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Westerly workers are interested in the statement, issued by President George R.| The Soldiers’ Bonus board has mot Humes and Field Representative Earl H.|yot considered the matter. of the yeo- TUpham, of the Master Builders' Associa- tion of Rhode Island. The strikers in Westerly have offered| angeq to compromise with the contractors and return 10 work on a 70 cents an hour | gnecia] work. , this offer to hold good until I.\Iu:- Wil e o will 'be | mill operatives ac Potter Hi withdrawn and a new demand for 80 |fore Judge Williams charged with cruel- ty to animals. Both pleaded guilty and were fined $10 and costs each, which v paid. A complai Irown that a horse owned by the Tan- ners died ‘recently of starvation, and that for many days before death relieved the horse from suffering, the d pawing in the in’ the barn and pleading for food as best he could. More recently it was reported that a cow was in the barn unable to stand and that demand for Dr. Humphreys’ Remedies Directions with each Vial in Five hea Languages English, German, Diarrhea, of Children and Adults Gripings. Bilious Colic Morbus, Vomiting Coughs, Colcs, Bronchitis Toothache, Faceache. Headache, Sizk Headache, Verti Indigestia d Menses or Scanty Leucorrhea, or Profuse Menses se Cough. Laryngitis ruptions, Erysipelas m, Lumbago Malaria, Fever Bleed Whooping Cough, Oppressed Swellings and Enlarged Glauds General Debility, Acc Disorders of the Kidney and Urinary Nerveus Prostration Urinary Incontinen Painfal Menses Disorders of the Heart, Palpitati Spasms and Convulsions Sore Threat and Quinsy Every living thing —mailed free. HORW‘GH BULLETIN, SATURD MAY 15, 1920 WESTERLY approximately 200, trict court, Frida: ish, Portuguese and ¥oeheh the pitiful moaning was almest contin- FOR uous and that she was dying for the rs, Congestions, Inflammations want of nrn;‘a‘eflr :uod, arm wer, or Worm Dis-| Smith was notified. s g zation and the arrest and prosecution of Crying and Wakefulness it In- | the Tanners was the result. Neuralgia cow 1o b n, Weak Stomach | that the horse, d A but now re: not receiving the | | | and | { Judge Williams ed the true na Jara | i A To | Dr. Michael W. Scanlon has been ap- medical examiner for the United Health department. for the district sterly, and under the direction of Sickness nointe of W the Boston office. ker. Fever Blisters . Wetting Bed Pruritus seriousness thereof, m Grippe nn Gertrude Foster, Babcock, Albert Stewart Greene, Mrs, are the only good, cheap things in|mond, Mrs. Tiverett ica. . Foster, Milton A. Crandall, member- ship committee : electric power and| pasi Roles Wood; rates. gramme committee ; , Mystic, Conn. Dby special exercises The banks were closed. The flags at the high school and town | hall were at the peak, Friday, marker for Arbor, as. a marker for AT~ They are now termed Sanford drunks and most of the drinkers bridge into Pawcatuck, when they begin to feel they are under the influence, S0 as to escape the vigilence of the Westerly hie across the cents an hour substituted. menette bonus. vated on the last day of the session of- the general “Building construction in Providence,|which gives to each the sum of $109, it at a standstill, will be en-| he same as given in the original bill to tirely held up within a few days un-|goidiers, sailors, marines and nurses. It less the laborers and hod carriers now on strike accept the terms of the con- tractors and resume work at once. Many jobs are ready for work, but all are be-| uiiil December 31, ing heid up pending the action of the . laborers and hod carriers” said Mr |y The Westerly service men have not been given an opportunity claims for the state bonus of $100. the "state bonus law due in Westerly to receive applications. Merrill post, American Legion, ning to parade in full force on Memo- resentative of is claimed the board: is busy at present getting their system into swing to