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wmeriptien piee I3 & weeki Tie & Weme; . D Gt s e Teefies & Nered ) e o “matter. ; Tetegiens Catla Todnes Ofen 8y Baleta Btecial Pavme, B Offies. % Cureh B CIREGLARON K ENDING AUGUST §, 1921 11,264 LOGIC IN TAXATION. n tha conelusion reach- dministration amd ‘who Their find- rekeh their agreements when talk freely and thW dannot be @one In Open contertnee. reached by experience. measure fulfill the is a proper publichty that will dring re- IN PURSOIT OF FASWION. fam on Which & Woman ean dress well Seem more conservaiive. They assert and does not attempt te follow all the dbublinge amd twistings of fashion's trail. Mere man, inspecting the fashion mag- azines to find what thkes the money, im- mediately flounders in wnfathomable complexities. Ont of the welter emerzes one clear fmpresston—that the woman Wwho rides, wwims, plays gelf, shops, saunters, te: dines &nd sups in hot vursuit of Pashion must pass through a series of protean changes which would have made old Protéus @issy. The La- ltin peet, who first wrots that womam was a changeable creature, did not con- template a time When every hour and v This may be deplorabls, but it is a An opem eonference, but there sults with reasonabdle speed, While on the Other hamd thers fs a publisity that ‘breeds troudble and stands in the way of Ballecta Job O, g4 | 7STUIS. This is to be svoided. Teleptuos 108 Smes New York women of fashion de- clars that $5,080 & year I8 the mintmum and follow the styles. Chicage women that $200 a menth will tarn the triek, if the fair parehaser takes the ahort euts THE MAN WHO TALKS Probably no one in these days excépt an unreasonable crank will register an undigcriminating protest against smok- ing, that is ,during this present life, It Is doubtiess a great pleasure that the majotity of men. and many Women en- Joy. Seclence has not yet’ \discovered that the moderate use of tobacco 18 harmful to the body, therefor alofhg this ground the qu does mnot eén- ter the field of moral discussion. There’ are some phases of the habit that are open to eritiism. 1. Boys of a tender A are apt to be stunted by the use of tobaceo, and especially by cigarettes which is the worst form in Which the weed can be used. 2. The habit is al- together too expensive for some peopie; no luxury is warmanted when it curbs . necessity. 3. The majority of men smoke too much, and that means some bodily harm, mnaé or later. 4. Many smokers ‘have inexcusably bad habits, In that they blow tobacco “smoke into other people’s faces, and fllck cigar asn- es into other people’s eyes, especially on the street. ‘Bhe non-smoker whether man or woman, is entitled to Some con- sideration. Do we fully realize the import of what is usually called the minor graces? Those little fhings that do mot ris' to the dlgnity of character, but yet have muchs to do in establishing*a man's reo- utation. Take, for illustration, the grace of socialibility, which 18 Emmpy amiablility working on the” job. ~Why can't we give a touch of good nature to the act of shaking hands with one an- other and in the exchange of usual @i~ vilities? Socialibility opens for us rieh mines of pleasure and satisfacton shien otherwise would remain ' undiscovered and closed, The man who carries a grouch around with him mever gets anv- Where either with himself or with oth- ers. It is a touch of socfability when od, the place s reduced, money witl he house that it expeniitures. If its own. have action wosld demand a change of certain hurdles, and yet is there at the and the ways and o of the house sbel to ¢ the storm announce- conld prabable and that The lopped ost a cuts in the ship= partment, osstble taxes, zher brack- the halving W maw needed. automo n forcing appropriations and departments tions and then to n expendi- of getting and light- oth an Ir- ndicap. ving 5, cross- Meyer & miliating reve- find what manner - been under | cleaning to $16.790,009 in hopelsesly his com- lack of ch funda- carpoea- » head to ald ot risk imperil stock- by ziving control to smch industrions The city of New excesding those eat e muddled mayer ¥ OPEN CONFERENCE. ri4 applanded when President gated his hope for the “open. covenants ai Millions of men ament wonld be glad confsrencs in the t the mations at Washimgton, lent Harding'is said te faver But the question Is, tically, the jdea seems_ admira~ 26 who advanees.zrguments lays himself open to the being “reactiomary.” It weuld slously fine thing-if % weuld it did not wark at/Parls and work gt Washington.in'No- nless, betweem,then and now, pected changedcomes over hu- ot saying. that thers will pet pen gmetons. and thesmeiTiFbe to press and public