Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 30, 1920, Page 4

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as it does amonia, potash and phosphates of lime. A ton would yield about 480 pounds, valued ‘st about. §3 for fertilizer ‘Which with the grease would make a yield of nearly 39 a ton. o This material is now an alsolute loss and . in addition to that large sums are paid for the towing of the garbage to Yet in spite of the ized fact that these very things can be re- claimed ‘are greatly needed and . that there wad never a timie When the elimina- sion of waste was more the large seale. - That there should be de- mand fer the stopping of such waste is E ‘Buliets , Bitria! macms, not surprising. The city has plénty of . ! ‘Bulieci s G 353 [Usés for the meney and the market for g"—...:-:-.: Telobese 145. | the products is alwayy large. AS CONFIPENT A4S RVER Thomas . Lipton by the way in which he has ageepted his failure to lift the cup after e seémed about to take it away by the gracious mannér.in which he has. congratslated the winning ‘crew and admitted that Resofute is the better e seten ot auciat dmosied- |i1yaf has shown himéelf’to be the same true sport he éver has been. .But even in defear his confidenge is still - unishaken. o is of the firm opinion that ke can yet have constrmcted a y#eht that can criss the Atiantie and b: balif en such’lines and be handied in such a manfér as to defeat wiatever product Ameriéan yacht bullders can put up against it. He has Deen intbued With this sime - cunfidénce snice he launched his effort fo regain the cup vears ago. Although decisively. beat- en in fhis year's racés he .Mevertheless made with Shamrock TV the Best show- ing thus far and With the assistange of a fluke came mighty near fo victery. At no other time has he gottem as much en- couragement from the contests: That he doesn’t intend to monopolize the posifion of challeager is indicated by his détermination to Wait a year and give others who may desire a chance to make a try for the cup. With:that point made cléar he plans to renew his- efforts in a cause Which lies close t6 his heart Whether he will stiek to the same sort of model that came so Tiear ‘fo victory, though it can hafly be claimed ‘that the se contest was due to the method of construction, is some@ying that only time can determine, But it seems certain that if the trophy is ever carried back to Eu- ibie to put up a I?DG fight and it is sure| one it will be through Lipton's efforts. o have the backing of the allies 10| This seems a reasoneble indication when jwhatever extent it is reguired. Theif{i ic announced fhiat Sir Thomas has Ipwn pestection lies in upholding Poland.|mage provision in his will Whereby “Yven though they are urging peace inlfunds wiil bs provided for the continu- Jbat qemster. p ance of the races in the expeetation that The situation is such that the bolshe-|(ime will develop 2 vacht that will be “¥viki may well understand that the POIS| nl to outdo the best efforts of builders oIl not be disposed to accept anything in|ang seamen on this side of the water. It| the way of terms. They unquestionably may be as some in London cfaimed that bave Emowledge of the report of the the races are gettfdg to be a bore but Franco-British mission to Poland and its that apparently isw't, the way Lipton finding t6 the effect that Poland’'s man- looks upon them. Tower is sufficient and that its position = is not 86 desperste But what it can be| retrievéd without great difficulty by the sending of musitions to Poland. (He em- ployment of French and Bri officers and the regrouping of the Polish army. g G It may well be therefore an act of wig-[¥1°° (he Turks to understand that they BE = o et of T he|must aceept the orders of 4he alifes thel : Y| Greeks hate made stead: botn! shape iheir oY | Greeks hat ¥ progress both| WEEK ENDING JULY 24th, 1920 AWAITING THE TERMS In commeetion with the struggle be- tween the Poles and the bolsheviki in te- Test cemters at the present time on "he armistice terms that will be presented by the latter whem the representatives of the two governments get