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Jerwich Bulletin and QUuéicG 124 YEARS OLD ——— Subseription peice L & week; 54 & month; 3.4 reur, Butered at the Postoffice st Norieh, Comn., 3¢ wsecond-class matter. Telephone Oalte, Norwich, Tuesday, Sept. 7, 1920, MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Amociird Press is eselusively entitied to" e tse for republicstion of all news desated- w, ecredited to it or mok eredited 1o the local news published All fshts of repubieation of pecial des- patabes hevein 2re also reserved. thls paper and aiso Bepeln. CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING SEPT. 4, 1920 10,939 GOVERNOE COX'S METHODS. That the New York Times, which is backing Governor Ceox, is quite right when.it says that the shindy about eam- palgn expenses is wearying the eountry thers can be little question, and it is ng weary because of the repeated infulfilled promises that have been made by Candidate Cox in connection th. Governor Cox has induiged smoke screen, assuring the coun- he would prove his staterants, but thing of the kind has beem forthcom: «and yet it is upon that tnat he is 2cing his chief reliance In his swing abott the country. acksonville, Fla., Timee-Union We regret very mueh that the | campaign has degenerated worst mud-slinging contest en © matter who is responsible no one will gain by it and the will be embittered and disgust- Teus Mr. Cox must realize that the boomerang, which he had good reason , expect has already started. He i8 aloné responsible for the record break- ing mud slinging campaign. It is his idea and there is no surprise that there is a strong desire among the democrats to have it called offt. The New York Times eyen 1olds that “The whole mat- ter wtrikes most people as insincere.” Had Governor Cox mnot only made charges but taken advantage of the op- porfunity to have made them under oath and in doing so sybmitted proof to sub- stantiate them his pesition might have been- different. As it is there is noth- ng -but discredited statements, with his wn leaders admitting that the repusli- ns are doing no more in the way af ng campaign funds than the dem- are while there is the added t to the effect that the demccrats iolated the law in assessing demo- atic officeholders for party support. Is there any wonder that the demo- ocra wratic papers should be disgusted and weary at Governe: Cox’s efforts? Or that they should term his efforts as in- ro on record? the worst mud-elineng care But why « op him! Now !s the time to let the country find out what kind of a candidate is before them! NEW POLICY INDICATED. the arrival of the head of .the organization of street railway ployes in New York there promises to a more determined effort made to £ about an ending of the strike in rooklyn where for over a week the public has begn forced to get such cop- veyances as it could, where a jpumber of deaths have oecurred and thany have injured as the result of the sirike. significant that President Mahen should declare on his arrival that the etrike was unauthorized, that he indi- cated a desire to bring about an early iation and that he should s=zte - fully appreciated the position by Jndge Mayer the federal that those whe have been the court have rot been peaking for him or the Amalgamated. Brooklyn is now experiencing a much improved service from elevated subway surface cars. Bven the company fficials do not claim that it is baek to normal but each day shows progress in that direction. It promises to be but & shbrt time even under the present sit- uation before the service will be able to meet requirements. The arrival of the head of the ma- tieme! organization, howevér, and the at- titpde which he has manifested inditates thet & much different policy is geing te Be wadertaken in behalf of the railway men. With his recognition of the breach of contract on the part of thé men and the entramce upon an outlaw strike there appears to be a determination on his part to call the members of his or- ganization to a proper respect for their agreement and the rules of the organi- zation. Whether he will approve of the offer that has been made to the men, or whether he will advocate arbitration subeet to the review of Judge Mayer may depend mpon the result of the con- ferefdes he has with these directly or indingetly interested. It is time, hew- ever, that some consideration should be given to the relleving of the ineonwen- 1ee that the public is being cansed an® anding of the danger to which it 14 being subjected. of and iticizing POLAND GUARDING ITSELY. Just what the policy of Poland rela- tive to