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by the fact that the railroad administra- tion went into .the hole as it did during the period of operations. (Special to THe Bulletin.) . 5 & A 3 & ‘Washington, D. C., April 26.—“Calling| “It is my own fault)” wailed the ste-|I knew was to be vacated that after- It was unquestionably fortunate in many “ways that there was a competent on congress to quell the storm of unrest|nographer, selecting the only vacant which is sweeping over the wofld i the wake of the war, and - dierwich Zulletin | man”at the head of this branch of the war service. He called to his assistance chair in the studio. congre: 3 for all evils which exist, 4 very much n:zll: commercial artist looked sympa- a ship de- : manding that the captain and erew stop| ~ “I recommended a boarding house— the storm which endangers the eraft”|my own” explained the stenographer. said onme of the"active workers in ton- e artist stared. “You poor- thing! capable directors for the various regions into which the railroad system was di- vided and was obliged to take the reins under the most unfavorable One result of the government control of the roads was, however, to demonstrate und Goufief like a lot of passengers on today. The most sed that the ship don’ we can do is to | she said. —_ ‘—-'l--\.n-.-uv---».u- g0 to pleces on | “I admit that I am old enough to know s the rocks. We must Steer it the best|Letter,” said the stenographer. “Years we can till the storm of unrest which is | ago I learned hever to recommend a Butesed st e Pestoffics &t N @nnd-cam watier. Telezdzas Cafta. Putletts Musinem Offies 488 #n cwma. w|to the country that they had not been getting proper treatment in the perlod just previous thereto. Sweeping the world subsides.” The resignation washerwonian, a dressmaker, or a play, Congress has accomplished much con-| for fear that the next time I saw the structive work in the eleven months it|person to whom I made ihe recommen- has been in session under republican con- | dation she would {nform me that her best Jartisan statements to | lingerie had been lost by the washerwo- It ‘convened the 19th of | man her $8 a yard goods had been ruin- May, 1919, and with the_exception of a|éd by the dressmaker or she had been Thanksgiving and | boréd to death by the play. it has pounded away | “ARd Yet” said the artist, punching at its big task of reconstruction, with- [her brush iato the paint, “you deliber- It has tackled and | ately, of your own free will, bring a adjusted some of the biggest problems|friend into your own boarding house! that has confronted the nation in half a| “It is true” sald the stenographer. century. Some. one: said today that the|“I'm guilty. All last fall I listened to railroad bill alone, Would have been re- | harrowing tales of home hunting, with- garded as a sufficient accomplishment | out offering any advice—not aven & hint. for any one cangress, viewed from any|I eongratulated mygelf on being in & standard other than that of the Stu- | small hotel where everybody from the pendous war time legislation Which im-|owner to the telephons boy, radiates Beiees | Edterial Macms 335 of the director now means that we are Bullgin s Omee 332 | petting much nearer to normal condi- Wiitmastie Ofics # Charch St Tewobens 165. | fions. — Norwich, Tuesday, April 27, 1920 trol, in spite of the contrary. THE MEXICAN REVOLT. Just what operations the federal forces in Mexico intend naming against the revolutionists has not been disclosed. It is not probable that the plan of action will be made public to any greater de- gree than is necessary, but up to the present time it does not appear that any- thing in the way of effective action has This may be offset by the claim that the federalists have not as yet got into action, but if such is the case it must be realized that valuable | time is being lost and the chance of nip- few days off at Christmas time, WLMGER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Press 1 exclustreny entitied Tor repubileation of all oewr Cemeleh- U er ot oterwise erediied in out a day’s let-up. been undertaken. mediately preceded it. Turning back the railroads CIRCULATION good will; the chef is extra good; the the | families are pleasant and even the bach- country from government contrdl to pri- | elors are jolly. And the women never vate ownership was the most difficult job | g0ssip!” ENDING APRIL 24th, 1920 8" i\ i1 outbreak in the bud is being of “unscramblin; " which had to be fac- ed by _congress. The president statea| “It sounds ideal” said the artist. Conditions in Mexico are that théy should go back on & ceftain| “And then” said the stenographer, *T they should be for a quick and effective date, but offered no suzgestions of how | blundered. A couple of months ago I suppression of this revolution. o done without jeopardizing | ran into Lois Kelham. She was born and NP SUGAR CONFERENCE. has maintained for a long time that he the interests of the roads themselves and | raised in a fifteen room house in En- the country looks forward|has been in control but there has been the industrial conditions of the country | glewood. She told me that her brother «vidence galore that he could do little In the midst of it all comes|Was to be uarried and She and' her appaling magnitude, making | mother were to lighten the white wom- lahor conditions one of the most im- |an's burden by living in a.cozy flat. Dhases of the pending legisla-| “First fnd the flat” commiented the in the way of maintaining law and order 17 many sections of his country. fiant attitude of Sonora and the success hich has attended the activities carried & to be held this week. ther they are well stop the upward ten- artist. “Yes, of course,” said the stenograph- e e o e S| Weil, ‘anyway, .the next time I saw Roads that run &l the way from highly | her she said that if there were two un- successful to two streaks of rusty iron | eccupied rooms under the same rgof any- Across the country, must be provided for, | Where in Chicago she had not been able Without adaquate trans. |to find them and in despair hér mother the country would starve and|had gone out of the city=to board. Lois o Iabor ques- | was temporarily located in a hallway, fion could be dealt with, strikes elimin. | Sleeping on a cot behind a nervous por- ated ana Toads put on & Secure running | tiefe. Then my matural Kindness of s the industries of the country would [ heart asserted itself and I called up my material, | oWn hotel and asked about a room which on by the leaders of that movement adds etrength to the belief that the opposi- tion to Carranza has either gotten the upper hand or else strong enough to accomplish and the way in which federa roopd are reported to be deserting Car-| ranza and jolning the opposition must{ cortainly be giving it the encouragement which it seeks. Flad Carranza possessed a more thor- ovzh control previous to 1 more confidence could be placed in try had to be considered ue to profiteering all in one bill. improve matters, | so large as to af- here and like- it would seem that i1y go to smash. finished products, food, fuel and all the this cuthrelik aries of iffe must be transported t was not done the Franklin_ Plerce on the 36th ballot. The' little known name did not It was not until the 49th rellcall that the wearied delegations reluctantly nominated him in a perfunc- Presidential honors never weré less welcoms in any home than in that of the Pierces, Washington was dreaded by Pierce as a place of exile. When Benjamin, her little son, who was away at school, heard of the nomination, he sat down and wrote her that he hoped |be his father would be defeated in the elec- tion, seemingly having caught his moth- er's’ dislike of the capital and of public start & wildfire. noon. There Wete thres on the nst for it, but any friend of mine would be given the preference.” “Then your troubles began,” art “Indeed they did! teen Toom house to a room measuring 18 by 10 feet requires some mental and phy- sical adjustment, especially if one brings along everything that she forgot to put in the storage house—including her auto tools and.an extra tire. “What do you care?”’ “What happens in Lois' room does not conceded the stenographer. “It is what &he says At the table. Our regular breakfast foods, ham, bacon and eéggs, cakes, toast and coffee; then fried sWeetbreads, saute kidneys, fried. perch and waffles frequently.’ “Sounds good to me.” “It is good, % b umiliating To go_from a fif: hair on her this can be co moved, roots lactine procees compared at all Wil electrical of shaving meéthods. lactine is hon-odoriess, no. non-poisonous—=se eaten without any bad all, the haifs come out en! roots, before o skin 1s left as smooth A hairefrge as Awyone who purchases a elactine from the druggist ws the simple be pleased and GLEANED FROM FOREIGN EXCHANGES. It is good news that question bas, in pril beet cleared ‘The third French note gave us the hopad-for undertaking that Fracne will in future act with the alllance. AlreNiy our second note had given the “French those assurances of our determination to enforce the treaty, for which their side wgre anxious. . reached—provisionaliy, the depllatory, el e E The boy was not to keep his parents SENDIE e in their unsought residence in In a train wreck be- tween Hoston and Concord the month at- ter the election he was killed While traveling with his father and mother) Afterward the railroad was sued on ae- count of the death of another of the pas- sengerS on the wrecked train, and Pierce requested Benjamin F. Butler to defend the road from the charge of negligence. The reason hé gave was a strange one. Mrs. Plerce was convinced that the eom- vany was blameless, because she looked upon the derailing of the trainas an act of God. She was anxious not to be dis- turbed by a court decision that should Tun_contrary to her consoling belief that a speclal Providence had taken away from the president-elect his only child in order that he might give himself wholly to the duties of his great office. . The cynical lawyer did not attempt to prove that the accident was due to 4 8u. pernatural cause, but he so cleverly up- oy set the technical evidence of its mechan-| PeFs will await w ical ofigin that he cleared the corpora the White House. rections, is bound to | Pae world's standard Macder o i ackd Throe bizes, all Reduce Wei unfortunately Lois can't eat fruit that has any acid In it, and doesr't like fruit-without acid. She doesn’t care for oatmeal unless it has been steamed four hours the night before and an hour more in the morning. “Lois doesn't touch pork in any form. She has never tasted sweetbreads or Kid- ney gaute, but knows that she does not Anglo-Freneh. ‘S5 she made her breakfast on coffee Ipt stenographer. ‘Ant Finglish aunt had visited Lois' home for two weeks and since that time Lois has never eaten toast without marma- lade or gooseberry jam. Hirmony is Sunlight and Wireless—Wireless. ex- h interest the result of SRignor Marconf's investigations into “You are going to be late in getting back to the office,” said the artist, glane- ing at the clock. “To cut my story, Lois now has seven varieties $f hreakfast food, and as many kinds of jam on the window sill near So far the head waiter has not sald anything but he seéms troubled every time he looks at this baby delica- tion. With such comfort as sha could find | the phenomenon of the remarkable crease i the strength and range wireless mignals at night compared withy 10 60 pounds. Brochure mall in that result of the trial, the berenved KOREIN CO., Stetion F, New York, N. Y. mother dwelt her term House under the pall of.this domestic the daytime, which he Intends to carry out on his floating laboratory Megiterranenr of this—variation is an unsolved problem of wireless ewc.ricily, but during the to May suggest that of the sun's rays on the atmosphere. Birds Nesting in the City—Birds are building nests nd Caltfornia, have exceeded 10000z Nuggets were much more Zommon the early dayg Tomortow: The Prolozne mining than and the great £ol produced is in alluvial deposits, as dust—London of a Great experiments eclipse of the sun last due to the effect “It is a good lesson to you but, because I love you, I shall tell you a way out. Lois Kelham's friend; Mrs. Baker, wants a . boarder—someone Who can be treated just ag it #he were one of the family. Put them finto touch With each other and see what happens.” 8aid the stenographer. “Of all the revenges, it is the deadliest”— Stories That Recall Others R | Needed Her Help kzew very little of chil- dren until his married sister three-year old son came home to visit Now the variety of the three year old’s language amazed the o The Burned Child. No third party for Hiram Johnson. stung once and he isn’t going jeast not in the House square, and that is as near to the centre of city life as the migratory birds hav® got for a good many years. the beginning of the war rooks innab- to be stung again the other day. same spot.