Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 2, 1920, Page 4

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mest. It is ¥t to be regarded by themt In the ‘sense of misjudging their inten- BOY SCOUT, WEEK. Wherevér the wdrk is undertaken it|on your appalled gaze. © WEEK ENDING MAY 25th; 1988 10,670 st f4il t6 bé appreclated that the| “Thers were the two girls the other orgdnization that) dey Who stopped before a mirTor set in shou! cotbmu the back of a pillar out in fromt of a mgl;:,:":n,‘."ue:ri, ‘many :,’:“"_‘, Michigan avenue shop, and with their iti permit eich to bo active and fieur. | 20€ toward the jammed sidewalk pro- ishing. THis 13 the week when efforts|yngugh benind drawn curtains. Oh, I ave being made throughout the counrtry| stopped, tos! They put on lavender pow- for the purpess of awakening increased|der and cerise lipstick and rose rouge, It should| rearranged their hairpins and smoothed result wot orily In making the boys more | their eyebrows and sauntered on just'as Interested but should be the means of | Oblivious of us as though the setting had greatly stimulating the merabership in [ Béen the Arizona desert thirty miles from the troops and of bringing to (he peo-| M€ trail HPRBERT M. LEROU. For Aldermen, ARTHUR L. PBALE, WILLTAM 8. MURRA' For Counellmen, EDGAR B. WORTH! JORN S, BEACK) interest int this org#nization. of the country a Detter understand- g of the excellént service tHat #his or-| wi| do tnat right here? Why ganisation is doing for the welfare of the | jike lovely girls!" commonity as Well as for the berefit off “Tm betting they do” said the hand- N. EUGENE SMITH. For Collector of Vases, JAMES W. SEMPLE. the boys themselves. The Boy Scoutd means that the boys|Bervousacss pervading their atmosphere .} which ean mean only one ing—tha O 1 b ot Mmany hings that| they are beginning to wonder whether are gding 16 be of lasting valus to them. | thel ATC DEEATTE 'Théy are Brought into a different rela- e tiomsisip With the, community and while they are Being shown where they can be of twuch service, the community grows TH] more and more to realize that a grow- LETTERS TO E EDITOR ing depefiderice is placed upon them for But it also means that Mr. Editor: Knowing your slr‘\f: flre; Boys are being trained in ways which | ard for the truth we beg you will find of Presiiaat Wikes are going to make them mote observant, space to correct a somewhat misleading aceept | More foughtful, more attentive and as js a|the résalt they dre going to be better|ihe town hall. As a matter of fact It is an ex-|there was no tinsmith employed on the CHARLES H. RAYNES. For Water Commissiomer, HUGH BLACKLEDGE. THE RIGHT ANSWER. Quite in accord with what was called | MRy duties. “Tor was the carly action of the semate| that Be be granted authority to the mandate for Armenia This bt okl 2 L iy ‘C;",h:?::: ::' ,:;'m; cellerit course In gdod citizership built| job in question but a plumber carrying Toremed, that It wotld have been & sie.| 8980t the very things wiich the boys are|a plumber's union card as the firm who take lo have permitted the requést te|Interested in and Which hey ato bound | SPIVEl nm o DO COPNLE G0N g swalt over until another session without| ! find of much value in the years to} 2 O 3 It came at a late date but the | *ome: sanate was well prepared to act upom it in response to the desires of the “allied powers, and doubtless in keeping the sentiments of Armenia that asked to undertake the task af directing the government of CAiS BEW, The Boy Scouts furnish the instrwe-|wafkout léaving it Tuesday night he tion and the entertainment that the boys| claimed as tight as possible. On Wed- it should be given|nesday afternoon Janitor Fields cdnsult- Triors is|ed Busincss Agent Sweeney, telling him required of ésurse adult coopératior that he hAd been given twenty-four hours fotatred of éautse Sduit coonsration nd| s put men on the ob preferably union 80 mueh crave and every possible éncouragement, [l featute 6f the rgemt.|TeR We instructed Mr. Sweeney to in- 1t eannof be said that we are met In- in seeing that’Armenia gets “what it is entitied to in the way of » government of its own, or in the way of proteetion from thoss who have pestered. it in the past or others who may be inclined to copy such acts. We have “done much for those people in the past And we are going to eonfinue to do mueh, bt it canmot be I the way of sending ~a8 army thete or of actually directing Jhe government for a period of yedrs. The action of the sehats thévefere in to grant the authorlly sousht “@oes not come as a surprise. Wis it more surprising that in view of thy known sentiment that the reduest ghould have been made. This matter _should have been disclosed a long time .ago and if it was desirable to place the tesponsibility for the action upon com- little queéstion but the answer would have Beem fhe «same Six months or longer age as it was gation should get icreased atténtion. Anfioh in hand that we would furnish all excéllent dervide is rendéred in helping|the men needed to complete the job the Boy Scouts, and seeing that the or-| which offer was flatly refused, leaving 1t ganization fs made What it should be. A PERTINENT QUESTION. Increased attention is being given 10| gutters in question have been in a rotten the past which the pubiic plays in con-|condition for a long time and the dam- neéetion with strikes and lockedts. Long|age which has been steadily growing Ras it Beew redHised to what inconven.