Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 21, 1920, Page 4

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dlerwich gnllm’ ' and @ouficd i24 YEARS OLD " Butarigtion pries 120 8 wesk: Ste a meuts; $8.00 war. Entered & g Norwisd, E"'flfl o o Telestzae Cafta Sulietin Susiness Ofles 453 Bullstin Kdiioeial Tooms -ula-nboq-ll-le Witmantie OFics ©3 Chugen Sb Telephena 105 Norwieh, Saturday, Aug. 21, 1920, MEMOER GF THE ASSOCIATED PRERS, CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING AUG. 14th, 1920 10,924 PROMISES TO END AUTOCRACY For several years from an enlarging we have suffered| egotism that bas grown to an aut in the White House. Minds that did not run along with his had to give way to President Wilgon's super-wisdom and one resig- ration after another followed in the cab- in When ambition led Mr. Wilson overseas it was the same spirit that took him alone into the peace confer- ence with his fourteen paints while a large and expensive commission of experts who were supposed to be advisors sat coooling their heels in the ante-rooms, and Secretary of State Lan- sing had to make the humiliating con- knew very little of the ons that were carried on. The Dludgeon of the president’s obsession personal government was applied to senate the attempt to secure a of the Wilson-made treaty is refreshing to hear Senator the republican candidate for an end to autocracy when he is elected people are looking for 1l vote for. The con- uthority of the senate is o to it and not shorn from it. will be governed, just as in- democracy, by the wisdom instead of by the super- tended in a n demands a change and t demand ef- hey will cast in the But they will not do if for Governor Cox, the demo- candidate, who affirms that ent Wilton has promised I 1l perform” League ‘of Nations, Article X and all. The leagf® takes precedence over all other issues of the campaign only because its possibilitics for evil to Amer- so prodigious. If it were whol- ted the administration of the ome would yield suf- ce to decide any citizen's course. The wholesale extravagance, the appalling inefiiciency, the sectional favoritism as illustrated by southern cotton and sugar, the damage done to business by official meddling and experi- would be a to turn the voters st the democratic party. league is not the whole thing. iring mistakes at home should not forgotten. The CONCILIATION AT LEISURE r two days of conference a strike e anthracite fields has been set- the conciliators of the federal of Jabor. The agreement is satisfactory to both miners operators, which is a pleasing out- the difficulty. But the strike in progress for five weeks wilh its waste of time and its curtailmen+ of coal production at a time when it is o much needed. If all that was needed for a settlement was a two day con! ence, the question I8 why this measure could not have been taken sovacr by the federal board. The suspicion is fosteved that the government conciliators are like toc many others at Washington in ihat they slow to get moving, hesitating about ng a hand in these clasaes, in- t about the losses to the country they make up their minis to Go by hile that for which they were appomted. SERVICE TO BALANCE WAGT A recent declaration by the American Federation of Laber that it will not tol- te a reduction of wages brings up the estion of product in propartioa to wage. The present relatior. of product to ®age is well illustrated in the build- ing trades. For instanee, (ko bricklay- =rs in large cities limiz a day's work to § bricks for whaich .nev receive the day’s wage of $10. Befure th> war the average day's wo 150) bricks and the average day’s wase $5. Taday it s two eents t> Juv n brick as one-third cert bafore the war. r words, the cost of layinz bricks in six vears 500 per cent.. the buil¥ng trades and s the same per cert. of increase a $4.000 house would tfoday sost $20,000. There ‘s nc suzh wage value in this produect. There wou!d not be full value if 1,500 bricks a day were 12id. What is true «f the buildiag trades is more or less true in transpor- tation and in manufatwring of every product. This may be deniel lut fig- ures do not sustain denial. In many in- dustrial processes it now takes five men te do werk that was formerly done by two men, and In tranportation five men to do what three men used to do. Costs in tramsportation and produc- tion have been constantly increasing, gradually bringing prices to where compeiition abroad will ber impossible and domestic consumption doubtful. Be- tween