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aaflvitl: Eulletin and Goudie? 125 YEARS OLD Suteeriftion price 2k o WEE: TH 4 Baath: W00 » reas, Zatersa i @0 Pemefiee A RWNA OWE. 8 meond-eiz matier. Whreantie oMl 3 Ewnih 8 Norwieh, Thursday, Jame §, 1081, MEMEER OF THE ASSAGIATED PAESS, The Asodléted Prem J etelnsively ebtitiod b o ui -.v;m or B8t otberwise * A A eal e 8 romdisten o ol da- nan R & SN CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING MAY 28th, 1921 11,238 REPUBLICAK OPrY 7ICREY. i Ardermen, CLAUDIUS Y. PENDLEYON; LRI RE wi‘r.’x.‘r? (’nnnr“u_. 3 BOWARD CROOK! ST . AR Oity Clerk, WBESTON C. PULLEK. i Oity 'Yreaserer, y STEPHEN H. REEV ity Tax Colldétor, 1AROLD ¥. ROBIKSOX CHy SReRE i CHARLER H, RAYNES, 2 U”,‘LF. ¥ rnmfi‘rflnx Water Commidnionse, BEN 8 BARTLETT. P S ——— REVISING THE CITY CHARTER. The voters of Notfwleh in additiéh to electing A city tickét fiext Monday aré ealled upon determine whether au- thority &hall be given thé mavéer to ap- péint a commities to fevie the city eharter The charter of the city hasn't undef- gone a thorough revision for more thah a generation. There have besn Amend- ments from time to timé eh that it &} mpossible of being cartain just What the | provisiohs of the IMstFuffedt Aré today | without MAkIRE an SXRAUSPE investiga- Han to determing fust What thNé changes are Ravé béen Mdds ARd whsther an ve béen overieeked. samé e Eonditiohs in the S0 change) since the predefit charter wag adontsd that tHesa 18 AesA for bringif® the instruméft wp t6 Aats, mg theréin such featurds of thé freaent ahartér as are desirable and in- MEposating thérewith 6thér feRturés which i1l Mest fHrsesnt A4y EoRANtIGRE. lea it to overcomé thé .ftequently | complaint ahout tryifig to do Bsi- | nder an aftiquated eity chartés, 16 polle on Mofiday tha desis'sh not be upon the changes, but Whéth- A eommissian ®I1 hA AGSROFIZEA 6 the work ofid t8 frésent its recommendations ratifleation A year from now. Thus the acttn on Monda¥ s to that - have tor W1 sommit the efty th N6 change but #mply pave the wav fBF & GRARES PYS- '3k tha ARt SF 4 dommikelen tha the ma¥hr *I11 B8 EI¥6R HO®EF to nams mests with approval Tt 18 A fAbier on Which thers hetd | heoa full FXBFRRsIGR BY RE VOLEFA 6t ths ety. Th vate will hé {aken of (he ma“( ehines by a “v4i* ARA “A6" vote Dén't | waglct sxpress vonr fesling on hit | tn of much Importancé i eAARESHAR H#ith e ofMcient cHRANGt af the ofty under present day condlfibfs, s s et | i POTING MACHINE DEMONSTRATION Voting machinés ara BY 16 médns few Bera. Nevarthelesd thére af many ®ho Rava not voted so often as t6 hecoms chl- loused in the operation afd thérs are| those who feel (ha fi68Q Of BIRE MWIE | fnstructed just before 4lectibn day until doubts as they have about eertain Astalls ire cleared up. | For the purpose 6f AcermMcAating AR &0 a1l of (hé votérs it Ha# beén Ar- ranged by the régistrars {6 K&ve & ma- | éhiné f6r demoristration purposes in theé éorridafir of the city hall each afternéon | for the remaifider of the waék frém | peon until § o'clock i Grder th Infer | hosé Who need Any ISErictions eomesrn- | tn gthe casting of & ballét oM &1setion any. VoLAE by MASNInG s a'mple. TH re- Muirey Mttle tms and aftér using it 4 85uBlA of times thate le né trouble te anticipate. Tn fact practiclly 1l the troubla with the veting machines 14 an- ticipated. TWhat may ssem liké a seri- 64 complication quickly melth away when étplaingd exeent of cotirss it ie 'Mpossiblée {6 make the maching véte for mAts perfond than the votér 14 éntitled (L With the machine whers it can he sesn and arrangéfents made to have thess thers who éan demendtrats It and af- wwor all questions eomferfing itd operd- ten, it Beho#vés ARy ARA All ¢otére wHa Are mot As confldent as they might Be ABSut 1t 16 sten inte tH& Sity Al afd Bt men inetractions as they fesl that they fieed Tt #ill take bt 2 momeént te ba ehéwn and thoss who desire to clear wp any! piints