Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 11, 1920, Page 4

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Sierwech Fulietin and @ouficd 124 YEARS OLD _'=-'-w-n--».-u---n:-n nfimim“.- Telesizas Catta Suliets Ofiae ass. Bdloral floema 358 Bulstia Job Offies 352 SMimantie OM~ 0 Church bt Telrohons 185 == Nerwich, Wedpesday, Aug. 11, 1920, (MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, w1 eclusiveny eatiied wublication of &1l news Compalhe fi:.nfl stherwise erediied In 428 gl Mhe local mews published ot e of @ectal dempaten '__u-m .l WEED ENDING AUG. Tth, 1320 10,919 HOPE FOE RUSSO-POLISH PEACE Hope for peace between the Russians and the Poles as thé owicome of the negotiations which are just beginning at Minsk is voiced by Lloyd Georgs and will be shared in by all the world which wants to see an end of the devastation wreught upon any people wnd land by war. So much of the news from the isturbed area where the Pqles and the Russians are battling, either in the field or diplomatically, is contradlictory that is no wonder American readers are confused by this Polish crisis. The only hope of saving Foland from further devastation by the bolshevik ermy lies in the Minsk negotfations. It Is evident that no Allied troops could be sent to help the Polish army in time to save Warsaw, even if Great Britain and France were ready to help in this way, which they say they are not. Indeed any serious move by France and Great Brita util the outcome of the Minsk cnoference is known would add to Po- land's danger. Whatever action France end Great Britain do take, it is careful- v of explained will not be in the nature war on RusSia, byt merely the ex- ion of aid to Poland. Apparently| e is a diplema distinction in the des to tpis so that males ution t not pe terms that they are willing to offer to Poland will accord that country “fall pendence” e favorable boynd-| an ot for any| o ans at-} terms that would jeo- pardize Poland's independence or de- poil her of territory, an entirely dif- ferent situation would be created, and one in which the Allies, as well as the United States, would be called upon to defend the Polish state which they brought into being and pledged them- selves to support when they signed the Versailles treaty, If no untoward change may tempt to impase intervenes, it yet be unnecessary o put into ef- fect the warlike measures agreed upon by the Allied military experts conference at Hythe. after ITALY COMING BACK It is an extremely hopeful report of Italy's rehabilitation after the ravages of war that is brought back from there by a New York banker, Willis H. Booth, who has just returned from Europe. He finds that no country in Eurepe has faced its problems of reconstruction and readjustment with mere intelligence and energy than Italy. Italy is at work as completely as any nation in Furope and more so than most of them. Young, energetic and capable business men have taken’ hold of the post-war development and are bringing 2 new gpirit to the industrial life of the nation. A wealth of hydro- electric possibilities with which the country is favored is being' developed at 2 rapid rate and the current is ab- sorbed for industrial purposes as fast 2s it can be produced. The whole coun- try is being interlaced with electric lines and 4,000 miles of additional track- age is imvolved in the electrification of] the railways. Matching up with the industrial devel- opment, the port facilities of Northern Italy are being enlarged by the construc- tion of an entirely new nort at Venice, which will augment ths ¥ ort facilities of that part of the country which were heretofore largely restricted to Genoa. Manufactures on a large scale have been taken up in motors rubber, steel and many other lines, while the problem of mass production is being worked out carefully and intelligently. The break from the Triple Alliance with Germany and Austria is felt particularly in the financial institutions, so many of which were formerly controlled by Germans. But these are now under Italian control and are assisting in promoting the in- dustrial enterprises. Such an industrial expansion is going to necessitate a rapid increase in areas under cultivation for food, but thought is already being taken along these lines and projects are under way for the reclamation of land along the rivers and adjacent to the sea It is not going to be all easy sailing for Italy, but the important thing is that there is the will to do. Mep with capacity and judgment are at hand but it will take the united efforts of agri- culture, indpstry, banking and commerce to create the surpluses