care for the bonus first voted. The board has in_which to v the bonus to the yeomanettes, and h the comparatively small number, a plan- will be ar- to register all applicants within a certain period, which will facilitate this Miss Marie Zangrandi from a visit to her sister in Manchester, . C..R. a form of the First Baptist mchurch, dano, and who spoke in Wester! interest of the campaign for ion, is now engaged in selling m Tanner and his_s stocks and bonds. Flushing, L. I, and Charles Cyrus Jen- were married in, New spent several seasons with at Pleasant View. came to Chief percrarenty g Feast was the feature of the concert e High School chorus in High School hall, Hiawatha was Reu- Bt Moen e Boston. The tree planted Arbor day the animal was High school, dedicated to the school principal, Miss Lz Melntire. B O\ aan | Miss Laura McIntire He made investi- , will supply the pulpits of the and Ashaway Baptist churches, The accused claimed \nd the cow were fed, but perhaps not so often as _horses and others. They were given grain. but not much hay. The accused claimed they did not know anything about the care or q stock. nor that it was necessary for the e hay. and did not understand | the necessity for a cow to chew and cud, nything like that. and the cow, n fine condition up to a short time ago, hen began to show a rapid de- cline : they did not know the cause them, the animals were proper quantity food. Agen Smith testified that the ani- mals were probably not properly treated they were owned by the Tanner: de plain to the accu: ure of the offence and warned them to be more humane in the that the horse cows owned by COVENTRY A number from here attended the an- sheep shearing y. of last week. with her two chil- dren, of Talcottviile, spent the week end with her parents. Mothers' Day cial sermon in the Congregati was observed with spe- and family attended the a Dbrother, Arthur O. Turner, The services were st Hartford Congrezation- ze that Wednesday afternoon. in the cemetery surived by two brothers and a sister. Zoetje Schell of that place i Morrison is suffering an attack of rheuniatism. rs. Charles Shaw have open- mmer home on the mountain for the season. to give treatment to all men and to determine disability, and the connection with claims for compensation from ernment. Dr. Seanlon served in the army medical corps and is a member of Mer- rill_post, American Leglon, and i3 state cdical examiner for the town of West- former service was taken much worse early k. but has improved somewhat. . S. Fiske has moved his household 2oods to the little white house the corner, and will continue business at | the old stand. The Westerly Wistorieal soclets, at its 1l meeting. elected officers as fol- on the (reatment of | |0l Glotat B Whipple, Rev. Samuel M. Catheart. ¥ Stores Stillman, vice presidents; * Homeo. Medicine Co., 156| 1. Willlams, secretary ; York Thomas, corresponding secretary ; F_LECT'RICITY AND GAS The Merry Minstrel tefreshments were | 5 Frank Fiske has moved his fami the house r sed by him. MT HOPE treasurer ; with fhe other officers ‘Whipple,: Mrs. Mrs, Thorpe, pro- Miss Marie Zorerar- di, Mrs. Henry Greene, GAS AND ELECTRIC SHOP | ham. resolutions committec. Canal Street, Westerly, R. I. 9 East Main Stree &pent Sunday at her home, and attended the funeral of David Mathewson, and re- \furned Sunday night. Miss Cora Grant of Local Laconi: her parents, Arbor Day was observed In Westerly, fr, and. Mrs Clark of Mansfield Depot. 