Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 25, 1921, Page 4

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CIRGULAHON EEK ENDING AUG. 20th, 1921 ING CHILD LABOR. ability a fed- the purpose of will go before the court for the de- onality, Un- made for the enue de- f ten per cent. upon concern which x it has succeeded sion from the rt. Interest is that 1 judgs two itutlon- n has con: se decisions have T Stajes su- passage the ved that the the Con- s were not in- eo ther t w newal of the ef- and it it ever channels by nal amendment. to be whera such phosphorus he highest abor condi- the epposition hin but )t doing prompted DECISION AMA'S long time for the ama and | o respected. Pan- reason to gkpeet T bluft sons it wouli country to Panama if ad on the nat has not conrse ~of zes tha) guided by justice and urges wing consideration country instead act of mad- ly ovportune and the course that by the isthmian al of the rep- . Panama govern- | - puted territory and enable deferrence by Costa n t should avoid any - oodshed is what thisl ry has aimed to prevent and ‘n of the ma- and as was their departure resence was and pre- manitestation X6 PUBLIC HEALTH. behalf of pub- carried on for a period of e Foundation has and three- for a apparently there 1s need for a school In this quits ‘the same as in others, the oppertmnity of having It use at Harvard warrants How deep the imtersst in i succeed is reflectsd In the pent to the effect that more mom- be provided If necessary. far as possible the courses of ths to be werked in with the school, whil there will be the expansion of such courses as exist. Thers are now special in proventive medicine, W in~ hygiene and tropical medicime the iden will be o tralm pubile peslth admémstrators in dstinction | meeting Jrren they get dong for the entire country. Thus in- in the gift extends beyond 'the school and those who may get instruc- tions therein, and the feeling cannot fail to prevall that the money is beng ‘well employed. FARMING IN CONNEOTICUT. That there is room for the efforts #hich are put forth from time to time to get greater production from the lafd in this state, and therefors make it pos- sible to more nearly contridbute to the requirements of the people of Conmec- ticut, is well fllustrated by the dise closure made in the last census to the effect that in the past ten years there has been a decrease of 287,000 acres of improved land in this state. This re- vealg a movement in the Wrong direc- tion. We mnot only have not been go- ing ahead but we have fafled to hold our own. We are going backward at a rapid rate and it is time that attention was directed to opportunities that exist through taking advantage of Comnecti- cut soll for producing a greater percent- ase of the foodstuffs and materials con- sumed and used here, A pretty good answer to the inquiry that is often made as to why the state seems to be flooded with goods which have been brought from the other end of the country when it is next to im- possible to get native products is fur- nished by the census figures. Connec- tieut is steadlly growing in population and yet those who are contributing to its requirements are each year Pputting forth less efforts to supply the demand. It is natural under such conditions that outsiders should be catering to our wants. That conditions which prevailed dur- ing the period of the war were re: for a large part of the redu in improved farm land seems probable and yet regardless of those conditions the vast amount of unused and waste and and the chances which prevail f the consumption requirements of the people of this commonwealth on 5o much better terms from Within its borders than from without ddesn’t ap- pear to get the serious attention that it deserves. That there is need of an awakening there can be mo question. Efforts di rected along that channel are certainly well aimed. Connecticut is an indus- trial state and yet its farming activities ought to show an increase rather than a’ decrease in view of the facilities, the demand and the available land. on- THE PRESIDENT'S ACTION. Those critics of the. president who attacked him because of the man- far or win general support. They have been well answered by those who were quick to defend the course taken, but even had nothing been said in op- sition to the tirade littla weight Would been attached to such outbursts. When the claim “is made that the president has Infringed mpon the privi- leges of congress the one who makes treads on delicate ground for it is a bit dificult to tell just where the boun- A It is the attitude which Is manifested which can invariably be msed