out of which she will be able to pay her great debt. WIDENS DEMOCRATIC BREACH In his zeal for lashing out at the re- publican senators who would protect the constitutional integrity and independence of our country by reservations to the League of Mations, Candidate Cox has Tead out of the democratic party those demoeratic’ senators who were courage- ous enough to refuse to submit to White House domination. His bitter attack upen what he calls the senatorial cabal was meant to focus attention upon the republican senators’ oppesition to the TWison league and treaty, but it must be taken to refer also to men who have been cosidered among the wisest, ablest and most trusted leaders of the demo- crtale party. Senators Gore, Reed, Hoke, Smith and all the 23 democratic sena- tors who were opposed to the treaty | touches that the |The time when they Will take ship for ithout qualifieations, as President Wil- son presented it, or with such reserva- tions as the senate committes on for- eign affairs appended to it. The Ohio govermer is explicit enough in his attack upon the sepatorial conspiraters who dared to think differently, whether they ‘were republicans or democrats, from the gentleman in the White House who was determined to carry the whole thing though with an assumption of gutherity apnd power which the constitution does not confer upon the president in treaty- making. He is “as one” with the presi- dent in the eontroversy, and he pro- ceeds in & way that is a kickout for the democratic senaters who stood for an amended treaty and a Kkickout for all democrats yeverywhere who think with these democratic leaders. ‘That White House conference put Can- didate Cox in a situation where he was obliged to choose between the two sgides of his' own divided party. He has em- phasized his stand-in with the organiged machinery that is under contrel of the present administration, but his speech will certainly do nothing te heal the democratic rupture. He has played up to the offended egotism of the Presi- dent—he has made loyalty to Wilson ideals and theories the keynote of his speech. He apparently believes that the country wants four mers years of Wil- gon ideals, theories, wisionings, ineffici- ency in all practical affairs and egotise tic assumption of power and autheritv. BOY SCOUTS IN JAMBOREE One of the most interesting of the world conventions ef this year, 1926, comes to a conelysion at the ord of this weelt. The Boy Scout “jamberec.” held in London and attended by Szout dele- gations from thirty-four countrigs, has been a great suecess from whatever angle it may be viewed. Taer> arc 3ul boys from all over the Unlicd Stales in the Ameriean delegation, and, aegerding to the reperts that have beea ecoming across the Americom Seout: have been “~doing things.” It was down on tho pragzam that every delegation should snow something and do semething illustrative of the country from which fha various delega- tions had come and fAllustrative also of| camping out life as emch pariieular: dele- gation had experienced i the back- home country. The American Seouts have been showing the deleations fromi all over Burope somm roal things. Redl Tndian camp life With a few pictaresque| Red Indians rever| thought about. Thay have even resur- rected the Indian war dauce, which ihe good Indians of thls crizhtemed school- house and eow-barn era have almesi fer-| gotten. While the jambéras nmomer closes at the end of this week, tae entire Ameri- can dejegation has nesy invited to visit Faris #d tour the regian of the greal battlefields as guests >f the French gov~ ernment. And them they ar: (o go to Belgium as guests of tie Bzigiza Zove ernment and will prohib'y be 3t Ant- werp at the time of the Ovaprée games. the homecoming vovage i3 not yet cers determined, tho13a Augwet 20 has. tentatively mamed s the date. heen IMMIGRATION TESTS NEED CHANGE How inadequate and in fact absord the literacy test as apnliel te immigra- tion may be was demengiizted in th2 reccnt ease of a brigat Italian girl who Wwas "held fer deporta.ion because she cculd not read Engliss. But in - the fcurieen days that elvied befare she deportation seatence s7as to be carried out she had laarned en: of the Jan- suage to pass the Emgiisa test and sne was allowed to reman. She was frob- ably a desirable imm’gmut anwway, b1t how she was mpade any mere desirable Ly fourteen daws’ vtady of the English language would be aaxd to deterniine. And when it was 3!l over, it was frund that she was the fiances of an Awmerican soldier abroad and did not have ‘te pass the reading test at all. Fundamentals of conraster more value in