the continuance of its drive against the bolshevik forces is; if it has been definitely dsterthined, has not been fully disclosed. This country’ has un- dertaken to advise Poland against plunging too deeply into Russia in the hopes of large conquests. The purpose apparently has been to bring about an ending of the strike in that regién and by hgving the Poles stop wien they fot to ethnographic frontiers hasten the time when peacs could be established. Regardiess as to how this advice was received the reply forwarded to this government indicates that Poland is much more disposed to listen to the 2d- vice of France in this regard and it re- ports are true France is not favorable to having the Poles stand on suth lines. It belleves that it should push beyond with the idea of being able to take posi- tions which would make it possible for them “to adequately protest its Ites. The latter advice is bound to make ita appeal both becatise of the assistance which has been given and be- cause of the success attend- s the operations of Polish foreés. A short time ago when the bolsheviki were prewsing the Poles backward would have been for the latter - Sk have bepn reconeiled to regaining their enthnographic frontiers. - : The fight between the forces of the - soviet government and the Poles has| Don't be alarmed and imagine that moved forward and backward much the|this is a tale of a high-powered, luxuri- same as other tides of battlé in which|ous automobile, Far from it! Just a the Russians have been involved. Just = of twe ?sh‘c):;;:mln“ and lgv?ble at present they apparently consider that|8irls as you mig] nce to meet, fun- they held an advantageous position and|loving, adorable, full of pranks as with representatives of the two coun-|OUT 0ld car is of had laughingly dub- tries about to renew negotiations 100k | peq = mem ine “pain-Sisteencr four ing, to the arrangément of peace terms|ycars before and the name had ¢lung. it can be appreciated that they are not|He asserted that they weré always over- inclined to tie their hands in advance.|speeding, but that he never knew either Polahd seeks to get the fulll advantage|Of them té have any “tire trogble"—tney from sueh a strengthened position as |Possessed enormous emergy, and were al- ways “on the go.” Then, in additior, its armies have placed it In, and in Packard, although Char. it belleves in 86 using its LNCif Name was Pa Mashe Iotte Was about to change hers to Ford. forces as not to weaken its’defense oOf|mThnic mad once again occasioned Barry's jeopardigze its armies. Incorrigible Wit. “To think of a Packard begoming a Ford—A FORD!” . - A. Ford, familiarly known as Art, was ¢ due t6 arrive from overseas in a couple kel i it i e 1] of months and the wedding was t> take street cars and relying upon moter Gl KSeRIAe that It driven vehleits. Some of them @id it| houta be. Impessivie for him (o make ths because they were forced to While oth-|plans upon his arrival he had acked ers did it intentionally under the belief|Stephen Chandler to anticipate his com- that they would then get 100 pér cent.|ing to Brookhurst, and attend to all nec- service which they felt they were enti.|®sSiry final arfangements. auh\: was 10 tled to and had not gotten previously. |Dé ths Dest man—-Steve, whe & d 56 va- Invariably where such tests have been NNty fased death Wi im T tO made the result has been the same. It|.coq's ewn eountry.” Steve knew the required but a short time to convince|twins only by. the oft-told tales repeat- the reSpeftive communities that they had{ed to him on many starlit nights amidst made a mistake, and in some instances|the herrors of No Man's Laad. Many had he received n:: o 't:;l appreciative of |in love with Charlotte, but to he as fac- what they had been getting in the way|CIIRHINE R2 ne MRl [0 TUER don. E ST ; ble wedding, but there was just one Bridgeport has had its experienés| ping missing—the man in Virglnia's with nothing but motor driven vehicles|case! There had been suiters aplenty, and several Massachusetts citiss delib-|but Jean had laughingly treated them erately fnvited in the jitneys to the ex-jone ;hmt alike. E‘Ang“ha:’ be:: fix;e elusion of the trelleys only te quickly|of the persistent, rescind their decision after a short trial |daunted attentions she “‘_;“_7;"012;1:;‘,- Similarly in Brooklyn for the past ten| Barry I love you"-——at whic B — TROLLEYLESS CITIES. There are many citles which have ; ted—1ike a brother.” days buses and autos of all descriptions | Fould ":m;“; T e yoh tob el have been pressed into service to trams-|parie GUiTw’ Barry's hopes came port the people and