about the operatioh, insluding that of voting of the question of fax révis- for, owa it to othera sk Wsll a8 them- walves to facflitate the veting on eféction day. MUST MEET THE COMPETITION. On scea#ions when aMoFis Rave been mde 16 éréate A gremter demand I Améfiéa 167 ¥o6d4 MaMEtactored $ the Unitéd States, or when eftores Bave Been HAA (4 iRcFeRsd the mariet & Seuth América for this country's pré- #ucts, it has been yointed out that this @ountry and such represeritativés it fias sent to South America havé fatled # properly grfdsp the sitdation. Ofé great troublé that has be#h persistefitly Beld up to criticiam is tR8 fact {Hat there 4 4 cofitifinal indisfence tnat thi South Ameriéah cHtntrié invest A the #00ds such ag thé samples shoWn inétead o fRding ot What Sonth América wants and endeavoring t4 meet suéh ré- gairements. Im other wofds instéad of Allifig the wAnts of that continent we have been endeavoring to Gonvert it fo|érh #tllizing United States goods, That ¥éry sdfhé situation is again be- Ing held mp for etir consideratioh BY the répresentative of an Argentine néWspa- #or who declares that the agefits of firms & other coumtrieg aré #6t SRiy Mr MoK ~ iof |clsarly aiscloses the changed teh eountey. Boiith Atheriea has aiways dene & farigdy Dusiness with w than Witk m:“&mm States. Befors the war &4 well i AOW the trads Fepresentatives of Puropsan conhtries have mads A polat of eatefing to South American deraahds. e cotiftrisd (A that eontinent Werd obliged to dome hére while Furope Wil shgaged ih the War but it Burope is g6 HE t8 SEFVA It BALtSF Ahd ean méet its WAnty more SAtistaEterlly than can the Uhited States Aéw that It I8 again tirh- ing to péace timeé pursuits it behbd this cOURLFY th SREAES Ih & Sompetit that will #A¥s the trads Which nas ehtablished there o¢ t expect that #t wiil drép bick Whets 1t wis before thé war. Thére shotld be close tradd rsla- tloh® betwsén NOPN &nd South Afmeried bt i? adeantagss 118 Jh other Aifbctiond £ 18 natiiral t6 sxpect them to follow that eonse. e GOVERNMENY DEPENDS 6% THONR ENONEN. Mot o ifttia attenlton (@ boIMK divested At the Pressnt tima 6 the aBFt that it Being Made ih bakkit 4F the SiEF mAnager fotm 6t FoverAment IR the eltles ot New Faven anda New Londsn. The ofpsrta: Aty had Badn EiveR t6 the citidéns of thesa aommiifiltie t5 dedide whethér they want 16 take thé change ér fot. At Néw Haven *H. H. Riifible, an &2- tofney frém NOFtelk, VA, WaN sesured to a%plath the Advantages of the nsw plafl 4nd he gamie from 4 clty wheére thé éity manager plan is in éffect aAd whers fiush hak Besh ghent to get it. New Ha- von ia displaying considerabls opposition 6 the 1dea Afd ft Was GRIF AAtiFal that Attofriey Riimble #holild e auestiofied frof the standpoint of the oppositioh. When afked what the pessibllitier of ebrruption wére In the hands of evil men ufider the héw charter his reply was “A RiER ofi\em SRATtAr 18 of soHfEs & dan- gerous tRing in the hands of Eorriipt mett Biit tha pasple must take care thit they &L the right seet of| men.” Latér he #ald that theré Was Hothing Whatéver In the new plan that cotild prevent an invislble government with & WHIL 6l16d fAchIng géttiig &o6ntrol of the From sueh statements by one whe fias had much experience with clty managér governtéht it bécomes evident that Whether thé old charter Is retained or a féw oné séecuréd it 411 depends upon the men Who are électéd to office and that of courae rests in thé handa of thé élector- ate, That fact has been perfectly ohvious from the time commission and éity man- agét formt of governimént have been ad- vocatad. It is not thé form but thé mén Who are électéd to office and thé idea with which they také office that produice the desiréd résmiltd. Thé responsibility rests upon the people in all cases and it is nét SUFPrifiAg that there are théme in New Ha%éi whe féel that the fors 8f #6VEFATIGAL i8n't of itsell goiAE t4 M- Creakd that redpsnefbilit: e PAYING 