te at- anyone cwho.knows smything 1 other e old practies of | | that many of the minor metamorphoses might be omitted without Aleaster. However, the average man does see with the Ane ey® of a fashion ex- | pert as does mearly every woman. In a large degree, therefors, compelling com- binations deft treatments, supreme achievements and unntterable smartmess are wasted on him. When he Is bowled |over, It is a& it by lightning. He never | knows what strikes him. CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS. That the comgress of the United States is in no mood to weaken the e sential provisions of the prohibition en- forcement aet is attested, among other things, by the deeistve vote—39 to 20— by which the senate has passed the bill forbidding physielans from prescribing cighteenth amendment is said by many |to warrant the anti-beer Bill, while oth- ers as strongly assert that the amend- ment is in confliet with that measure. The issus, howsver, is legal and must be determined by the courts 1t is signifieant that the senate adopt- #d without formality of a roll call an amendment to the amtibeer bill Which forbids employes or others from searching homes and private prem- ises, or attempting to search them, with- out a proper warrant. The reason for this amendment wes trenchantly formu- zovernment | of bootlegming and generally enforce the | prohibition passing boats give a mutual salute. It M Itw A T is a recognition which makes both pAt- Lk IS small @hangs TMAL| | lcs feel justiw ilfs boter) Den ook AEKUEDE Wi .. fishing smack clad in overalls and it fel-| The canny fashion chaser avoid | ; Jumpers, or on a dainty yacht dressed in white fiannel will wave th hands finish. Woman, e course, cannot dine|at you, and the women their handier- as she breaklasts, mor golf as she| chicf, and by doing It they will catch | swims, but to man, at least, it seems!more fish and find added joy in yach!- ing sociability works everywhere. It Peter's wife's mother lies sick with a fever inquire after the old lady's condi- tion; it will brace up the whole family. Scientific men have very mnch fo tenl s agout the “wniform activities” and regulatory processes” of nature. Now it all sounds very big and learned, and may’ have some basis of fact—in thet ory. but to the common every day ob- server of natural phenomina it is all pure bunk. As your learned man of science to explain the unseasonably hot day winter and the relatively cold day in summer 1 his glib answer win be that it is on variation of type.” But when this “variation of type” sits on the throne most of the time; while hers in New England there are at least seventeen ‘“variations of type” josiling one_another for places on the [ throne in the course of a single day, the common every day observer begins beer as madicine Sn any oass whatever.| {0 inquire just: what that typs Is. Whether beer has medicinal qualitfes is| LoUDtess there is some rational e s DPlanation of freaks, but nothing thns |a question upen which reputable phy- far has been forthcoming that satisres |eicians differ wide but congress | tha comwhon observer who has for:aed chooses to give prohibition the benefit| the stranze habit of secing a real un- f the doubt. The language of the| likeness \nlxh‘ zs ‘hat differ. There are great many people in the - world today, ere always have been who amount to a great deal. There have always been a great many men and women who have thought much of themselves, and have been perfently justified in doing so, There has aso been an camally great, and perhaps vast- ly greater number, who have bien highly though of by others, anl in %o doing there has been no error i: jile- ment. The ganeral who conducis a great military campaign, leadinz a_vast army, Into a vigtorious Battle, think thi are times whan something of himself, and other. thes he is right. - But lated by Semater Lodge, who declared | (n pigmest man on is made to feel that violaters of the fourth amendment | very small. T be on a steamer ) the Comstitution should be punished] jusi out of “when some- |as offectvally as vielators of the eight- | thinz happs fo the enzine—and the centh amendment engine in a steamer as noan au- There are zealots whe would lightly | lomoblie o & Tuman beins someimes violate any number of eonstitutional | © Bt the Teiatt iR the provisions in order te smppress the evil|jont Lo’ Dy amendment. Clearly, how- | ing, and many faces grow white. Soom |nore one in an effort to enforce another | %L TAKES MEEE 0 s to encourage violation of any or all| it oo Ty gl eiotase min parts of the Constitution by persons who 4 Kitehener was successful in many 4o not happen to be pléased with its| battles, but the