209% REDUCTION SALE TO ACQUAINT THE PEOPLE OF NORWICH AND VICINITY WITH OUR NEW AND ENLARGED LOCATION AT 29 FRANKLIN STREET, NORWICH WE WILL CONDUCT A REDUCTION SALE, ALLOW- ING 20 PER CENT. DISCOUNT ON ALL MERCHAN- DISE BOUGHT DURING THIS SALE. SALE WILL LAST 30 DAYS A NEW ENLARGED AND UP-TO-DATE STOCK OF JEWELRY Watches, Watch Bracelets, Rings Cut Glass, Silverware, Etc. GE ASSORTMENT AT EXTENSIVE SAVINGS UATION AND WEDDING GIFTS FOR JUNE OGULNICK JEWELRY (0. FORMERLY OF 32 FRANKLIN STREET 29 FRANKLIN STREET and Mr. and Mrs. were callers Charles Bell and son, after spending Martha Walker. Mrs. Walker has commeneed to Mansfield C LEFINGWELL iss Rosabel E. John Gilbert of Norwich were recent guests at the home of ) Iirnest Lathrop. y of Groton Bible Col- upper in_the ¥ o A services will be at 11 conference of Baptist Foreign Mission church, New London. LAUREL GLEN McCullough and dence are at their home here. Louise Skinner ref r mother here. Mr. Wall has sold his place to out of town purchasers. pastor-at-large, held Will Try German War Criminals NORWICH, CONN. e FOR FARM AND GARDEN SEEDS A FULL VARIETY OF THE BEST FOR GARDEN AND FIELD. FERTILIZERS All kinds of Fertilizers at the lowest prices with guaranteed analysis. Let Us Make Your Crops a Success Sole Distributors For EDDY PLOWS. CULTIVATORS, HARROWS AND ALL KINDS OF FARM AND GARDEN TOOLS. J. P. Barstow & Co. 25 WATER STREET OPEN, SATURDAY EVENINGS E“Ynhflimml!mlcn Imjl The German Imperial Minister of stated in an interview that those ac- cused of war crimes will be tried at He added that any of the nccused who did not respond te the summons would be arrested. (8 P e o i R e a service in the Laurel Glen chapel Sun- day afterncon. In the evening a song service was held. Sunday Mrs. Attaway Main entertained her sister, Mrs. L. H. Burdick, and her brother, Charles Holdredge, and his fam- 1ly of Providence. All attended the ser- vices at the chapel. Howard Martin and family of Ashaway spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Frank Main. John Geer began his work Wednesday shearing sheep for Willis Almy on Pen- dieton Hill. Rev. Frank A. Junkins of Norwich Town is supplying the pulpit of the Con- gregational church. The Ladies’ Social union met Wednes- day_afternoon at the home of Mrs. Wal- ter Moran. Plans were made to hold an entertainment in the chapel. The ambulance from New London took® Louis Rattner to Lawrence hospital Sun- day for treatment. Mrs. John Lynch and Misses Helen and Marian Lynch attended the entertainment in Uncasville Wednesday night given by the Bass Clef double quartette of Nor- WAUREGAN uregan Congregational church, Rev. Wil g, pastor, the subject of the sermon at Sunday morning worship will be The Wings of the Morning and God. At evening worship. The Heart and the Outward Appearance. Church school at 12. The committee is at work prepar- ing for Children’s day. Young People's own meeting Thursday at 7.30. LEDYARD . The roll call of the Ledyard Congrega- tional chureh is to be held Sunday, May 16th, at the close of the morning ser/ice. EXPORT FROM EUROPE SHOW BIG GAINS What are the articles forming the cnormous increase in Europe's exports to the United States? Luxuries from her treasure-houses and raw material from her colonies. The total value of Europe's exports to this country had dwindled, a statement by The Na- tional City Bank of New York, from $800,000,000 a vear prior to the war to 318,000,000 in the year in which the war ended, a drop of practically two- thirds in total values, despite the fact that prices of the articles forming that trade had at least doubled meantime. Yet the indications today are that the total valué of merchandise sent from Europe to the United States in the fis- cal year which ends with next month will be three times as'much as in the mediately preceding fiscal year and ctually sreater in value than in any year in the history of our trade. s This tremendous increase in our im- ports from Europe in the current fis- cal year as compared with the year im- mediately preceding occurs chiefly in luxuries, but includes also certain pro- ducts of the European colonies now reaching us by way of the mother country, instead of direct as during the war. Among the luxuries in which the great increase occurs are diamonds, works, laces and embroideries, silks, high grade cotton and woolen Zoods, kid gloves, and olive oil, while the colonial produets