the constantly in- creasing service by the railways has been a seurce of great relie? so mueh 8o that it is olaimed shlt one week of such eonditions has beém not only suffi- cient but téo mueh. Not only has such dependence both- ered the public bat it has greatly in- creased the street dangers for where trolleys must be given due respect in the highway they are in a fixed place whieh is by ne means s with the moter’ ears. The result is inereased danger to all vehicles, to people crossing the streets apd to the occupants of smeh ve- hicles. If any community is considering the replacing of its tramsportation system with motor vehicles it will do well to consider the experiences which others have had in this particular line of ef- fort, erashing down. On the day of Stéve's arrival Char- lotte had been compelled t6 make a iast shopping expedition to the &ity, to be gone a few days, so it was'left for Vir- zinia to do the honors for the new guest. A naughty little impulse lsaped into Jean's brain. Why not? Just for sueh a short time! That would certainly ward off a possible suitor, He might think it compulsory for him to -fall in love at first sight with the bridesmaid—such things had been known to happen! B the bride-to-be—he certainly -would uot Jet his emotions run rot in that dires- tion. So Jean argued she would be Char- lotte until her sister’s return. The de- ception was easy as far as personal ap- pearances went. The twins were very much alike, and were often mistaken for each other, even by very intimate friends. Therefore, with an absolute stranger, the “pose” could not possibly be detected—so she reasoned. Stephen at the first meeting did not wonder that his ¢chum had fallen b des- GOUGING THE PUBLIC. perately in love With the charming Miss This is the time of year when mest Packard. . Art had told him to make it pleasant for the girls until his arrival, S0 Steve did his best. He had accepted the ready explanation of - the other twin's absence on business, still thinking that Jean was Art's promised bride-to- be. There had been one Or two narrow escapes, head-on collisions and so on, but Jean had managed to extricate her- self gracefully eagh time. It was easy enough to persuade Steve of how fre- quently their identities were mistaken. Gradually Jean began to feel just a little sorry for the deception, but she did not quite know how to crawl out of the situation while Steve was trying to keep a tight control on his heari- strings. He berated himself as an abom- inable cur to be falling in love with his friend's sweetheart, but he had to ack- nowledge to himself that such was the case. But he allowed no hint of it to escape, although it took as much cour- age as he had ever displayed previously to hide his real feelings. On the day Charlotte was to return the two were bound for the station to meet her when they encountered Barry just returning from a business trip. Now Jean might mislead others, but ' never Barry; he “knew her too well!” He was nearly abreast of them when Jean, deep in thought as to how she was to straighten out matters before her sister should learn of the ruse, was surprised by a cheery: “Honk-honk! Don't steer right into a fellow, Jean!” ‘Whereupon Jean was so upset that she. t t6 give Barry a warning sig- nal b finger hastily pressed on her lips beh! Steve’s back. By the time she recovered sufficiently to do it and to make the usual introduction Steve had caught just an inkling of the real trath At first he was a bit angry, and then, when the full realization of all it teant came to him he was so unac- countably happy he chuckled just as “Aha, Jean! Prank- let me be the first to congfatulate you!” and the incorrigible ex-gultor vanished. / Jean blushed a most beautiful erimson- while Steve looked at her with an al- miration he now felt no need to coneaal, and then the situation was relizved by the hearty laughter of both. By the time the station was rrached. mattérs had progressed so well that Charlotte (Barry always insicted on calling her “Charlotte”) guessad how things stood, although she n learned the part she had unwittingly nlaved. Upon Arthur's coming to claim his bride, he found that Steve had not only faithfully carried out his instructions, but had gone even further and made all the plans necessary for a double wedding. Was he surprised? Hardly that—it was the realization of a pet desire which he had never dared voice for fear of balking it from the start. Then, too, he knew Jean's ability in “speeding.” Barry alone suspected Jean's escapade but he, too, was glad among the other guests to extend his hearty good