waves of the North provisions. Eeat got him. - & s Sympathy fn human hearts arlses EDITORIAL NOTES, through the identity of susceptibility Great Britain has atways had use tor | EYY living s sowsiuba I e |* big navy in her business thouch it t of fatality Better work in a pienfs these fime |davs. They will soon be over. _ The sheffs warrant striped the halo Tilinols governor's head | Tenin is said to be planning a vaca- Russia ought {o gpeed bim om his Have you noticed that .a bad yha’hil seems to get more of a hold on us than |2 gooa one? Rum-running schooners are replacing ha sea serpent as attractions along the antic coast “Acquitted” 18 not the same thing as | “exonerated” in the case of the t\znn- Sox ball players. Probably Semator Borah would agree t0 leave us wnough of ah army to make ap a firing squad, : | Spain would probably approve of hav- |ing the Moroeco tribesmen invited to the disarmament eenference. General Wood's acceptance of the gov- ernorship of the Philippines premises a happy solution of thelr troubles. The man on the corner says: Anyway, bobbed hair 1g not x0 Nkely to get tan- gled around the button on a man's coat. “Faling from Grace” iy a familiar Dhrase in the Methodist church. Those Wesleyan studlents found it has a Ikick too. President Harding’s father, groom at 75, succeeds in making him. seif lodk foolish in trying to "keep It out of the papers.” & bride- California s to have four new &on- gressmen. Ome of thess movic heroes ought to be quits 2 vete-getter It he runs for one of the mew places. Too many bauke are being startsd, ac- cording to one financial aothority. Ned the bank that starts but the bank that stops makes the trouble, mccording te the layman's point of view. Some day the men who run the Amer- jean people’s multitudinews govern- ments will be crisply hotiled by the long-suffering public that paying taxes is not the People’s favorits tmdeor sport. Negotiations with Mexice have bees reopened by fhe state depmrtment at ‘Washington and there i a prespect thet in the relationship between the two countries pelities wWay yet eatoh wp N it RIS W B e i S these things hise with those who 1 When wo sce frlictic | only see bt | sufter, and prebahly why. Because we at any time are liabile to cxperience ills of life makes us very sensitive those who are touched by them. This defflity to ‘others through a 1 ¥ to suffering is the basis of all of our be- nevolent work and societies. With ¢ there would be no Home Missionar Societics, no American Boards, no Red Cross work. They are all the outward expression of this idea; as we Khow something of what suffering is, we w help the hungry, clothe the naked. shelter the homeless, cure the sick There is no gra ork on earth than this. world _rejolees over the s of the Trish question. Na have differences of to t e merits of opinion as tion due and prineip world rej s over the settlement of ficulties by other means than resort arms, which usually settles nothi lly. Peace isfacto wants to witness the overthrow of res- on and good will that has bef shown by both parties this _unfortanate country. Ths common wearness of strfo and murder has led to the hope that a real settlement wIl be found. The meeting of Dominion premiers in Tondon, with thefr broad ' statesmana- ship and unbiasseqd judgment is helping this cause. Ireland with a strong do- minfon parliament would have a great- er voice in world éouncils than as a free republic with six coerced couritles. In the latter case she would be no more than Finland. Aceording to the New York Times— which _seems to speak With author —we have In ‘a realistic cartoon, @ n version of the discovery of poison-ivy. It would appear that our dommon an- cestor, Adams, when the hour came in his existence that he decided “to be ciothed upon lest he should be found naked” went In quest of 2 Palm Beach suit as the summer approched. Finding othing at the clothiers that fitted his immaeulate form, and being disgusicl with the high prices, he conc'adei to make his own out of a bean:ifal vine having a three branched leal. Now the innocent Adam was dealing wita pois ivy, and as the sewing was easy m. a long flowing robe that would put it all over the new fig leayes that kve wore and made her jealous. = A few hours later when the ivy began to show out its disposition, Adam began to yell and Eve began to laugh. Soon it-wias no laughing matter, for In the -cartoon Eve has & look of Rorror and has pkel her fingers.in her ears; Adam Is usmg language she never heard before, ~That night he danced all over Paradise trampling on BEve's flower beds.. anl stepping on the snake who susgested ap- ples to them. Those of us w0 have touched this