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i MODEL | 132 MAIN STREET LADIES!! We will continue to sell all our high-grade footwelr in ! " BROWN KID PAT, SUEDE TOP’ " - BROWN CALF PAT.KID TOP. - BLACK KID BLACK SUEDE TOP imdainty Louis heels—values up to $12.00— AT $6.90 1 Aful“meofw L.DOUGLASS‘:K)m,ltIfiem‘ lowerpnces. "MODEL BOOTERIE lnMAlNSTREEl', NORWICH,CONN ments were served at the close. G. F. Goodxmugn Tecently went to New York to attend a dinner of the Yale club, of which he is ‘a member. At the close o fthe banquet Rev. Mr. Good- enough made an address. Archie and lay Holdridge of Storrs college were visitors with their parents in_this place Sunday. Etnest® Thompson, who purchased the Calvin Hewitt farm about a year ago, is making ‘improvements o his haildi There will'be .2 prumag demonstration in the orchard of Isaac G. Geer on the Thomas place, now: occupied by Earl By Geer, Monday, Feb. 14, at 2 p. m. County Agent’ Harold F. Johnson with a demon- strator from Storrs college will have charge of the work. The public has been invited to attend and learn how ah ap- ple tree should be properly rruned. Rev. Mr. Goodenough was called te Winchester Wednesday morning by the sudden death of his father, Rev. Dr. Ar- thur Goodenouzh. _Rev. Dr. Goodenough had been pastor of the Winchester Con- gregational church for 30 years. . He supplied the pulpit of the Congregational church here last summer while on a short vacatipn visit with his eon and was a very able and forcible speaker. LEDYARD The speaking and spelling contest of Ledyard schools was held in Led- Congresational church Wednesday réoen. Supervisor W. S. Dakin had exercises. There were the fogr test, one each from the Cider Hill, Geer Ejll, Church Hill, Center, Unionville, and Lantern Hill schools. The were Samuel E. Holdridge, Mrs. isor Dakin. judges awarded first to Miss Louise rk, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Uoseph A. Clark, of the Geer district, and, honor- tble mention to Miss Virginia Good- saough, daughter of Rev. and Mrs. G. F. Beodenough,. of the Church Hill district; tlfe_special mention to Miss Sarah 3| arini_of the Lantern Hill school Miss Virginia Goodenough was the chafn- pion spelier of the different school. A large number of parents and children-was srésent. | ' Ledyard grange held its 306th regular mpeting Friday evening, Feb. 4th. with & good attendance. The committees for the various activities of the grange for the snsuing year were appointed. Refresh- — WANTS TO HELP OTHER MOTHERS, . Mrs. William Sager, 901 Nichol St TUtjcac N. Y.: “I gladly write anything thit heinrs a inother with her children. My little girl had ‘whooping cough and I was afraid she would choke. 1 gave her Faey's Honey and Tar and it heiped her wanderfully. She could sleep most all might without coughinz.” 'his good fl ‘i lu > checks colds, stops coughing, 'gm and covers raw, inflamed e i 4 neare coating. Lee £ Ggacd Co. and an enjoyable evening was spent. The - extension with an average attendunec of 40. day and Wednesday women. housewife. advantage of this school. Canterbury men? * The W. €. Whflt abo of tive members: were attending -the e: tension schoel, a box lunch for two. will share her lunch with the: man ing the matching haif of her valentin ~MERROW NO STENOGRAPHIC COPY OF BOLSHEVIK PROPAGANDA ‘Washington, Feb. 11.—Officials at,the state department today professed to have no knowledge of any sienographic copy of the proceedinzs a Bremen of.the in- ternational bolshewik: propaganda com- mittee as the Petit Parisien today stated was understood to be in possession of the department. mn: rell ives in the Thread City. last week. Mrs. Further Reductlon ln - COAL PRICES Chesmut Coal .. $14.50 per ton Stove Coal ..... $14.50 per ton EggCoal ...... $14.50 per ton PeaCoal ...... $13.50 per ton Boulet Coal . ... $13.50 per ton No Extra Charge If Carried In. || SHETUCKET COAL & WOOD C0 Telephone 1257 ily in South Willington. for jured her finger. antine has not been removed fros house yet. ease, was seni to coming back that germs were strictions removed. WESTMINSTER a talk by the pastor. Lincoln was charge of the exercises. bush. successful' Parents’ day. :Several of - RESERVE OF $4,250,480 IN hold $19,347,350 resetve of, $4,250,480 ‘from. last week. A few heighbors gathered at the home of Mrs. Levi Baker Saturday ‘evening, Feb. 6, to help celebrate the birthday of her mother, "Mrs. Bradford. who. is over score mark, yet well active and alert, " She received a number- of gifts trom friends. Refreshments were served. 