—Was from one point to another, tthhee ;:;‘er:’e:éi LETTERS TO THE EDITOR and the producer had to be protscted and Americanism in Sehools abors, and blic, his iillty to put down this opposition, | ng i wremeser San o) but eonditions which have existed there e been dus to the weak control he to bo faced with h less favorable it was a big job with which the inter- state commerce committees of congress d themselves face to face, and only in which to accomplish it. and_ the situation was well un- ssed and now more serious situ vent the loss ast year much indicates that he must work quickly and| effectively or 1t wil be a case of leaving government of the republic in other hand pointed the raflroad board at the time 184 rthotized by congross to do so, | teaching Americanism in our school: the price was Mr. Editor: After the feast of reason and the flow of soul at the special town meeting last Tuesday evening it would seem that there might be a few baskets of food for reflection. The spokesmen for the teachers at AP | that meeting urged the necessity of et sorted. | What kind of Americanism do we wis! one of the foatures | to have taught? Do we choose the pop- From all indications Carranza is reap-| For that hoard w ing the whirlwind for which he has lonz since been sowing the seeds same time finding that hi: s the railroad DIl been ular brand that demands the utmost dol- | lar for the service rendered and does not i 1 cause public expense and in- pessed—regarded by many as the great- | STuPle 10 o 2 constructive —but one or unpopular at homo 1eHINTSon convenience to further its ends, or do he | We prefer the somewhat old-fashioned other branche: ongres ° | kind that renders proper deference to e T nches of Comeress has alfeady | existing suthority that inculcates devo- towards economy of|tion to duty although the present re- Fovernment and reform In twenty years, | Wards may seem inadequate and en- has also returned to private owner- |courages altruism and patriotism at the the_budget bill, the - erentest OUTLOOK 1S GOOD, The San Remo conference Wl faged In its work has that several ready given evi- the " telephons d telegraph es, | cost of personal sacrifice? the governiment controlled during JACOB GALLUP has passed the land bill, | Norwich, April 26, 1920. | matters that were before it for adjust- ment will be settled, that there is a di | position on. the part of the represent tives to get together and reach thus settling trouble whith has existed e days of the Ballinger-Pinchot has ‘amended the war ting an artl Smoking in Banks and Stores irance act, and made better pro-| Mr. Bditor: May I raise these ques- throuen | tions through the columns of The Bul- vocational training acts — besides |letin? What in the world is the matter will be & better understanding than ever That certeinly will be a desir; of the great appropria- |with our NGrwich banks and department tion bills and having the army and oth- | stores and our book store, —that they towards | should allow men to come in and smoke “The republicans feel that |as freely as though these piges had hove already made a record which | been established for smoking rvoms? or to war time standards, yvould have| I was in a New London bank a few aglow with enthusiasm | weeks ago and the “No Smoking” sign work they have |there was as refreshing to the soul as ble outcome if such only results and cer- tainly there has been thete was greater need for the display of common sense In disposing matters growing out mportant bills well 1 now is to have the price going agy higher. of the war than|cet the country constructive aceomplished. an oppoition Nothing has been emphasized more | than the need of a thorough understand- ing of the views, and the which they, are based, of the respective It was folly to suppose that there was to be a break among the al- During the war, wi She ks y to any measure, undertook to head rd was fixed that peace times and economy would not warrant s a steady reasons upon rhood, comes to the less to buck the Congressman John Q. Tilson, s declared in one of h no | a breath of fresh air to the lungs com- 2 | ing out of one of our smoky banks. Also, what in the world is the -mat- ter with the men, that they should have no more consideration for women and or the | for men who do not smoke. Third Connecticut district, who was th 1 ordnance expert of the mil during the war, hed the con- ve started with lies because of the action that was taken | by France against Germany as the re-! sult of the trouble inthe Ruhr basin. One