1%5 Brits Muén sighificAncé ig to Bé attached €8 thE 1aFgé paymént maae by Gérmany tb the répadstion edmmiselsn this waek, far dside from the fact that it meafit the eompletion 6f practically the bitiieR Fo1d marks Aetanded at this timé It shéwed that Getmany had departed from the at- titndd Which had been previously main- taindd afd that ft wad éngaged in the Keeing of it3 Promises Sofiehow thé impression had gotten a #tfOfig H6ld in Gérmany that thers wérd provisions of tha treaty of pedcé tHAt é6iild bé dodgéd if only enough persist- éfics Was uséd Ifi Gppbsing the keepifig of thé promisés. Muchr atress was placéd 1if6n ghé indbility of Gérmany to pay. Tt #as 4 pléa that fell to the ground f6¢ |GArmaRy didn't even manifest the Aisp6- sitibn to pay. It squirtiéd under the amdiint &8t and thé alliés even offérsd to 16t it sufgedt othiér Wavs of meetifig thE Fequireméfts without GHAREIAE the amount. Géfrhany failéd t6 Avail itséit that oppottunity, réalizing of écourse that that Wotld fiot réliéve it 6t its ob- ligdtioh AnA it Was not until GefmaAy ®as. plainly $héwn that there would be n6 toléfation of a fafitire to pay poliéy And thit the pénalty of losing its valua- Hid InAustrial 88etion wotild Be éxacted, (hat it aecidéq t6 toé the mark and pay thE Bil. Thus tHe paymént efun though ft 8 &all in Amount h comparison with the tétal #iif fixed makes it evident that Gérmany i PFOCARdIAE on a new basis. Alrady thiéfe 4ré uider consideratisfi vAriBig wave of sécirinig the Mot st the féparation Aémands afi of #hich attitudd that governe thé Aéw goverfiment. Suéh of coursé wis inevitable. Ger- fiany does't poksedd thé méans of 6p- postg 1t Ahd it krows *Kat the aliieg édn it Akcédddry iforée their démands. Tt i€ therstsre - far préférablé from its standpoint that it should keep its prom- ises thad t6 force the aliiés fo collect. FHITORIAL XOTES. Thé early #éaton ought to put s knee deép in June right {rém the véfy start. The AN 6n thé ofmér <ave: T¢A & Bit AiMMilt to maké Hoes who fided ft most take good advice. Put abwn #4 énthusiastic {hée fellow Who doéd hig garasning by tha aid of au- tomobilk lighte. He #hould b& Practidifig daylight saving. We aré getting t6 THA Adasol o fhe vear whén atténtion must bé given t6 wétting the playgroundd into shaps for the summer's Evéry dollar that Gérmany c4n save through curtailéd military activity just that much more Will bé avallable t6 meat the bill of thé altisa That middiewest taxietb Ariver #hs taTked two men ont of stealing his ma- chihé onght to make #o6d 48 2 membér of thé diplomatic corpe. 2 e The Morida 1égistatiirs hag 4 B fw- iting the incomés of lawvers té $3,600 A ¥ear. Bt W'l Bé tAIKIAE With Mass Béfore that becomes law. It wust have béen a sad daPtor Le Aie Wheh hé gavé notled {6 the bolshe- ¥1ki that GOmMUAISR WAS baRkrupt and sapitalism Would Nave to be called in. If 76t éncountér anyoms who had had éxfiérienéé With gruff and inhuman en- féféément of iraffic regulationg make uf ¥8ht mind they have been t6 New Lem- Aén, And now the war départmeént denied storied indicating that ceftain ones in the #ldcker lists dre unijustly aceused. It doé#n’t like tHé efforts that are baing madé to whitéWash certain draft dedg- The desislon that fas been reached in the Mégisiature that {HEFé is #6ifig t6 ba Dty to do without taking a recesd creates no surprise. It is better not td {fy 10 crowd séVerhl days' work into far better experienced i the nesds of | When Hé did ¥ield a ¥ullen assent Tord “Din't T hear you ¥ay 4t dinner time thit ARgelihe Wik €0ming over this evén- 1AE t6 Study With you?’ asked the father of the family seversly a8 his aaugntér mv\:’aum yawning at ten minwdes 2 / “Why, she did! Carsliné paused on thé third stép to ejaculaté in surprise. “She’s just this minité 1éft—and you lét NeF Brother and HEF oHt!" “Study!" sniffed the father of the fam- fi§. “It was t6 be abbut Sométhidg héavy and Sediological, wasn't it? And ¥OU_Weré