price and value there is not rea- sonzble proportion and wage is the prin- sipal factor in price. Consider the matter viewpoint one may, it all comes down tp this—if labor will not tolerate wage reduction it has to produce more for wage demanded. There is no alterna- tive to this proposition. Capital has not found enme. The constming public will not try to find one, simply delaying purchase untll price more nearly rep- resents value. This is illustrated by the present experience of a large manufac- turer of men’s shirts. He has been com- pelled by wage cost to increase the price of shirts from $2.50 and $3 to $5.50 and $7 and finds that he cannot sell them at the latter prices. He frankly states that the shirts are not worth tha money, and does not blame men for not buying obtained. them &t that price. Consequently he|a from whatever | to reduce wage cost by‘ incnnlnqt ‘production per capila of em- ployes, .and says tp: it,lh i to do 50, -his lfi lrgl will wear aid 8 ve 2id G"’N Refare i Qrice 0 greatly exceeding values ,E&“ cause uuxtofeelmnmywsanob- High wages may remain trdefinitely, but they will be the reward of high ef ficiency. This and this only will bring present nflm‘gpwn to the limitations of consumption home, itive conditions in theael‘e:):n marlets thereby preyenting purchase . abroad when there is so little sale that partation ‘at a profit is vos is as much'a matter of peeeui as it *is to capital, especijWy iif lahor would retain X_L! high wagz. POLISH SUCCES3ES In the defemse of their capiial the Poles are showing the Spirit of the French at Verdun. With their backs to the wall they have fought in the full spirit of the ‘French siogaa, “They shall not pass.” While retrea: of fae soviet army seems to have assumad much proportions of a rout at mumerous| points, it would be rash to econclude thaf the danger to Wadfaw has passed. Lenine and Trotzky may * still ‘muvster hordes of soldiers to throw against Gen- eral Pilsudki's army. For the present at least heartening successes are attend- ing the Poiish arms and one graat ad- vantage that the Polish army possesses is in its superior equipmeat. They are now using airplanes, tanks and big guns, amd in all these arms thay zare bging rapidly strengthened. In the matter of transpo:*. too, the advantage is all with the cefanders of Warsaw. They are close "o thair hase from which they draw bo.h foodi and ammunjtion, while the bolsheviks are forced to rely on a long e of com- munications that runs through a desti- tute country. The effect of a series of serious reverses on the bolsheviks is cer- }tain to be disastrous, net oply from tue! military, but from the civil point of, view. The soldiers have been stimulated by the promise of loot and the people have been told that with @ victory over foreign foes. evervihing would seon be right at home. Such a gpvernment 28 that of Russia can not afford to fail. Nothing could so well please Ameri- cans as to haye the boisheviki shown up as a disorganized mass of ignorant and degraded fighters under the lash of a few iternationalist gamblers, with the ideals of civilization' a@s the stake. The bolsheyist leaders are fighting for their own political lives, and, perhaps, their physical existence as well, and they are seekipg in every way to gain capital at home by their adventures outside the borders of Russia. FOLLOWING OUR BAD EXAMPLE It has been the proud boast of Britons that Canada, a newer country than the United States. with the advantage of British law, was able ta get glong with- out lynch law. Almost every week sees a lynching or an attempt to lynch some- body somewhere in the great American Republie. But that our example shonld have its wretched effect on neighbors oyer the Canada border is not a matter of won- derment to people who think. The Do- minion’s record came close to being broken this week. at St. Gatharines, On- tario, about thirty miles from the New York line. A mob stormed the town jail and set fire to it. The mobsters got the prisoner they were after and strung a rope to hang him with. But he was a former soldier, and after he had pleaded his cause, cdoler spirits pre- vailed and he was returned to police custody. A jail .a ruins is all that re- mains of the incident. What will hap- pen later to the rioters we do not know, but if they are not adeguately* punished, the inauguration of lynch law in Cap- ada ‘may be predicated on official weak- ness. ‘We should be sorry to see that. Cana- da might well follow our example in some things. This is