wishes. “Good luck, twin 20s, and a bright road in the sunlight for those who steer your way”"—Boston Post. people are beginning to get ifiterested in| 3 OR coal if they havem't been fortunate|| FTTERS THE ED! enoug’s to have their bdins filled. They TO rr are interested in it because of the in-|- Valse of a College Education. ereased difficulty there promises to be| Mr. Editer: During the college com- in getting it hecause of the “vacations”|mencement season “scouts” for various ‘which are being taken by the anthraeite{large industrial rations were Nfl‘ miners and becatise. of the price that is{2mong our colleges, seeking out Drom- ising young men to enlist for active ser: being charged for sueh fuel. Vice wnder thelr Denrs—in it Coal produetion wasn't what it should eonvineing indication fhat the college be before the coal miners refused 1o |.jucation is no longer regarded by the work because they failed to get as much|pyusiness world as a detriment. There as they asked for in the way of wage in-|was when the hard-headed man of large créase but the decresse in output prom- business werld as a detriment. Time ises to have its effect upon those who |college-trained lad as in some manner of are obliged to buy where they can to fashion inferior to the ones fwhl)' hi«’i i not taken the trouble to go so far in the keep warm during the coming winter. | 00,0 " "etiay Today the colleme- But in addition to this possible reason for an increase an expert representing bred man is in active demand—not the idler, nor the shirker of course, but thé the miners maintains that the consumer is even how, and has for seme time, man who has shown promise. It is been paying motre for his coal than he therefore mo longer necessary to argue the point. The case is proved and 2d- should This it Is charged is due to the|mitied on tit industrial side. Collego fact that the operators in anticipation |education is i handicap in busiaos:. 3 What one would prefer to stress is the of the fact that there would bo an in-|.o " aterial benefit—the Subjective, ra- crease in the miners' wages raised o0al|iner than the objective, side of a college a dollar & ton the 8rst of April. NeW|edueation. Ong stands rather aghast at with the advance granted the men it is|the sudden revelation that coliege men mamtained that the extra burden placed |are no longer regarded as hindered by upop the operators will. amount to no|the fact of education against the gain- more than 50 eents & ton fo that a half{DE Of a livelinood. It is agreeable to sxbens ey find it so, but it has all come very sud- :’t:::‘neani hudb:::;:m rr:: t ofl Genly. The point that is the most often the| overlooked is the ohe which concerns BoL1 Buyers. the inner mam. College education is Coal, it is realized, has bDeen- taking|not intanded solely as the means of ad- several jumps. Inereased wages for the|vancemint to a better salaried job, even miners and increased freight rates have|if it does have that one effect. It is betn offered as the reasons, while it js|Meant to have a high importance both appreciated that specuiators have like.|OP the political future of the country by wite been doing their beat to muke tne|PCTeasing the number of well-informed f and high-principled citizens and upon boost noticeable, but it is an old stery|the inward resources of the individual that the econsumer is charged with much|The man who goes through a college more than the increased wages granted|course with genuine credit not only to the men. . gets himself into a bettér pesition to 1t foakes Httle difference who is goug-|MAke Money, but also into & better po- ing the publie if it can be determined |'on [OF USing the money that he gets that utjust prices are being charged|ionic, il 2 5 longer or shorter; and the great thing there ought to be means of protecting|for evervome is to make the moit of it the public against such practicts and Colleges try hard to increase the indi- ml:llh:“ those Who engage in it are|Viflual eapacity to get the most and the pen: . best out of life. They are not mere training schools for the gainful voca- tions. They are incidentally places Where men are introduced to, and made familiar with, the best that the world has to offer frem its rich stores of hu- man e ce, knowiedge of which cannot help but make those thus famil- iar with them into better—réunded characters and more resourceful ifhal- itants of the current world. It is our canZid opinion that far teo little is mads by most colleges of this sidé of th. preblems. There is always a conflict botwesn the theories of educa- tion which respectively emphasize “-if.