|Worse for the last two years was done it is|long before the walkout as anyone can Her, to smy nething of the fact| PAInly see by looking at that washed te bear the burden of adfustment is made. But in|were no tinsmiths employed on the job spits of all this, cemsideration of the|and we have no jurisdiction over the fetiee it has been put and what whenever dispates arise Between them. It Was therefors an important question ed at the debate last week erwor Allen of Kansas and Samuel Gompers when the former sought * > L :.tmma:u:u- m'-r: n‘:‘tne:“-m: [ Stories That Recall Others l troversy between capital and labor when there can be Provision for Armenia has been neg- TMcted for & yesr and a haif. pirently been hoped that this eountry change its mind. the preduction and distribution of - the Fits the Situation. neesssitles of life were involved, what| After looking for a while at some fhey are snd hew they should be pro-|Strange marks a little girl was making Investigatiors! substantiated the belief| that we should refrain from that Job and the Senate has now given prompt an-| swer and In so doing voices the semti. mints of the country. That is a matter whieh needs greater mother inquired, “What are you doing has been getting. There HKave been repeated instances| Smith” was the answer. Where there was apparent disregard of| “Writing a letter,” laughed the moth- the publie weltare, a determination toer, “but you don't know how to write." use the conditfens 1o Which it was sub-| ~That doesn’t matter, mummie. You fected as a club to swing the decision |See Lily can't read” orie way or the other and a defiance that $howed utter disregard for rights or ef-| Since coming into the neighborhood Tt was.a question that more than|she had been a troublesome patron at Governor Allen would like to have had|the school. The room was too cold 18 a matter|for her daughter or it was too hot. The that showld get the attention that it de-|lessons were too hard and ihe teacher serves. It is time that the public should | Must ive her extra aid bhave such protection as it is entitied l: on it went, the mother saying that she, in matters of this character, but unfor- tunately Mr. Gempers didn't answer it It is for this very purpose that the in-|read as follows: “I wish the teacher to} dustrial relations court has been estab-| keep Priscilla with her at recess. 1 don't lished In Kansas as advocated by Gov-| want her to play with children who learn It s questioned whether |her to butcher up her English like thel attention than SAVE THE LIVES. ~Onoe again the news of the day Is in- reference to drewning' _sccidents due to bathers going inte dan- §erous water beyond reasonable limits, venturing of thesse whe cannot ond their depth and to the take non swimmers in ¢hyding frequent Mr. Gompers anawer. are of course instanees where arelessness and the disposition to take Ahances did not prevail but they are so where recklessness played a lead- “ng part that whather there were eseapes Whether untimely deaths were caused in that manner ft is {ime for proper regard 1o be paid to the which these emor Allen. - the governor thinks it is absolutely per- | Ohildren in er room do teet, but it is held to furnish the kind of relief that is meedied and at to be a leng step teward the elimination of the cestly strikes and the adjustment of disputes in seeord with the facts. works to bleek the unjust strike or the strike that impeses upen the public re- ; gardless of whieh side instigates it. . SRR, 1833—August 20, Benjamin Harris D'Annunsio will never be satisfied un- nguet §9, Benjamin Harrison til the Adriatie question is settled t4 his e N Dt 0, least ‘ii i) ‘8!. 15 ifi‘l The tourist whe gees to Europe this year meedn’t gxpect to get about on pre-| 1854—Became a lawyer in Indian- i | % =k LJ £ : ,.