now reaching us by way of Europe include India-rubber, jute, wool, furs, hides and skins, and raw cotton, In many instances the increase, espe- | cially on the luxury side of the state- neral-of David Mathewson and returned | M0t Sunday night. very large. Diamonds, for ex- ample, imported in the eight months ending with February 1920, practically all of them from Europe, amounted to $48,100,000 in value against $5,300,000 in the same months of last vear; art works, brought chiefly from Europe, $21,715,000 against $2,850,000 in the same months of the preceding year; cotton laces and embroideries $7,800,- 000 against $3,200,000 in the corre- sponding months of the preceding year; silk laces and embroideries in the current year $4,312,000 against $1,- 189,000; walnuts from France and Italy 156,050,000 against $310,000; olive oil France, Italy and Spain, but Bier i mhete !M "}"C'-!‘mp..mm the latter, $10,910,000 against vlace | $633,000 in the same months of last { vear; silk | $261,000; (000 against $802,000; and raw silk, |chiefly from Italy, $23,007,000 against $36.000 in the same months of the pre- fabrics $2,110,000 against k wearing apparel $2,050,- ceding r. One class of articles which falls outside the luxury list is |burlaps, brought from the United Kingdom but manufactured from East Indian jute, valued at $3,330,000 against $1,550,000 in the same months of last year. Just what proportion the colonies supply of the enormous value of the hides and skins, which Eurove is now sending us, canno statement, be specif: at this moment, but it is 2 that the value of the hides and skins sent us from Kurope : in' the eight says the bank's cally determined least a fact 2,000 LBS. SMALL LEAN Smoked Shoulders, Ib. . 22¢ SWIFT'S Spring Lamb LEGS, (4 to 5 Ibs), Ib. 38¢ FORES, b. ......... 22 10 b, .2...... 28 LEAN CHOPS, bb. . .. 45¢c NATIVE CHICKENS Yearling Lamb Short Cut LEGS, Ib.. 33c LOINS; 1b... .. ... i2de FORES, Ib.......... 18 WHITE ROSE TEA WHITE ROSE COFFEE NATIVE DANDH.IONS 4 Quarts . TEXAS BERMUDA ONIONS, 21bs. ........25¢c B — CELERY HEARTS Bunch .. Celery, Native Lettuce, Cukes, String Beam Peas, Strawberries, New Beets, New Carrots, Spinach, Tomatoes months ending with February 1920, probably largely colonial, is $33,000, 000 against a little over $1,000,000 in the same months of the preceding year. Of the $28,240,000 worth of India-rub- ber which Burope sent us in the eight months of this year as against $532,000, all of course is produced outside of Europe, and chiefly in the colonies of Great Britain, Netherlands, Belgium, France and, Italy. Of the $14,347,000 worth of pig tin sent us from Europe against $4,239,000, prectically all was produced in the Maylayan Peninsula, and the Dutch East Indies, but sent to us from their “mother countries” in Burope, Great Britain and Netherlands, respectively. Of the $21,960,000 worth of wool sent us from Europe this year agalnst $15,000 worth last year, pre- sumably a very. considerable propor- tion originated in the colonies. Other items of merchandise sent from Euvrope in much larger values this yead than last include leather $12,- 970,000 against $250,000 last year; woolen manufactures $21,862,000 against $9,572,000; furs $13,900,000 against $4,- 600,000; raw cotton, chiefly Egyptian and chiefly sent from the United King- dom, $14,592,000 against nothing in the same months of last year. The Birch Trees. They stand in the woods alone, often in groups like a snuggling party of debutante: walting the coming of ad- mirers, The light that falls properly upon them accentuates their slim beauty and their giglishness. By the side of lonely lakes and rivers with the wind blowing upon them they have graces as of beautiful dancers. In still hours they look down on calm waters and, reflected in the mirror thereof, seem like slender marble columns in pagan palaces. They are the loveliest things among the forest trees, not so stately as the elm, nor so