to determine whether there has been in- ference with the of con- To say that such has been done sident Harding because he before congress the conditions that exist and called upon It to give heed thereto for the welfare of the countrr s &imply to wasted breath. It exists, privileges has cannot fail to be remembered that thera | are duties prescrfbed for the president tmder the Constitution and it has been in fulfilment thereof that he acted. to a pretty privi- to prevent at a time de- We certainly have gotten state of affairs If congressional leges are going to be set up the president from speaking when the interests of the nation mand it. He Is to be given cred| cour: that he has to his duty and his respon: fes and facing the facts as they ex- ist Instead of vielding as might have been the congressional course to the easiest way. The fact of the matte is that for whatever usurpation of the congressional privileges the president hag indulged in the country is thankful The regrettable thing is that congress not alert emough to its responsi- feg to do its duty until the presi had spoken to it for the eoun- EDITORIAL NOTES. The man on the corner says: People standing on their dignity only seem taller. ‘The richest man in the country doesn't have to reveal his condition but the poorest ehap is constantly forced to make his condition known. It Bergdoll cannot be extradited from Switzeriand that country may take as much delight in sheltering him as Hol- land does the former kaiser. The discovery of 39 new planets last year means that the fellow who is plan- ning to shoot a rocket to the moon\ or Mars wili not lack for vacation spots. Des Moines seems to be the latest city to try to get along without trolley service and depend upon jitney only to find out that they want the trolleys back, There conttmue to de those Wao place Tolson and harmless medicine side by s'de’ and yst wonder how it happens a murry or Actlon by congress on the additional funds for the shipping board indicates a recognition of the needs of that gov- ernment agency and the importance of hastening its efforts. The flood of appeals for the testing liquor mads to the government's g labmitory tn New York shows a amemmt of unwillingness tosdrink that Jooks Jie Nquor. fore reaching their destination. covered 84 years, enough to quig body. Just " the “right angle on her Jittle, teens, quite a walk to reach home, shone to guide the way. gtrects lights were passed. no welcoming presence to liven to reach it. ern bachelor woman. a few months. While the- train been standing the Se remembered the first time she seen hi had stood out, strange, overpowering awe—awe masterly personality heart to quake while shrinking joy. ship live with her lonely sister. in the telephone office succeeded to_fo N was he? orgive, after 10 years. now or not she did not know. ‘:"What a pit she thought, two other should be so parted.” old she might still find companionship. self. 3 A sudden thought came. Esther_had done both, while dividing her attention between a beautiful black velvet bag beaded in jet, which she had Just finished without the aid of glasges, and a paper bag of fresh eggs that she feared would break their container be- She had been visiting a girthood friend a few stations back, who had given her the eggs after a day of mu- tual retrospection through a past that It was a long, long time, but not long Esther's active brain or Her nitty little black hat sat at neatly coiffured little head, and the graceful aigrette bobbed as daintily as though on the crown of & miss in her Nt was now 11 o'clock, and Esther had through a pitch black night. Not even a star It would be impossible to keep in the road after the Esther was brave and spry as a girl of 18, but her heart sank at the thought of entering the lonely cold house with the deadly dreariness—even it she managed Esther was not an old maid or mod- She had Dbeen married twice, and had been alone only had long two hours on the track, her memory traveled back to her first romance—the only courtship she had had that was really a romance. had when she was only 14—how eyerything became invisible except him- self; now, like a figure in a dream, he filling her soul with a of a that caused her it wondered in Then she smiled at the bashful court- that had ended when her mother died and she moved to another city to After that a few modest letters—and then—the girl in coming between jthem with hateful and untrue stories which she was too proud w she was 84 year$ old—and where had married soon after the part- ing and she had heard he had married Whether he were living “that who were really meant