‘ v r———— It Is quite evident that the expes preme ecourt of Indiana. connected with presidential m:fi: 1361-65—Calanpl and. . Dreveted ¢ ; i H 1 ! | | 11 i : ! i s § ! i a smays: The wea- not have to work very hard the fault finders |Man he took it from. appreach of the berry sea- the mmeh needed in. | the leadership of men. Even the author the quantity or the decrease n the priee of mugnr. low per capits fire logs in Nor- | Notwihstanding ~Benjamin Harrison exesllent prevention | was the grandson of a president, in a8 the fire Aghting ability | whose house he was born, his father was local @epartment. “T'll bet you,” said the handsome young man who had ordered fried chickens, “that within five minutes the peachy dark ene will haul out her vanity case and make up her face. And within ten min- utes the whole four of them will do. it ! “I'll take you,” promptly said the homely. young man with the distinguished air, who had selected fllét of beef with mushrooms. “This time, Archibald, you aré wrong. If you ‘were observant you would note that their faces are in the pink_of condition, and I am certain they carefully powdered and rouged and p ¢ ciled just onte minute before they came in and sat, down at that table ! “What difference does that make?’ in- Quired the handsome young man. ‘Don’t you koow that whenever four girls sit down or get up or take a train or buy matiée tickets or just draw an extra léng bBreath it is necessary. at once for them to attend to thelr faces? Where Bave you been all these months? All that worries me is, why they neglect to bring along their tooth brushes. “And the infernal part of the perform- 4anice is,” Me continued, “that no matter how many timés you see a girl apply powder and rouge and stuff to her coun- tenance the process is still just as fasc Bating as it was the first time it dawned cseded with their toilet as serenely as ‘Do you suppose,” inquired the homely young man expectantly, “that these girls they look | some young man. “There is a wave of “I tell you the burden of a makeup face is a hideous one for a poor girl to carry. In the days when she shamelessly appeared in_public with her natural face a single thing. She didn't even wear a hair net, either, and whisps and gurls of hair floated out without sending her into a case of nervous prostration. = But in these days—" “The dark one may,” admitted the homely young man, “but not that pretty little blond creature! Ske is absolutely perfect and,she must know it! I'm bet- ting you another luncheon extra that while You may win on the other three not on her! ~ “Take you,” the handsome young man agreed instantly. “Why, if just ome of them starts it the others are lost! No girl can stand seeing another girl make up her face without folowing suit, any more than a man can endure seeing an- other man smoking without reaching for a cigar! Td like to know how in the world they get S0 many layers off when it comes tome to wash fheir faces! There ~—no, I thought she was diving into her bag, but not yet! “They aren’t going tc at all™ declared the homely young man. “You're going to pay for this lunch, all right, Archibald. Yow're getting to be an awful cynie! Why, those girls are too sensible and all that— they realize that what they applied just before coming it has had no chancs to evaporate or do whatever it does before it has to be remewed! I don’t belieev they have much of anything on their faces, anyhow—they really have lovely complex— “A-a-ah!” gurgled the handsome young man, “there goes the dark one—and the one in blue—and in brown—and your lit- tlo blond. See thelr anxious gaze inte the little mirrors at their little noses— and now the dash for the compact pow- der! You lose—and it's a costly lunch today, let me tell you!” “Well, what do you know about that?" grumbled the homely young man disgust- edly. “I could have sworn—say, I'm go- ing right out and buy.stock in a rouge factory.’ “Well, P4 say it was a sure way to make money these days” agreed the handsome young man. ‘“Now, I'll bet that in ten minutes more—" “Nope.” objected the homely young mhn, “I'm educated.”"—Exchange. The Town Hall Roof. statement in this morning’s issue of your paper anent the tinsmith’s strike and against their shop. This man worked two days on the job after the tinsmiths form him and also the firm having the squarely up to them for any damage' that might be incurred. As for the damage claimed nearly ev- ery tinsmith in town knows that the down condition of the brick wall on the Broadway side of the building. As there is| plumbers we vray that you will in jus- lfice to the tinsmiths publish this true statement of facts. G. B. FOX, Chairman Ex. Comm. Norwich, May 31 1920 on a plece of paper with a pencil the my dear child?” “Oh, I'm writing a letter to Lily The Why of It. as a superior patron of the school, should have preference over the lesser lights. Then came a new demand. The note Five Minutes a Day 1t With Our Presidents Copyright 1920—By James Maorgan LXIXI—THE SECOND HARRISON 1855—Married Caroline Lavinia Seotia apolis, 1860—Elected reporter of the Su- Brigadier General in the Civil War, 1876—+Defeated as republican candi- date for governor. 