one on which she should keep as far away from it as pos- sible. EDITORIAL NOTES The man on the corner says: Many| farmers will soon say goodbye to eme of their most prefiiable crops, the sum- mer boarder. Los Angeles is bound to keep ahead of San Francisco. The citizens have started a campaign to anmex several ad- joining communities. Shall we have to add mirrors to the voting booths? German ships trying to load English port were mobbed, It soop to let bygones be bygones, the Germans would like to have that way. in an is too though it Ponzi has had a big run in the head- line position. Now he is giving his pat- rons a run for their money. Tn a California city burglars cracked the police safe and made off with $25,- 000. They'l be after ie city hall next. The bolshevik plan for the conquest of the world has experienced at least a temporary setback at Warsaw, Secretary Baker tells us nothing new when he acknowledges that Article X was the Wilson idea. O RO, - e, When Babe Ruth's home runs begin to kill off fans as well as break reeords it is no time for men with weak hearts to attend games where the champion slug- ger is to perform. “We don’t have to vete, do we?” | queried one woman in tones of dismay when she heard - of the action ' of the Tennessee legislature. Bachelor candidates of the , future will have to conciliate thie old maid vote. New York's rat blll is $35,000,000 a year. Luxuries come high but the big city must have them regardless of cost. In preparing to defend themselves at the Rhine, France shows little faith that Poland can defend itself and that a German-boishevik alliance''is -not an impossibility. ‘When the Mexican bandits hear about that bottle of cognac which Villa drank they will probably come in out of the brush and surrender their arms. compet-| IBE. Probably no existing modern tfl.\!flpfl Hhag passed through more evohfll‘.En! than the theatre.* If:there were n e real call in the nature of man for the dra- matic the theatre would not have 'sul vived ail these changes. Fronf the d of Aristotle down the long distance to the eighteenth century the drama was characterized as a form of poetry, be- cause originally ‘all plays were written in verse. No other form of expression was deemed admissible for dramatic fed) . The conception of dramatic art was considerably enlarged after prose plays forced themselves upon the recognition of the critics, but it.continued to be regard- éd as a branch -of literature. In the early part of the last century it was thought that any man without value as a writer.could be 2 good dramatist. By the use of prose the dramatist became a play- wright, not a play-writer. Bu tsomehow, he succeeded, and literary critics, in or- der to seek revenge, ceased to regard the modern play as a work of art. But'the theatre still lives and under the possi- bilities.of the motion picture has a great future. TUnusual notice of late has been called to serious outbreaks in our penal insti- tutions. To some extent the same has been true of charitable and humane in- stitutions. In these institutions the per- sons dealt with are either afilicted with disease or criminality. That ineans of course that they are in an abnormal condition and are easily and oftentimes. unreasonybly dissatisfied. That outbreaks against authority &hould now and then occur is hardly surprising. As there are few things more coveted than personal liberty, we can umderstand why lunatics and particularly criminals should take great chances in dashing for freedom. ‘While eyery fair minded person is ready to admit that strict- discipline must be maintained in all ‘public institutions, at the same time we must realize that even criminals have rights, and every serious riot ought to be rigidly investigated and the managers of all such institutions must see clearly that the public will not stand any unjust and eruel treatment. For a good many years there has been a controversy in regard to meat as a diet, and especially red meat. Quite naturally that discussion is revived dur- ing the brief period in which fresh gar- den vegetables hold sway. That red meats have an unfortunate connection with rheumatic troubles has passed the speculative stage. The epicure tells us it is hard to provide and cook so simple and clean a diet as will not offend the imag- inaiion. Few people relish the compound odors of the ordinary chen, especially the dew of youth has passed. Mark Twain nnght h l)un odd, but not en aloft and Is it not somewhat of all the nu- merous living forms of