vine will “cast Bo stdnes l»uq'-*mrmw D . \ 52 L AUGUST 15, Tom1 o That the manufacturers of New Eng- | land are keenly aware of the import- ance of a healthy and prosperois age ricultural condition in the Bast, is ev- idénced by the fact that the Associa- ted Industries of Massachusetts one of the fnost powerful and influential or- ganizations in the eastern states, has issued a pamphlet calling the attention of its members to the alatming agri- cultural decline in the eastern states and urging them to take necessary remedial action. “ The publication of this pamphlet i of especial significance when it is con- sidered that the policy of the ted Industries is one which it floes not itsel? control. As the foreword to the pamphlet explains, however, the exesus tive committee feels that as the agri- cultural declife in the eastern states has assumed such proportions as to be almost a mehace, the organization as a whole is justified in calling the attention of their members to the se- riousness of the situation. The pamphlet briefly reviews stat- istics from 1880-1290 pertaining to the improved farm land under cultivation in New England as comparzd with the population, It illustrates that the im- proved farm land under cultivation has suffered a decrease of 53.5 per cent and shows an increase in population of 645 per cent during the Same peri- od. In proposing remedial %ction check this decline and increase agri- cultural production in the eastern states, the pamphlet makes'a strong plea for concerted backing on the part of the manufacturers of ths var:ous cooperative efforts in New £ngland. to ia- |@et wpuld enable a farmer to embark “There js abundant evidnse that in all communities where cooperative ef- fort has been- intelligently practiced 1“‘“”%1%’“:} Bodies Are Poisoned by Their imprevement in quality, elimination of |, Waste. Most Hlinesses w&?fl. reduction in costs, and iherease _ Are Preventable. - ih quantity have invariably resulted,| ‘with greater prosperity for the farmer| Thehuman hasto beheated and and the consumer alike” says the pam- phlet. Thousands of New England farmers could -greatly inerease théir output, reduce production costs, and sell more fine foods inside the pro- duce much waste. Allgmwfimnld be removed from the body regulatly, thoroughly, daily, by the eliminative organs,—which are the bo kid- economically and advantageously, if i e the at times they could get temporary fi- | [nog 'k-fl’u:"dh:um n ny nancial assistance. Often a féw hun-| "if the bowels are inactive dred dollars, which he is unable to effort is required of the othern, on_ undertakings that would nét good which easily become deranged. Many to es I medicines will force action returns and bring to our cities larger femporarily but the after s supplies of food products, A = ot {The Bastern States League has been | harmful. Many remedies are % instrumental in stimulathig banks| tised, some of which have proven thautb agricultural agents, to make| Vear after T to h,mlhble..emd- short term loans amounting to approx- | ents and without harmful action or ifately $2,420000. It iz clear that the further extension and exparsion of credit facilities must be a feature of any movement for the proper de- velopment of food production and food distribution in New England. The conclusions drawn by the As- sociated Industries are—First: That the decline of New England agrieulture is a serious menace to New England industry. Second: that the decline is due, not te natural causes, but to art- ificial causes which can be removed. Third: that to remove the causes of de- cline and to put New England agri- culture on a business basis, organiza- tioh on a large scale Is essential, and that such organization cannot be ef- fected without adequate financial back- ing. effect. Take Beecham’s Pills for ex smple, For over f.n Beech am’s has been & household word all over the world. 70 yehrs of use oy all sorts of folke, men, women and even children, have proven first, that Beecham’s Pills do what is :laimed for them; second, that they are harmless, do not produce bad effects. Some meditine forces Nature to unnatural action. Other medhx::-. S like those contamed in Beechim's Pills assist Nature, act mildly, per- suade and hence produce no harmful offects.. It is common to'find fam- lies in which Beecham’s have been ased by several generations, their ase handed down from father to son and from meother to daughter. That’s the best possible recom- opD INCIDENTS IN AMERICAN HISTORY OUR FIRST NAVAL VESSEL. In the long list of &plendid vessels which, in a hundred combats, have main- tained the honor of our national flag, the United States stands at the head. After three