for each She sighed and called herself an old fool for resurrecting a thing that had been buried for almost 70 years. Though 1 “‘One is as old old as one's-heart,’ as the doctor says is true,” she told her- She would stay on the train and ride to the town of her childhood home &nd stop at the ittle hotel near the station over night She would not go home to the dark |gloomy heuse thiough the blinding blacknesa. The train was slowly starting and s00n was record time to reach another gide-track to give the coming train another chance to pass. It stopped however at twh stations fiy passengers who had been waiting its long delay. An old gentleman with thick, snow- white hair entered the car tipped his hat and took the seat beside her, al- though most of the seats were empty. Not until he spoke did she take par- ticular notice of him. Then no feature of his face placed him as belonging to her book of remembrance, but the voice sounded back through ages of times. His eyes still without glasses were bright and searched her own face. “May I have the audacity to inquire where your journey -ends after such a disagreeable holdup?” Bsther laughed & queer little laugh. “I svas going to the little hotel in Maple Hill. It was-so late when the train ar- rived in the town I live in I did not wish to walk home, and the reads are not yet in condition for cars, because of the spring mud, even if it were not too late to expect one. They do not meet late trains until the summer resorts are fill- ing up. I also thought it would be quite a lark for a young thing ltke me to visit old scenes after an absence of §9 years. You see, the spirit never dies in some.” Her companion replied with a smile. “There are others.” ether they chatted but not of rhen- matism, asthma, or such like things, as most old people do but of spring, of auto riding, gardens and even the grand opera. ‘When they reached the hotel of the littler hill town, he attended to the bag of eggs while he secured rooms for each of them. “The days passed and the lonely little house remained in abandoned solitude. After nearly a week Emmy Jane told Lizzy Jane she was goin’ ter instetoot Droceedin’s to hunt Esther up. “I'm afeered Esther hes gut murder- ed; there's amtul doin's,these times,” she said shaking her head. But just then the postman came with a letter from Esther, requesting Emmy Jane to care for the cat—that Esther would soon be home. If the whitehaired gentleman (who itroduced himself as Charles Whitaker) had other business than courting an old lady he did not attend to it. He took Esther driving, autoing, and even fishing; evening they played cards and kept the graphophone working oveftime, until cne night while both were admiring Venus, they decided to remain together Yor the rest of life’s trip. The innkeeper thought they were re- lated in some way until an impromptu wedding ceremony was perfomred In the little parlor. But Esther’s surprise came when the minister said: “Will you, Channing Wilkinson, take——" She then recognized HIM—and knew her only remance was being finished. The thin faced man by her side was ‘the same rosy cheeked lad she knew 60 vears ago.—Boston Post. oD INCIDENTS IN AMERICAN HISTORY OPENING OF THE ERIE CANAL tement andl ry when interest over the would a to st tions. |ditch so constan icute, - was ready for transportation. sion of citizens and deco al. e W nir ated fleet ly One. of these boats, { he advent of the white man. was on a most the procession of a col ced along the canal down the Hudson to New Yrk. When the last gun w: the forts 1 | { d heard the ¥ a second cannonade. on along the entire route. Deen brou s he did s | the been accompli ranean seas and the Atlantic ocean, 425 miles, by terests if the human race.” salute was ade, closed the day. t msportation facilities unique. on a horn would zive notice that not wmiike a Noah's Ark. low house, blinds and Tefl curtains. i at_night, his helpers would appear, with adjustable berths sheéts, a modern sleeping car. rings fn the ceiling. or on the floor. reading; cards till the helmsman T ———CT————— It is hard to estimate the great ex- entire ie canal was opened finally & commer- cial link between the East and the West. and it was considered that great profits both After nt labor the big the subject of rid- e celebration of the opening began in Buffalo where on the 26th of October] tia es- orator and the incited guests g in wait the , was a veritable Noah's a bear, two eagles, two o Indian boys, birds and fish of the products of the West the address had been made the memorable journey. started there was tinuous line of cannon to_Albany and fired at the