together. So- viet Russia of course realizes that it holds an I"l?!i‘mns position but likewice knows its own weakness and it is aware of eourse of the fact that it has let it be understood at it is desir- Jous of peace. Now it remains to be seen Iwhat it will propose in connection With 3the Pélish appeal for an understanding sthal =@l end the fighting and open the| Iway 6 the .sking of peace. It cannot fail to recogmize that Poland though be- g drivef back not on its knees. It is, B L] GOOD PROSPECTS FOR GREECE Decidedly favorable ave the operations en a free hand to go ahead and the bolsheviki terms in su h 2 way win the approval of the Poles matead of| i ASi Minor and European Turkey. It making them so drastic that it woura|lS DEFfecily evident that the Turks are BRI r o it s e the fighting machine that they were sumption of the stragele on a seale ther/Deen- There is division in their ranks of would show what Poland can do when ts| COUTSe but while the fighting faction lack!| back Is against the wall, and at the same| " T A e o time force the allies to get into the fght|SCUTes and the indications are that they for the determimiafon of the resl suprom. |Té4ii% the lopeldssness of thew efforts acy. It is apparently 2 time for the exer| 10UEh UAWilling (o accept the inevitable cice of discretion if in fact that is amy siy-| ¥ithout bloedsked cere desire om the part of soviet Russia| I 1S Of course the nationalist forces for peace. Russia likewiss understands|('i( 37¢ Eetting the attemtion of the| that much €le of deep concern to irself| G CKS but ail Turkey can appreciate thel will rest upon the way the armistice ap.|SIEfificance of the situation. Greece has il fa trefited had ambitions for a considerable period. Having forces ready (o deal ' With the 5 Turks, who by the way Were threaten- THE CROP OUTLOOK ing (0 upset Greek plans, they were given While r conditions i certain|Uie WOrd {0 USe them to the best advan- respec e been il tHat could|(4Ee a5 soon as it Was demonstraicd that have been ordered the reports which are|the Hationaliste would not abig> by iAe ai- coming from licd orders. Smyrna has been removed about the country give dication that those who are working the|{rom the danger of atfaek by the nation- #0il are either doing much better than it|alists and Adriznople has been captured with commander, being was expected that they could With deplet- e there it somthing the Turkish nationalit| Jafar Tayar, the latter| in which G EHOPS re S5 » reverse which cannot fail fo end RS of by nakes N ST act nationalists in Eu- avy reduction in!opean to minimize such ef- was anticipated may el fo may be making 1o and Bulgarians Whether the Greeks will continue to ro~ Adrianople is another question. Tt hardly likely any more than it be expeeted that they would hold a bumper [the territory in Asia Mifior from which hey have driven the nationalists. The auantity fo meet | wou ant wheat owing as is mo danger|successful efiorts, however, and the cap and this seems to bejture of this important Turkish city will borne o breait which |Serte io strengthen its position in connecr S & to changing conditions | its demnads in that part cf the and in view of what it is doing ing down opposition to the allied subject o canno to be enthusiasm| will have reason to expect thatt 3ver the present prospects in comtrast to|ils cleims will get due conmsideration. xhat had been forecasted early in the|Greece is piaying its cards well for the eason attainment of its policy of expansion. While great dependence is placed upon wheat it is not t ecessary! grain tnd fortumate is &t that the prospects for jom are excellent and thes: EDITORIAL NOTES the price of potatoes continues e can afford to stop eating he amly have 2 s effect nd indirectly u * household P | Ine fast that plainly ¥ in uld rot arge vield regard- ons as a hefp it ‘oper preparations Though there is plenty of thht, there ars many mol'$ things than troubie brew- ing these days. | P | = s o rrerd Those shakes in Los Angeles are ot of the farmers. yrhe|due to laughter over tie way that city fo Be planted and even with | passed Frisco in