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" 1%4 YEARS OLD §'1% & week: %0c & moath: $6.99 . G . Sullettn Busimess Office, 489. - Bulletin Editorial Reoms, 35-3. . Bulletin Job Office, 33-% St Telgphont 105, Wilimantie Office. 23 Chus B WEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, e Asoclaud Préss s exclusively entitied 10 16 uge for republication of all news despaieh. o lcrwilind o' B o mot otbeiwise erediled ta this paper amd also ‘iba wcal news publlshed oerels b, All rights of republication of meclal dese patclies i.rein ave also rescrved at Norwi+. Coma. as Norwich, Friday, Dee. il, 1920, CIRCOLATION | WEEK ENDING DEC. 18th, 1920 11,085 TIME TO STOP. When Chairman: Benson of the ship- ping board declares that the government should get out of the business of operat- ing merchant ships and trying to com- pete with private eapital he echoes a sentiment that has been prevalent for a lofig time.”" In his stand thus taken” there are reasons\to believe that he speaks as the result of the @Xperiences of the ship- ping board, for the record of the board makes it evident that the time should be hastened when that agency of~ the gov- ernment can be placed under the gwid- ance of men equipped for the job and ing for the Aupbuilding and mainte- nance of an American merchant ma- rine At the present time we have a large tonnage in merchant. ships, acquired at an enormous outlay accompanied by a great waste but much of this tofhage is an idleness, much cannot be disposed of and more is being held at such figures taht no sale is possible. In the face of these conditions, and because of them in some instances, the board is defeating its own purpose. It is. endeavoring to carry on a water transportation busi- ness that is not able to compete with private capital and yet because of its very existence and the backing of gov- ernment funds It serves to discourage private enterprise. The result is that the American merchant marine is not what it should be. Of the thirteen and a half million tons of ships that. will be the total amount consiructed when the board's plans are completed it claims to have disposed of a littie over two million tons, the disposition in many instances being under charter with the right to buy, so it becomes 3Jvident that there fs a big task ahead for the board, That the head of the board should urge that the government get out of the business of owning and operating mer- chant ehips causes no surprise on gon- cral principles, but an added and sight- fieant reason is furnished when it is hown by the board's mmort that the loss entailed in the operation of the fleet mounts up to the sum of over $185,000,- 000. Run at thot rate we would soon be paying for -the fleet over again, — HELPING WITH SEEDS, A news item to the effect that the American Forestry ciation has sent twelve million Douglas fir seeds to the 'tries that were devastated war will mean only about trees to supp this cu during enough ply the Chrisimas trade in r-u'n.rry for a couple of Christmas vay celebrations, provided they an live, but there cafinot fail to be recognized that they are bound to serve as one powerful means of aiding those coun. Iries in the restoration of their -forests, They are not being sent for Christmas tree purposes and they will not be used in that method. tripped of their trees in some sec- tions and with some of their most val- uable forests seriously depleted if not liminated, the-problem of reforestation there is no small one. It.needs to be started Sy at the earliest possible moment. h efforts as could be made have al- 1dy been undertaken and it is a move no small importance when this asso- fon puts forth the help it does in the 7 of sedds. It nffins the provision of means for making the quickest possible recovery. o ¢ _This is a polley which the association Anci upon some time ago. Its help t be confined to the despatching one particular kind of seeds, Oth- in large quantity covering a . good variety of valuable trees for all kinds of uses have or will be forwarded. It is perhaps the rendition of help in a direc- tion which most people would not have thought of in view of the demands.that are being made for the relieving of dis- in so many other ways. But for- csts and trees are going to be greatly nedled by those countries and it is go- to take time to grow them. Thus loes the association anticipate the com- ing needs of devastated Europe and put into the hands of its people the means Whereby they can begin at once the res- toration of the much needed and valua- ble woodlands. will tres: — WHAT