determ.sicg biiity of an immys-es: and In his it Is apparent that a Mra:ac test falls chort. ‘When we look over the erime wava that seems to bhe sweeping our country and notice that so lazz: a propertion of the criminals are of farelgn extraetion, it 1s apparent that fhe test needed s/ eomething that sn3u.d exclude that class.) We want them m> mwra thaz Furope cces. But 3 literasy fpst may even fa- cilitate their enwance, far it iz true that revolutionists and other Jdsngerousi elements from in: 1 World pass the’ literacy test wi‘n ease, sinre nearly all of them ean read, anl most of :ipem in| several lanzuages. Our gates are wide open to the im- migrant who com’s her> with herest| purposes, intends to otey the laws, and are f who will make some return la honest work and sincerity of purposs for the opportunity which is so freely offered him here. Common sense should he 2p- plied to our immigration laws so that none of this class should be excluded. At the present time the tide of immi- gration is lower than it has ever been in the histery of vhe naticn. Woud not this be a good time o fcrxardthemich needed reform in the conditions of ad- mission so 28 to place no unnecessary obstacle in the way of the really desira- ble but to bar out more effectually those ‘whom no country wants. EDITORIAL NOTES A barrage of soapsuds repelled 2 Den- ver mob, Should this be called 'a clean knockout? Just when it seemed that Villa was going to be good he refuses to keep his promise to surrender. Franklin Roosevelt obediently joins the “Me too” chorus after Candidate Cox on the League of Nations. A man of 93 on Long Island is en- gaged in shingll his house. Youthful spirits are hard curb. Japan’s rushing of new troops te Korea indicates she has ne idea of al- lowing self-determination to be applied there. : —— Raisull is now a fugitive with a few followers in the mountains of Morocco. He might profit by lessous froix Villa in banditry. Ponzi falls back oa ths saying “‘meney talks” when he insists that he is sol- vent as long as he has the cash to meet his liabilities. The man on the corner says; had to follow the fashions we prefer being a bathing beauty to bearnig female at this season. i we should a fur- Theodere Roosevelt is te stump for Harding in/the far west and Kentucky. ‘without protective reservations are all included in the vituperative attack by Candidate Cox ignores the situa- his own party, ignores the fact the democratic party is divided on ol adopting the ‘What sledge hammer blows his father ‘would have been dealing if he had lived to this campaign. crats of [ilahoma appesr to believe | that Senator Gore played. with the wrong|": crowd during the war, especially when he veted agminet? conscriptien. ) the desirs-f A oconsiderable portion of the deme-|; i SOME - EXPERT ADVICE . E”m.m“fi.fflffie“&m“‘wmfih:;: “Whatever you deo,” said the sprightly elderly lady to her young niece, whom she was coaching in metheds warranted to gain popularity, ‘“be careful about your . conversation, For instance, when you go to the dentist, don’t talk to him about teeth; particularly = your own teeth. He may sit ngxt you -at your next dinner party and you don't ‘want him te shudder and shake in painful recollection of the fifteen minutes he spent +rying to show you out in order to let in the following patient while you insisted on relating to him your discov- eries, thoughts and ambitious in regard to your set of molars. - “If there is apything he isn't interested in, is tired to death of, it's teeth. Ask him if heelikes Airedales or doesn’t he think it awful the way dress goods do not wear these days, if you feel the urge for talk coming on. It always does come when one's mouth is full of cotton wads and steel crochet hooks and things. “And don’t start in with your hand- dome young lawyer friend by saying that you’re just dying to hear him try a case in court and when can you come down? You ought to know better about the law of averages than that—because while he may have won his last ten cases with flags flying, just so surely as he lets you in to see him prance up and down like a pouter pigeon and reduce By the flow of his eloquence the judge and jury to ad- miring pulp, that will be the time when he'll get all balled up- on technicalities and the judge will flay him and the op- ponents jeer at him and everybody will laugh—and you sitting there! “Why, he ‘won’ be able to bear-the sight of you from then 'on! He'll want to forget that you and that special law- suit ever existed! My dearest friend some years agp was on the point of be- coming. engaged to a promising young lawyer and she djd that