probable answer to this latter question, or rather 1 will say a possible this | answer, subgests itself. startling_statement on! 0, I hope it is not true, but I fear it France stands in a much different posi- | tion than the other large powers. felt the force of the German blow and it is only natural that it should be certain to let no advantage accrue to the enemy which might result in more troubl the allies cannot fail to appreciate its in- sistence upon the respect for the treaty the floor of th e house: “Wii'le the Unit- cd States spent seven billion dollars for material and air plane sup- not materialized when the we fought the war a billion dollars worth ordnance purchased from Great Britain When the war came on to who have un- plies that had with shown that their biting off more 1 that the crea- and France. is, that some of these men are either fathers, - brothers, sons or husbands of smoking women. In that case they might not realize that some women are dif- ferent nad therefore might not like smoke. Another possible answer to the last| of 3 i constant indulgence in US In 1917 it was the popuinr Bemlet thay | duestion is that constant indulgence in provision or to show alarm when trouble | ffering through- develop develops because of a failure of | not many men would be required of us, the vile weed has robbed them of so : ¢ their manhood, that to them, but that our great and_ important' part | Tuch of th 2 3. 3 ey mportant Dart | courtesy seems like foolishness. mething that is not joint ‘ask " Rish. TeeDect, the joint ‘ask That there are bothersome complica- tions in the problems faced questioned but it has been shown that as were supposed to Txactly the re- | Matter and do some aj American men provide withont stint. he Lever act ernment after some most needed I wish that others would take up this ating. All hands “ore | together would rid Norwich of this We Sent men in surprising | Auisance. the result of calm and cool deliberation that knotty tangles can pleces and such numbers, and strangest of all they had : made munitions,” | fre¢ from smok Song with him is what the San All our stores and markets should be Tilson proceeded t4 prove his LOVER OF NORWICH statements with official records and facts. | Norwich Town, April 23, 1920. conference promises some, if not all, of the questions that are Tilson spoke of the Springfield rifle s the “best in the world' and praised the | pre—— —ec—— was great Indigna- railroad men in complications work done by the munition fact arisen because of the delay that has been it Aid ths Bliat ot the Tnited States, he Iaid the biame of || Five Minutes a Day | caused in the settlement of matters that not being able to furnish munitions in of men| Should have been cleared up months ago, broper quantity to the uiter lack of, pre- With Our Presidents had left, be-| DUt @pparently recognition is now given paredness in which the country found it- the need of getting down to business and self at the beginning of the war. He gave interesting exhibit " of Tanoue || Copyright 1320—By James Morgan to keep trains run- kinds of munitions used in the war and reforred to the important part plaved by| XXXVII—THE SECOND DARK in the way of pub- is undertaken EDITORIAL NOTES, pistols and revolvers as a part of sol- While kicking so much about waste in dier equipment. He urged preparedness| 1852—June, Franklin Pierce nomi- au and his follow- In the future saying “I fayor a small the opposite of sympa- other directions, why stand in the way ed by the democrats. standing army, knowing that in the fu- November, elected. ture, as in the past our wars must be December, death of his only of saving on daylight? citizen soldiers. For their SR sakes there should be elementary mifi- tary _training. not drift back into the fool's paridise in strike was aimed more at an at the rail- e roads and the s ones that were made to With several states passing beer bills it means more work agents enforcing prohibition. day should Pierce. The country received the unheralded nomination of Franklin Pierce for presi- % } rise as when Polk which the war found us, on the ground | Gery Wi @8 much eurpr o If the war sufferers of Europe haven't got them there's many a fellow who can find a small fortune in his old clothes. there will be no more wars.” In a ten minute speech in the house Congressman Tilson also eulogized the ork done by the 