WILL THE ANSWER BE? cept for the signature of the' king the fight for home rule in'Ireland is over. 1* has passed the British parliament with #light changes and now it remains to be seen whether Ireland will accépt it. There is little doubt as to what the re- sult would have been a.few years ago. Conditions, however, have changed and what it will be today is uncertain be- cauise of the effort that has been launch- ed for independence. It is in the southern part.of Ireland that the fight has been. made which brings this home rule, affd it is because of the uncertainty as to what the atti- tude toward it in that part of the island will be that there are doubts as to the successful outome of the effort. The northern part of Ireland did not desire home rule, but it has agreed to give way to the demand and to make the most of the double parliament that has been pro- vided for in the island. By the provisions of the bill there.is to be a parliament in the northern part of Ireland and another in the south part, with an all-Irish council conneet- Ing them, and when the time comes that the two parts of Ireland can agree to it there will be a joining of the two parlia- ments into one for the entire island. For the time being Great Britain will retain control over certain important depart- ments connected with the government, but with the assurance and intention of turning them over to Irish control just 48 soon as the Irish government makgpdlynching spirit. it evident that it can be allowed to structionr and- martial-law, or whether it Will accept Thome Tul ovidy make th8 figst B ats iwadg " NO QTHER COURSE. "~ - sk A g 2 : | When Lieutenant Colonel Aloe, recrutt- ing ofiicer for the New Britain distriet, ‘Say, absolutely refused to accept for army |Sarah, e mh'n‘.“he‘( but : to be'funny,- ~m-w he ,does ‘something. 1 <while he did get’ ready. kid and dv:'?mw it's like all men do.- as we was starting out the door.| ‘girlie, you. a guilty of taking a;n' automobile without the owner's permission; 4 cure for him a‘ suspended sentence, it was only what has prévfously been shown to be the attitulie6f the army and navy officials and What should by done. The idea that the’ afmy or the navyecan be made reformatorfes for those w} shown a lawless” inclination need: discouraged at every possible “opportu- nity. That there. are. those wearing uni. but. that does not mean that'they were put into one of the branches of the goy- ernment service = because they were xrowil ‘to' be bad, and for the good of the service the impression cannot be permiit- ted “to’gét Whroad that criminals can be dumped into the army or navy provided they can meet the physical requirements. It does not appear.that, the idea of putting the New Britain young man into the army originated With- the judge: It was suggested by the counsel for the ac- cused as a means for overcoming the pen- alty that might otherwise be applied: Because of “the discipline which is tc be expeeted in the &rmy ‘or navy they are too often looked upon as the agencles | and he hadn’t feit no.call to write to her [me was rubbering at the other day over with which to deal with those who have gotten into trouble. It isn't desirable that they should be.made up of a lot of men Who caniiot be trusted in the role of a| good citizen. Let that policy be carried out for a short time and it would be im- possible tn get any other Riid of mater- ia] and the army and navy would be- come the breeding places of all kinda~of crime. Black sheep may get into any flock. but the declared purpose of the recruiting of- ficlals to oppose with . indignation those Whom correctional agencies‘are trying to burden . them with is the right one and the only one that ought to be expected. It ought to be So well understood by this time that cotrts wolild not under- take such efforts, FIGHTING . CRIME. Efforts to block the crime wave that 1§ being experienced in more than one sec- tion of the country must: be undertaken in all seriousmess and with- due regard for the protection of the public. -In: this connectfon it is interestitg to note the contrast Dbetween the methods employed in Chicago and those in New York city, In both instances the eities have been experiencing . an . unusual number of cases, of crime, the means of preventing it or of bringing those-guilty to punish- ment were demoralized, and in spite of the outery against the situation it was'a 1ong time before any move was made to change the Jncthods that“were employed. In Chicago’the first move to bring re- sults was the removal of the chief of pb- lice. He was replaced by a man with- out experience in such work, but he re- service a young man who had been found{tea pitcher set and that owns her, own in -order to_ge-|llke E{:“ x!