very thing. “qt happened to be the one time when he got stage fright and could get no fur- ther than ‘Your honor and gent—— apnd the mmrderer en trial said he'd be will- ing to call it quits and hang instead of watchtng him struggle., So he married a2 man who conducts an orchestra be- eause he didn’t have to talk at all in carrying on his business. “Y knew a girl once whe was very mach interested in a young man in the gtock and bond business and she thought she’d make a large hit by saying she was so interested in stoeks and things an dplease wouldn't he tell her abeut them? He had been "adding up thousands of figures that day, every one of which ended in different fractions, and he had slammed down his desk cover viciously with the resolve to go out and hoe potatoes for.a living the rest of his tife. “The ,mere thought of stocks gave him that sinking feeling. Why should a girl as pretty as this one like stocks and bonds? Heavens—think of having a wife who would greet. ome feverishly with demands to know all about the market and who could uead a ticker tape! And he had once thought she was really rather fascinating and attrac- tive! Besides, what was there to tell ber about stocks except that they went up and down? And who cared after such 2 day as he had gpent? So he said to her that somebody seemed to be beckon- ing to him out in the hall and he got away and spent the rest of his time with 3 silly Jittle wise thing, with eye- lashes and a giggle, and he felt that at last he had found 2 real womanly wo- man! “And if you are at a cafe dinner or supper don’t, for the life of you, inter- twine your fingers, elbows on table, and, resting your girlish chin upon your hands, gaze deeply into the unfortunate man’s eyes and tell him that you under- stand him perfectly. No man wants to be understood perfectly—it gives him the horrors to think of it. He thay want you to admire him with awe and wonder and mystification, but if there is anything he dislikes extremely it is to 1 be understood, in spite of popular opin- ion. “And it makes him nervous being stared at limpidly like that. He doesn’t know what to do with his hands or where to gaze. He wishes you would eat your perfectly good, expensive food. And the next time he takes a girl out he hunts up 2 matter of fact one who likes to Jaugh more than to talk and hasn't long, beautiful hands that she is ebliged to_ display.” “My goodness!" rebelled the pretty niece, ¢ “Why, there isn’'t anything left to talk to a man about! Not-a thing!" “There doesn't have to be” said the sprightly elderly - lady with finality. “You let them do the talking—and you'il have 'em lined up five deep outside your door "—Exchange. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR World Revolution TImpossible. Mr. Editor: This world revolution, of ‘wkich ail the malcontents dream and of which Nikolai Lenine proposes to make himself the prophet, is of course ap im- possibility. It cannot command the co- hesion that revolutions always reyuire. 1t is too big to be strong. It eould suc- ceed only if madness were more valid than sense. But that does not at all prevent the madmen of every country from talking wildly about it, or from rushing to embrace tt. The world has seen fit not to accept the doctrine vol- untarily. Very weil, then~—the world shall be forced to aecept it. It will be done by calling “a general strike of all mankind.” In 1917 strikers overthrew the Russian empire, the largest nation on earth, ex- cept China. The next largest country is the United States, and here organized strikers have been planning widespread disturbances, In Russia the seizure of the government by strikers was made possible by the weakness and the abdica- tion ‘of the eczar, the inefficiency of the provisional government which succeeded him, and the self-abasement of the Rus- sian congress, that is, the duma. The bolshevists got control at Petrozrad only ifter the Russian army had been large'y broken up or uemora.ized and the duma silenced. Strikers who would Russian- ize America cou'd not prevent our hav- ing always a chief executive. Unlike the czar, each president and each vice president of the United States has a designated successor to rep’ace him im- mediately, if necessary. Nor by any means whatever could strikers impair our military power. All that remains to Russianize is congress. Could the or- ganizers of strikes silence the house of representatives or the senate? Never, For eight months the constant threat of the Ruasian revolutionists was a general railway strike, which they did not re- sort te until just before the partisans of Lenine and Trotzky