population. he hefiy wortage fac em the esti- Mates new: made indiea ‘went whexd with the preliminaries necessary o prodaction hoiding apparentiy to the Sefief that if there was a large crop Mere would be some way of harvesting £ They lai the foundation for a Barvest and from the prospects now Wwihich are of course as much subject to change a3 they were a month ago, they wnd the country are going to benefit thereby. The man on the coffier says: Unless Augnst . does better than July, fur lined bathing suits will be in order. | that they The odor of the chestaut tree blossoms | |1 not exaetly fragrant but in these days of few chestnuts no one saiffs enough (o #peak about. With Phiadersnia offering a mickel | apiece for rats dead or aliye will someone b\ 5 jumping up and hollering about cruel to animals. gt Ziose Turks who are going to fignt the | the quicker they accept the policy of | Greece in Thrace the léss needfess blood- | #hed there will be. 1 Someiow most of those Who are willing | to pay the figire of gefting intoxicated | these days are able to call on a reserve ty CHANCE TO FIGHT WASTE on of the great amount of @avage that accumulates in New Yerk exch day has been 2 problem with which that ity has straggled for many vears The coletion has been attempted in aif. feremt Ways but no satisfactory method has been devised which does not have objectionable features. Putting it through imetmerators has proved costly and the| 70 WHen atfested. | odere cbnotious while the towing of the| | 2 | material 1o sea to be dumped is likewise mf“mi','\"e:\:’ T e 8 Wadroud expensive and open to the complaint that | 1o ITEN 10 make more s T mwch of it drifts back to the shores| i+, ey e where it beeomes quite offensive as the o e e e Burning of it elswhere. fas e e e cionis which can| . U FOItte may get e ifea that he is a bit queer, siice he gets all the| » n::d":: unhrm:‘m‘od; .;.: in addi-} chiances fo head' the tickets of those who| tion othe: eatures follow radical ideas or minke up bolting elemernite. #oes with the practice of dumping the @arbage at sea. 1t the administration would onl; - y man There is produeed each day in NeW|ifest zs much interest in keeping down Tork about a {HOWSEMSS tong of garbage.|prices for th fi g ‘e public as it does in buy- Mecording to tests Wiikth have been- made [ ing oil at its own figure there migha not ton of garbage averages 65 pounds|be so much said about profitsering grease. THis grease contains about _— 4fight per cemt of giyerine and the re-| Cummings may run for the senate Mainder could De used for the manufac-[against Brandegee because Wilson wants ®lire of soap. In commection with such a|him to. ThEt is #ood and sufficient rea- Teductisn plant as is required to get this son Why the people of Connecticut will Wease it is likewise i # the Greeks against the Turks thus|, Where did yoli get (HIN Tithie wilé bn- thology, Lucile?" asked Polly Gray, who NORWICH BULLETIN: | “It Was perhaps’ a half hour after taps When .we ~down tHe maiile steps to was tooking through fhe books on my ta-|the bridgs and o our astonishment found Ble. 5 “It was bought in Paris,” 1 replied, as I buttoned my spats. B “Who _is, Ricarda Marner, eross old. skipper?” § 4 “Oh, she was just oné of 'the, weltare girls 1 knew in Framce. 1 don't. know Who ‘the cross old skipper' was. Prob- ably a_charming young captain. “How do ‘you happem to have her book?” she persistéd. “When 1 was in from - the the Pontaneen camp last May," I be “I'was great friends With a stunning Young private, Hal Har- rimore. . We took some.delightfui walks in the marvelously lang twilight. “One evening We discovered a wailed garden right in the midst of the. camp. Tt seemed that it MUsSt be a dreasti, for it was so foreign to all its surroundings that we felt it was hardly, possible that it was real. A guard was slowly. pacing by the little bridge that led across a. tiny moat ‘into it. Ferns, palms, roses, lillies and sweet smielling shrubs embowered the marble seats and the’ stately statues of Venus and Diana who were the only inhabitants of the garden. “Hal loved poetry and always carried a Book of verse