00l opened. Tuesday Very. interesting subjects . were treated Tues-. for both men and It was regretied that more men have not taken advantage of the school, as it certainly s a great help to the farmer and poultryman as well as the There was ofie. *.-man -from Pilainfield and one fram Wauregan taking U mmxng was post-" poned until next Weanesdav as several At the next grange meeting, Feb. 16, the lecturer will have a valentine social.| The women have been, requested to put inm Valentines will be |- cut in two and partners will be found by matching the halves, when each woman | Mrs. Phebe Wilcox spent Monday vis- urdick of -Chaplin visited his !Dn, A § 3 Burdick, and family a part of Lena French was a guest Sun- day of her daughter and the latter's fam- Mrs. Frank Millard has been unable to. attend to the work at Spring Manor farm several days, having painfully in- It was stated in this colunm some days ago that the Wilcox family were out of quarantine for diphtheria. but the quar- . the A culture from Ira Wilcox's throat, he having been ill with the dis- New Haven, word still present. . The family Tias to be patient for a few days longer, when all hope that the danger will be over and the re- The hour of the morning worship Sun- day next will be used by the church school for a Lincoln day celebration, with Kentucky mountain highlander- by birth, So it Ts fitting to have the offering for ;the A. M. A. which works among the American highlanders, :and many other- wise neglected nationalities in the land. Miss Young, assistant superintendent, has Mrs. Ida Shorter is passing a fort- | night in New York eity and vicinity, spending a part of her time with Mer daughter, Mrs. Harold George, in Flat- Raymond school recently had a very the schools. ‘Westminster Hill among them, are to observe Wash- ington’s birthday with special exercises. —_— CLEARING ROUSE BANKS New York, Feb. 11.—The acual condi- tion of clearing house banks and trust companies for the week shows that they in excess of legla Tequiremenis. ~This is an increase | m:-mmmammnum niuy interepted‘in the termis of the “which had just been concluded Between the Germaps and . French.. By the terms of the armistic France was to the Germans 200,000,000 ‘son was experieficed that week, when the dropped . several degrees below . 'The Thames river was frozen over andl navigation was closed. The steamer City of; thmx; vh;n&ble to make her usual: trips use e’ fce. “Extra ‘mu oF The Hulletty and Fatire is received. The chief points gre as follows: . Military operations m both on.land and sea until noon on” Feb. 18th, except in the department of) jubs, Jura and Cote d4'Or and the siege of Belfort. The national assembly is ‘to Be conveked at Bordeaux to decide traaly— for peace or war’ The Germans take posseseion of the forts aroynd Paris, while’ the. garrison are to give up their zrms and remain in the city as prisoners of war. During the armistice the . Ger- mans_are to enter Paris. The city d Paris is to pay 200,000,000 francs be- fore the 15th ‘day of the armistice. The railroad bridge over Trading Cove was found to be on fire Saturday morn- ing- when the 10:30 train reached it. The fire ‘was_extinguished but the bridge was burned so. badly #t was necessary strengthen it.” Yesterday morning was the coldest of ithe season, . the) thermometer showing at 8, o'cleck from four to nife below zero. Tuesday, Feb. 7th, 1871.—Our eity ought to he the cemter of a very large trade in salmon king of he river fishes. Nearly . all the rivers that ‘drain the eastern part of the state meet here to form the Thames. The Shetucket and Quinebaug were once famous salmon riv- ers and there is hardly a brook* that runs_into’ them ‘but furnishes miles of admirable breeding grounds for this fish. The Yantic is ‘quite as fayorable ffl spawning beds. The steamer City of Norwich was un- able to reach Allyn's pojnt yesterday morning, the ice having made during the night and closeg navigation to a point a mile or. two below. ,The freight was | disharged at New London. . Workmen on the Air Line have reach- ed East Hampton and it is expected that the.road will be completed to Willimantie and Putnam by June, and that through trains will run between New York and Boston by July. MWednesday, Feb. 8, 1871—The funeral lfll’v(&l of the.late A. R. Bingham were held in the Sachem street church yester- dady dfternoon. ‘The Fev. Mr. House preached wera interred in°Yantic cemetery. . Frank Lovell has an iceboat on the river—a - novelty -in these waters or on these icés. The skating is very good. Last evening .three or. four hundred peo- ut x- SENSATION IN TRIAL OF . * JUDGE W. P. MeGANNON Cleveland, Ohio, Feb. 10..