26th and especially by sthe 102nd Infantry, Division nt number into bring-| The man on the corner says: Prohibi- was sprung. upon it. “Hereafter,” Ste- phen A. Douglas indignantly exclaimed with a taste of sour grapes in his mouth, “no. private citizen is safe.” A stranger in New Hampshire is said from Connecticut. The occasion was the tohave Tooked 0 I hew e mpenl foom = E i d anniversary of thio 26(h-holding & Sector | theem” Beomer | bont - the " moealnee conditions iny tion fs with us but there are wet places where it seems impossible to mop it all at Seicheprey, which was_ the first pow- German attack difected against a sector held entirely then make an vern keeper about the nominee. ‘Wa'll, up here,” was the drawling re- Ao |PIy: “where everybody knows Frank and It isn't going to do any good to fuss that they mu ¥ must| ana fret about it even if the thermome- Col. Tilson sald in part: where Frank knows everybody, he's a 26th Division, by matehing, by motor and | Pretty. considerable fellow. But come to ter persists in heading in the wrong di.| DY railroad was moved to the north of spread him out over this whole country, | Toul and on April 19th, with hardly a :;::t!fifraid hell be dretful thin in day of rest and without a single day of | SPOLS: - real training by division, began to take | New Hampshire democrits were in over a sector of its own, relieving the | the inner councils of their party from First Division which was sent to another | the inauguration of Jackson td' the Civil The 102nd Infantry held the | WAr. Their hunker partisanshin was as DIRECTOR GENERAL HINES, That Mr. Hines should resign from the office of director general of the rallroads, Profiteers may be responsible for only a small part of the high prices but there an office created under the government| WOUld be greater satisfaction if their ac- | control of the roads, at this time is only The railroads. tivity was curbed. right of thf sector. 'The 12th rifle com- | Fock) ibbed as their hills, and from 1832 pany of the 102nd had an @verage of | to 1856 the little state never faltered in only 186 men per company instead of 250 its support of the democratic, ticket. men they were allowed under organiza-| Granite sfate- democrats were special The 102nd had about 35 rifles for | pets of Jackson, and there is a tradition 100 yards of front, inStead of the 60 |that when he selected Van Buren as his Bave been turn Daylight saving is desirable but it is the direction of quite important that the best use of the extra hour of daylight should be made. Don't let it be wasted. back to the owners and e operations i now out the government. many adjustments there is still which guarantees are 1 the roads, but the duties of the office are certainly far less than they were and it is not surprising that the di- the 50 French or the: 160 British rifles which is customary to allow to 100 yards of so-called “quiet front” 80 was called to defense with only one half notmal circumstances. 1f thé price of shoes exported is about half those sold at home, the old shoes habit or wooden shoes may fit Wwith the denim craze. successor, he slated Levi Woodbury of New Hampshire to succeed Van Buren. That slate was broken first by the de- feat ‘of Van Buren for re-election in 1840 and finally by the untimely death of The Germans made an attack which|Woodbury. | mector gemeral should believe that others san from now on lovk after without Ms remaining on the job. Director General Hines served not only was more than a raid and the enemy kept up a terrific artillery fire enor- mously outnumbering our men. German attack at It is useless for a person that he can be a red and af the same time convince the people that he is a Seicheprey is his- good American citizen. The democratic convention of New Hampshire in June, 1851, indorsed Wood- The | bury for the presidency, but that asso- torte for th ronson hatTIe vt |clate justice of the supreme court died o e Ak “girte) aiSE LB 2 aeatna; | 0 the following September. Another state a8 the head of the railroad administra- tion but alse as assistant, but throughout the period of hir appointment in either The idea of limiting Incomes te half 2 millfon dollars eoncerns it would if it .was planned to see entirely by American The commanding officer of the John H. Parker, characterized the conduet of individuals and units of the regiment as being “be- yond praise, heroic and sublime.” It will be well to bear in mind that Grow Your Hair ! i wt poes, | FREE RECIPE clocks should be turned ahead commenc- Make the change Saturday night and keep up with the procession. - the first battalion of the 102nd Infantry,” its morale was not ing Sunday. said Col. 