i his O. D. shirt. He said the gardew's mwme- should be ‘En- chantment,’ and after we had seated our- selves on @ marble bench he read to me, from the ‘Idylis of the King’ ~We had Such @ delicious time that we decided to return the mext eveming. “ Bee what I have,’ I.said. gayly when Hal and I were safe in our secret gar- den again. I displayed @ little big of almond cakes that one of my admivers had brought me from Brest' and this book of war verse. * ‘Where did yon get that? he asked eagrly looking. o sep Whether “Phe Mag- ples of Pieardy’ was in it. I told him that I borrowed it from one of the girls o that we could read it in ‘Bnchant- meni” We read the ‘Magpies' and many other .of ‘Hal's favorites. “ “Phat’s a call to quarters! he ex- claimed s the sound of a bugls Broke out lovely stilifess. ‘Where has the evening gone to? ‘You, don't have to go tyet, do, you Hal? I pouted . “ “0la Sergt: Cuckoo is checking up onyfor it,” I replied as I us pretty stiff these nights Before we sail.” he answered. ‘Oh, dear, it's so hedvenly restly I hate to leave just when the moon is ris- ing, I sighed “ ‘We won't go just yet,’ the book and we talked. He laid aside a gate"across it, which we had:not before uoitced. It was locked, and' it was high and it was sni . and ¥ou ean imagine, Polly, that I gasped in dismay. “'Good! giaeious. W sualt we We _simply must get out! do? ‘Its lucky you are such @ little person,’ he said and then lifted me over that tall gate. “The next day Ricarda Marney came to me, breathless, with the news that she was golng home. ‘I'm booked (o sail to- morrow,’ she said, ‘and I'm -afraid I shall have to ask you for my war an- thology Lucile.’ “You can imagine that 1 was embar- ased when I couldn’t find that book. 1 believed, after .searching through my things that 1 must have left it in the se- cret garden. 1 hoped to find it there that evening. But Hal did not call for me and I learned from one of his pals that he was ‘C. B.'—conflned to bar- racks—you know, for being out after taps. “I went to the garden by myself im- Mediately after mess, and' found it locked. The guard informed. me that this was be- cduse of new orders, so L returned to Ricardo, who was packing wildly, and told her T had mislaid the book. She made no attempt to cofceal her anmoy- ance, and she was rather disagreeable about accepting the price of it. I told her she could buy another in New York, surely, but she said it had been given to her to read on the ship. “When 1 saw Hal again after a few days he laughed and said he thought the book might be recovered, and, sure enough, he brought it to me the next day, nome the worse for a few nights under the marble bench. He had climb- ed over the gate to get it for me. He had forn his trousers on the .spikes and bruised his hand and risked a possible arrest, but he considered it a knightly pleasure, 1 am sure. Wasn't it roman- tic and chivaltous of him? Do you wonder that I prize that little volume?" “But, Lucile,” demanded Polly, “what Is it really her Nonsense, Polly; I told: you I paid her carefully powdered my nose. She gave me a most disap- proving look, which I simply ignored. 1 have to be patient with Polly, Who is one of those tiresomely overscruputous per- sons who make life extremely irksome for themselves and everybody else—Chicago News. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Colembia” Fifty Years Ago. Editor: “Hail Coumbia! ' happy land!” That :grand patriotic song im- mediately inspires me as 1 start to write this brief sketch of the town of Columbia. The lown was incorporated from Lebanon in May, 1304 and was given the postic name of Columbia from the United States. In looking for data § at once foend’ thut it was no wonder at Columbia was a “happy land"” f before me it says lumbia, being lovers and with -the fear God before them entered (about 1720) into the covenant “to Wwatch over one another, and tothedr witness dgainst sin to walk in the ordinamce of the Gospel M & ment. ywould have to go unanswered when one member suggested, “It might have been the faften caif.” Au Appregiated Compliment . The two Jones sisters, aged 