whether safe, ordetly and re-1 Production doesn’t appear to be sponsible leadership is going to guide the activities of labor in making and| insisting upon demands or whether | it is going to be placed in the hands| of the lawless who entirely discard| reason angd justice and care not what| they do or the havoe they so | long as they can accomp their unjustified purpose. Let the irrespon-| sible get the upper bhand in one| branch of labor and there is no tell ing where it will end. And th no question but what the law cle-1 ment hag been doing its utmost for a considerable time to get on top. It| isn't unionism and organized labor| has everything at stake. BONORA’S SECESSION. We have had so many surprises| from Mexico that we are not inclined| to get excited over the announce- ment that comes from the state of Bomora in Mexico declaring itssinde- pendence. H Sonora is directly south of Arizona. it is & state rich In undeveloped min- eral wealth and it possesses an equal- ty undeveloped civilization. It is onei ot the several trodblesome states of| the republic to the south where ban-| #itry is rife and where the Yaqui In. | dians are in the saddle. It is there- foro a state that can be expected to| turnish more or less trouble for it- 1elf and neighbors whether it ig a part of Mexico or an independent re- public which it now essays to be. In fact it is a question whether it can pertect and hold an organization that| would make it possible to carry out t] tl i Jt sreignty for any lengba of time, Bomerd might attract much capi- tal and undergo extensive develop- | ment if cenditions there were dil’l’(r-l ent. It is the second largest state in Mexico with an area about 16 times the size of Connecticut, or larger than all of New England and New Jersef combined with Connecticut counted twice, but in population it is the low- est considering its size, having only about five times as many in that great area as there are in Norwich. That conditions in ‘Sonora can be ex- pected 1o improve under a separate government is improbable and with such a fight as may be made to up- hold or break the secession conditions there cannot be what might be con- sidered inviting for somé time to ’ 2 need certainly for a bumper crop. forcing many who them & necesgity to diametrically op-| posite conclusions. lkeeping pace’ with the demand at the present ‘time with . European gondi- ions still far frem normal, What he beetfields will do in the way of ief remains to be.seen but there is EDITORIAL NOTES. Any queer: antie< by the fish these | days cam. be attributed to the dispo- sal of illegally possessed booze. The ==sn nn tha corner says: There s no difference hetween borrowing or Fisacs #24’ =% -~ it comes to umbrel- as, The price of white collars today- is always 'thought ‘When Mr. Hoover says_ he would | not accept a democratic nomination he doesn’t attach -much the primaries in° Michigan. weight = to 1t is'interesting to hear New York authorities .admit that vice’ conditions are even worse than find them, and nothing done to check them. investigators The governor of Massachusetts has bowed to the sentiment as expresse: by the legislature for saving daylight,; Yould place but President Wilson wouldn't listen to the senate on the treaty. A Boston repart has it that Connec- ticut ‘s waiting for a special session of the legislature. to get daylight sav~ its undertaking and defend its sov-|ing legislation. Connecticut knows better than te expect any such thing. The senate has ordered a probe ot the strike of railroaq employes but all sorts of things can happen before s makes a report as to what ought to be done; uch an investigation committee The Connecticut Company is told it must alter its rates. Would that there was would bring down prices where exor- bitant charges are made and there is no way to escape them, some regulatory power that _While certain of the Bri ish press were regretting that the differences of President Wilsen ang the senate could not be harmonized, they thought that Great ‘Britain would bej . g~ ¢ wamma. With the Mexicans fighting| #iding with Germany against ance.e] 'UA SJ-O R*I A’ littla i d the | -Church £ ful r 1 for ~ what has b T[T v stetiich GIEREE LR 4 - ismen! 0 E - T'am not a controvers-| whicn we feel should measure ub ialist and I think I have never before orably with that of both the brain written to any paper. But'I felt that fay m‘:liut;;awn necessary v.:.