rugged, sombre and mysterious as the pine, but more mystical. The Roman fasces were of birch and, from them, it passed as the sceptre of the schoolmaster. It has exceeding toughness of twigs and exceeding pungency of in its cut; as well as a singing noise as it decends on the pro- tuberant portion of a boy. These broad-leafed and hardy trees have forced the pine, that is gregari- ous and exclusive, from many habitats. The birch is like a willow, it has a power to eke out a life under the most adverse circumstances. Most of the birches love moist woods and river vhite birch, which is also called the “canoe birch,” lives almost wholly in New England and chiefly in lonely places on elevations from the sea. In green pastures, beside still waters, there is rest for the soul, even of the tree. Here grows the r birch whose grace has won for her the name of “the lady of the meadows, but the aw: rive woods.” No tree is more useful to man than the birches—the red birch of the south, whose seeds fall into the mud in low waters and germinate to hold back the waters of the streams, from tearing away the banks: the vellow birch, like ‘shaved by the black birch, o useful for its beautiful wood;- the cherry birch, of the same wonderful lovelitess and whose inner bark gives the essential ofl of wintergreen and the peculiar perfume to what we call “Russia-leath- er;” the poplar-leaved b'rch of whith Lowell writes so beautifully, and the that which Burroughs tir canoe-birch. Hs *an Roads. Hampton R of vital importance in_our war operations, but unmen- tioned in that connection because of voluntary press censorship, again is a center of interest hecause of the burning of the Hotel Chamberlin. A bulletin of the National Geographic Society gives the history of this re- gion as follows: ‘There is but one entrance by sea into this country, and that is at the mouth of a very goodly bay,’ Captain John Smith wrote in his ‘Map of Vir- ginia, with a Description of the Country,’ concerning Chesapeake bay with its_attendant harbor. Hampton Roads, which he describes as ‘bounded on the south by France. on the north by New France, and whose western limits are unknown.’ ‘A few bustling ports like N well, “Hampton Roads has been the ren- n navy ever since there was one. When, during the early part of 1917, newspaper reports dezvous of the Amer: were saying that the fleet ‘was swal- lowed up somewhere in the mists of the ,Atlantic.’ it had secretly slid out of the harbor of Hampton Roads and was quietly at Yorktown a few miles up the bay, awaiting orders from Washington. At a moment's notice ew York and Roston might disagree with the redoubtable captain concerning the facilities their harbors now offer, but certainly no harbor can claim a much more romantic history not only in Co- lonial times, but in the world war as these huge battleships could here sig- |boldly above the mean dwellings of tae nal to each other with their. multi- tude of flags and steam out o sea. Through the waters of Hampton Roads thousands of men, tons of sup- plies, and cargoes of horses glided out -during the night -to- play their parts on the fields of France. “The ‘harbor is a splendid sheet of water 500 feet in width*with a mini- mum of 30 feet, safe-from gales, and large nough to-float a great navy. It is formed by the James, - Nansemond, and Elizabéth rivers as they pass into Chesapeake Bay. The thriving cities of Norfolk, Newport News and Ports- mouth give it commercial importance. “The first land In- this' vicinity that the - sca-weary" Captain- John Smith and his men caught sight of was the eastern end of ‘a sandy spit of land, which they namied Cape Henry. Here they opened the sealed orders of the Tondon Company and learned that they were to settle much farther in- , they rest- ed and explored the neighbbring wa- on_this spot of their first landing, In grati- tude for a safe ending of their jour- ney. Later in 1691 a lighthouse was! land. But, for a few