“::l‘ ‘ma’s today and she thinks it ud be forms who get into trouble is recognized,| «wyell, after we was through supper and 3 r Jim's Aunt |I remembered about some gelatin jell T the one matm?:a. swell ice |made after supper and set it on the j slll to get hard and I says to Jim ain’t got any childred or | wouldn't he go out in the kitchen and iat except o funny old dog? - Waell, { take it in and set it on the table till we l‘~w§;’t see for. the life of me why Jim |come back. shautdn’t e Kind of Hice to her, just Like he would to anybody. Well, the night I kinda made u} 'wasn't no partieular shouldn’t do it, so. and ' tha ought more 1 After T alatn T ASer LS Fing ot & noics my mind there |and I hustled out and there was Jim with ason why he |that jell. spilled ‘all over higm. hg; and: supper 1 says to |pants and coat.and everyth o you .1 says to him, ‘I was over to |beat that? : ¥ ot g 3 I don’t’ know as he did it on purpose, kinda. nice if“you'd go ov':,;er‘a:o see your | but it sure locked llnfl; (kll::yt;l:"h;;«; 2 p-v i says. 50 hard Aunt Sarahy Al rignt” J ey wvh’i‘ < Wm0 dishes washed up and the l “Oh, T'was 6 mad I didn't say nething. {3&‘:; nt:l:r kind of ewept up a little, 1 |T just sald, ‘Wel, it you ain’t the bunk | went into the living room and who-rhould | artist,’ and Jim says. “What do you mean, be sitting there reading the paper lke lie | bunk-artist® -~ And I says, ‘Spoiling your nevér had no thought of golng no place |clothes and everythiify just to keep from ever no more but Jim!. I says to- him, jnot doing something you don’t want to do! ‘Hadn’t you ought to be kinda chasing up | That's why,' I says. to get ready to go? I says. . “He just looked awful eyed. ; ®‘Go where? Jim says, just’s innocent. | ‘Bure, we didn’t. Jim couldn't wear ‘Over to Aunt Sarah’s’ I says. clothes-and I had to-clean up the | “10h, was it tonight wé was going? |kitchen. I was just ’s mad s I could be. and- then: Jim says he'd been kinda: think- | I wouldn’t talk to him for the whole resf ing maybe -hg'd ought to stay lome .and |of the evening. ; write to his sister Maude out in Califor- | *Sure. A person can't stay mad at Jim. nia.- He'd been thinking of doing it for | And anyway—say, d § ic, can’t you and quite some time, he says.- Ed come on over af supper_and play ' “Well, 1 says back to him, seeing how |rummy? I got something to show you. Maude had been to California ¥ix months | You remember that swell waist you and | 1 } 3 ought he>could put if off one |on the avenoo? Well} say, girlle, what Z?éhf -%‘vau‘,nm says, maybe that was so. [do’ you think? Jim, he stopped on his “But he hadn’t-no more than went into | way home tonight and bought it for me. the bathroom to star tto commence to |What do you know about that? And he elean up than he come right out again and [brought me a swell box of candy, too. 1 says he guessed maybe we'd better go |guess maybe it kind of plld.ter him not over to granny's and go to Aunt Sarah’s Ito go to.Aunt Sarah’s, what?'—Exchange. their dead companions. The swine had a share with ye sheep in the strang surviv- | als. Twenty-seven days after their burial | they made their way out of the snow bank, at the bottom of which they found a little tansy to feed upon. Hens were found alive after five and twenty days. ‘at a-distance from ye ground and alto- gether destitute of nn)';)flnz to feed them. The odd incidents befalling many poor people, whose cottages were totally: cov- ered with'ye snow and not ye very tops of their chimneys to be seen, would affords a story. But there not being any rela- tion to philosophy iIn them, I forbear them.” 5 (Tomorrow—Atts i President ODD INCIDENTS IN AMERICAN HISTORY OUR # dBEA"ST SNOWSTORM _The. climate of America is undoubtedly “indergoing a gradual change for- neither are tne winters as severe at Present, nor the summers as torrid, as they were.in the early history of our country. It is only rarely that we are treated to a bliz- zard, and yet a century ago they were not of uncommon tacurrence. In Febru- ary, 1717, gecurred what is considered to have been the greatést snow storm that has ever visited-this country—or perhaps any other. So deep was the fall that prectically all through the New England states people were - barricaded intheir homes, and it was considerable time be- fore that section was opened up for traf- Assassination of kson) Stories That Recail Others No Disobedience at Al “Willie, why were you disobedlent to, your Aunt Jane?" “I wasn't disobedient. mother.” “Yes, you were. Haven't you been swim- mins this afernnon?” “Yes.” \ Didn’t I hear Aunt Jane tell you not to go swimming?” “No: she didn’t say that at all. She only came to the door and shouted: ‘Willile, I wouldn’t go swimming.’ And I shouldn’t think she would. What would c. anying this snow there was a te:?f?cicmfw\zim agd a very low . tem- perature. It was not only in sections, but a1l over the north and at many places it drifted to the extent that it may be said that “whole villages were snowed under. The blizzard caused a-very heavy loss in property, and especially to live stock. Thousands of cattle petished throughout the country, because thelr owners were unable to o to their assistance, and organized the force, told the men that they would be held responsible for. con- D 4 any remarkahle instances. were relate: ';‘f rZscues. 0:? one New Bngland sheep farm it is said that eleven hundred $heep folks think of they saw A woman like Aunt Jane swimming in the creek?” 1| peals to an ‘unwritten law’ for the op- A ; S ' ONE BLOCK FROM MAIN CEDAR CHESTS, AT $17.50 TOILET TABLES, AT $40.00 : NEW BUREAUS, MAHOGANY OR WALNUT CHIFFONIERS, $45.00 / YOUR INSPECTION WELCOME OPEN EVENINGS ~ Special Gift Offerings | WILLOW ROCKERS, $26.¢0 culmnrs_mfl-l TELEPHONE STANDS, $10.00 CARPET SWEEPERS, $6.00 ECONOMY CORNER hissed at the Olympic games, but finally he won a prize at Athens for a tragedy: ‘Whersupon he celebrated with a de- bauch that caused his death. “Files of our imaginary Sicillan news- papers also would contain mention of ap- flicts of cultural and social ideals, that he Sicllians djsplayed a strength eof character, rathér than a viclous tesden- cy In evolving a self-imposed, and seif- enforced code? “Geologically, Sicily is a new bom babe among the land masses, even If it is a Methuselah of human history. It all but halves the Mediterranean finto two great bowls. In fact it once linked Europe and Africa; the famous Etaa having a peak in a motntain range that begins in the Apennines of today and twists. to the sweep of the Atias range westward from Tunis, Today it is as isolated mass, in the position of a foot- ball about to be kicked by the toe of Italy’s boot. “In size Sicily is comparable with our state of Maryland, inciuding Chesa- peak Bay but minug the eastern shore; and in shape it resembles the same erations of the Mafia inevitably suggest this. latter-day plea, except that the Ma: fia code was far more inclusive. The much talked about Mafia is not—was not. more properly, for it only survives In parts of Sicily as remote ds our own feudal spots—a secret order or’ clan. Rather, as some one wittily remarked of an American city in another connection, it is a state of mind. It represenis the idea that ‘vengeance is mine,’ the be- lief that appeal to law is a weakness, that the individual is the supreme ar- bitor of his own affairs, even when they involve others. “Obvfously the operations of the Ma-|state, Expledes 0ld Adage. Ben Cocke, manager of the elecisie iight plant in Eilkton, kilied as 11 1-2 month-old | thai weighed & Bet welght of 4 pounds. He made 19 1,2 gallons of lard and 45 pounds of sau- he old adage that & hog is ot & hog untll he &5 13 months 0ld.—To#d County (Ky.) Standard The married and unmarried women in Colombia are distinguished by the way i» which they wear flowers In their halr, the senoras wearing them fin the right side and the senoritas on the left. Feel Old? minus its western panhandle. Tt is the largest isiand in the. Mediterra- near but it is crowded. Only five of our states exceed ‘!ts population. ditions in their districts and began | the property of one man, were found dead. roundup of the crooks and the lawbreak-| and one flock of a hundred on Fisher's ers in a manner which made it .plath|Island ,were #ound buried sixtecn feet im fla is not a healthful field for the so- ciological student; moreover those who hold the theory that ‘blood washes blood” Something to Worry About. The five year old twins were watéhing a neighbor kill a ¢hicken, for the hcli- that he intended to see that the law was{ the sn enforced and crime reduced. He called | they ha for special attention .to the and bandits, directed 2 proper use of the] ™ guns and the result has. been that not only has there been am average of two deaths a day at the hands of the police in the 'case of criminals trying tg es- cape, but there has been the desired de- crease in the number of 'holdups and murders. ° ,'In the back rard. They were mmnch Two of them only were altve.