—Miss Mary E. Neely, counted upon®as 2. witness for the state in the second trial of Judge ‘William -P. McGannon, charged with sec- ong ‘degree murder in connection with the slaying of Harold C. Kagy cn.May 7 last; ‘created a.sensation when she took e witness stand today and, declared re- («Iy that Judge McGannon is inno- ‘cent of the killing of Kagy. After being asked a few. formal ques- tions by County Prosecutor Edward C. Stanton,; Miss Neely startleg the court- room when Stanton asked her: “Did-you see Judge McGannon om or about ‘May. 7.” by replying: réfuse to answer because in s> do- ing-T might diszraca or incriminate my- self. "Judge McGannon is not guilty of the murder of arold C. Hagy." Miss Neely was one of the principal witnesses for the state in the first Me- Gannon-trial. At that time she testified she followed Judge McGannon's automo- bile<to -the scene of the shooting-on_ the shot, “saw McGannon Simul- taneously there was a fldsh of shot and Kagy fell forward. " .Today she could not remember inci- dents she described at great length at the first trial. She refused to answer practicaJly. every question that touched upon testimony she gave at that _trial that .might involve Judge McGannén in the_shooting. ‘When 'Prosecutor” Stanton -app Judge ‘Homer G. Powell that‘the be .compejled to answer /questions court upheld Miss Yeely's plea that to answer “might tenq to disgrace or in- criminate™ her. ; A second sensation came as a climax to the Neely testimony when Mrs. Ella E, Webb, sister of Miss Neely, took the stand and .again told of overhearing a conversation in her sister’s apartment on the night of November 21 in which Me- Gannon offered- Miss Neely $500 “to go down. to the prosecutor and she. she was mistaken.” H ed o 2 itness TO PREVENT A. SPREAD. OF EUROPEAN TYPHUS e ‘Washinigton, Feb. 10.—Precautions tak- en and - steps ‘contemplated, are believed by federal authorities to be sufficient to prevent a spread of the European typhus epidemic- to the United - States, Secre- tary. Tumulty. tonight informed .Dr. R. 8. Copeland, New York city health com- missioner. -Seoretary. Tumulty, in.a telegram ‘to Dr. Copeland, quoted a report on the ty- A Sale Of Ladies’ And MiSses’l : COATS AND SUITS AT $19.50 FINAL CLEARANCE OF ALL LADIES’ AND MISSES’ FALL AND WINTER COATS AND SUITS WHICH SOLD UP TO $65.00 AT 519.50 No Exchanges No Charges B. GOTTHELF & CO. “The Store of Good Values” 94-100 MAIN STREET phus situation from the Secretary of the treasury ‘whio declared there was noth- ing-t owarrant.the step suggested by’ the New York health commissioner, in g .tel- egram yesterday to the White Heuser imposition' of- & ban- on the admission of imigrants from the arrival at the port of New York within the last few days of moré. than thirty cases of typhus. Surgeen: General Cuniming in. a staf ment issued during the day said thal even should typhus get into the United Statés,” “there is Do reason te fear that . its” introduction. would ‘be followed by ep- idemics on the same scale as in Europe.” “At the same time” the surgeon gen- eral ‘added," “it ‘must be berme in mind that there might be outbreaks in the slum quarters of large cities. The dis- ease spreads only in unsanitary and fiithy surroundinga for, so far as kmown, the disease is spread only by lies. - The “sitnation as’ presemted by the ar- rival ,of the typhus- cases at New York ‘will- be_considered_at‘a conference to- ‘morrew between Dr. Cummings and Ew- ing Laporte,” assistant .secretary of the treasury, in charge éxgublh: health, the report ; of - assistant rgeon gGeneral R, H. Creel. whe has been in New York in- vestigating ' the ‘situation will be consid- ered at the conference anq it i# expect- ed “that further, fneasures to sifeguard the United States will be determined. | MOVEMEWE TO SAVE THE NOAH WEBSTER HOMESTEAD Hartford, Feb. 11.—Sarsh Whitman Hooker Chaptef, D. A. R. ‘West Hartford, is backing 5 movement to sive the Neah Webster homestead in South Main strest, thatitown, and preserve it for posterity as one of the historic land- basring his mame, first published in 1823, was born in 1768 In West Hartford, at- tenided school there and went from there to Yale college. His father. Noah Web- in- the old town bury- %he sermon -and the Rev. Dr.