Bat- in the harbor returned lute and the news that New York ings was sent back to The pro- ¢ little fleet was one continu~ ng water from Lake Erie, nt from Buffalo. first arrival of vessels from Lake FErie is injended to indicate and commemorate e communicatiin which has hed between our Mediter- in about eight years ti the extent of about the public spirit and energy of the people if the state of New York and may God if the heavens and the earth smile propitiously on their work and render it subservient to the best in- When this ceremony was over a grand fired and the boats returned to the city where a fine industrial par- to which each trade society fur- nished a float with arttsans at work, At night there were parties dinners and ifluminations. were Shortly before eight in the mirn- ing and seven in the evening two blasts the Buffalo packet was about to start where- upon the westbound travelers would hur? ry from their hotels and board a vessel The hufl was eighty fect long by eleven teet wide, and carried on its deck a ling with a flat roof and sides sloping which wers plerced by a continu- ous row of windows provided with green At the forward end was a room six feet long cintaining four berths and called the Ladies' Dress- Room. Behind it was a room thirty- feet long., which was nsed as a cabin and dining room by drff and a bed room Precisely at § o'clock thé steward and loaded down pillows, mattresses, curtains and in & Httlé time the cabin would resamble the irterior of Each berth was a narrow wooden frame with a strip of canvas nailed over it. and was held in place by two iron rods which projegted from one side, and fitted into two holes in the wall of the cabin and by two ropes attached to the other side ‘of the frame and made fast to When the passengers outnumbéred the berths, the men slept on the dining table When the weathér was fine the travelers gathered on the roof sewing, talking and Slayifg “Bridge” when the assembled company would rush headlong down the steps and nito the cabin to come forth once more when the bridge had heen passed. Three horses dragged the boat four miles an hour. It required mory than four davs to make the trip of three hundred and sixty-three miles. (Tomorrow—Jackson’s the Most Demo- craitc Inauguration) 3 READ YOUR CHARACTER By Digby Phillips, Copyrighted 1921 High Heads The ear is the pivotal point from which most of the comparative head measure- ments are made. Sometimes the ears themselves are out of normal position and in such cases, usually discernible at a glance, you should measure with your eye from the positions where the cars ought to be. The head which is scientifically classed as high is measured by the distance from the ears up. It is really a question of the head shape, rather than the face and it is the sign of certain pronounced men- tal characteristics, You'll never find a high headed man or woman who is lacking either in am- bition or aspirations. Such people also are quite conscious of ideals, you'll find, and are inclined to guide their lives as much in accordance with ideals as with motives of expediency alone. If you want to know just where a high headed man or woman is going to stand just make it a point to learn their ideals. With these as your guide you From Albany an escort of gayly dress- | can pretty nearly always tell in advance ed steamboats accompanied the fleet | what course they are likely to take un- a Hudson to New York where the |der given dircumstances, courses very n, increased by 30,000 foften at wide variance with what appear angers turned jut to receive it, and(on the surface to be their best interests. ce thousands, boarding every kind| Take a concrete example. Supposs raft, went down the bay to Sandy |two men have ideals of trath. One is There Governor. Clinton, lifting |high headed. The other isn’t. The time the deck of the Seneca comes when it i8 to be to the advantage of both to lie. It wouldn't be true, of course, to say that high-headed people don‘t sometimes lie under temptation But you could be pretty sure that the high headed man would have mare of an instinctive resistance to this temptation than the low headed man. Tomerrow—The Initiative Head IN THE DAY’S NEWS Sivas: The New Temporary Capital of Asiatic Turkey If the socalled Angora Government of the Turkish Nationalists has left An- dispatches state, following the defeat of its armies by the Greeks in Asia Minor, it has truly moved into the Turkish back country,” says a bulletin from the Wash- ington, D. C., headquarters of the Nation- al Geographic Society. “In fact it might almost be said to have moved from the twentieth century into