writihg papérs, weren't you® “Why yes,” admitted ‘Caroline. “I'm glad t6 KROW it” said the father of thé family. “I eertainly am! Evéry little while I WoHld pausé i My own readifi®, Which consisted of & Shamétully iowbrow 1 story Wiitten in sling W#hich I havé fio doubt the author's fathiér paid g6od money to have beaten out of Kis son’s Yoeabulary in 8ollege. Littie did the authér's taihef dféam that this #ameé slang 1d pHFeAasE sixtéen cyilfi- Aér cats for the whole family latér &h. 1 Jiked my atory, but I said to myself thAt héfe, whén right at hand lofty in- téllé6tual Pirsuits wéré F6ing oh, How 1661i6h 6f me M6t to take advantage of ISR keBwibdEe literally Scatteréd ho- foté mhe. Why net arink the fruits of | 4885 remdarch and imprové mvealf. 1— “I think you aré perfectly horrid to savesdrop " aid Caroline haughtily. “One 18 privilezed to savesdrép when | heé can impréve hi8 mind,” her fatheér | told her. . Ad@lilre 4 blask velvét dress without any | Dack ih it Beféfe tme néxt dafice you | @hbuld mast certainly expire and that | Afigéline was terfibly anxiéus that you | shéuldn't hAvé it any lénkér than just | heiow yout knees. Everybody in Paris is | WEAFINE gOWRs SHOFt 48 tMAL AS ARY one | Who readh thoas perfectly adorable foreisn MmAgAZiAeS with plcturés of the nobility walking dewn the Champs Flysees and in | Hyde Pirk knbWs—and what if they ao | wear them longér héte? Why not Start sométhing? “ WaS ko IHtérsstad trYiRE b declde | what there would Bé 1éft of the gown | atter you Had amPutatél the back hait | of the waitt and most of the skirt that I Jost what dedision you arrived at, but “I learned that if you didh't | #: I later learried that both of you were simply cFazy tb mieet Beftha's cousin, who will be here next week. Bértha saye he is 8ix feet tall and 2 marvelous dancer, and utterly handsome. Anl sRé is pofitivély sure that he i8 crazy abbut Eifls 6f your type, and you are so undecided about whether to keep on tfalhiig youf marcel ovér your ears ot whether to display tham, as the lat- ést hairdressing news says you must. An- géline said that if you draped your hair Pack she though it would spoil the Ma- donng effect evervbody who knéw Vou was just wild aboiit, and then you polite- 1y récipfocated by saying you cohsidered Ref HAlFAress the best among all the girls. Anl She askéd whether you used that wonderfil new brillfintine Susan brought back from New York and that you couldn’t buy hére. vThen oné 6f vou sighed and asked waSfi't it awfiil the wAy those frofesors made you grii@ and how long did they think you could_stand it Wwith break- ing down. Mabel Hoops had broken down from ovérsthdy and had o € to Florida #5r all wintér, and wouldn't it be per- fecty glorious to go to Florida! You al- ways could téll exaetly What the next SUMMmer St¥les wére going to be it yoi ¢biila @86 Wwhat the eastérn women were Wearlhg in Florlda In thé Winter—and Bertha's western cousin, shé sald; aid so Admiire a girl who was spiffy and up to date. “Riit it Dorine got her claws on him— #00d night! Wasn't it the limit the bare- a1 way that girl seatched any man who came within a mile of her? The idea of chasing a man the way Dorine did! hother—this wasn't the right bnok on Social Reactigns” after all—however what difference did it maké when old Bigks never read the papers throuzh anyhow that hé madé yon hand in And weben't you simply dead with al It awful evening's work? Why did they make ¥6u §tudv so hard—and let's Jeave the rest till hetween claseed tomorrow—unless | the eroWd goes after chocolate sundaes as | Did you get that paper done? v." confessed #Caro- iné with hauteur, a&cénding the sta rapldly. “And I think ¥ou are perfectiv ! horrid and you don’t undarstand how hard | we work at all!"