took possession of Petrograd in November, 1917. Their emulators in America started off with & railway strike which was nipped in the bud. ‘There cannot be a general strike of all mankind. The reason is that all man- kind loves life more than death. Once the mechanism of this world ceases its daily operation, everyone will starve. There is abont thi= something suggestive ~f the airplane, which has to keep mov- ing or come g down. A world- wide general strike would ruip its own participants quite as surely as it would Tuin anyone eise. We doubt that any sufficient member of people will be S0 blind to that obvious fact as to require to have it proved to them by experiment. Too much virtue is being read into the notion of strikes. They have proved very useful and _effective in certain cases; and the headlong assumption is that if they can work in small areas with effect, they can also work in world- wide areas with even greater effect. That is no more true than the assertion that because a little of some potent drug, wisely administered, is found to be ben- eficial, an overdose must be even more selves of what they demand, it is assert- ed that if many million men, scattered all over the earth, can bring themselves simultaneously to stop work they can do anything they choose, no matter how ! absurd it is. Society is all wrong as at present arranged, we are told. Some people are on top and others are under- neath. Let us reverse the scale, and put the present top stratum on the bottom! In short, let us Go by violent artifice what is not the natural thing. For be it perfectly well understood, the revolu- tionists do not at all suggest that there shall be no one on top and no one on the bottom. Oh, no! Domination will continue ; but it will be a different domi- neer. The so-called “proletariate” will compel acceptance of jtself as sole boss, by reason of its might rather than by promise of its proving beneficial. On that score the proletariate does not make any idle elaims. It merely feels its oats and assumes that it is big enough to do the thing, whether logically it ought to or not. Lenine has made no secret of his hopes. He has advised a world-wide unrest and his apostles of the Red Cravat have gone forth to preach this gospsl unto all the peoples. Kick up a simultaneous d turbance everywhere; that is the short and simple first eommandment. Out of this is supposed to come a world ruled not by the wise but by the ignorant, not bX the fit but bw the strong, not by the humane but by.the brutal. TLet us get back to the ‘caveman! Civilization is a mistake. Evolution has been working backwards. THe natural arrangements of God are not o near perfection as the artificial ones of Lenine. The odd thing is to find so many rapt enthusiasts list- ening to this lunacy as if it were from the sayings of Seneca, and holding sol- emn parlor gatherings to listen to the preachment of this new social doctrine, which probably enthrails as much by its delicious hérrors as it does by anything fiea S EUGEN? BERTRAM WILLARD. Chelsea, Mass. T e S o T ATy FACTS REGARDING THE @ CARE OF THE BABY By U. 8, Public Health Serviee. First Aid and Home Remedies Headache—Find out and treat cause. Headache may be due to constipation, indigestion,” eye strain, excitement, fa- tigue, or over-heating. Apply cold cloth to forehead and back of neck. Inhale camphor, menthol, ammonia or smelling salts. Avoid headache remedies.. They are exceedingly dangerous for children, Holding the Breath— Occurs after great excitement, crying or expesure to cold air. Dash cold water in face. If frequent, consult physician. Night Terrors—Probably caused by in- digeggion and constipation. Give the ci®i®a careful diet, light evening meal, healthy outdoor life, aveiding excitement. If continued or frequent consult physi- cian. Examine for enlarged tonsils, ade- noids, decayed teeth, genital adhesions, or_tuberculosis. Poisons Swallowed—Better prevented than cured. Never put any poison where a child may possibly get into it. Learn the antidote for the commoner forms of poisoning, or keep a table of poisons and remedies. Always send for a doctor promptly, advising him the poison tak- en so he may come prepared. Insect Stings—Remove tha sting and apply spirits of camphor, ammonia or wet baking soda. Snake Bites—The wound must be made to bleed freely and poison sucked out. If a poisonous snake, tie a cord above wound td stop progress of the blood, and keep poison out of general circulation. Send for a doctor. Sunburn—Prevent as much as possible by shade and by protecting the skin with cold wream before taking the child into the sun