flesh there are so few that we consent to eat? It is certainly a fact t savage tribes have left ofi/r.u ng one another just in pro- portion as thev have come into contact with civilization. Possibly we, too, shall leave off eating animals, s: v as we become more It is not the quantity of food one eats that makes the sensualist, but the quali- ty of his appetite. The man of refined taste and delicate moral fibre who dis- tinguishes the tre#® savor of his food can never be a®glutton. Epicurus has beén ridiculed these many centuries, as I think very unjustly. as a dainty and finical eater, because of the emphasis he puts on the cultivation of taste in eating. Eating was doubtless designed by nature to be one of our great functional pleasures and that end can be reached only by realizing the vast difference in the taste of the things we eat. The cultivated eater is entirely justified in cutting out of his bill of fare the thousand edibles that fail to come up to his standard of taste. Some men boast—as though it were an honor— that they eat everything that is set be- fore them and soy nothing; hogs dothe same. but they don’'t boast about it. It is not the quantity nor the quality of the food that goes into a man’s mouth that defiles him, but his lack of diserimina- tion; his savage devotion to incre ani- mal instinet. Thoreau, in one of his essays, tells us that “opr whole life is startlingly moral.” He probably bases his statement on the fact that there is no compromise between good and eyil. Things that are radically opposed by Nature and grace can never be united; like o0il and water, they refuse to mingle. There is never an instant's truce hetween virtue and vice. Goodns and the whole large world of which it is representative is the only real investment that never fails and which repays all ef- fort put forth for its possession. Good- ness, moralit) virtue and all other kin- dred principles are the strings of the harp whose music sounds around the world and thrills us with its harmony. All opposed fo this must be discord, be- cause it iz injustice and wrong. These arc j. % . strident notes that dis. turb {lie me... crder. The music of the spheres' is interpreted to us only through the moral sense. It was Plato who sald “we are changed into the image of what delights us most.” In other words, every man is the archi- tect of his own life; he gis the sculptor who carves the human temple according to his own liking. We can see some men in the houses they build; they display their taste, their ability and their wo manship in what they do. If a man is vain and showy Dby nature, vanity and pretense will be seen in the house he builds. The model he works upon is the expression of the dominating ideals of his life. Not only can we see the trend of a man’s life in what he builds, we can also see his.character in his face. It used to be said of A. T. Stewart—once a New York merchant—that he had looked so long at dollars that his face resembled a die in the U. 8. mint. We can see dis- sipation as well as sobrigty in men’s faces. We can certainy’ see patience, calmness and strength in the face of ‘Washington. What a young man s can be seen in his face. Plato was right, “we are changed into the likeness of what delights us most.” It is no easy thing to eradicate evil after it has once settled, whether in the heart of man or in the heart of society. ‘We could do much better with it than we do if we went at.it right. We are so apt to hack away at the branches of evil and leave its roots undisturbed. If the poison of cancer is in one's blood something more heroic is needed than rubbing ol oil on the skin. The surgeon’s knife may not be acceptable but it is demand- ed. If some great social ill, like can- cer, is eating at the life of a nation, it must be exterminated root and branch. To get evil out of a man’s heart you musti purify the heart; the bad must be re- placed by the good. We may legislate till doomsday against national ills with- out striking results unless righteousness at the same time shall be cultivated. Let us be thankful that some things do not change, and among them is the ethics of stewardship. The Man of Nazareth settled that question forever when he ex- plained who a man’s’ brother is. What- ever attitude parliaments and congress may take toward the needy, they can never legislate the Parable of the Good Samaritan out of existence. The more intelligent part of our people are feeling that strong, great-hearted TUncle Sam ought to play the part of big brother to suffering Armenia by ending the national Chairman Hays should have no diffi-| existence of the “unspeakable Turk.” culty in catching the drflt of quemor Holcomb's letter. ; ST IR 1) e Peevxsh New York fans filed the dia- mond With botles that droye the Bos- tou players to the’cover of their dug- out. This rough stuff is nét. included in the rules of fhe mational game. Our ruling passions are apt to remain with us till the end. The last meovement mule attempts is a kick. —_— Panbury.