years of unavoidable detention, the first naval “vessel built by the United States under the constitution was to be committed to the waves. The dgy chosen for so great an event in our history was May 10, 1797. The hour for the launch- ing was set for 1 in the afternoon, and the whole city of Philadelphia, it was said, went down to Southwark to behold such a rare show. One estimate puts the number present at the launching at 30,000 Souls—a good- ly number for that period. Another au- thority declgres that an hour after the launching took place the streets of Phil- adelphia_near the riverfront were still choked with people going home. It was feared that a strong northwest wind, which for several days had kept back the tides of the river, would make the waters of the Delaware much too shallow to permit the launching. Yet at sunrise on the morning of the 10th the | best points of observation began to be occupied by an eager throng. By noon every hilliop and every house. top commanding a view on each side af | | the river, and every inch of space on the stands put up about the vessel and before the houses on Swanson street was covered with huinan beings. In the river a hun- dred craft rode at anchor, gay with bunting and richly dressed dames. At 1 precisely blocks were knocked from under her, tie lashing of the cable cut, and amidst the shouts of the great multitude the United States slid gracefully down her ways. The builder of this first naval vessel of the United States was Joshua Humphreys. | The Jaunching was witne the president of the United and the| heads of the departments, Whé were sta- | tioned on the United States brig Sophie. | Commodore Barry was in command of | | the vessel | The figure head on the vessel was |carvea by William Rush and represen ed the Genius of America orest adorned with @ consi hair escaped in loos rested upon her breast. A portrait of Washington was suspi®ded from her | neck and her WA bound with a | eivie band. | In the right hand the fizure held a| spear and belts of wampum—the em- blems of war and peace. In her left| hand was suspended the Constitution of the Union, Above was a tablet on which rested three books to represent the three branches of government, and the scal tice. On the base of fhe tablet were carved the eagle and ndtlonal es- cutcheon, and the atiributes of- com- | meree, agriculture, th®arts and sciences. | Searcely was the wa- ter thanhe jeurnals of the country who | ™ favar of the French republi to the class rule of we was of ju frigafe in the wera and took except the country, to scoff and executive dow { four-gun ship? ¢ desigan zan “What would the navy of one fort Send her to hunt un the | Africa and_demand satisfaction for the | insults heafed upon the town of New-| port and the Fremch Mfnister Fanchet? Sena her to avenze the flozeing given by an Englishman to the captaln of an American_sh #70uld he (use her to step the impresEme § oir, Seamen and the plunder of oar merchantmen? Or would he use her against the French? These radical republicans moted that Talleyrand_himselt had been heard to ay that Trance had nothing to fear from = mation of debaters that had heen trying for three years To bulld three frigates ' The United States was one of the first vessels to do service in the war of 1812, with that brilliant -cea captain Stephen Decatur in charge, and the most re- markable of the engagements in which she fought was with the Macedonian. Of all the battles between American and British ships there was none’ so often discussed and so well remembered up to our civil war as this sea fight, for the reason that the victory was well won for the Americans, and the Mace- donian was brought into port and for many years ghe clrrioz} the Stars and Stripes. Monday—The International Flora Me- Dpnald) Blind Leading fhe Blind Men who are advocating obstruct- ion to commerce are the blind attempt- ing to lead the helf blind. |- making — READ YOUR CHARACTER By Digby Phillips, Copyrighted 1921 mendation for any remedy. Every druggist sells Beecham’s, is glad to do so because he knows that their reputation has been won by merit. | “ELASTIC" FLESH For ithe purposes of reading charac- ter there are three kinds of fish. The experts of the.'science call them hard, soft and elastic, No. you don’t go around poking your finger “into people's stomachs or arms to probe their characters through their flesh. You can accomplish your pur- ose quite naturally and without excit- Iyg attention by the simple process of sheking hands with them. ome people’s hands Yoirve noticed it, no fell flabby and goft. Still others have that springy, elastic, resilliency that is, in facy, rather usual than abnorm- al. It