&fi tire m;:mmz i ‘and prof ion. our Mr. Briggs' statements i his letter ;gm ent, £ Ay s e e of today should not remain unchal-) our il ete P lenged. Mr, Briggs does not stand our_mills, ete. alone in his positiod among the min- The teachers do not consider them- selves in a select class; indeed, brother Laborer why should they? Is there anything particulgrly select in tae environms and routine of the scheolroom? ~ True,” there should be the aumosphere of interest and at- tainment, but of exclusiveness, ther is none! \ It is not our fault that the teach- small ministry. I think he has mis- taken bitterness for conviction and First with regards 'to aristecracy. In our annual convention in Den- X ver with 2,000 delegates from all of|ing protession offers short hours and the states of our convention, there|long vacdtions. There aré many( were only five opposing votes to the .among us who would gladly labor alignment of the Northeyn Baptist llonger for the sake of better resuits tnterchulrch |and a higher wage. Remember, that during those long “lay-efis’, expens- es go on and we are having to meet the necessary requirements of wholesome living. , Bach year a goodly pertion must be set aside for that period of our lives when, our labors in the schoolroom over, we hope io live in comfortable retirement. I have no complaint nor eriticism of our school board. I have reason to feel that they have done the best they can for us. However, if our citizens and feliow-laborers of Norwich feel that they can justly afford to aliot us a larger portion than that decided upon by the board we trust they will cheerfully lend us their support. - Y F. HINCKLEY Norwich, April 12, 1920. _ The Fight in New Haven Mr, Editor; Doubtless many of your readers have been interested n the fight the New Haven teachers have been making for an -increase in salary. They have won. The follow- ing clipping shows the opinion of the “New Haven Journal Courier” in re- gard to the matter: * 8o the underpaid teachers in the public schools of New Haven are 1o receive the pay that has been long dug them! A point has been reached where the situation ‘“requires es- pecial consideration” and, therefore, the legal experts look on approvingly. We are dee-lighted that justice is to be done though we shall never cease to lament that it advanced with such leadened feet. ‘We profoundly "trust that' this un- derestimation of the value of school teachers will never again be put to the test. Having now abandoned the wholly untenable theory that the task of teaching raises the beneficiary, or indulgent, in the social scale, and that, in consequence, socidl station is to be figured as in part payment, we trust it will never be revived. As-.a* mat- ter of fact there is no employment so intimately associated with good citi- zenship, honest government and de- cent moral standards as the employ- ment of teaching. The publie school of America has done more for Amer- iéan progress than any other single institution supperted by public taxa- tion. To weaken it thromgh a mis- understanding of its place in the so- cial order, or through an undervalua- tion of the teacher, is to invite igno- rance and the sins of it. The risk through which the public schools of New Haven have run must never be run again. The consequences are too frightful. We seem to have es- eaped them but through no virtue of the city government. The escape is! due to the patriotism and dignity of; the teachers who have exercised mag- nificent self restraint and judgment. All honor to them. s JEANETTE C. STRAHAN Norwich, April 13, 1920. unanimously as direetor of our national society of the Northern Baptist com- vention. We: are fortunate in having a leader big enough to be the unani- mous choice of all these states and societies. These two facts are not aristocracy. In fact the only thing for a true believer in democracy to do is to abide by the will of the ma- jority. If he can’t keep sweet about it he ought to go where the will of the majority suits him. The board of promotion of the Norhegn Eapfist f‘convention has under ten one million dollars of the expenses of the interchurch move- ment or one per cent. of our cam- paign fund. If the interchurch cam- paign for funds fails, we shall pay our share. without a whimper. If it succeeds it will take care of its own expense. Enemies of any reat movement al- ways attack the movement on the basis of extravagance and luxury. The anti-saloon league and the Y. M. C. A. are examples of this. Now comes the interchurch movement. They have all made their mistakes, many of them sérious. But their mistakes have not consisted in sittin still, or in findin fault with oth- ers who were trying to