—Chicago News. oD INCIDENTS 1IN AMERICAN HISTORY THE WRONGS OF LOGAN, THE IN- DIAK CHIEF Logdn, the fameus Mifigo Indian chief, naméd for James Logan, William Penn's fécrétary, Wwas one bf the miost talented of any American Indian figuring in his- toty. He lived in familiar and friéndly intercourse with the whité settlets in Pennsyl¥ania, and Was kfio% far and Wide for his fine preésence and ergaging qualities. 5 dust prior to the Révolutisn Logan's family wa smassacred by €8ttléfs in the Ofio Valley, which et stirred him t6 réék véngednds upon all White setilérs in ni§ Sedtibn, mnd fir several he féaf- ful barbarities wers Pérpétiattd upon teh, ¥oksn aA8 Shildrén. At the timeé fuéh the FreAtér part of the froAtier Wwas héld 6r Llaiméd by Vit- Einis, whose Fbydl govérAek was Lord Dunthéré. ThE Indiahs in this deetion had béén nérmally At Péacé With the Wwhite& for ten vears, Mnce the clofe of Botquét's éatipaign. But the Whiték Werd begifining tb éncréach on the great Runtihg ground sbuth of the Ohis, and | the Indians bécame anary, amd in the fail of 1773 their attackk bscame &0 trequént that it was evident that z gen- eral outbreak wis at hand. Thus the &pFing of 1774 opénsd with everything ripe for an explosioh. The bordérs wére AnXibus for the Wwar, and Lord Diinmére wad fiot ificlined to balk. Unifortimatély thé first stfoké féll ofi friendly In@iads ThE bahd was 1&d by a Mary1and borderér, Miéhaél Cresap, wiie proéedsd té nestilities at ones by ambushing anl shboting down some friendly Shawhees WHo were engaged in trade. THiS safié party thén set out to at- fack the eamp of Logan Wwhoe family and followérs wers thén awellifg at Yél- low Cfésk. Crésay's party, aftét going Sofe Miles toward 1Afan’s camp, began to feé] ashameéd of théir mission. Calling & halt they Qidcusséd {hA fact that the théy were preparing to &ttack lugivély of frieddly Indians, and forfhwith abandofied théif propésel | trip and FéliFhéd Home. Biit Togdn's péoplé dia fiet profit by Crésap'é changé of héart. On the last diy of April a small party of men, Wo- fiien afa chillfén, incliuding almost @l of Logah'é kin, 1eft fiis camip and croséed the Fiver tp visit Gréathouss, a& hiad béen | theif custom, for he fade 4 trade of sell- | ifiz rim 6 thé Savageés, though Crasap had notifled him to sto: The Wwhole party was plied with lquor, sca 1y drufik, in_which K and his assoclatel crimihal fell upbhi ana fhassacred thém 4i A# brcé thé frontiér was in a blaze, and thé Indldns giffsd themselves for revenze. They corifuséd tiié two madsdcres, &t- tributiig thém Both {6 Cresdp, whom the¥ well kfd® ad 4 wattior. Soon all the back country was involved in the unspeakablé horrors of a bloody Indian war, Which 1284 till the follow- i Ottobér. The hatle of the Great Kanawha tas the chief fight in which the whité§ gainéd a signal victory, which brought about peace. For some time after peace had been declared with ths athér chisfs, Togan would not join it. Dunmore was obliged to communicate with him through a méstenger, a fron- tier veteran named John Gfbson. To this messenger Logan wae willing to talk. Takifig him aside. he suddenlv addressed him in a speéeh which will always retain its plaes a& perhaps the finest outhiirst of savage &loguence of which we have any authentic record. Thé massenger tosk it déwn in writing trans- fating it litérally. Some of the finest r:\ncés from his Speéch are the follow- ing: “T apped] to iny white man to sy it é¥ér Ré eéntéred Legan's eabine Rungry and he gave him not meat; it ever he came c81d afid naked, and hé clothéd him I passed and said, ‘Logan is thé friend of )In the 9th century, but as late as fiot. During the last long and bloody war Logan remained in his cabin idle, an advocaté of peace. Such was my love for the whites that my people printed as they the white man’ I had even thousht to have lived with you but for the iniquities of oné man, Col. Cresap, thé last spring, in cold blool and unprovoked, murdered all the relatlons of Logan. There runs not a drop of blood in the veins of any living creatire. This called on me for révéngs. 