—Seventy-nine opcratinns. 38 of which were classed as “major,” were rformed at the Danbury hospital during uly. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA 1 told her to thinkthing . whigh would tle time to “Gee, find to Woodlawn, own pocket row@. “Well, now,” the ing. mere 9:30 & m., bridee. 8. take things count five ting on the the exposed step.” Took !" cloth. ‘See wouldn't inside twisted up trainer with the machine jerked loose clean with all th molding at sighed and 1y challenge Dust think women should work mope than ighteen hours 2 day ,and isn’t it fierece the things. they 2 “carelessly putting into “And when they aren’t really doing ’em they are worrying about how they are going to do what comes next.” “that is warranted to make - housekeep- she should bé able by a simple twist of the wrist to turn off a day's toil by free and undefiled to be filled in with shoppis I thin] but that wemen is working by actual hours a day more than she ever -did before, er little home helpers.” “Since she got the new refrigerator with zn inside like a ¢hina cup without crack or crevice, sist polisning it off daily. miringly into its sanitary Interior while she will say, giving its porce- lain face another loving dab with a wet that tried to light on that surface would just about slip and crack its skull, i ad “Then she has to put everything back it and meanwhile passeth onward. rattletrap refrigerator, most scornful, “As for the vacuum cleaner—well, T have become home nights and findning Imogene all happened she said she had been sitting there since 3 o'clock hecause if she stir- red she would jerk something loose on her predicament being so spots eve in all our lives had been cleaned before. That is, ex-| his gallant cept at housecleaning time. when all sorts of disagreeable ahd highly unnec- essary, to my mind, events occur. “For instance, couldnt you be per-|ery in fectly happy in a house knowing that} McGonigal, the top ledges of the windows and fold- ing doors probably had a quarter of an inch of dust on ’'em, uttely safe and| Won, undisturbed where it lay unle: one climbed up on a ladder with a tele- scope to view it? And T was, her new vace that woman si resist showing off. clean the wall attend to that, in the carvings and fretwork the piano front, that everybody has be- 'IMOGENE'S BUSY HOURS Beenermhlw Mrflvu!@'&!dflwmm“ ark man, “and so{as triumphant though she had imvented the machine instead of being merely an innocent by- mgldl bid fair to e well known dodo, up. to me to provide ;.u conveniences assits ‘flg toil ag:n:tg’sou:ohumble ahead and buy Bive i I redlly- do not stander: herself. lady’s 1 said so.” from his the pencil he had just bor- asked his friend 2 has most everything ,Park man went .on, { washer—' d’s play, and theoretieally | fretfully. my leaying the rest of the day or other important maybe if she didn’t so seriouslyit might be well, —Exchange. managing all her clev-| Mr. Editor: she simply can’t re- 1 find her sit- floor before it, gazing ad- ice does a melting quick- | fect how it shines! - Any gem now the morning with the old. Imogent was on casual terms. Now, 1 Reriment , Guards, perfectly used te coming in its coils like her pets. a snake The first time it Uhlans. Thi that had no business to be and she must have got into interested in that c. tionality. Of course you could! and so was Imogene, but e snakelike attachments on | The “Things like box springs, that have no business expecting to be dusted, ay- way, just fi““ in. their cleanliness. “She’s gof a wuhm; ™aehi ironer and she is 80 jealous of the wash- bosing the job continually and inabout a minute she will haye attained her purpose—the laundress will get mad and leave -and then Imogene can play with the laundry equipment to heart’s gontent—onl. make me hang out the glothes, I'll—" “Yowll hang 'em eut,” the Woodlawn man cheerfully. you oughta see our new electric dish- “Oh, heck!” said the Hyde park man preference is for the vou work your fingers to the bone and let it go at that. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR As to Coercing Ireland. Judging by the remartks made by people, Wi seem to be poorly posted on Ireland & popular opinion land left lingland) were made for Ireland right whel his new method of My knowledge of Irish participation in the world war goes only from the be- ginning to early in 1916. The British Ex- peditionary Forces, which left for ¥rance in the early part of August, 1914, con- tained regular battalions of all the Irish regiments, namely. Irish Guards, Royal Irish Regiment, liers, Royal Irish Rifies, Royal Irish|S Fusiliers, Connaught Rangers, Lewister Royal Royal Dublin Fusiliers, Fourth Dragou Sixtl Drageons, Fifth Lanciers and Bighth Hussars. troops which fought d¢he battle of Mons. n Irish soldier Qf goons, fired the first ghot of the B. E. F., when he killed = German officer of ihe was on August 22, 1914, On the following day the grit of Ireland’s fighting_men was shown when M. J. Dease was killed while holding| a canal bridge with a machine gun after his men were all killed or wounded. His i parents received the Victoria Cross for tion. of the English service to receive the V. It is interesting here to npote that the first Medal of Honor, awarded for bra in our own forces went to Private Whose name tells hit It might also be said that up to the opening of 1916, in proportion to their papulation, four Victoria Crosses to England’s one. The facts you will not read ‘n despatch- es as England didn't care to praise the efforts of her Irish ailjes. papers all printed accounts uf the Australian troops at Gallipoli and yet, when she finishes a8 ipe gad an that she hovers around her trieg little ¥ it she to supplemented “Say, “but beyead simple life, You have more time.” d lrish aflairs, the eems {0 that Ire- tat When the demands pression into ef- Royal Inniskilling Fu- Munster Fusiliers, | & They were the e 4th Irish Dra-|t Lt. He was the first man t] na-| the Irish had For example: nlqn-wm is De Velera's visit to Amari- 91 and they dld‘their bit towards makm' the world safe for democrae) to tirow off Bngland's rzh He asks diplomatic recogmition ef th'm ;mbl\c and mat sn army to free Rre- “Tm wiling to work 2 pa-| 2ol tent pencil sharpener, in America’ and especially Mn(hus Irish at Chancellorsville, When Burnsid dered them they charged six times anl Jost three- fourths of their cm?des. New York was part of as the 185th Infantry they their 3,000 men in thig Wer at gome period in their lives wighed to some tangible and public manner. Like see seme great sign in the heavens er some other startiing manifestation to convince us of God's presence and of His readiness to answer prayer. lished for us by any extraneous evi- dence. it for ourselves. Sler to a spiritual but very tangible test every day. The measure of our indi- vidual trial and triumph will be found does prayer or does it net keep us humble? our minds from evil thoughts and our hearts purg? save us from sin? not draw us nearer to Ged, and to prayer will always call down blessings from Heaven both on him who prays and on thse for whom he prays. ér always triumphs when it tried. Most of what is called praver fails because it ig not Ninety-nine prayers out of every hun- dred, at a very law estimate, if tested the cgeam of his army. Capt. the New k‘ in at 8 you wil can her duty a;iow mmbflon as d 6 8 mg wder nd troops said “Their ever read of in haoks. “ these extracts from jetters it lem Aveh St Im-mi aid not ehirk " hvrsai in g of uu she had over 134.000 in service on the zgm- ail volunteers nnd Dhese vn'p m woporncn to population would re regent a voluateer iirce of over 6,&. :gl here in Ameriea. ive, no “&?:3.“'%;5 i p?“\c’ to where n tum Another thing that tion gver 87 uhmcm h:x;r :nu Tris! eiding us llop: fumes, , P ‘l&li new s.i'fi:'dfi»:?" | difacat those n ll too m’evunt to Write new and hall \! oRee. Sej no mail goupon . below. I have heard this. great pa- riot speak and have been honared by be- | wed to shake his hand ard I FREE TRIAL COUFON ~ ASTHMA CO, . Room 9 Nh.sara and Hudson Strests, mmo. NY. Send free trial of your methqd to: take the stone wall “fl e S '1'2?100 of I hope I have not detracted any glory from other deserving trogps as this is not my intention. T merely wish to plaee few facts before the public so when ?hl Irish protest against English oppres- sion (a5 we aid F1176), thelr Tight 10 do so will not be questioned 1. Confidence in God's personal love to us and eare for us. This appears in the form of address “Our Father.” 