1881-8%—In the United States ate, 1888—Elected President. 1889—>areh 4, lnauzurated 234 President, ‘aged 55. 1898—Wife died, Deteated for reelection. hoe| 1896—Married Mrs. Mary Secott Lord sy Dimmick. 1901—March 13, Death of Benjamin Harrison at Indianapolis, aged 6. Benjamin Harrison’s _administration proved to be only an intermission be- tween the two acts of the Cleveland drama. History gives but a passing giance at the ome Dresident whose pre- decessor became his suceessor, who had to give up the presidential chair to the Although Harrison had more brains than Cleveland, Cleveland had a larger nature, and that is what counts most in of “Ben Hur” General Law Wialace, who was® his campaign biographer, could not make romance of the life of this Ben. as 2 little man almos lost o sight under “grandfather’s hat.” But there was noth- ing of he social aristocrat about the man who had the ‘longest ancestral line of any of our presidents. Graduating from a small Ohio col- lege, Harrison married at 20 the girl to whom he engaged himself at 18, and they went to housckeeping in a Httle three-room cottage in_Indianapolis. He was not admitted to he bar until after his marriage, and the first money he ever made was as a court crier at $2.50 a day. Later on he helped out his lean practiee with his salary as clerk of the Supreme Cour of the State. Then came the Civil war, in which he served gallantly as a colonel and marched with Sherman to. the sea. Aftgrward he rose to a high and prosperous rank in the practice of law. As in a dozen other instances, the presidency overtook and surprise Harri- son when he was going away frem it rather than toward it. ‘Tis strange how often the highest prize has fallen to men who had becn disappointed in their race for lesser prizes. ‘The only political office Harrison ever held before his election to the presidency was a seat in the senate. Defeated for re-election to that body in the year before he was elected president, he left Wash- ington with no though that he would soon return as president-elect, and he frankly described himself as “a dead duck. The only candidate that the rank and file of the republicans wanted to nomi- nate in 1883 was Blaine. But he was not well and refused to make a contest for the nomination. At last he cabled from Scotland, “Take ~Harrison.” ~ And the convention indifferently took him. Harrison was rather the best public speaker we have had in the presidency, with the ‘exception of Lincoln. His fin- ished little speeches which he daily de- livered to the crowds that were rail- roaded into Indianapolie by the party managers, were most helpful to his can- didacy. Money waxed still more eloguent in that campaign. Cleveland's tariff mes- sage as answered by a record-break- ing nd for the republicans. Fry the fat out of the protected industries,” was the command of the chairman of the republican national committee, and those industries were done to a turm. The more notable events of the Har- rison administration—the McKinley tariff act; the silver act, whch more than doubled the purchase of that metal by the treasury; the Sherman law on the subject of trusts; the dépendent pension act, and the first Pan-American congress —hardly belong to this little story, be- cause none of them originated with the president bhimself. He did not rise to leadership, and congress took the reins. All the while he at in the White House in cold aloofness. A lone little figure throughout his life, the presidency isolated him still more completely from his fellows. “Now I walk with God,” his closest pelitical con- fidant was chilled to hear him say elec- tion night. Without offering a chair to his callers at the White House, he sat tapping his desk, impatient for them to go. “Don’t feel insulted by anything he may do or say a friendly apologist warned a v of men and women that he was about to lead into the presiden- tial presence: “it is only his way.” A senator said that when Harrison ade dressed 10,000 men he captured them all, but if they met him separately and pri- vately every one of them would come away his oppoment. “I have only two enemies in the world, Speaker Reed drawled, “Harrison has appointed one of them to office in #y town and pardoned the other out of the penitentia ‘With the cry of “God help the sur- plus first “billion-dollar congress,” the aj propriations for the two-year term ris- popular protest, Speaker Reed retorted: ley act. thing to sell seized upon the excuse te mark up prices. The “shopping women’ republican majority in the house. poor and the boy was brought up plainly. His opponents, when he was a candidate for governor of Indiana in 1876, mick- named