1 have eought it. T have killed many. I have fully glutted my vengeancd. For my cotntry I rejoics at the beams of peacs. But do not harbor a thought that mine is the jov of fegr: Logan nesver felt fear. He will not turn on his hiéel fo save his life. Who i t6 mourn for Iogan now Not oné “Thé authénticity of this famous speech been much questionad. i his ‘“The 6f Lowin has §iys Thesdore Roosevelt, *ith no g6bd ground” (Tomorrow—The Brook Farm Colonsy.” IN THE DAY’S NEWS THE RUHR. The Ruhr valley of westerh Germany at the mouth of which allied soldiers have béen encamiped for several months, and the complete seizure of Which France was barely averted by Germany's eleventh hour acceptance of the allied reparations ultimatum, is the subject of the followinig bulletin_ issueq from the Vashifigton, D. C., headquartérs of th. nal _Geographic Society: & Ruhr river js an ineonspicuous | stream, hardly more than a hundred milés long, with little volume of water, and navigable even with thé aid of Its| by | is eléven locks for a distance of only 43| milés. But its valley and the rolling | eountry to the north for a few miles, to| which it has given its name, is a region | of coneentrated industrialism. There, in | a district roughly 40 by 10 miles imfl béén developed the greatest coal pro-| duetion in FEurope. And with iron ore! available from the nearby former ‘Ger-| man Lorraine’ and Luxemburg, there sprang up the industry of fabricating |hi iron and &teel which went' farthér per-! hdps than any other aof biilding up the mighty German empire | of 1913, and gave a litéral signifieanc to Bismarck's ideal for a country ‘blood and fron. “Oné could pick out the éval of the Riihf region on A map of Germany by 1§ railroads. Germany's steel highways form a relativély close net-work over | thé entire country, but in the Ruhr re- n the lines draw togethér into a fine e showing unmistak: the hive of | dustry that this distrjef has come {o] ba, “The solar plexus trict is Besén, known thé home of the g armorplate factori In prominent places in the eity stand statues to Bis- marek and Alfféd Krupp—the man who | laid the foundations for Germany's pow- | erful fighting machine, and the man who equippéd it and became tremendously wealthy in the proe Krupp real made Essen almost United Stateg Steel Gary, Indiana. of the Ruhr dis-| far and wide as as Corporat The town was founded 1854 it was little more than a village with 10 500 inhabitants. Before the World thé Krupp works. TFrom 1914 to 1918/ When Germany was putting forth every | effort to produce more and supplies, the population of Essen had | a war addition of 100,000 or more. “With the development of Fssen as a steel and from center hundreds of other éstablishmerits joined the Krupps until the envirans of the ecity afe now a for- | Qg ést of chimneys. Near Fssen, tos, are many eoal pits. “But while Fseefi 18 the centor of ‘the Ruhr’ it by ho méans monopolizes its btisinése. Big éitles are thick in this atéd. Tnterihg the regiofi at Duisburg, fte gate-city, with 230000 inhabitants, by a journey 6f less than five miles one réachés Obérhausen with a popnlation of a4 alwiays been azd ;:m i;Mua, e 2 nestly represent 1 feady g Cettainly proved to v belief will this Write Desa 2/ for FREE 205~ e Seitly made fi Tl bR true in the casé of La Tetitaine Téa.” m 3 - ; that Freezone on an aching corn, instantly | that corn stops i vyou life it right off with fingers. Truly! Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes; and the calluses, with soreness or irrifation. | | longer t Krupps' gun and | = war | S it had gréwn to be a city of 300,000 and | § of thess nearly 50,000 were employed in | [ more war | |8 Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a littls| ting then shortly | i Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH FRECKLES AND WHITEN i SKIN %! Squeeze the juice 6f two lemons into | a hottle containing three ounce of Orchard Whit which any drug stor will supply for few cents, s and you have a quarter pint of ti best freckle and tan bleach, and com- plexion whitener. | sage this sweetly frz into the face, neck i | | | SUROUOTORIRRIRRRIRIRN lotion and blemishes bleach out and how clear, soft and rosy-white the skin be- comes. 