| why enjoyed a delightful visit to the ge. Armg made a few remarks. The remains{ nnal host and his famely: _—nmm— tha, ple were skimming the frozen stream be- tween “the. city ‘and Allyn's Point, ‘We. comipile from official sources the jamount |of taxes paid on distilled 'spirits in the state of Connecticut from the or- ganization of the internal revenué law in 1863 to June 30, 1870: First Distriet, Hartford, Tolland counties ........$1,018,035.78 Second District, New Haven, Middlesex - countiecs Third - District, Windham, New London counties .... Fourth Distriet, thc\fleld Fairfield countles . % 49,067.10 13,519.08 54,223.32 Totdl .uvveees sesoesss.. $1,134,844.26 ‘Thursday, -Feb. 9, 1871—We learn that a telegram wag received last ‘evening, bringing the sad ‘intelligence ‘that Miss Myra Wetmore, formerly a teacher in one of the public schools in this city, fell downstairs in Worcester yesterday and was instantly killed, hér neck being ‘We understand that the Rev. John C. Middeton of Calvary chureh,, Stonington, has accepted a call from a church in New Britain. Mr. Middleton has done much for the interests of his parish and of the village. His removal will be generally regretted. “The funeral serviees of‘the late John Meier” were held in the Sachem street church _yesterday afternoon. A large number of friends of, the decgased, in- cluding deputations from the Norwich and Greeneville ' fire departments were present. Friday, Feb, 10, 1871—We think there Moretown, Vermont, March27th 1918, “I am warranted in having the strongest faith in ‘Fruit-a-tives’ &fter ‘receiving such wonderful benefits with Kidney uxd Liver Complunts. My back ached; my liver wag sluggish’; and.my. whole 'lyfleh is a good opening in the smaller tribu- taries of the Thames between here and "fm‘*d out °“:fl1er- New London, . for individual enterprise Fruit-a-tives’ was the only remedy in raising salmon. There are scveral| gohelpme, They gthened the streams flowing into the Thames and into the Sound in this county quite large enough for salmon, 4nd yet not so large but that agsingle 4ndividual with a mod- erate capital gould control a half mile or more of ' the ‘outlet. Whatever legisla- tion is needed fo protect these private enterprises can be easily secured. The Rev. Mr. Koerner has received & call to Chicago and ameeting of the German Lutheran soclety is called for next Thursday ‘evening to consider it . A hydrant near the Mberty.pole in ‘Franklin square burst resterday and the stream filled the gutters to the height of the sidewalks. Saturday, Feb. 11,°1871—A% a meeting of the Broadway Church society lest evening, A. W. Prentics, Henry Bill and E. R. Thompson were elected the society cdommittee, S.'R: Parlin, treasurer, and George W. Kies, olerk. Thursday evening, Major John W. ‘Houghton of Bozrah, weicomed to his home and good cheer over. one hundred of the parishioners of Trinity church, kidneys, made my bowels *move regularly and freed me of all the distress caused from the kidney trouble, constipation and indigestion. A few weeks’ treatment with *Fruit-a-tives’ made me feel as'if I had anew lease on life, and I amglad these Fruit Liver Tablets”. MOSES MURPHY, B0c. & box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 256, Atdealersor from FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, N, Y, ~ R 1 g “ en remarked that all the multifarious imsly clues apparely had been followed to the fadipg-out point. . Since the remnants of the old « ram- shackel dray have b rusting ‘at police headquarters, no. ) than 300 .wagon makers, painters and cabinet mkers have come from remote corners of New York. Pennsylvai New Jersey. and Connec- ticut in vain efforts to trace its maker. | Many expressed the opinion that'it was an old butter-and-egg wagon built 17 er 18 years ago. All agreed it' had a eover. Harness of “the derelict horse which drew the wagon, as well as a number of large slugs it was supposed to have car- ed, are still at police héadquarters ' but ey too probably will be taken to the warehouse later. A meeting of the legal voters of ‘the Town Street school district to take ac- tion in regard Bo the eale.of a part of the disriot prvpen.y will be held this evening. TNDECIDED ON DISPOSITION OF THE GERMAN CABLES ‘Washington, Feb. 11.