do their best. They have gone forward to mighty achievement. So may it be with the interchurch mibvement.. I am among those who believe that the Baptist faith is the purest New Testament fdith in existence. But surely my heart leaps for joy when Korea bows before Christ under Aresbytethan leadership or great mass movements in India sweep hun- dreds” of thousands into the kingdom under our Methodist brethren or when the students in China turn to Christ says: “Rejoice with Me, for I Mott and Sherwood Eddy. I hear Christ saying “Rejoin with me, for I have found the sheep that was lost) I cannot find it in my heart to say anything but God to semd to all whe preach Jesus Christ as the Saviour of Sinners. * I have a minor conviction: and a major conviction. My minor convic-. tion is that the Baptist churches are orgranized, more than any other de- nomination on the New Testament basis. I am second to none in my conviction of this. But my major conviction is that every follower of Jesus Christ is a brother of mine in'a brotherhood that is genuine and real, .Bvery organi- zation on ‘earth that reaches Christ as the Redeemer and Saviour of men, shall have my unbéunded sympathy and love without any reservation. I say God bless all genuine 'Christian churches. « In a time like this when the forces of hell are so tremendous, when the needs of humanity are so fearful and so tragic, when the great denomina- tions are facing their tasks together, without in any way losing their con- victions or creed or denominational identity, when the church;s oitthe living Christ are for the rst time He was a stranger to the Ways of facing seriously the command of | "6 % a0 S Wi about with Christ to give the gospel to the whole|giriv1iv He entered a department world, to me it is past all compre® | "Ny o0 o ding mear the ele- hension how any man can stand N} i, ‘Ghen he heard the operator our midst and stick his knife in OUT (el others in their search for differ- back when we are striving sincerely ent departments to “Take the elevator, andihonesfly to do the will of our it will take you anywhere.” e 0 So the stranger entered the ele- REV. A, F. PURKISS, 2 3 x Norwich, April 13, 1920. vator next time with the assertion: Stories That Recall Others Believe It cr Not quick The boys because they gathered around her to talk at many of the intermis- sions.* The principal who had notic- ed this commented on her interest in the boys and then told the boys how they should appreciate her for this same interest, ' - “I guess you like to have her .talit baseball with you,” he smiled. “Oh;. no,” hastily corrected one of them. *“She don’t talk any baseball, We 'talk it before her and then we like to stand near so we can hear all the foolish questions .she asks the fel- lows about it."” Five Minutes a Day With Our Presidents By James Morgan ‘Copyright 1 XXVII—THE FIRST WESTERNER 1173—February 9,. h:u-. of Wil- liam Henry arrison, at Berkeley, Va. 3 1791—Entered the Army. : 1792-6—,Camp-iu ng with Mad * Anthony Wayne against the Indians. 1797-9—Secretary of the North- west Territory. 2 1799-1801—Territorial Delegate in Congress. 1801-14—Governor- of the Terri- tory of Indiana. 1811—Battle of Tippecanoe. i814—Battle 'of the Thames. Although William Henry Harrison was elected te the presidency as the log-cabin candidate in the first of our Jfrenzied, barading campaigns, he was born to ome of “the first families of Viriginia,” in a manor house on the bank: of the aristocratic James. As a son of Benjamin Harrison, signer of the Declaration, with the hlood of Po- cahontas in his yeins, and as a de- scendant of a_Cromwellian colonel who had signed the death warrant of a King. no president has had a ionger, more historic lineage. With the ex- ception of the Adamses, the Harrisons remain the only family whese name appears twice in the presidential line. I, ability Willam Henry Harrison feil below the standard of his prede- cessors and properly is classed ‘with the eight or ten demiocrities® who have since had the greatness of the presidency thrust upon them.’ He was elected not becawse he was a great statesman or a great soldier, but because he was thoroughly rep- resentative of the great New West, which was flattered to see in the White House for the first time a man created in its own image. One among the four presidents who were not bred to the law, Harrison was in Philadelphia, under the patron- age of his father's friend, Robert Morris, where he was studying to be a physician when a desire for Indian fightipg, so common to American boy- hood, stirred his blood. He was only 18 when he plunged into a 20-year struggle to win the Ohio Valley’ for peaceable settemient by the white man. After campaigning with Mad Anthony Wayne he was elected terri torial delegate to Congress at 26. There he took the lead in protecting the Vir- gin soil of the great west from the land-grabbing lobby which had risen to exploit At 27 he was governor of the territory of Indiana. Although an ordipary mam in his mental qualities, with no more phy- sical courage than was possessed by the general run of adventurous men in the Western wilds, Harrison .wen his way to leadership by his down- right honesty and by a sobriety of habit that rare on the frontier. With no’legislature to6 check him and no press to watch him he exercised for years almost the despotic power of a Roman governor over all the vast country lying between the West- ern Loundary of the new state of Ohio and the Rock Mountains. Tempt- ing opportunities for personal gains came to him, among them an offer of half the land in and about St. Louis But he left the office with hands as clean and pockets as empty as when he entered it. L Zarly in his term there rose among ans a prophet, who spread the welcome gospel that the Denial of Rapr;;enut;:e Government. Mr, Editor: Someone takes excep- tion to my letter to .The Bulletin protesting against the ousting of the five socialist assemblymen at Al- bany, N. Y. In the first place he thinks that they ought to ‘be excluded from any law-making body because he does not | like their facial appearance. Truly.| this is the most extraordinary reason | for denying duly elected represent- atives of the people a seat in the as- sembly that I ever saw. If this were the only qualification needed there would be a general exodus from our numerous official bodies. The fact of the matter is, this expuision of duly elected representatives j= a complete denial of representative government. As to his next statement, that I am wrong about the charge brought against the Carpenter of Nazareth when he was brought before Pilate. 1 will say that Inspector or anyone else has a perfect right.to interpret the Scripture as they see fit. I still stand pat on my former statement. As I do not care .to zo into any. ex- | tended discussion of theology I will iet the matter rest here. Inspeector sums up by advising me not to worry. It seems to me that it is a very poor citizen who will sit calmly by and al- low. our hired men in office to abrogate the prin?leedeo; w}:tl:b 2ur sovern- {the blood causes the heart to ment is founded, without at least,| 3 S i Taising our voloe against it. Some. of | (PUmP barder, just as stepping on the most influential papers in the [ hose increases the water pres- country have denounced the crime atsure, which is the reason why, Albany in so uncertain terms. Says! Quring this disease, the physician the New York World: “No anarchist | every dealt such a blow to American | |[Watches the overburdened heart so carefully. institutions as that planned by Sweet | and his usoehtsys.’!'lk And the‘ N, Y.| = Tribune; New York may well con-! After ung: sider how she will enjoy the skunk' filled witimvery u;ewk:gaf cabbage wgarland Speaker Sweet = & INASS o e on her brow—Wnat [the debris of the battle—which must be gotten rid of by a process known asresolution. Frequently, inflamed spots remain, congestiof the air Cough, Pneumonia attacks the air cells of the lungs. An inflammation i set up and matter is thrown off which causes the air cells to splidify, thus preventing the natural flow of blood thru the lungs. This “backing up” of Speaker Sweet puroposes to do is to put New York in a pillory of shame. | His proposal, all things considered, | is the most fundamental medieval of: i stoi [k st A in ahe political history of the| persists, cough hangs on, and the | And’ et ‘Inspector thinks every. | least exposure brings on a cold taing_ 18 l-wek; heteaxzse "Ilf Pusted | that is hard to get rid of, If is peculiar taste. emember T this, Mr. Inspeotor: “Bternal vigi. (meglected, such damaged air pas- lance is the price of liberty.” és may easily develop serious GHORGE BE. CAMPBELL | Misease of the hungs. > Norwich, April 12, 1820, IR1 5 ¢ Nt In'e Selet Giaes l ‘inSu:chundfl :hpfiysidm?: mr; Mr. Editor: I trust.