the thirteenth. Angora is the rail head of the only steel highway that penetrates northérn Asia Minor. Beyond this outpost of the age of machinery the country is wholle de- pendent for transportation on the camel and other beasts of burden, operating over roads that ars far from good. Sivas lies more than 200 miles east of Angora Sea. “The city exists, however, In a region that reached a very high state of de- velopment long before the smoke of puf- fing locomtives ever darkened an Asian landscape, and i is no mean city, as cities go i its part of the world. t is credited with a population of 65,000 and is therefore of about the size of Listle Rock, Ark, and Sacramento, Cal, cities with which it has the further point in common that it is the capital of a state or vilayet. “Sivds is situated on a Migh plateau which is bléak and éven fflgid In wintér when the blasts from the. stéppes of Central Asia swirl around and over the Caucasus and give the region a climate comparable to the snow-swept plains of Russia. But it is by no means a waste country. The grain of the plategus of the vilayet of Sivas and the ffuits from its.valleys help to feed the less favored sections of Turkey. It is rich in copper, iron, coal and other valuable minerals and@f an industrial Turkey ever rises @ivas may be its Silesia or its Ruhr, e Rofe was the ruling power in thé Werld, Sivas (then Sébastéia) was one Would shout of its chiéf bérder cities. Armenian kings gora and shifted its capital to Siva, as! and over 100 miles south of. the Black | ruled it ant city in Asia Minor, only by Caesarea to- the west. “If in & unlon station for camel eara- vans In the Bagdad of Harun-dl-Rashid's day there was the counterpart of the train-carrier of today, Sivas must have Dbeen often on the lips, for it liek in a strategic position between Bagdad and points west. A few years later it be- came the métropelis of the Seljuk Turks' empire in Asia before they moved west- ward _and_captured Constantinople. “When Marco Polo visited the city in the thirteenth century it was one of the show places of the Near East and had a population of abbut 100,000. At that time the city was noted for its fine rugs and’ carpets but now thatindustry has passed farther wvest. = “When the Seljuks had the seat of their empire in Sivas their architectural arts flourished. The colleges which they built there in the thirteenth century are among the finest remains of the Moslem art to be found in Asia Minor. “Perhaps the most despicable act of eruelty ever perpetrated on a sacked ity even in a part of the world where cruel tyrants have been numerous, was inflict- ed on Sivas in 1400 by the notorious Timur-the-Lame. = He causéd a thousand children to be trampled to death under the hoofs of his war horses, and followed this monstrous proceeding by Thaving 4,000 of the defeated Armenian defenders ot the city buried ajive. Since it went through that haddowing sgxperience the city has never risen to a position of any great importance.” R b [ Stories That Recall Others A Little Stery Little Helen, one of the active young- sters was missing her sister who was old enough even to go Visiting and to stay away from home three whole days and nights. She was getting wore lonesome every hour and after having been told several times by her mother that Louise wouldn't be home until Friday, finally hit upon 2 plausible pretext for getting sister home. “Mother, let's write and tell Louise that we have a new baby at cur house. I know she would come then.” “But we could not write that, that wouldn't be the truth and it isn't nice to te]l things that are not true.” That apparently settled the matter but Helen added: “Well, we could tell her it was a new baby doil when she got home, that would be all right, wouldn't it?” Lumber High, Too. “Bvery time I put my hands in the water of my washing machine I get a shock,” said the first speaker of the gos- sip club. “It~got so bad I had to call up the company and have them send a man to locate the trouble. Then when he arrived the old machine just wouldn’t shock anybedy. He told me I received a shock because I stood on the wet floor and that machines that were in cellars often shocked the users. The next time it shocks you just stand on a dry board while you lift the clothes out of the wash hy said. Then he charged we $ and lef! nd you know lumber is awfully high, too,” remarked another member of the gossip club. FARM PRODUCE DOWN FARMERS SEEK COOPERATION Hartford, Aug. 24—The just issued figures of the federal reserve board upon the wholesale value of farm products, placing them at 15 per cent above pre- war levels, is