2. Consciousness of our unity with all @hrist's diseiples and a desire to share our prayers With them—“Our er.” 3‘.i A supreme desire for the ad- vangement of God's glory, for the es- tablishment of His Kingdom, and for the ammphshmm of His will on earth—“Thy Kingdom come, Thy will But | be done.” nnot be estab-| 4. A readiness to trust Ged to o ssaey S prayer conpot judge for us with the supply of our im- mediate necessities—"Give us this day our daily bread.” ‘We can each, individually, put pray-{ 5 A humble. honest confession eof sin andy appeal for forgiveness, and a hearty forgiveness of tbose who have offended us in any way—“Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive them that trespass against us.” 6. An honest desire to turn away from all habits or pleasures that lead us into temptation, except, of course, when we are called uj to face temp- tation im the path duty—“Lead us not into temptation.” If anyone who thinks that prayer has proved a failure in his case will test his pravers by this divine standard he will find that he ha: failed sadly on some points, and very likely on all points. Sunday Merming Talk The Trial and Triumph of Praye: There are few people who have not tested in ee the effieaey of praver he Pharisees of old would all like to ‘We must each test it and prove n the answers to these questioms: Does it or does it not keep Daes it or does it net Dees it or does it hose about, us. If it does those things, hen it is truly triumphant, and such Pray- 1a fairly 1) e < fovery tom- | The shan of Persia possesses perhaps the most valuable pipe in the world. It ply can’t by the etandard of prayer given us by |is. the Persian official pipe, and is Dust on the pleture | the 10th Irish Division was nearly su:| & Lo S18RSRTd of brayer give all 12 | amoked ouly an state oacasions It is which we formerly merely | Rihilated at the landing at Selva Bay and| jmportant elements of prayer. with rubies and diamonds, aad is said, ‘Well, when the men | the capture of Chocolate Hill, and rhe valued at $509,000. paper we'll have them now simply is’a dead- h she must up and at! on whi Dublins and Muasters were met Wi such opposition three fell before they reached the .and at the lanfing at “V" Beach. The work j of the other troops was mentioned and cause they ecan’t get rid of it, sendgl the term Calcmal Lroops Was mean: to that two out of ev'-‘ry This is and 38— We have been selling them for 29c and 35c apiece, and they are worth all of that— DOLLAR SPECIALS WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S Summer Underwear It's seasonable merchandise—it is merchandise of good quality, and well made in every particular—and it’s going to be sold today at wonderful Dollar Day Prices. Women’s Jersey Ribbed Vests regular and 4 FOR $1.00 gl Women’s Bodice Top Union Suits the style which sells the most readily for Summer wear, and these are of splendid quality, sell- ing regularly for $1.25. Sizes 36 | muslin. ONLY $1.00 Harvard Mills Vests and Pink or white garments of this best of all makes at a bargain prige. Better buy 3 few suits today. Both extra ONLY $1.00 Children’s Waist Union Suits Knitted suits or those made of gocd Comfortable and built te wear well, regular $1.25 value— ONLY $1.00 GIRLS’ 75¢ KNITTED UNION SUITS—ONLY $1.00 sizes, worth A FEW OF THE DOLLAR DAY SPECIALS Fresh Made Marshmallow Fudge 2. ... clmini it a0 Very Tasty Nut Fudge, 21bs. .. ... $1.00 Cocoanut Taffy,21lbs............. $1.00 Bitter Sweets, Vanilla, 21bs. .. .... $1.00 Fresh Packed Chocolate Bon- Peanut Brittle, 31bs. ............ $1.00 Special Lunches From 1 to 6 S. F. PETERSON, Inc. 130 MAIN STREET ‘What are these elements? ANDREWS BAKERY THAYER BUILDING WHERE ALL CARS STOP OUR SPECIALS FOR DOLLAR DAY 4 Ibs. of Pound Cake, regular price $1.80 ........... DOLLAR DAY $1.40 Our Doughnuts, the best that money can buy, regular price 40c Our Cup Cakes, regular price 40c DOLLAR DAY .. ... 36 Jellyrolls, regular price 25¢— Marshmallow Rolls, regular price .- Our Fruit Buns, regular price 20c per dozen........ DOLLAR DAY l6c All our Luxury Bread, 15¢ per loaf on Dollar Day. All our Brown Bread, 15c per loaf on Dollar Day Wait for your car at our Bakery, and see the most attrac- tive food any housewife can wish for. Look at our French Pastry, there is nothing like it in the city. You will not complete your shopping until you have purchased your food for Sunday at our Bakery. 20 FRANKLIN SQUARE THAYH! BUlLDlNG

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