'Tilson, ited the elms in Gray's When they decided to find fresh qiart- migrated to Fountain in the Temple, and for a season there | But the birds proved to0 noisy for lawyers, who served a writ of ejectment on them in the form of air- ay’s Inn is no n the rooks Boys For the Job. ican Jandlords an’s palace if *“mew-mew” convention in January, 1852, substituted la" for the talking but hé~positively for- bade such a use of his name, declaring it “would be utterly taste and wishes. for cat and even “I Franklin _Pierce, ate over the S The other evening Frank came were three nests. he called up stairs have to give me " this young- Buffalo Courier. The earnestness of this refusal was not doubted by the pub- lic at least. was dropped, friends kept at work for Pierce's nomMa- to his sister, Now that Gi longer in military occupat may return to their 0ld home. A Bread Bubble—Our ecomplaisant ae- ster t0 go wi*h me to what kind of make for moving pictures.” Poor Father Marlan is eleven years old and thinks she is old enough to stop having her hair bobbed and let it grow out and be braided as do the other But her mother 88 of course there ment every time hair utting time ar- Last time mother ward a new argument. hair to be pretty and thick when you grow up,” she said, ing which makes your hair grow better than to cut it often.” Marian's eyes opened wile. why don’t you begin it on father. “He says himself that he is get- 112 Nilkions used last year to KILL COLDS When a political ‘party is going wrong, the first thing it does i behind either a respectable or known figurehead. national convention of 1853 through 33 ballots at the nomination of such conspiciuous leaders Buchanan, Marcy and Douglas, tame to trot a dark horse. picked Daniel S. Dickinson of New York. But he was a delegate, who felt in hon- or bound to stand by Cass, and he put a stop to the movement in his own favor. Had he only sat silent in his seat or spoken with a double tongue he would een president. Senator Bradbury of Maine, who was at Bowdoin College with Plerce, had heen persistently coaching his friend idly with.the rumpus raised this time to try to hide After the démocratic glish housewives were confronted with the possibility of a fise one-half pénney per Joaf! ture the “corner man” confessed himself pocketed his b pricked the finaneial bubbl Nugget—The which ‘was found At this June- as Cass and is an argu- CASCARA BroMIDE Standard cold remedy for ~—in_tablet form—sale, QUININ “1 want your and there is noth- | Weighting over 12ib world's largest gold nuggzet” except in the, sense that it still exists, othérs have been melted. cver found was the “Welcome™ discovered in 1858 at Bakeryhall, Baila- weighed 2,2170z. and sold Not a few, both genuine box has a Most of our duties are too plain to dark horse. Under the senator's timely [be attractive. in Australia At All Dreg Stares BEFORE WE MOVE We Will Quote Special Terms On Victrolas and Brunswicks $ 25 Model. $ 35 Model. $ 75 Model. $125 Model. $150 Model. $165 Model. $200 Model. $225 Model. $275 Model. . 50c Weekly cern T5c-Weekly ... $1.50. Weekly ... $1.75 Weekly ... $2.00 Weekly ... $2.25 Weekly vve. $2.50 Weekly - vv.. $2.50 Weekly veer. $2.50 Weekly WE HAVE A FEW PIANOS AT SPECIAL PRICES, BEFORE WE - 46 FRANKLIN STREET b broken bt it remained feady and willing | has & prolife growth at age of 66—for to undergo any sacrifi e it might be| Fhich ‘was| Those strikers who caned on to makes ¥ Y threaten to sft still work under the poll-| till their demands are granted are to be o will send the genuine recips free on request to any man or woman Who The elogy. of. the . 26th - Dis by | [ishes to overcome dandruff or gsin sew congratulated for their peaceful inclina- Col. Tilson was warmly applanded. tions, but they have got o long, long 8 oF How a baldheaded man does sneer| eilver. His sddréss is John H. B-tftu& at a woman who d5¢s her hair! g VICTROLAS—VIOLINS—MUSIC ROLLS—RECORDS—PIANOS. aration, Kotalko, will * be mailed hair growtl: “OF testing box of the preg: wil recipe 'if_you send 10 ets.. stai 1. Station F, New York, N. ¥, S i