having a most powerful effect upon producers as it ultimately must upon consumers. In the table of commodities that the farmer much- buy, the per cent advances still average 54 per cent above pre-war levels, some of the more important being: 41 per cent in groceries and provisions (which of course include these same native products); clothing and clothing material (that also is agricultural) 86 per cent; fuel, 99 per cent; building materials 103 per cent and so on up to house furnishings still haughty in their war paint prices of 174 er cent above normal. The Country Gentleman is led to re. mark editorially “There is as yet hardl a speaking acquantaince between a bush- el of wheat and a loaf of bread. The lagging of retail prices shows the ten- acity with which every man hangs on to all the price which he may by any pos- sibility extract. The more hands it passes through therefore, the siower will the commodity come down and the longer it will be in reaching bedrock. “The farmer's stuff goes at once and direct to an open market where it brings whatever competitive buying will pay for it with no artificial inflation.” Yet at the same time he must pay, With his own deflated money the still artificial re- tail prices, whenever he buys. But he is about thru buying at retail while selling at wholesale. The rush with which the newly formed Connecticut Agricultural Exchange”is being subscrib- ed to among the progressive farmers all over the state proves that. This erst- while infant organization has, in a few weeks grown from its sixteen original incorporations to a large membership, and their aim will easily be reached and may be doubled. The exchange being a strictly cooper- ative organization has as yet no elected officers from among themselves. At pres- ent its affairs are managed by an exec- utive committee of three, appointed by the incorporators and working under their direction. For the purpose of completing WAS SO CRIPPLED the Waterbury Citizen Had to Lay Off Days at a Time From Rheumatism. “By the help of Tanlac I am fast get- ting tid of a case of rheumatism that made me miserable for ten vears,” was the truly remarkable statement made hy Joseph Coleman, 1248 North Main St., Waterbury, a well known employe of the Dexter Baking Co. “My hips and muscles were so Stiff and hurt me so bad that I never knew when I went to bed at night whether I would be able to get up in the 4nornings. Often the pains in my hips and arms Were 86 severe I could hardiy~stand it. In fact, my whole body was affected and T could not_turn over in bed without racking my back and arms with pain. In damp and rainy weather, especially, T Would be so Stiff_from the waist up I could not bend 1o tie my boot strings or pick up anvthing from the floor. 1 Wwould get so bad that for days at a time I had to lay off work and be just like 4 cripple around the House. “Hearing 6 much about how Tanlac was helping the people here in Water- bury, T decided to try it in my case, and 1 cértalsly struck it right. After taking only-two bottles 1 feel €o much better that I can't help talking about it. I have also been using the Mheumatic tFéatment along with the Tanlac and I think it is the greatest combination in the world for rheumatism. My muscles and joints have all limbered up, the pain has gone out of my hips, and every day I motice more and more improvemgnt. I ean now bend over and straighten up without feeling any pain. Tanlac has not only 'taken care of my rheumatism, but it has braced me up all over, making me feel brighter and stronger, and with the good work still going on I know it's the medi- cing for wme.” . Taniac is sold in Norwich by Natjonal ot S T L T S e R B SRR for a while, and under the By- zantines it was the second most import- surpasser staté-wide membérship howéver, an of- fice has been opened in this city, the man- agement of which is in the hands of E. B. Mitchell, a native of New Eng- land; the benefit of whose wide experience HE COULDN'T WORK | ‘r: th;'fl h:n:an. the committee feel rtunal aving securéd to supply their need of an expert in this Beld. AMERICANS IN MOCCOwW AWAIT PERMISSION TO LEAVE Riga, Augtust 24 (By the A. P.)