—The internation- al communications conference convoked at the state department after an interim of two months, adjourned today without reaching a decision on the disposition, of the German cables. nother session will be_held next Tuesday. Representatives of France, Great Brit- ain, Italy anq Japan requested a further postponement of the discussion in order that final instructions might be obtain- ed by cable from the respective govern- ments. Since all the delegates which represented the allied governments re- turned to their homes after the adjourn- ment of the conference in December, the four ‘powers were represented at today's meeting by their ambassadors or charg- | es. ‘WILL RECEIVE NO MORE FILTHY IMMIGRANTS New York, Feb. 1l.—Representatives of various trans-Atlantic steamship- lines which have brought large . numbers , of immigrants here .were notified by Percy A. Baker, superintendent aof, the. Eilis Island immigrant station, .that.no more immigrants would be ved. &, the “is- land in a fiithy condition. One thousand steerage passengers who arrived recently on the . Lapland ‘were taken to Elis Island today but.inspection was refused because of.their eondition, Ambassador Jusserand informed ™ the conference that on account of the eHange in the French ministry \since the com- munications conference last met, it had been difficult for him to|obtain instruc- tions as to whether the attitude of the government had altered toward the allo- cation of the cables. : American officials have stated that the attitude of France.and Japan was re- sponsible for the blocking of a sett'ement last fall and it is hoped by officials here that with the new instructions which are being askeq for by the allied represent- atives, an agreement fhay be reached within the next few weeks. * Advices received today In official efre cles assert that mneéwspapers In Japan were forbidden to print reports of the sessions of the communications confer- ence held here last fall Danbury.—At a epecial meeting of the Ladies of Columbus held ‘in .tife K. -of C. home Thursday evening tie officers#were installed by Rev. J. J. Carroll, stite pres- ident. of New Haven, ausisted hx M Charlotte M. Holloway of Hartford. New Life for Sick Man [Eatoniec Works Magic] |.. ‘‘I have taken only two boxes of Eatonic and feel like & new mas. It has done me more good than any- thing else,"” writes C. O. Frappir. Eatonic is the modern remedy lo} WALL STREET EXPLOSION TO BEMAIN ETERNAL MYSTERY New .York, Feb. 11.—The orfgin of the tragic Wall Street bomb explosion, which snuffed‘out 89 lives and severely | mcid stomach, bloating, food repest- injured dqwnreds Hf others last Sepe | ing and md:;nuon tqmck_ly takes tember, appears to be wrarped in eternal up and carries out the acidity and gas and enables the stomach to digest the food naturally. That means not unly relief from pain and discomfort but you get the full strength from the food you eat. Big box only costs s trifle with your drugeist’s guarantee. Lee & Oigood, 131 Matn Bt mystery. When 17 boxes filled with bolts, jag- ged iron nuggets anl other death-deal- g miscellany—remnants of the notori- ous “death wigon” supposed to have hauled the infernal machine to the scene of the tragedy—were locked up today in a_police warehouse, reminiscent ‘police- S0 strenéthemng 30 “healthful contains so much-yaluable food material that 1t should be used OKLET OP CROICE' RECIPES SENT FREE Wolier Baker&Co.L1d. ESTABLISHED 1780-DORCHESTER, MASS. to make known the great value ol ]éurh on_the. hills, the air is clean 3 LINCOLN, THE ‘HAND THAT WROUGHT.~ This hlnd [N' strong |, felling etube That b.'fid (e way of frec lom for eur And ‘Nefe I Tifinois i 1 That ll(oulfl de-mu .t‘lfll e( 5 race. He siw ‘help of Wi dAen L J en-. and vowed ir k This ha?dhclnch'd haid the tyrant's rod And mn .l from his grasp. A people’s ‘Went \.m lo Cod who_seein) | rdespal: Had sal:rle:: them a Frnend‘bx!nod ud “ THE REVELATION. He walked among us and we passed him y And lheul'ht him but a_ceuntryfawyer As mu' r;:d prairies are, and more thar Who reveled in his jokes and deviltry. We col:’lll not know the heart within that Until the biood flower freely from the wound A madman made; “then was it that wi That (xo\‘l hld loaned us for a time Hir Best. And no' the mllm sifice their king: THE CHRISTIAN. His foes declared him blasphemous, per- umfln: bod lnd heedless of His Word Théy satd in fineness, whu vre{ened To ml.:l.t jokes, foul scandals to re- arse. He was.no white-robed saint; a strong man he ‘Who )ovul to wrestle with the devil: That ]urkld behind the fashions of the He scorned all shams, and for hypeerisy He held a.hatred such as Christ alone. The lcmn of haughty Pharisees, coulc Those uh;-‘; masks of Christians fell And n;hm- blml— name each oms! ¥ .