day ters. They erected a_cros: erected on ‘this same spot. It i standing today and bears a ping. “Sailing farther inland. they touch- ed a point at the -entrance to the harbor they calied ‘Point Comfort,' be- | cause of the good channel ad the safe | anchorage it afforded. When later | re found, the one similar places w first touched was dubbed ‘Old, the name has clung to it ever sin: It was here than Jefferson Davis was ? rea Ctaiet | on S commemorating the landing, though a larger and more pretentious structure has been built for lighting the ship- i give a modern town. Nowhere does such massive- permanence suggest such eery lightness as in these six abiding pillars of the temple of the sun. “The smaller temple, itself ' larger than the Parthenon, was erected to Bacchus, a-jovial god, .now discredited in certain parts. It is one of the finest Roman tempies extant. The ehtrance to this temple to the God of Wine is decorated with delicate carving that would grace Melrose Abbey or worth- ily frame the Rose Window of Rheims. “The forty-three-foot doorway is surrounded with tracery’ where vines and’ garlands, nymphs and satyrs and gay bacchantes are tfansfixed in stone almost as they appeared two thousand years ago when the ringing chisels of the Roman sculptors fell silent before its finished perfection. “Baalbek béspeaks permanence in spite of the crowd of ephemeral sum- mer visitors who seek in the cool shade of the willows beside the sacred pool a rest from the heat of the Mediter- ranean_ littoral. “The emblem chosen for the Leban- on flag is the cedar trees. This sym- mbol of lasting strength ed as the seal of the Am- has. long s cedars of Lebanon are not unappreci- ated by the people of the mountains. Lord.” me scholars believe that the pic- rafts of confined ‘for a time at the close of |the famous: temple ‘at Jerusalem the Civil war. “Newport News, sottled in 1621, 1 Master ‘Gookin out of Ireland’ ¥ named by him in honor of his friend. Sir William Newce. A quaint old chronicler tells us that ‘at Newport- | king v news the cotton trees in a yeere grow o high here anything that is planted doth prosper so well as in no ! Today this town contalns one of the largest dry docks in the world and ships much of the product that onar grew so abundantly on the so thicke as a man; one's arme and place bette: trees that the chronicles mentions. “Norfolk, the largest city on Hamp- story that dates hack farther even than that of James- town. The first white men who vis- ton Roads, ha: ited the site constituted a small ex ploring party from Sir Waltes Raleigh’s colony at Roanoke Island at | about 1586. Almost a_ century later | Portsmouth was settled. Since its 1 h infancy it has bheen famous for its ment with a Christian mutesarrif and | navy yard, the first gne having been built by the English. Seven miles east of Newport News lies the ancient horough and village of Hampton. | When Smith_and the colonists landed at Newport News Jooking for a tow site, five Indians met them and in-| tude of flags ard steam out to sea. tan’ where Hampton now stands. “From the -days of the colonists, | during the Revolution when Lord | Dunsmore, the royal governor of | qualitre: Others cite this 3 ing that never have there been many of these kingly trees and that thei rarity much for the best tempie material. group of true cedars now contains only Dbout four hun tea shrub adisha val mountain pass, are re hundred years of ag v eighty quoias of ( age and dignity. erican university at Beirut. But the They call them ‘The Cedars of the |turesque sides of lofty Lebanon were lonce clother in the majestic trees and a reason the fact that Solomon |obtained from Hiram of Tyre -great s time-defying timber for a reason for beiiev- as their rot-resistng made them desirable to the ho could scour the known world “However that may be, the main ed of these trees,|ishe clumped in what from a distance of several miles appears to be a dark