- cieney” for practical life and culture in general. The dolleges of the United Statss are not producing scholars in the striter semse, S0 much as multitudes of men who have a vague growing ac- quaifitance with scholarship. There is probably ample reom for both; but in the tremendons impetus which the “efi- EDITORIAL NOTES. Times are changing. Bven the hems don't seemn to eackle so often as they used to. The ooal miners seem to get about as erazy over the matter of wages as a dog chasing its tail. ST e, The day after effect is the same Whether it follows Labor day or any of the other holidays. e Jack Frost is about the last one that the fellow with ne coal in his cellar is anxious to see put in an appearance. When the democrats deelare they are having @ificulty raising funds it doesn’t speak well for the popularity of their tieket, The man on the corner says: We are getting to the time when the fellow who is wise looks up the condition of his last year's overcsat. HE NOW BELIEVES SRR SR i S Prohibition agents in New York oc- easionally uncover somé liquor but it's only 2 drop in the bucket to what is be- ing disposed of daily. IN“FRUIT-ATIVES Teacher Of “New Thought* Healed By Froit Liver Tablets Those anthracite miners who are on a Strike vacation are among those who claimed they didn’t get enbugh days’ employment to meet living expenses, il hm:l;, ;‘ Y. g Governer Cox reminds ome of that| any material medicine as I am an claes of agitators. who arouse a ecom- mynity with startlifiy statements and promises and then get away befors they can be ‘ealled to account, advocate of ‘New Thought’ ; but some time ago, T had such a bad attack of Lioer and Stomach Trouble that T gave up thinking Tdid not have it and took The :ma mx:-‘m of Water | ‘Fruit-a-tives’ or Fruit Liver Tablets.' street is one Fepale work Most gratifying whs the result, It thet has long been réquired while th ¥ few in wi give bétier water| Tolieved my liver and stomach B servics Ead fire pfotection. troublt, cleased up my yellowish complexion and put mew blood in Whiskey valued at $250,000 was seiz-| my body. “Fruitetives’ is the highess ed lhst week while being transported resuls of ¢ 5 B through New England. That doesm't of Wew Thoughi' in medicine”. afford ahy estimate, however, of the A. A. YOUNG, amousit “thiown in” in the same section| 80c.8box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 256. Quring the same tims. At dealérs or from FRUIT-A-TIVES o Limited; OGDENSBURG, N. Y, govermnment printing offies was called upon for 1,300,000 speschies by the Gmeocrats for campaign purposes. And| WHRN YOU WANT to put your busi- they were malled free of cost. And yet fiess Lefote the public, there is no medi- the obuntry i5 sufféring from a DaDEr|yw pbetter than throufh the advertising nwrun“*'mmn_ salmerms of The Bulletin. ciency” side of the question has re- cejved, the cultural side has suffered. 1t one offered advice today it would not be 8o much to go to college with the idea of becoming an welcient citizen, s with the idea of becoming also a weil-round- ed one—that is to say, seeking not only an enhanced value to the worid of men, but also an enhanced intellsziual valae to onesalf. riding home in it. make herself comfortable until’ the ar- ed he family had recently bought a new The family tly ‘l\.llufl-\ she would give the family a treat by So_she.proceeded to rival of the family. After a time the owner came but it was up to the little miss to make her apologies and hupt "an electric car home. She fealizes now that there are many machines that look alike except for the license piates. Transporting White Mule. “Say, sheriff,” said a veice over the telephone to a deputy a few days ago. “this is So and So. Well a neighbor of mine that 1 have been watching is on his way along the fiver roud with a load of ‘white mule’ That isn't right you know and he ought not to be aliowed to met away with it. He's got the ‘mule’ all covered up with canvas so jt eannot be seen.” Getting assistance the deputy hasten- in search by automebile and eame upon the canvas coversd farm wagen. Cutting in ahead of the team he asked the driver if he had a load of ‘“white mule.” “I syre have. I got te admit it,” re- plied the farmer who by this time had sensed the fact that someone had put up a joke on the deputy, “look for yer- self, sheriff, under the cover there.” The sheriff raised the canvas and gazed upon the form of a real white mule, a victim of the colic and on the way to a reduction plant. IN THE DAY’S NEWS Lower California. Lower California, reported to be in révolt against the present Mexican