« s es Not by v.helr words, but by their fruns said He, Who also kne'h —mm Written 2'er viewing & cast of Lin- doln’s right Tind the sting of calumny. Clark, in Boston Tran TO A CLOUD. Light footed cloud, far wild rover, What lands and sears are you roaming over? . The stars zre still, n, You, la“lhe footloose, wand'ring one— Porcelain cities, blank eyed gods; . A golden Buddha that broods and nods Thatched roofs, awthorn, an English . lane, lhnflun lights in a mist of rain; sea ‘of jewels, Venice at night, Gondolll, gliding in golden light; Beauty and color—too swift 1o sex Dln and squalor and misery. the moon and the P‘v n now yem are drifting away, smoke of factories hides the .‘,5— raus is, bright and the trees are X Oh, take me up like a wave on Take me with you. tak —AwMgail W. Cresson, in New York Her- al HUMOR OF THE DAY .- Plaeard in a.rural store—"Trade here and teach your dollars 1o have more cents."—Exchange. Mistress—“Norah, I rung for you four times and you didn't come. I'm getting tired of it.” _ Mald—"So .am I; that's why I've come.—Boston Transcript. = A ‘quack' doctor wse advertising some street corner. ve sold these pills for twenty-five years and never heard & con- pisint, What does that prove?” Volce from the crowd: “That dead men- tell no tales."—Detroit Free Prese. A business house, having been solicited for some advertising by a newspapir, wrote back asking what _ territory the paper covered. The editor replied: “This paper goes from New York to San Fran- cisco, from Canada to the Gulf and it keeps me working until 2 o'clock in the -urrnlng to keep it frem going to Hades.” Exchenge. Wite—My didn't that girl have a lot of paint on her face? Hubby—I didn’t notice that, but she certainly had on a loud pair of stcckings —Florida Times-Union. “What are you doing? tles In the air. “No I'try to forget shop when I leave fice.” Building eas- .mo “And - you are?™ “An architect.”—Loulsville Journal. Statistics show that omly 5,600,000 per ®ons. paid - income ‘thxes this vear. Which proves conelusively that an over- whelniing majority of our 119,000,000 cigizens .are happy, contentd and have comparatively nothing to -werry about.— Life. “T guess that fully competent.” “He inquired what method of volce culture I had been using and promptly told ‘me it was all wrong."—K.oiusville Courier-Journal. “Who'll write the family history?” Hiram, of rse! He's taken out any number of life insurance policies.”— Buffalo Express. Jimmy—Gee, & Jane mist be interesteq in.a guy when she begins to pick threads ‘off'n his coat. Tommy—Nothin' to when she begins to, pick hairs ‘off'n it!—Cartoons Mag- azine. Said a teacher of much erudition. “I; deplore the peor workman's comdl Courior- instructor of music s When he learned what they earned. His profession he spurned. And he became a high-paid mechaniclan —The American Legion Weekly. THE KALEIDOSCOPE Miss Norma Foster Stoughton an( Miss Margery K. Eggletson are the firs women to be appointed to the staff ‘of the Rockefeller foundation. Pigures compied by the Tuberculosis Association #how sum approximating $2,000,000 s spen cath year by residents of New York fo; fake tubefeulosis “cures.” and that th perpedrascrs of .these frauds throughou Nationa that | the country take from their confiding vic timg between §$15,000,000 and $25,000,. 000 annually, Canada is preparing to take sare sare of the meat ‘demand by supplying some- thing which will be in the natuge of & novelty on the table. This is’cattalo steaks. which are cut from an aniwal which is a eross between the huffalo und the cow. Thil meat s very desirable every way, and the “animals are be raised in great numbers In Canada. During the war Harry Tiematn the forest preducts laberatory at Madi- son, Wis, completeiy revolutionized the lnmbefi!nhl process. As a result of his experiménts he found a way te dry black walnut in sixty days, oak which ordinarfly meedeq three to five years of seasoning In nincty days, and material for iarplanes In from twenty-four ° to for airplanes in from twemty-fowr o o