30 and 32, successful business women, live next door to the Smith sisters aged about 50. The Jones sisters speak of them- selves as “old maids” and their neigh- bors as the “pesky old maids” just to distingyih. And of course they Jity to second class ladies. The other evening one of the Jones sisters was sprink the lawn olad in a bungalow apron. While doing so he heard the Smiths in conversation. “Yes, sistef, age has its compensation.” one was telling tiie other. “Now look at thoss girls next door. They no sooner get home than they get into ap- “Hal looked down at me and smiled. || FRIDAY, WLY 30, 1920 Look For the Number, 100 Frankdin St. BARGAIN DAY . Saturday, July 31st | [$1.65 B. V. D. Union Suits ........ $145 §$1.45 Men’s Negligee Shirts ...... $1.29 (Attached Collars) - $1.15 Men’s Nainsook Union Suits . . . 85¢ $1.00 Men’s Lawrence Fancy Bal- { | H | - at foot of Market Street, at 10:30 a. m. and arriving at the Beach at 12 o’clock. Returning leave the Beach at 5 o'clock and reach Norwich at 6:30. This is a brand new boat with Deissel engine, and ample e : accommedations for 600' passengers. - * Bathing Suits at Big Reductions FARE 40c EACH WAY. ‘ For More Bargain Day Special , See Window Display o i Open Evenings convenienit. For the first few: weeks, pro- vided it is not hot weather, diapers eight- een inches square of old, soft knitted wear are' very convenient. Several doz- en pieces of old sheeting ton into pieces ten inches square, may be put inside. When diapers. are removed, they should be put into a covered pail of cold waters to which Borax has been added: Later they should be washed clean with @ pure soap, boiled, rinsed thoroughly, but not blued, and hung in the sun to dry. Soap and bluing are very irritating v a baby’ woolen garments must be washed very carefully. They should be' washed by hand in tepid soapsuds (mild soap), rins- ed in a little: soapy water and hung in the shade to dry. When dry, they should be pulled or patted' into' shape or smooth- ed Wwith a warm iron before being put away. Always before putting garments on a baby they shoyld be held to the cheek | to be sure they are dry and: warm. IN THE DAY'S NEWS 100 Franklin Street Nerwich, Conn. skin. They should be folded, pressed Cutimr Suger with a hot iron and put away. A soilgd I 3 r. . G Sl Sl g iie wain| Susss ke dwew wo e tows t LR A Few Minutes’ Walk From Franklin Square second time without washing. The urine|8ranted. Now procuring enough for the | preserving season may be a problem. and sugar “speak easies” are not uncommon in Jamis where tHe supply is rationed: Writnig to the Natlonal Geographic contains substances which are very irr {ating to the sKin of a baby and. he may be made very sore. Jackets—For cool mornings baby needs a singie crop for every human being planters owning his land was from $56 hree short jacketts: These are made ofjSociety, William JosepH Showalter says:|who lives on the island—a sum almost|to. $61 per acre. When one remembers white flannel over the kimona sleeve| “With a sugar production neagly fas great as the per capita wealth produc- |y o o E SO pattern, or they may be knitted or cro-|doubled and prices mpre than quadrupi-|ed by all the farms, all the factories, amd) e meine ol Rty Sy fmm cheted with close stitches. There should|ed since 1912° one can readily see why |all the mines of ihe United States! {four te six times as high in 1920 as it be no loose stitohes or seallons or other|Cuba is the world's El Doradb of 1320,| “What wonder, then, that Cuba today|Was then, the size of ‘the per-acre in trimmings to catch on butions or the|and Why sugar is its king. is a land of gold and. gems. richer than|oome today is apparent. baby's fingers. “THe imagination is almost overpower-{Midas ever was. converling Croesus, bY| “How much net profit the san-grower Out of Door Garments—The healthy [ed in attempting to comprehend the vast|contrast, into a beggar! reaps at 1920 prees is hard to estimate is taken out of doors. so he must|proportions of the sugar industry of the| “Sugar-cane is grown by three classes{byt that it is large will appear when a wrap