is the real hard and soft flesh that is unusual, among average Amer- icans. It's not a matter of mascularity at It's not a matter of the stremngth h whi-h a person grips your hund, kgl of v dgorcuit, saqued [EY may throw you off the track oth- person squeezes first. It's the con- stency iof the flesh or muscle. And here is & case where the physje- al charaoter parallels the mental for the person of elastic iflesh is also elastic mentally. That is to say, his mind does not run to extremes either in pos- itive tor negative qualities, He's norm- al and practically sympaiaetic. He's reasonably independent, neither overly aggressive nor submissive Progres- sive, but not umstabke nor scornful of time-tried poinions; determined, but open to reason; in short a rather aver- age “regular feller” type. (Tomorrow—Long Fingers) fekl hard, doudbt. Others’ 1 1 THAYER BUILDING * Legs.......1h.20c [Chops......Ib.30c Rumps . ... Ib. 20c |Cutlets . ... . Ib.40c Loins ... .. . Ib. 20c | Stew Veal. . Ib. 15¢ Boneless Potting Beef, alllean . . . Ib. 18¢ Boneless Porterhouse Roast . . . . Ib. 35¢ Lean Chuck Roast ............. 1b. 15¢ Fancy Rib Roast CANTALOUPES | EGGS . ... doz.37c BEST HEAD RICE .... FRANKLIN SQUARE VEAL—Native—VEAL Cut from Armour’s Steer Beef SIRLOIN, ROUND, SHORT, PORTERHOUSE MIXED BACON Pound 20c Ib. 25¢ Springdale Creamery BUTTER Pound 45¢ SELECTED LARGE, JUICY LEMONS Dozen 35¢ THICK, MEATY 2 for 25¢ PURE : LARD ..Ib5c 3 Ibs. 45¢ 0 Ibs. GRANULATED SUGAR .. 65¢ Both for §1.00 Sunday Morning Talk our LOVE THE WORLD banks extend, rather than curtail,|acres are producing valuable erops of credit. Let the big big bankers, who|alfalfa, sugar, beets, corn and pota- « v 5 c y n, do the | toss. Tove mot the world, neither the ontrol the money situatio 3 things that are in the world.” JTs it Fo IR A i s A o R not well for each one of us to consider these words when the world and the things of the world have such a prom- ent place in our lives! Are not the things of God often crowded out of our es unconsciously, perhaps? The call e world o Joud and strong that we do not good do it n thing, just this once, and for their own safety t down itself, kinds. . The Shoshone project, in western part of the state, i benefit and : Sty and our people, | Eion of great scfale beauty And, lastly, legislation, = < until the situation rights | 11° ®0il. Like the Nofth ¥ continue foreign loans of ail |t bas transformec -populated agricultural the north- in a re- and safety, and the of the country t down. te project, cessary, the desert into and _highly-pr WE! jon. It is a fine dairy o, ot hear the voice of God call- Premler Edward Benes, of e A BORBOWER § oatry. andl-Was » creamery: and al- e s oo Caling | Cecho-Slovakia, one of the “Little S falfa meal mill. It is devoted to en us a of ue happiness. ;A pae . h ieral farming. Crops to valge of Wfe that we. inky ramamb g Entente,” who will meet the 279 Homesteads Avallable, z > =g e 2 Dleasute and not with regrer . "'" | Premier of Jugo Slavia and Forelgn over $4,000,000 were produced In 1920 May e not learn a lesson from one |~ Minister of Roumania in a confer- recei of the humblest of His creation? If| ence at Marienbad, Cgecho-8lo- |recla you will go to the bank of a little | vakia, in connection with the read- |acres i ‘:m‘;a:j\"l Pt ian n:umwfl(wug‘:: come | justment of the recent offensive and they’ plunge their bodies in_ the water | 4efensive treaty entezed into by the |30 they keep their winzs hizh outfof the | tATee nations, water; and after ‘swimming about a 1 while they fly away with their over :,;rl\‘:s”‘:{w:ln!t:u:\c 'f"‘d Su";{\:' a®. | country has never befs known. Re-| 7y are imimersen 1yt ea do. Here we | sult—business paralysis, with industry, | the ness of the world: bat et us nd DUS-| the life of the country, so weakened and ss Of the world; but let us keep the| enfeebled as to make recovery slow |open wings of our soul, our faith,and our | ang paintul, In the meantimt our great | D love out of the world, that with these|anq noble bankers are ‘waxing fat o unclogged, we may be ready to take I recall having recently heard of | o pur Might to Heaven =This life Will| many of our old-established and! well- | ¥ig, be all the more delightful because o1 | manhged concerns in tne industrial pur- | contests with the sordid cares and teen perplexities of suits reducing passing dividend but T have yet to hear of a single well- established or well-managed bank redu ing or passing dividends or showing an; this worldly world. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR one be falling off in earnings, farma For Tealth With Fashions The bankers have been and are at Mr. Edltor: I was much pleased with | 80, With,no_ real leadership and no |13t article which appeared in the Bulle- | real remedy. nati tin, August 4th by Mrs. F. S. W, on the | And what have you to Suzzest, you subject of modern dre: adk? answer—giva the business | ccape She must be one of the few sensible | men Bf this country 1 per cent. call women of today. She is quite right, | mone Let the federal reserve bank there is nothing medest,~attractive or | establish @ discount of 3 per cent. Let becoming in the fashions, the low nek, | our banks stop forcing liquidation, Let the short skirts and the high heeis “which give one the appearamce of walking on stits” A doctor once ex- aminad the feet of different women and found but one ofl the n r who had a perfect shaped foot and she was a plain women who had always wore (e common sense shoe, If for o «ther reason than from a health point of view I should think that all womea who have any sense at all would abardun these simple fashions. Health is one of our greatest possessions and hea'th Mrs. WILLIMAN TESTIFIES Declares LydiaE.Pinkham’s Vege- is wealth, table Compound to Be the Best MRS HATTIE C. HEMME! o a West Willington. Lo Medicine for Girls and Women A Borrewer on Banks : Hamilton, Ohio. —*‘Ihad such awful Mr. Editer: Th& federal | Hamilton, it bank was eréated for the murposes ue| DRIn8 in my back I could hardly stand mesting emergencies. How did it meet this present emergency? By establish- ing_unattractive and prohibitive rates, last year the enormous profit of 200 per cent.; by advocating and en- couraging liquidation in face of a bus iness and industrial crisis such as this on my feet and I SOME DAY. MACHINE OR, WORSE STILL, TO TO PROTECT YOU FROM LOSS. LAR YOU POSSESS, INCLUDING ANCE AT ANY TIME. l 30 FRONT STREET “AUTOMOBILE WRECKED” HOW FREQUENTLY YOU READ THAT HEADLINE, MR. AUTOMO- BILIST, AND THEN PAUSE, WITH A LITTLE SHOCK, MEMBER YOUR CAR IS NOT COVERED BY INSURANCE, “AUTOMOBILE WRECKED” MAY BE WRITTEN ABOUT YOUR CAR NO DRIVER 1S IMMUNE FROM ACCIDENT TO HIS LET US TELL YOU SOME TIME ABOUT AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE AND OF THE SATISFACTION OF DRIVING A CAR SO COVERED AS REMEMBER, THAT ONE ACCIDENT MAY COST YOU EVERY DOL- CARRY INSURANCE ON YOUR CAR. WE WILL GLADLY TELL YOU ALL ABOUT AUTOMOBILE INSUR- A NEWTON VAUGHN, Insurance I had to go to bed and I was not able to do much of m; housework. :vhould have hemor- every two i v:fi: and_drag- En -down I had been feelin ly for three years and had two the best doctors in the city, bug I ki getting worse and only weighed rmnda. Isawyour :dvemmm. and took eight boxes f Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound Tablets, four bettles Lydia E. Pinkham’s Blood Medicine and your Liver Pills and no- ticed an improvement might away. Now I weigh 188 pounds feel fine. Everybody tells me how well I look and asks me what I took and 1 alw: say, ‘Lydia E. Pinkham’s Ve, (;omsoumi, the best medicing’in the world for any sickness to which girls and women are subject.’ I willalways have word for your medicine. ' -—Mrs. JOSEPH W T22 South 9th Street, Hamilton, ; AS YOU RE- PERSONS. YOUR HOME, IF YOU DO NOT Officials of the American Legion have! . “anouc 5,000 acres soldiers ‘of North Platte projects, and ex-service men have a pre- ference right of entry “On Sept. the World war, irrigation project, and on Sept. 16 theére in the two opening: vermitted to make ‘A decade ago the lands now included tn the North velous change in that section. The iand- prosperous farm homes, HOURIGAN B 62-66 MAIN STREET ved notige that the mation service United States will open 1,000 of public lands in Wyoming for the World ‘war on Sept. 9 The lands are located on the and Shostone irrigation 16. for sixty da civilians at the openinge. e preliminary announcement reclamation service reads: 9 there will be 222 ed to homestead entry b trom farms v soldiers on the North Platte be fifty-teven farms thrown opem r the Shushone project. About mimes housand acres of land are included For sixty days no soldiers of the World war will filings on fAns Gouraudis Qriental Cream’ but atte project were a vast e occupied by herds of eattle, but nal reclamation has wroughta mar- WHEN YOU WANT to put your dus:- ness before the public. there 15 no medi- um better than through the advertising columns of The Pulletin . HOURIGAN BROS. An August Special! A Beautiful Ten-Piece Bedroom Suite in Walnut or Mahogany dotted with hundreds of and 100,000 is now Which includes Bed, Dresser, Chiffonier, Toilet Table, . Two Chairs, Rocker, National Spring, Silk Floss y Mattress and one pair of Pillows $180.00 SEE WINDOW DISPLAY ROS. FINN'S BLOCK NORWICH JEWETT CITY