‘“Laborer” { 2 s pardon me"lt 1 undertake to cnrr'::,{f and t examinations should his impression ‘that the teachers of | to see M nature is Norwiéh have used “abusive compar- ison” between their own efforts and | attendant compensation, and those of laborers along other lines of work. We are only fellow -tollers .in a common . fleld~giving coneietiou Children_ o i alldren OI7 | s Thaw 17 Willion The After Effects of Pneumonia ‘This is No. 2 of a,series of advertisements, prepared by a com- petent physician, explaining how certain diseases which attack &asag&s——such as Pneumonia, Influenza, Whooping easles or even a long continued Cold—often leave ‘these organs in an inflamed, congested state, thus affording a favorable foothold for invading germs. And how Vick's Vapo- Rub may be of value in this eondition. | | properly continuing the rebuild- ing process. Nightly applications of Vick's VapoRub will aid nature in this work. Because Vicks acts locally by stimulation thru the skin tc draw out the inflammation, at- tract the blood away from the congested spots and relieve the cough. In addition, the medici- nal ingredients of Vicks are vaporized by the body heat. These vapors are breathed in all night long, thus bringing the medication to bear directly upon the inflamed areas. Vicks should be rubbed in over the throat and chest until the skin is red—therd spread on thickly and covered with hot flannel cloths. Leave the cloth- ing loose around the neck and the bed'clothes arranged in the form of a funnel so the vapors arising may be freely inhaled. If the cough is annoying, swallowa small bitof Vicks the size of Samples to new users be sent free on request to the Vick Chemical Company, 232 Broad WE MAIL RECORDS BY PARCEL POST If you can’t come to our store, we will bring our store to you ! Write and tell us what records you want. We will pack them carefully and mail them to you by parcel post collect, insured so that there is absolutely no loss from d breakage. You needn’t send money. Pay the postman when he hands you the records. Order These New Hits or Any Othsrs You Want: Dardanella Now I Know - Swanee Naughty Waltz . Patches 'l See You In Cuba You’d Be Surprised Sugar THE TALKING MACHINE SHOP 46 FRANKLIN STREET NORWICH Please send parcel post coilect, records I have checked above. b s — Master of Life was himself a red man!foe from the ' shores as Perry bad and was about to restore to his people | driven them from the waters of the to their rightful supremacy over their e. With only 3,000 men he had white inferiors, who should be tramp- | carried w into Ca Tecum- led under food. By the side of this|Seh W and his a the Brit- religous fanatic stood his ish general, was put to flight; 600 bothes Tecumaeh: Th sh ‘troops and all the British age crusaders were restral from taking the war path by bold and skilful diplon the general faith in characters. The Indiang were aroused at last by rumors of the approaching War of | 1812, and they struck the long delay- ed blow. But Harrison with his 800 frontiersmen, got rather the better of | them in a famous little Tippecanioe, Ind. With opening of hostiliti captured. was a bers en- s big in its effects. It an army the control freed forever the west from the ambitions of the 1d from the dread of the In- It was one of the few bright an war map, and ed in triumph on The people wild- and by and his | & {of Ontario and middl e east. een s the victor in the Americans and the , the sav- litary engagement of ages became the a f"the Briti- t jealous politiclans at 15h, and the entire future of the great ve him from the army Middle West was at stake. ¥ into the White At_Harrison’s request, Oliver Haz- . ard Perry was sent out to buil O Tt (i eiiate oo o BEos fight a squadron of ships. It was to| 24 s the General that the victorious n commander dispatched from the tle of Lake E sage: “We h: they are ours. val For Three Lickings. ited in NeéW York that rie his celebrated m: e met the enemy and l | States.” but he «didn’t say what for. — That naval victory was followed up | Detroit News. in the fall with army victory at the Battle of the Thames, when Har- rison drove all the allied forces of the | is unother name for SPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY- CORNED BEEF EGGS LEAN PLATE AND FRESH BRISKET PIECES LARGE BROWN Pound 10c Dozen 47c FINE STEAKS COCOANUT STRAWBERRIES Yab... O Basket ..... 49¢ PEAS—SWEET, TENDER, can 16¢! FLUFFY TURNIPS 15 Ibs. Peck 35¢ BROOMS Size No. 6. .. 75¢{SPANISH ONIONS 13 Ibs. BEEF, Ib. ... 22¢ LEAN POT ROAST BEEF BEEF LIVER . oo 12V HAMBURGER STEAK, Ib. .. 20c FRESH PORK SHOULDERS LEAN SALT PORK, Ib... 23c ARMOUR'S LINK SAUSAGE, Ib. 23¢| - GUNDERS ARMOUR’S b. i ceese lzlfgt STAR HAMS LARGENO.1 |STRAWBERRY veuven.. 35cISMELTS, Ib. . 30¢]JAM, Ib. 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