or wind. Avoid use of water on a sunburna. Apply sweet cream, al- B N N T T i S i R e, Baby Specialists. Physicians wao specialize on Infant ailments you kmow. All " Physicians understand Infant troubles: all Physicians treat them. It is his profession, his-duty, to know human ills from the Stork t0 the Great Beyond. i But in serious cases he calls in the Specialist. Why? He knows as every Mother knows, or ought to know, that "FEAT there are ‘ment, special remedies. Baby is just & mond lotion or cold eream. & Sore Throat—Indicated in an"infant by difficulty and pain on swallowing. Safest to call a physician. An older child may gargle the throat or have it sprayed with a mild antiseptic solution, such as one- fourth teaspoonful of baking seda ane table salt to one cup of warm water. Sterilizs drinking-cup and tableware used by child with sore throat to prevent spreading of infection. FOREIGN TRADE IN 1920 AND 1924 It is now possible, with the complete figures of the total trade of the United States in the fiscal year 1920, to com- pare the trade of the first fiscal year following the war with that of the last fiscal year preceding the war. These figures, says The National City Bank of New York, which presents this analysis of the foreign trade at the present time, compared with that of the fiscal year 1914 which ended just before the out- break of the war, indicate tremendous grins, though it must be remembered that in nearly all cases a considerable part of the gains are due to higher prices. In’practically all instances, how™ ever, there is a large advance in the quantity of the merchandise both im- ported and exported. Imports as a Wwhole, adds the Bank's statement, which stand at $5,239,000,- 000 for the fiscal year 1920 show an increase of 177 percent over the fiscal year 1914, when they were $1,884,000,- 000. Exports, which stand at $8,111,- 000,000, show an increase of 243 per- cent over 1914, when they stoed at $2,- 365,000,000, Of domestic exports only, excluding the foreign merchandise re-ex ported, the total stands in 1920 at $7- 950,000,000, or 241 per cent over 1914, when the total was $2,330,000,000. Re- exportation of foreign merchandise shows large gains, the total for 1920 standing at $160,000,000 against $35,000,000 in 1914, Manufacturing material showed the largest increase on the import side, and| focd and manufactures the big increases on the export side. The value of the raw manufacturing material imported jumped from $634,000 000 in 1914 to $2.- 160,000,000 in 1920, an increase of 241 percent. This increase occurred in many lines of articles, but especially in india rubber, raw silk, raw cotton, wool, hides and skin and tin. Of the 10 principal manufacturing artieles imported of a character which can be reduced to a umi- form basis of pounds, namely, cotton wool, silk, fibers rubber, hides and skins, tobacco, tin, copper, and gums, the quantity, measured in pounds, increased a little less that 50 per cent when com- paring the 1920 imperts with those of 1914, while the total value of the same articles increaed to a much gredter ex- tent. These increases in manufacturing ma- terial are in many ea extremely larg and illustrative of the gr ty of the manufacturing indust the country. Raw cotton, for im- of example, ported in 1920 shows a total of slightly | more than 340 million pounds against 123 million pounds in 1914; wool shews a total for 1920 of apyroximately 420! million pounds against 238 million 1914, and raw silk despite the Wry high prices of 1920, which ‘are three times as much as in 1914, aggregated in the fiscal year 1920 46 million pounds, stated in round terms, against 29 mil- lion in 1914. while the unexampled de- mand of the people of the United States for silk and silk goods are evidenced by the fact that the sum paid for raw si imported in 1920 was in round terms $430,0,000 against $98.000,000 in 1914, Of india rubber, the increase in quan- tity was equally’ startling, the total Dandruff Soon > Ruins The Hair Girls—if you want plenty of thick, beautiful, glossy, silky hair, do by ail means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you don’t. It doesn’t do much good to try to brush or wash it out. The only sure way to get rid of dandroff is to dis- solve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liquid arvom; apply it at night when retiring; - use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. ¥ By merning, most if not all, of your dandruft will be gone, and three or four more applications will completely dissslve and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop, and your hair will look and