and hood: This wrap is|island as it exists this year. of planters i Cuba. Perhaps the major methods of cane-growing are stated. Tc | begin with, after the first crop the plant er does not have to6 bother with seed: time for about ten years The soil is s¢ deep and so fertile that one planting Droduces ten harvesis. Neither does cul tivation bother him after the first season. for the blades siripped from one erop {form a muilch that keeps the weeds from | competing with the next one “Think of the profits that the Ameri Ycan farmer would make out of corn i made like the sleeping: bag except it of white eiderdown or flannel. It may be sewed together or Hound around Wwith. ribbon. At four months; the upper eorn- ers may be opered so &s. to allow the {baby to get its hands out freely. When baby beging to walk, a very comfortable coat may De mu from the bag. . Open it and hem at the botton, shape the top. loosely by a kimona siip pattern. For wiriter. the hood may be made of the same material as the wrap or it may “The can produced is of such tremend- part of the crop is grown by share farm- ous volume that a procession of bull|ers or ‘colonas,’ as they are called. Tho teams four abreast, reaching: around the owners. of the sugar mulls furnish them earth, would be reguired to move it. The|With @ given number of acres of land to crop would suffice to build & solid wall {planc and 3ive them an agreed share of around the entire two thousswd miles of | hie Sugar they produce. the island's coast line' as high as an or-| “The next class is composed of the dinary_dwelling house and thick enough | land-ewning farmers, who grow ther own for a file of four men to walk abreast on |cane and have i ground on shares, after it . |the fashion of the rural grist mill T “The sugar extracted from this cane|remainder of the the. by owners of the mi ane grown themselves. At |bring them up: of Cmrist * * * * " we, do also give up children unto him, promising to w, the nurture and 2d- rons, so scanty that they are immode Of course they're just kids but still That was erough for }®ss Jones. our he monition of the Lord: . This peobably ac- | rushed into thé house. Grace," counts for the many good people -wWho |she toid her sister breathles “Those | were natives of Columbia. Space will | Smiths are real ni We've got to stop not permit me to tell of the early his-{calling them * old maids.” And| tory of the town, will give, as L have!now generou Jones refer to them in other sketches, names of the offi- las “the other old maids.” of an opea lace able. ‘without starch. dy. A side cf €3 and o very bow under eye y with be knittted or crocheted silk or cotton knitted or crocheted hoou with | is comf Wash-loods may be made of soft vhite - ewbroidered lawn and lzundercd the hood should be steh as can be laundered eas- little chin strap fastened at one nap or hook does: Dak pattern a the very thinnest White silic The ties d with a convenient d lined on and the For summer A would load a fleet of steamers reachng from Havana to New York, with a sn.l;\same centrals the ‘administration’ cane for every mile of the twelve hundred that|as that grown under ‘central’ manage- stretch between the (wo ports. The | men* is known. amounts to only ¢ per great pyramid of Cheops, before whose|cent of the totai; at others it amounts awe-inspiring 'proportions millions of peo-|to 90 per cen. Dle have stood and gazed: in upenrmnulh—{ “Even he share ed amazement, remains, after five thous- ! prices made money and years, unrivaled as ‘a monumentai|Before the World. the official handbook pile: but Cuba’s sugar output this year|of the Republic at the Panama-Pacifie would make two pyramids, esch outbas- | Exposition, when sugar was selling at ng and overtopping Cheops. 