gov- ernment, is described in & commun- cation to the National Geographic wn- ciety by Frederick Simpich as follow: “The long, boot-shaped peninewia that swings down off the left-hand corher of the TUnited States belongs to Mexico and is known on Mexican maps as ‘Baja.’ or Lower California. Barly Spanish maps of America showed California as an island, due, no doubt, to limited ex- plorations of this peninsula. “Scantily known as [t i8 to the av- erage American, this $00-mile-lorg = &y of rocks, peaks, brush-grown mesas, and rare, fertile little valleys is a favorite haunt for many Yankee naturalists, fishermen, and. big-game hunters; and “In all its turbulent, since the halcyon days whea Sir i cis Drake dfepped his’ pirate anchor in Magdalena Bay, no wheeled vehicle has traversed its rough and tortuous Illfll![ “Rich as ate its mines and fat ‘sre | (Toilet Heips) its herds of catile, its chiel source [ Tedlth Tiog i the cotlon-growing Fe. | gq 10U, 39, keep. your arms. ‘neck or et e | casional use of plain delatone and in ‘At the colorado deita, at the head of | using it you need have no fear of mar- the Guif of California, which *Dll'lll.‘ld.‘ or injuring the skin. A thick the Lower California peninsula from So- | nora, more than at any other point on | powdered delatone with water, | te is made by mixing some of the o ‘Then the whole border, the interests of the | oprend on the hairs and after 2 of 3 United States and of Mexico are closely joined. This s due to the singular to- | pography of that region (part of it is careful, however, to get real delatone. R ——————————————— e from the Colorade Alver. as between planters on the American Mexican sides of the line, can be solved satifactorily only by some | Joint treaty betwéen invelving elther the fixing of a neutral sone or the gale of a small strip of ter- titory.” the world. ® the ndtive wild animals amount to lttle Remaking New Zealand. More rapid changes in amimal difappearing before the in contest with the here and there, in the more favored, well- ! watered, grassy spots of the Nigher ranges, hardy American cattiemen have built their adobe homes, where they en- J joy the limitless freedom of vast unfenc- ed areas. The Circle Bar company of Ojos Negros Ranch runs cattle over a leased territory of two and a half mil- lion acres, and a British corporation holds title to something like fifteen mil- lion acres “Away down at peaceful, La Paz, where Cortez repaired his schooners and where, centuries later, Walker, the Yankee filibuster, raised his flag, another Yankee today runs a busy little tannery, turning out 600 sides of good leather avery day f6F an Angeri- can shoe facortary. Here and there, in hill and valley, Americans are delv- ing for metals or grewing the staple frijole. “But the country as a whole, owing to picturesque EUGENE BERTRAM WILLARD. Chelsea, Mass., Sept. 2, 1920. its many desert, waterless areas, is but sparsely settied, and, as one writer saya, [ CAST Children Cry for Fietcher's ORIA The Kind You Have Always n use for Bought, and which has been over thirty years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his pere sonal supervision since its infancy. ’ Allow no one to All Counterfeits, Imitations deceive and * Just-as-good” ‘Expefimemflutfliflewhhandenmmmwnhc@ Ynfants and Children— Drops and Soothing Syrups. aeither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has . What is CASTOR|A It is pleasant. It contains Its been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulen Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Ffleri?h’neu 4 therefrom, and In Use | R e e lon H Tho Children's Comtort —Tae Mother's Friend. e CASTORIA Awwars Bem'the Signiature of For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY. | R R R R SR N TR AT ONCE: new, $750.00, Overland Model 90, winter top. Reo Speed Wagon, stake iwdy. VALUE WE BELIEVE THE FOLLOWING TO VALUES IN USED CARS AND TRUCKS THAT WE HAVE - OFFERED THIS SEASON. DON'T DELAY, BE THE BEST SEE THEM 1920 Overland Model 4 Roadster, about 4 morthe oid, like 1919 Mn‘ak Truck, Z ton capacity, large stake body, first class :end‘man, cost over $4,000 last fall, for quick s sacrifice price of $2,750.00 on easy time payments. 