| 1av, k ing subsisted on the wool of their :;::setdedl % t‘:nut;'\e whole process and comp:m'i’onns for twenty-eighw<days after ot o G i e i vl one of the boys as he dodged to es- m;wr‘g;;rmea;om mr:: L‘L,"éi‘if.f aor cape’ the chicken as it flopped about the most entirely upon the account that was ¥erd: written by Dr. Cotton_Mather, and whit‘:;; IN ms is preserved amongst the manu: SICILY, volumes of the Massachusetts H\stgficai Society. It is not only a.curious ralic. have other proverbs which lay utmom stress upon sttence."*To speak little is a fine art’ is one. ‘The man taiks enough says nothing,’ is another. Hence there are not enough data to supply adequate account of the origin of the Mafia and the tenets of Omerta, s the code is called. s . * “One may -get a clue’from the pano- rama of Sicily's fateful history. Fifteen nations had a foothold fhere in its hi “Palermo, Catania and M-ssina, in the order mentioned, are Sicily's principal cities. Catania, at the base of Mt Bt- na, has been buried and often partly ruined by the volcano beside which, it has been sald, Versuvius Is ‘a mere pocket volcano, for which space might be found upon the flank of the greatér mountain.” “Before Charybdis ; the harbor Scylix, its of Messina companion in torle span of nearly 3,000 years—in an-| classic lore, lies opposite Ln c:uma.m : will give a gopd idea of{ - Scicily, long ago referred to by some|cient fimes Phoenicia, Greece, Carthage,|across the narrowest stretel of New York tackles the situa '3.'2 :‘t's-l;mcgmsrmn: of the finent Co-|Italian statesment as “the Ireland of| Rome, Byzantium, and then, successive-|Straits of Messina. Meseiga suffered 7 W : ickles the situation much lonial New England divine e manu-| Italy," may justify that appellation more|ly, the Goths, Vandals, Saracens, Nor-|what is probably the world's most cruel| “Rer r ifferently. 1t is expected that the force t }; dated December 10, 1717, and{fully @s a result of the reported seix-|mans, Germans, Aniouans, earthquake ' in 1900 when about - 100,~ : - will be made’to reform itself under the | SCriP itten at Boston. It §S.as follows:|Ure of landed estates by peasants. The|Spanish, Bourbont, Brench 000 people, two-thirds of its population, --‘fi“_ o -t same defective organization. The de-| o co golt 80 far as the negin-{island’s appearance -on the first page|Nor does that list include the period|lost their lives- because of a tremor of hm‘“-hnhh‘rdd—‘ummu-’-: partment head even maintains that crime ning of another winter, yett we have not wlould bet;:z;hhalioxnmm it nn;srmp:r eince 1806 :.s a ‘x;rt \Ma th;‘ I;:qlng'flomsu:t only 35 seconds’ duration. g o ) T g4 is only at it ¥ xt. W] % latter end | files ran g years, according to| Italy or .the originel dwelleps e Si- wwake ot night with rheumstic pains | sy y“d t'hit":;:“,; ’r’"l' S “:5':” O yor 180> ;“‘efi-‘t"::hffi ol RO el i DI e L L L, Elymians. May it not|. Quite often the man who s switt and | Sress s uest ¥ chosmetic ptics | can sy 0" the: Ohristman Spirit. - BoTes st e | et o giow. hish wes attend. | qusthers of the National Geograghic Bo-] he''that with Sudh 4 shiftiAr of rales|a ook Cocer distances the slow but Uk & OROBOS G 2 " - -4 clety. and standards, with\ such constant con-;sure chap. o have been taken in'onder to increase the| od with some things which' were umcom-} € et S e il i\ efficiency but the need is for the same|mon enough to afford matter for a letter sort of an overhauling that Chicago got, or the ¥eturn of those policies which were in force before the present admin- istration took hold. -No city is going to give-the right degree of protection to its people by ‘approving a police policy of amalties that make a Wall street bomb explosion seem a trifling mishap. Pla- to's visits to the island were heralded as broadly if not by printers ink, as was Sir Oliver Lodge’s tour of the Uni ed Staies. What Sunday magazine sec- tion could find & more lurid ‘spread’ than from us. “Our winter was not so bad that where- in Tacitus tells us that Corbrilo miade his expedition against the Purthians, nor that which proved so fatal to ye beasts and birds in ye days of ye Bmperor Jus- dnian, ;and that the -very flshes were do nothing. New York in comparison with, Chicago’s action shows uwp in an unfavorable light. EDITORIAL NOTES. From the stock market reports the cost of living isn’t the only thing going down these days. 5 These are the days when Santa Claus is busy wrapping and labeling his long list of presents. Constantine’s homecoming was 2 big