90,000. Three miles farther is Mulehim with 112,000, five miles away ¥ n with | 300,000, and four miles far G kirchen with 170,000. By an advance | of thér four miles into the Ruhr one reaches Bochum with a population 137,000, wh ten miles far to the east and still short of the easte: limits of the region lies Dortmund 214,000 inhabitants. I Paul, grouped closely ovér an area and somewhat narrower 6de Island, while among them a d or R were scattered ranging n. | v all of the| those s teway are to be ines, while nts and the grateway t ed the banking and ties fot handling the tre of this home of German: ortation fa ndov Stories That Recall Others A Freé Picture. One morning W mother and his litle a wonderful dream befora. e was #elling ster, Dora, had the interes 100 dream, dream le sister What is a you know what Why Shouldn’t He? en democra med to them a ride ot long lookly woman When he got . ually turns to go to bis vd the wornan that he would turn {here. t to the of At ox. ister Half Pound Canister dde vAIRLE A Sale of Alexander Smith & Sons’ Seamless Axminster Rugs ALL THIS WEEK A special purchase of these well known Rugs enables us to make you prices which are way below any that have been seen for a long, long time. If you have been wait- ing for this chance to replace some worn rug seize the op- portunity at once, and make selection without delay. 9 BY 12 AXMINSTER RUGS Gocd quality seamless Axminsters which have been selling for $69.00 — Latest designs and COlOTINGS o7 s s e oo diah s 8554385848880 8%« $39.50 Best grade seamless Axminsters which were sold last season for $95.00 — Patterns and colors all new .......... $55°00 36 by 63, were $12.50 «eses4.+ SALE PRICE $7.50 27 by 54, were $ 8.00 ........... SALE PRICE $5.00 18 by 36, were $ 3.50 cssssseesee SALE PRICE $2.45 e e e e e Hello Folks! I'm Here Acain! And Will Be All Ready For You Saturday An Event In Men's and Women's Shoes That You Will Never Forget SEE TOMORROW’S PAPER FOR PRICES, ETC. C. E. DUSTIN P. S.—SOME OF MY COMPETITORS ARE TICKLED TO DEATH med, “But I want to|we forsake the placid routine of the bank. simplé life for the doubtful thrill of the he kept on down into|shower bath that comes s about t6|wé arén't. éxpees ght hand of the street|6us lufe of the cif e woman dirégted him to éroséi g fatthér can’t pay hi: side and’ draw up on thé| 4nd is unhappy and pet undér présént ecénomic oon has to glve a steer for a pa and a wagon load of potatoes nightehirt?—H. R. Daniel, in the Thrift Magazine, out, drew out her P him a nickel. He took it| f without acquainting her t she had not beed rid Bryah as a Florida Senater 1t Wil Be news to the people of M ami that Willi&m J. Bryan “has tak- eh all steps to become citizen of Florida.” * ¢ * | genierally, will not be sury | decision, nor at the fur ment, though it the one-time boy nepess: nz on thé Farm. that s now aid in favor ire, most of thé|méans to be a candida e T brooks and the| Unjted States Senator from Florida— ired forth amid | Pittebifgh Gazette-Times. d flat. ¢ of ts pré- | run down b¥ | flattened out t i the | REDUCE THOSE DANGER- OUS SWOLLEN VEINS clans are prescribing and hospi- using a new and harmless, yet potwerful rmic! that not only e veins and e enlarged g first class dru o-ounce bottle « (£l accept anythi highly concén oune: =13 original t érald Oil wag a ¢ime in tiis country When cded in reseimbiing his It is such a on that two and further- g in i trated g a, long wonderful &xollen veing to keep on ¢ v huFet and canee tweel = And Joss of employ “merald Oil treat vise and_impro Generotis samy tories, ean supply s comple and a nafl runs over 1 as 1 HE SHOE FELLER From Ameshury, Mass. . NT 35 Broadway