him “Kid-Glove Harrison” in con- trast with their. own candidate “Blue- Jeans Williams,” and in his campaign forpthespresideney* . hewwas . caricatured WHEN YOU WART o pu: yous dus- Iness vefore the punliz there 18 no needium betier zhoz vertising columns ¢ 2, 1920 uncovered she didn't have to worry over |- American Sugar Refining Company e dowed niece of Mrs. Harrison succeeded | to the place of her aunt and became the companion of the ex-president’s complete retirement from political life. The only ExPresident Who Has Come Back SNAP SHOTS OF G. 0. P. CONVENTIONS Copyrighted by G. M. Adams Service FOURTEENTH CON choose your favorite. convention again went to Chicago and met June 16, 1308. nounced to the country on the night of his election in November, would not be a candidate Theoretically, this left an open Roosevelt had an- But actually, the fact Roosevelt favored his secretary for the succession, gave William Howard Taft of Ohio, a vantage which presaged was in no degree less t Frank H. Hitchcock undertogk the management of Taft Senator Julius C. ened by the fact Burows of Michi gan was temporary chairman, and Sen- ator Henry Cabot Lodge of Massachu- setts was permanent chairman midst of Lodge’s address, eloquent refer- The New June Victor Come In Any Time and Hear Them ence to Roosevelt started a demonstra tion which lasted the greater part of an to stampede in_ his_favor. But one roll call ultimately sufficed to | settle the issue, for on that roll call Taft received 702 out of a total of 9 nearest competitors were of Pennsylvani Hughes of New Speaker Cannon, with 38. ceivéd 40 votes; Ohio, 18; Senator LaFollette of and Roosevelt, The vice presidency was likewise set- tled on a single baliot, when Congrees- . Sherman of D the convention competitors being Franklii Murphy Outdoor Music for Summer Days Move your talking machine out on the porch for a children’s party when the sun is shining ! Have music indoors to brighten the day when it is rainy outdoors ! All the music in the world is yours wherever you want it, if you have a talking machine. It is the ideal home instrument all year round. TWO FAMOUS TALKING MACHINES See, hear and compare; try the tone of each; learn the important features of each. Then Whether you choose a Brunswick or Victrola, you'll have in your home an instrument that will give you satisfac- tory service for years. Special Offer ANY MODEL $75.00 OR MORE 10 Records, your choice. .. .:..... Record ABwion: . . . -c .. soovessoin: Needles, Oil and Record Cleaner. ... . On terms of $8.00 per month Largest Record Stock in the City. THE TALKING MACHINE SHOP 24-32 FRANKLIN STREET PIANOS, PLAYER PIANOS, MUSIC ROLLS, ETC. Curtis Guild inform him she hear of Massachusetts, with One of the interesting features of this comvention was a refusal, by a vote of 471 to 506, to reduce the representation of Southern demecratic states proportionatel of republican- states The platform was which sounded new notes & new and more elastic cur) the establishment banks, the limitations on the i the writ of sion of New Mexico and Arizona as sep- tes In the Union. Minority attempts to amend the plat- form were uniforml cal of this was the convention's refusal, b ¥a vote of 114 to 8§66, to declare for the election of United States senators by direct vote. outdone as a prodigious feat |more than 12,000, many trunks and regard the aining to keep |the Turks in 13 modern athletes could s a part of their C..~having an un- | po s of Per- |th feeling that h lashed beats bridge- for | 1n- | capture t loading of A: vears | their trenches like rats out of hoise, before he was reduced to tears at | Turkish smipers on tke hilis above pick- the failure of the world to provide him!ed them off almost as fast as they e thrill of Xerxes|peared. The campaign wa with the story of the Fifteenth Gonvention.) IN THE DAY’S NEWS THE DARDANELLES The Dardanelles is to have a small in- ternational force of allied Constantinople a similar garrison guarantee free passage to the ships of all nations through the straits and the Sea of Marmora, press dispatches state. “Even our own “Pennsylvania’ in this deep, swift straight between the goose-neck peninsula of Gallipoli and the mainland of Turkey, or steam past into the of Marmora and thence to the Bosphor- us for the American jackies to ‘Oh!' and at the mosques and minarets of in the distance,” Ameri- Con- | T to the HAVE LISTENING DEVICES —the Dard- side or storm door, can. soldier and a dwelling ho anelles being the ou the Sea of Marmor: and ! sonstructed their lateen sailed craft for the Bosphorus the inner door. the|and oft-times ferocious “eyes” were lo-| h of the Hudson River, is command- | cated on either side of the bow ed by the Dardanelles Mohammed 1T the European side and one on the Castles built is on |ing Asia- ie books published before | with “ears,” the location of which like this ominous and prophetic | the e “The castles on both sides have |ship's bow, 1914 carried with | water. ~ While supesst treaty | Chinaman to equip his ship so it could | 5 peace of | “see” its enemies and work its way i\td |ing ship's propellers. 