— Some fifty Americans were in a sort of concentration camp in Moscow a- waiting action on their applications for permission tq leave Pussia when D. Senna, an’American seaman who ar- rived in Riga today, left the Soviet capitol last week. Senna told Cap- tain Evan Young, American commis- sioner in the Baltic states, who is in Riga, that he was formely in the Un- ited ‘States Navy, but later had serv- ed In the Merchant Marine, He left a freighter at Danzig three months ago and went to Russia out of curiosity. ‘When he arrived he was arrested for entering the country without permis- sion, but was released umider the re- cent arrangement permitting Ameri- cans to leave Russia. FROM THE CONSULAR REPORTS The government of British Guianea has invited applications for $5,00,000 worth of 6 per cent debentures to be issued at var, for the purpose of finishing the work of certain public improvements. Consul Chester W. Davis of Georgetown reports that the precent financial condi- tion of the colony is favoraple, and that American money is being quoted at a consideragle premium, Agriculturé is the main industry of Syria. Crops includé wheat, barley, maize, hemp, flax, castor beans, rice, means, lentils, chick pears; potatoes, ses- ame and cotton. Tractor demonstrations have been held under Fronch auspices American agricultural machinery is iiked and has a chance of obtaining a mar- ket, provided ararngements are made for the supply of repair parts. war. This applies particuiarly to army legislation, alfhough the Re- publicans in the House and also in the Senate made reductions in the army.— Army and Navy Journal. Fill Sew's Ear Purse With Gold silk purse may be made of a sow's ear. A Boston concern has shown that a | Is.all fresh, flavoury young leaves that yicld Eenerously in the teapot. . Always reliable. with 5o one @ b Patriot, Information as to how to tranemute A& |erary society base metal into gleaming gold coins with |talked about. which to fll the purse would now be ap- preciated —Bostor Transcript. Value of & Wite A wife on hand is worth two on & VA~ cation.—Harrisburg Patriot. President and Comgress at Odds President Harding is having about the same experience with his party in Cém- l"l‘il' gress as President Wilson did dtiring the By YOIII' ? You rhay be only thifty, but if bald- haded, gray, of your hair is brittle e 1y and ugly-loeking, will surely take you to be much 3 If you want a lot of good-lodking hair the roots must be immediately | vitalizéd agd kept properly nourvished. | To do this quickly and safelv, get from the Lee & Osgood Co. & bot'e of Pari- | sian sage. A little atténtion now will | insure plenty of beautiful hair for years to_come. Parisian sage is guarantefd to keep away all dandruff, stop scalp itch and |falling hair and stimulate a new growth, or meéney refunded. It's in great demand by discriminating wo- | men because it makes the hair soft, | lustrous, easy to arrange attractively and appear much heavier that it redl- is. Parisian sage is easy t6 musa, not | sticky, and daintily perfumed—an an | tiseptic, clean liquid that suup! Real Anneyance A catastrophe is when the ladies’ lit- Almost Usbelievable You can hardly realine the wonderful im- Gouraud's Oriental Cream eB Reid I hair needs, oslon /iore hes ©@nn which we are now them in neat conservative anteed colorings. SALE PRICE $1.10—2 ing wear they are best— the very best obtainable for the money. The Tale of the Shirt IF YOURE THRIFTY, YOU WILL BE INTERESTED Every August the Men’s Shop clears away all surplus shirt stocks. Every August the Men’s Shop also buys from the makers their surplus stocks where profits have been sacrificed to make quick sales. now going on, and in the various lots advertised below you will find the shirt you want, at the price you wish to pay. ;: LOOK ’EM OVER — YOU NEED THEM THERE ARE SOME $1.50 PERCALE SHIRTS—all fast colors—neat designs —all sizes to select from. SALE PRICE 89c—2 FOR $1.70 FRENCH PERCALE AND MADRAS SHIRTS. ~ Real $2.00 Shirts, most of Sizes 14 to 17— OXFORD AND PONGEE OUTING SHIRTS—Splendid Outing Shirts with attached button-down collars. SALE PRICE $1.65 FINE SHIRTS—WELL MADE—GOOD PATTERNS—VALUE §2.50— SALE PRICE $1.69 — 2 FOR $3.25 OUR LUGGAGE DEPARTMENT IS A GENUINE TRAVELERS’ AID INSTITUTION Each piece—Trunk, Bag, or Suit Case was fairly priced, and The reduction making for a limited period brings the price down to bed rock figures. : TRUNKS — BAGS — SUIT CASES Reduced 259 You are the winner. This August Sale is SILK STRIPE CREPE AND MADRAS SHIRTS—High-grade Shirts, many of them “Yorke” tailored—pattérns that will please and colors that will stay. Regular $3.00 and $3.50 values— SALE PRICE $2.29—2 FOR $4.35 NEGLIGEE SHIRTS — VALUES TO $4.00—Imported Silk Stripés—Russian Cords and Anderson’s Imported Mad- ras. These are wonderful values— SALE PRICE $2.98 REGULAR $2.50 NEGLIGEE SHIRTS —Amoskeag 4nd Blackstoné Woven Madras used in theésé sturdy shirts which are as haridsome as théy aré durablé— SALE PRICE $1.55—2 FOR $3.00 Bargains— stripes. Guar- FOR $2.00 For out-

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