feel & hundred times better. You can get lquid arvon at any drug store. It is imex- pensive and four ounces is all yeu will need, no matter how much dandruff :'o!u have. This simple remedy mever ails. quantity imperted in the fiscai year 1920 having been considerably over 609 mil- lion pounds against 132 million pemnds in 1914, this increase being largely due to the demand for use in conjjumetion with the aulomiobile industry, though. it is proper to add that exports of rubber Lol 1920. mendous increase in our demand wpon foreign countries, the quantity imported Hides and skins also show a tre- in the fiscal year 1920 amounting to about 800 million pounds against enly 561 million in 1914, while the value of the 1820 $mports of this class we in round terms $37,000,000 against $130,- 000,000 in 1914 On the export side the startling chamges occur in manufactures and foodstuffs. Manufactures ready for use show a tetal of exports amounting to approximately $2,850,000,000 against $725,000,000 in 1914, being nearly four times as mueh in value in 1920 as in the year before the war. To what extent this enormous in- creasa is due to higher prices cannet bs closely determined though a comparison of the export figures of 1920 with these of 1914 show very large increases in quantities in all of the important arti- cles in wwhich quantitics are showa in the official reports of exports. Catton cloths, for example, show a total of abeut 375 millioon yards exported against 415 million in 1914; tin plates 450 milion hounds against 106 million 1814 ; sheets and plates of iron and steel 2,380, 000,000 pounds against 834 millien in 1914, and boots and shoes 20 million pairs in 1920 against 9,908,000 pears in 1914, TFoodstuffs also show very large increases.in total values of experts, ad- vancing from a little less than $500,000 - 000 in 1914 te over $2,000000,009 in 1920, “hT e If exchange goes a bit lower it may be found to be more convenient to deal in German marks by the liter.—Iadian- apolis News It is the easiest thing in the werld to stir up trouble. All you have te do it tell the truth at all times, ALL SODAS AND ICE CREAM 5¢ BELOW THE REGULAR PRICE. The Candy business during drops off a little, and becaus baby needing special treat- _ Can & Mother be less thoughtful? Can a Motner try to relieve Baby with & remedy that she would use for herself? Ask yourself; and answer honestly! . Always remember that Baby is just a baby, And remembering this you ‘will remember that Fletcher's Castoria is made especially for Infants and Children. At 1o ) 5DosES f\(\(‘ 2 Children PPt e public than has Fletcher’s at all times—and truthfully—for o the honest truth-telling advertiser that beat the hare, « ' Mothers everywhere, and thei smiles to their little-one, xg «* = for an; of value. . One might wpudyl?::‘io value. * So . _Fletchor and a copy of you that you may MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLETTHAT1S A GENUINE C "The Fale and the Trac g by the use of large space, the expenditure of huge sums The big eplurg, the misleading claims may win for a time, islike the old story of the There are substitutes and imitations as ASTO : Bearg, the_Signature of Cry For placed on the market, have put in your home, perhaps, many arficles that today have been discarded, as you will readily admit. you recall anythin th!:ia has mere modestly appealed to the modest in all its claims, pleadin ur babies ? s “ but tortoise ir danghters, now mothers, speak frankly, glowingly, enthusiastically in praise of Fletcher’s Castori: Spealk of It lovingly &5 & friead that hag brog Hy ] Iulhbm:‘m gonfott, cheer and 8 23 theré are fof the diamond, almost say that that'which is not fl“y‘o;‘g::e hflthahflmn ture of Chas. H. wrapper constantly before guard against the false and the untrue, ROUND EVERY BOTTLE OF FLETCHER'S CASTORIA RIA Awways cent. from regular prices. FEW OF THE SPECIALS Salt Water Taffey Bitter Sweet Vanilla Bitter Sweet Peppermints Assorted Chocolates, made by the Mirror Storeof N. Y......... 55¢| Sale Only, Ib........ 28¢c FRESH COCOANUT CAKES, Dozen............ 33¢c S. F. PETERSON, Inc. 132 MAIN STREET CANDY SALE For Saturday, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Y fresh, and our working force busy, we are having this sale. Everything in the store reduced from 20 to 30 per PRICES ON ICE CREAM AND SODAS REDUCED DURING THIS SALE ONLY the warm weather usually e we wish to keep our stock Cocoanut Kisses, dipped in chocolate, Ib. ...... 65¢ Home-Made Fudge Toasted Marshmallows A mixture of Hard Candies, For This VSON u,

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