1856, no foreign ship of war was allor ed to enter the strait without mission of Turkey, only during the da: “On the Asiatic Krupp guns.’ Constantinople bulletin from the National and merchant -|a sofe port through shoal water. hidden rocks and through erowded waterways. ships | science has designed the “ears” for the “Mention of the Dardanellés conjures before the American mind th estory of a fierce and interest-compelling fifhit in 1915 and 1916 and a history which trails back into dim mythological times when Leander swam across its 3-4 ‘mile width at Abydos every night to tell the ‘same old story’ to Hero ,who hun gher fight the town or Darda- |ped as a demor Dardanus, ancestor of the Trojan | have just had an oportunity to see and Roman | inhabitants. | It is now a government controlled in- of | vention, used on fighting ships during of |the war as a protection against subma- situated prett is the point e excursionists start for the plains of short distance beyond. Here, must stop to show their pap- number of merchant vessels | one during a single year numbering | Across on the European side. poli_or ‘beautiful town st_European town to be captured by Superbly located on the steep projecting coast of the Galli- | Peninsula. it commands a_view of | Asiatic side—the plains of Troy and | broken foot-hills of Meunt Ida. On narrow peninsula in April, 1915, al- ed forces were landed in an aftempt to | e Dardaneiles. When the | floods drove the_ British soidiers from ap- abandoned in Janu 1916 E CHANT VESSELS ARE TO New York, June 1—In olden times when Chinese ship builders designed and war on coy mercial purposes, prominent, | T modern America, now the lead- on in ship construction, is pro- DoSing to equip her merchant vessels s on the Chinese junk are on the | but under insted of over the ition induced the | same purpose. With the destroyer Breckinridge equip- nstrating ship, 40 or more atives of leading steamship lines represen t the efficacy of the jistening device. 171 100% Comfort In A Table Beverage is supplied by INSTANT PosTUM A rich coffee-like flavor with none of coffees harm- ful after-effects makes sTUM the ideal table ‘Why not use PosTuri in- stead of coffee? i Theres a Reasor” the republicans gave the coun- try in Harrison's administrations the A7 1418 AL ing to that unprecedented total. To the “This is 2 billion dollar country.” But the country did not feel rich enough to pay the higher tariffff rates of the McKin- That law was passed only Seven weeks before the corgressional elections in 1890. Of course, everyone who had any- N R rose in their fury at the higher cost of living, and the voters overwhelmed the 2 21 7= Vo) akinl ok al That was the forerunner of a still greater political overturn in the presiden- tial election in 1892, when Harrison went down under a sweeping victory for Cleveland.*© The lass of his wife befell him only ten days before he lost the presidency. After a few years a wi- Vil TAFAR T I 10 ol AV WAL PN A Our Record Booths On Main Floor. No Stairs to Climb. rines and_officially foretell the approach 1o shoal waters, ap- navigator of submarine bel lose with a remarkable degree of ac- water wherein the ship so equipped is floating The apparatus includes 48 hydrophene tank of water in of the ship, so the sound of the s depth of water is asoert ing to the noise made by the propeliors of the vessel carrying the hydrophone as it is echoed back from In depth beyond 100 fathoms, Rew- the hydrophone refuses to record it was explained, but as a majority of eoi- lisions occur near a coast congested harbor entrances. and officers of the navy predict th adoption will remeve many ards of navigation now induced by for. formeriy of Swarth- more college, sald the devioe had the transport and on one occasion probably saved the ship from running aground bottom of the the invent . of the has- n the Lomg- Hayes also claims that the invention will through the reflecting hack erator from the submerged portion of & dangerous berg the sound of the operat- ADACHE NO DOPE-NO ACETANILIDE “TRY IT AND BE COMFORTABLE UDINE IT'S LIQUID - QUICK EFFECT through” the sum- mer in a Keep- Kool Summer Suit. Comfortable, durable, wel:- tailored — they give the wearer that assurance and ease of mixd that comes to you oniy when properly dresced. Ready for your inspection in OPPOSITE CHELSEA J. C. MACPHERSON QUALITY CORNER SAVINGS BANK

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