igreen hassock thrown against the tawny mountains. Yet these trees, four hundred of which look like a i if one sees them from y or the distant Only the deo- ars of the Himalayas and the Se- iifornia surpass them in “The Lebanon had its own govern- Governor Thomas Riges. Alaska. in Washington as a delegate ational Conference of Com- munity Organizations. a special constitution dating from 1861, followinz disorders of the 1916 all specia he Druz privil by the Porte. Thi ges genda ‘merie wore a pic red and with tight ja legzings. “The. grapes and of the Lebanon have cal region has never ‘done the Phoenician traders to the wes! sea and gave sea-borne commerce and, perhaps, the alphabet to the world." Virginia, was driven to the safety of | his gunboats, to the fight of the Mer- | rimac and the Monitor in its water: during the Civil war, and to its active part in the world war, the histor: Hapton Roads has been fraught interest’ The ‘River Queen’ riding at anchor on its smooth shining sur‘a on February 3, 1865 was the scene « an_informal conference hetween Li- coln and Seward of the Union and Al exander H, Stephens, Senator Rober M. T. Hunter and Assistant Secretar of War John A. Campbell of the con- federacy, held to arrange a peace be- tween the North and South. Through! it was here that Lincoln voiced his in- tended magnanimous treatment of the Confederate States in the statement the power of | the executive with the utmost liber- | the efforts of these men of no av that he would ‘exercis ality.* The Lebanon. “In the city where its independence was proclaimed, and in the emblem it has chosen, the newly dec ed govern- ment of Lebanon at least has two sym bols of permanence,” trom the National Geographic “Baalby tell when first its temples were built to sun or spring or mountain. One shrine after another rose and fel lofty plateau of the Bika. “The larger of these temples w erected in honor of Jupiter or Hel them in their outspread arms “Six of these huge columns their Corinthian capitals and w mense fragments of the cornice still poised against the biue remain, rising | or | was beaten down by rival religionists, | until, some time in the frst century | A. D, two mighty structures whose | ruins still stand were raised above the the sun. It was surrounded Ly a peri- style of fifty-eight columns, eighty feet in height and so big around that four large men can scarcely embrace | RIDE A BICYCIE —FOR— | EccOMY AND EXiioo. LARGE STOCK AT LOW PRICES BICYCLE ACCESSORIES TIRES, TUBES AND REPAIRING —THE— ALLING RUBBER CO. 191 MAIN STREET NORWICH NEW LONDON — WESTERLY — Wl_LLlMANTlC 2,000 LBS. SMALL LEAN Fresh LEAN PORK CHOPS SQUIRES BACON YEARLING LIVER MILK, SODA, OYSTER BLUE RIBBON SALAD DRESSING, bottle . . . ]IB,ULKCOCOANUT CHUM SALMON Canin o oonn TOMATO SOUPS Shoulders, Ib. . 25¢ Lo 30e ROUNDSTEAK; Bb......cciens.s 27C LEAN BEEF (To Pot), Ib. ........ 14c SHANKS (For Soup), Ib.......... 10c 38c | CREME (large size) . . e A LARGE MEATY PRUNES FRESH VERMONT EGGS, Dozen 43¢ THAYER BLDG. FRESH NEW GRASS CREAMERY BUTTER Pound 65¢ SATURDAY ONLY Regular 70c Value GENUINE STEER BEEF PRIME CHUCK ROAST, Ib....... 22¢c Boneless Porterhouse ROAST, Ib. . . BONELESS CHUCK ROAST, b. .. PURE TOMATO CRACKERS, Ib. . .... 18c | CATSUP (large bottle) 27c Miss Curtis’s Marshmallow 33c LITTLE PIG PORK LOINS to Roast, Ib 38c [INK SAUSAGE, Ib. . 23c LEAN SALT PORK PRIME RIB ROAST LEAN HAMBURG CUT STRINGLESS BEANS, 2 cans ...... 25¢c MACARONI Nicely Cured CORNED BEEF Pound 121/5¢ (10 DAYS CORNED) Native Veal ALL CUTS TO ROAST CUTLETS, b. .. .. CHOPS,®. . ;... ik Sugar Today CRISCO Nos 1’80 . o oot seon m0lE No'2's......80 - coase No: 3805 .0 oi s n i 98 A No. 1 Potatoes 15 Lbs. Peck, $1.25 FEE before. But in esque uni- form in the Zouave style with volum- inous trousers of dark blue piped with kets and trim igarette tobacco ng been famous. long mountain range, name to the politi- greater ervice to mankind than when it drove