2.62 cents a vound. his share of the su- “The wealth the outgoing sugar cropfgar brought him, on the basis of twelve brings in is not less remarkable in its|sacks to the acre, a return of from §46 proportions. Four hundred dollars out of {to $51 per acre. The return of the farmer, at pre-war According to 'Cuba {he could get ten crops from one plant ing, and did not have to plow nine o them at all to keep down the weeds! { “Another item in the low cost of pro ducing sugar is the cheapness of the mo tive power. The cane is hauled in ox carts. The oxen live from six to ter months a year on the blades strppes from the harvested stalks, and the res mander of the year on succulent gunem lgrass. Think how prosperous would be the American farmet if he could have an. imal motive power requiring mot a pound of grain (o feed it! cers of the fitty years ago| S uo e Y (1870), as James L. Downer; Tegistrar, Yeomans ETES ST treasurer, Seth Collins; -selectmen, | § ¥ACTS REGARDING THE Samuel A. ‘Collins, Jared S. Manley, .-\‘l- ARE OF THE BABY bert Biown; constablew Amherst B Scoville. “Lorenzo D. Thompson ;. collee- BY W, 8: TR Rentih Sort tor, A. B. Scoville: grand jurors, John Bascomb, John Gray, John M. Smith sors, Seth'S. Colling, Jared S. Man Oliver Fox: board of relief, Joseph | H.*Gates. Daniel C. Scoville, Charles R. Fullér; land' surveyor, Johin S. Yeo- mans; "board of education, John S. Yeo- ans, Frederic® D. Avery, Sanford Yeo- s: registrar of voters, Charles R. er, Joseph Hutchins, Madison Fuller o’ member of the senate and Charlge Fuller, represented -the town in the | Sherman P. Swhner was judge | probate_and George B. Fuller, pos Tiie population in 1870 wa: 1910): grand st $32 7 in 1919). “SOUVENII Hartford, July H Fu was R house of miaster. in 5,214 (649 (C5 WM. H. TAYLOR. 28, 1920. ’ Stories That Recall Others Without Doubt. The Sunday schiool lesson ‘was Ssout the prodigal son and the teacher was dwelling upon the older brother's char acter. ” “But: umid all the rejoicing,” he said, ihere was ome to whom the prepara- tion of the teus: brought no joy, : to whom the prodigal's return gave ~no pleasure, but omy bitterness: one who did not approve of the feast and Who had no wish to- attend-it. Now can anyone of you tell Who this was? | three | uncomfortable. Baby’s Clothing Bands—Three flznne! abdominal bands made of soft, white unhemmed flannel five or six inches wide from four- teen to eighteen jnches long. They hould be wide enough to protect the ab- domen and no wide enough to wrinkle They should go once and a half arou the abdome lap across ¢ front and pin at the side. After the corc is healed- and these may Initted abdominai shoulder straps and a diaper. These s part of wool and upper part of ton. This kind of band will not slip up around the beby's chest and make The band may be carded_altogetiier in hot weather. Shirts—Three shirts, weol and cotton, or wool and silk, never all wool. very hottest weather an all cotton or silk shirt may be worn. The shirts should be bands b to pin to ih ould be made the low fitted smoothly. -They may either lap or_butt on front. Stockings—Three pairs - of bootees. ‘Three pairs of merino or cashmere stock- ings, if the weather is cold. Blankets—Three blankets of closely knitted or crocheted wool, or made from an_old soft woolen blamlket. Diapers—Four dozen pers two Silence followed till it looked as if it you must regard Nature This enables the many testines, contracting and out of the system. Try'it. possible to convert [see that Brandegee is returned with 4 We dry garbage into feviliser majerity tiea eves. . L To Keep Your Health— first of her laws is ‘“Avoid Constipation”. Nujol works on an entirely new principle. With- out foreing orirritating, it softens the food waste. mal way, to.squeeze the food waste along and It is absolutely harmless and pleasant to take, dozen 24 inch, two dozen 30 inch are ’s laws; and one of the tiny muscles in the in- expanding in their nor- l% " Ghe flavhattn | 121-125 MAIN STREET WILL CLOSE OUT TODAY AT MUCH LESS THAN WHOLESALE COST 21 Women's and Misses’ Suits at 81950 FORMER PRICES WERE TO $55 43 Women’s and Misses' Suits at $395n | o " FORMER PRICES WERE TO 3§95 e e e The assortment consists of mainly navy blue Suits in fine trico- tine—also a few blacks and mixtures. The Suits are very de- sirable for fall and year round wear. The Sale Prices are much less than the wheler ¢ coat: | SHOP e —— — [ c——=a | =

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