event. From now. on. interest will center on, the effects of it at home and .abroad. The ;man on the corner . says: The Christmas spirit seems.to show. an -in- crease in speed on the-day before Christ- mas. % & i Thdt 14-year-old Biooklyn boy who shot a companion in a' poker game in- dicates an early start in'the wrong di- rection. In abolishing its tax on luxuries Can- ada seems to be doing for the rieh what Secretary Houston wants done in this' ‘country. % > PR R Considering that it was broken again while moving there is ‘no good reason Why reference shouldn’t he inade to Ply- mouth Rocks. When Pennsylvania women are trying to brand another as a witch it shows how. strong a hold superstition has In | prompt disposition. Bome regions. The arrival of 14,000 immigrants over the week-end shows what efforts are be- ing made to get into the country befors the bars are put up. 5 S B S A | day, Pindar's story of how Phalaris erected a bronze“bull, built a fire underneath; did-as much to'ye men whom tyrantsi,ng threw his enemies | the cauldron treat ye fishes of ye sea. 2 to see how nearly their groans resembled “But .ye conclusion of our. winter was|'the bellows of a live bull? And Diony- hard enough and was too formidable to| sius the Elder, with his temple, city be easily forgotten. The snow Was ye|wail, and palace building, a steady source chief thing that made it so. On the 20th] of real estate news, certainly would have of last February there came on a snow | ‘landed’ on the first page when the story which, being added to what had covered | “broke’ of .his famous marble harbor e ground a few days before, made aat Syracuse. - ; PR roicaits (00wt o Iet K Swint] S Or Saae bt v e Deen in was usual. And ye storm with it was | the days of ancient Utica, Troy and for the following day, 8o violent as to!Syracuse, hotels operated as they are in make all communication between ve|the modern municipal namesakes of neighbors ‘everywhere to cease, People, | those cities, Their registers, in Sicilian for some time, could not pass from one| cities, would show such names as Sap- pho, Xenophanes, Ascehylus, Athens and side of ye street unto another. 2 e Corinth are credited with being the Bos- Bul on ye twenty-fohirth day Of ye|, i of Greek civilization; but Syracuse, month, another smow came and which |, giz0 ang activity, was its New York, almost buried ye memory of ye {Ormer.| ., jest any New Yorker object to that With a storm so famous® that Heaven | gigiinction it may be well to mention s ‘“'h"‘:c‘ °‘;’:u’;“~g*"“‘;h"-‘;f“;,’a that it takes- into reckoning the Syra- es throughout ye country on r gt ve like thereunto had never beer | Cosc) Prestige in letters, a vl seen before. The Indians near an hunidred | **U3e00 Lo goracuse when it had years old, aftirm that their fathers never| gtj told ‘tHem of anything that equalled it. “For no less than eight and killed under ye freezing sea when Phocas an imated million or more population, and was the foremost city of Hellas, pos- twenty | sessed a classic prototype of -Greenwich days after the storm the people pulling | village. Among _its artists and thinkers out the ruins of above an 100 sheep out| were. pretenders. Dionysius himself, not of -a: snow bank, which lay sixteen-foot| content with protean achievements as @ high, drifted over them, which lay sixteen{ ruler, city builder, and conqueror, as- foot high, drifted over them, there were| pired to writt verse. His efforts at first two found alive by eating the wogl of | were criticized by Philoxenus and were Fresh, lected malted grain, reduced to form. - The Food-Drink for All Ages. The police commissioner of New York S B s = tells the mayor that crimie in that city is Used successfully for over 1/3 century. only just above normal, and there are in- : ¥ dications that the mayor belfeves him. The earthquakes in Argentina are not due to that country's withdrawal from the -assembly’ of the leagué’ of nations but it will' be hard to convince some to'| . the contrary. A Maryland ‘youth ' has been found guilty and sentenced to_death for the. murder of a woman within five. weeks of the commission ©f the erime. Such of = capital offense el ought to do much to:curb .the Vo o Invigorating, Nourishing, Delicions {M?eul::m. K:;uhnurwh:gmvdh: - AskFor ..e Get Horlick’s b weiast thus Avoiding Imitations Rousd Packags . SUBSTITUTES Cost YOU Sare Price - ’w;i;o for {zee sample to Horlick's, Dept. B, Racine, Wis. ' MISS AGNES MACLEAN - AnnouncestheOpéfiiluof‘ oyt The Vogue Shoppe - 161 Main Street UP ONE FLIGHT - MUD MASSAGE "YOUR INSPECTION INYITED. :