1918 Reo 7 Passenger Touring Car, $1,000.00, offered at G. M. C. 2 Ton Truck, very low price. Stewart 3§ Ton Truck in good running ‘order. THE FRISBIE-McCORMICK CO. 52 SHETUCKET STREET NORWICH, CONN, Tepe= In the opinion of many irrigation engificers and political students, this perculfarly deli. Streams cate problem of irrigation water rights respectively. the two républics. | minutes rub off, wash the skin and &l traces Of hair have vanished, Be sea-level) and‘to the diversion ef lmany ef which now run wild; the are full of American and Bure- pean trewt, which attain an enormeus |sise, and even the forests are beimg re- placel by the planting of foreign tress as_the native ones disappear. Eleven miilion larches oaks, spréess, {Douglas firs and eucalyptus have a- | ready been planted and vast numbers of | seedlings are coming in all the time | The reasen for replacing the mative trees ‘vun-pa-h-u:eum-‘ States, Europe and Australia is (hat theme of and | New Zealand are too slow of growth al- TegetfMie life are taking place in. New timber. The implantations thrive evers- Zealand thah almost anywhere elsé iIn though some of them The native Polynesian race where. { ‘The banjo is .| - Mrrmm & iy PROVERB—As each one wishes his children to be, so they are. | Outfitting For School School Days are here again and this fact suggests many needs for the boy and girl of school age. To all parents of school children we would say—‘““Why not come right down here to headquarters for Children’s School Needs and let us serve you promptly and pleasantly”—all from our New Fall Stock and at moderate cost. School Clothes For Boys Most parents recognize our leadership in Boys’ Apparel— a position that we have earned by years of service in sup- plying parents with dependable Boys’ Clothing at fair prices. Our showine this invite inspection. year is better than ever and we Boys' Navy Serge Knicker- bocker Trousers, sizes 19 to 16, reguiar 32,50 value, at Other good values Trousers, at $9.28, in Boys' Boys' Washable Suits, sizes 3 to 8, regular price $3.00— Bpecial price Boys’ Washable Buits, sizes 3 to 8, regular price $4.50— Spe- $1.95 $395 and we Boys' Golf Caps, in nary blue and mixtures—at $125, $1.40 and $1.95. Boys' FElouses, extra good values, in piain white, light and dark effects, sizes § to 16, regular $1.50 value, at .. Boys' Kazo0 Suspenders, with garter attachment, sizes 6 I cial price 349 | 18 at ..... A TTF SREGTRar o 85 ‘Boys' Xorfolk Suit Boys' 1deal Underwaists, sizes rov and mixtures, sizes 3 to § T T TR TR T T [ —at §5.00 to $10.00. B Bwitian, Sl v o oys’ , extra Boys Norfolk Sults, th dark values at $800, $8.00, $10.00, mixtures, sizes § to 17, regular And $12.00. 31200 value at ... SEFTL 3 Other good valuet in Boys' Children's Swesters, good as- Norfolk_Suits, sizes & to 15— soriment, price runge $2.95 to at $15.00, $16.50, $17.50 and up $8.00. to $23.50. Boy# Knickerbocker Trousers, Boys' Raynsters” a depend in khaki and Qhrk mixtures, ble rubber coat, regular $8.30 regular value $1.50 Bpecial value, at . $750 | price & palr ........inaen .. N CHILDREN’ SCHOOL NEEDS FROM SEVERAL DEPARTMENTS School Hosiery EXTRA SPECIAL VALUES Childre black ribbed S Hosiery, sizes 6 to 9 1-2 ¢iai price for all sizes ..... Misses' fine ribbed biack Lisle Hosiery, sizes § to 8 1-2—Spe- cial price for all sizes Boys' heavy weight black rib- bed Hosiery, in 1x1 and Cordu- roy ribbed, sizes § to 10—Spe- cial price for ail sizes Misses' fine ribbed Lisle Hos- fery, in black, white and ecord van, sizes 6 to 9 1-2—at .< Boys' heary weight ribbed He jery, sizes & to 11, will give ex- tra good wear—at 3% o 5 . Children’s Underwaists Childrea’s Knit Underwaists, boys" and girls’, sizes 2 to 12, all - i RIS TN ..3% Children's Knit Underwaists, boys' and girle’, eizes 2 to 14, all sizes at ............ ceseees B0 School Handkerchiefs Children's white Handkerchiefs, with colored, cord borders— Price esach White hemstitched Handker- chiefs—these are specia! values . 4 tor Be Children's extra fine ribbed White Hemstitched Handker- gums. “;1: b'l:c:(.uw?iu uc: chiets fine quall b 18 according to size ..... 55c and 50c | W h {t e Lawn Hemstitehed " Boys' extra quality fine ribbed Hosiery, sizes 8 to 11, these are our EXTRA SPECIAL! — Missés' ribbed mercerized Hosiery, in black, white and cordovan, sizes 6 to 9 1-2—Special price for all regular sizes 60c to & pair, regular 7éc quality—at .... 88c Handkerchiefs—Price each .. 184e Exa fne White Hastuer hisfs, plain hemstiteh it corded borders—Price sach 18 Children’s Bloomers Children's Knit Bloomers, in plak, sizes 8 to 12 yéars — Special price 3% a palf for all sises. Hair Bow Ribbons For School Wear MOIRE TAFFETA RIBBON, 3 1-2 inches wide, in black, white and all the leading colors—price a yard 25c MOIRE TAFFETA RIBBON, 4 1-2 inches wide, in black, white and the most wanted colors—price a yard 33¢ BRILLIANT TAFFETA RIBBON, 5 1-2 inches wide, in Dblack, white and a full line of colors, both plain and moire—price a yard .....