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rrw ch @nllefi: and Goufiet 126 YEARS OLD Trinied ey day ta the esr exeet Sundes, Bubeeription peie 130 & weeki She & mantd; $.99 + e Eotered 4t he Posiofies st Noreieh, Coms. ws secon elaes mattes Telmhene cate Dusisas Ofce, wa Wl Bditoisl Noomy 15-2. Buistn Job Reem. 553 $ Chureh sL Teepdese Bettn Filtmantic Office. “0e3. —_— orwich, Satusday, March 18, 1932, THE ASSHCIATED PHESS bews derpaich credlied o 3t or bot coedited o Do bage asd ase e lecal news pusiisied righte of repudlicatien ef febes Bereln are & - des OPEN SEASON IN THE HIGHWAYS. i stopped to nmotice you will agree with Registrar of Motor Vehicles G n Massachusetts that “the seas g and maiming pe CAN'T SAY THEY DIDN'T BNOW is to show the | lans, including that 3 the situation the standpoint extra burden has its of the would it will not be possible | lezislation be adont- those who are re- | who may vote for realize in advance was going to be.| know it now and it welghed at this time. he in hould be dut IHE DYE INDUSTRY One matter upon which speclal pres- ure is being br » bear in connec- on with the framing of a new tarift is at concerning dyestuffs. It is ful snderstood that previous to the war this tountry depended upon Germany for its dyes, that Germany had a monopoly of w business which no one here under- look to break becavze of the difference In working cond%ions. When the war broke out we came to a fuil reaMzation of the situation which developed as the result of our dependence upon another sountry for our dyes. We were left Mranded and forced to hasten the best way we could to meet our Own require- ments, It was found of course, as it was known at all timeés. that we.could make dyes quite as well as German ex- perts it there was the right encourage- ment given to American Industries en- ers, or & at least that it given a chance to maintain the business under American standards it will not be necessary for us to look abroad for owr dyes and we Will not be caught a second time in case any emergency should de- velop. It is of coures naturel under the cir- cumstances that we should want to re- taln our dyemaking industries and not cause them to be put out of business be- cause of the German competition. Thus the problem that is faced by the tarift makers ls to give adequate protection to the dye Industry without so surrounding it with protection that i would make it a dangerous monopoly. There are good and sufficlent reasons why American dye making should be encouraged, and why with such industries well established and meeting demands the country Should be guarded against the possibllity of hav- Ing them destroyed by forelgn competi- tion, AN APPARENT WEAKNESs. When Secretary Davis of the depart- ment of labor in addressing a New York audlence this week referred to the fact that there was a provision in the agree- ment of the bituminous coal miners and operators under which they are now working (o the effect that there should be a meeting between them for negotia- tiona looking to a further agreement, he lireets attention to a provision of the esment which it would appear the \rators are violating by refusing to ngage in a conference quite as much they had faled to live wp to any provisions of the understanding s this month, is just as ent when to do what ti muc] the of a overa- agreed to as It ors a thy that mon 1h a the minors,, th ma ihey real ke to get t are mo- may be unwil ition even to the extent h the m avosed. but 1 of st he In Sttt oy thr. ean get ficultles are f: 1 vent just s numhered amons th viduala cource in a eal from faotor-| thoge-wh eealip suran ars and pra for T these Nine a o n EDITORIAL auto own the finst NOTES. The will be glad when he! ougl on the corner says income tax has been p ! g to look forward to fis the| aning season, | e man t the housecl In adking a two-vear contract at in. ased wages the coal miners do ot riend to have any part in bringing down the price of coal. Tn order to avold so much discussion Patagonian animals ought to wear their mames about thelr necks and be made to register every few years, Not all would have turned down the $50.000 a year job offered to Secretary| Hoover, but inasmuch as he is the only' one offered it all are not Hoovers. What the Unkted States sald to Europe| was simply that we have got @ claim on! Germany which must not be disregarded when reparation funds are being taken. The idea of recapturing gold that goes oft in the smoke from the mint is a good one. but more would de saved if the gold that goes to swindlers could be Tecov- ered. Resumption of the street improvement work by the city will not only hasten the completion of the job but shoud serve to further decrease unemploy- ment, Rum runners who think they can stand outside the three mile lmit and throw the booze inside the line are like- Iy to find that there's more than one way to skin 2 cat, In view of the burning of a fireproof structure in Chicago and the - serlous wounding of a man wearing a bullet- proof vest things are no more nearly what is clalmed than the Titanlc was Faged In that business. With German|yneinkable, products shut out by the war quite as *ftectively as i there had been a tariff wall we developed dye making and It all trafflc headed east must go through Water street it ought to have shiemical plants In this country ‘on 4 |more than one<third of the highway in |arge scale and American dyes are meet- Ing the tests. We have become independent o that narrow section of the strest which {s no wider than Main street, as lonz it Temains 3 two way street, ! or the other side. For & number of centuries it has been the custoa among all Ch denomi- nations to furnish the a house to iive in rent free. Thls has besn an abso lute necessity because In most cases the stipend has been eimply starvation wages. More recently .in the vigorous west similar homes have been provided for school teachers, who have been and still are Tnotoriously underpald. These homes are appropriately called “teacher- ages.” The up-to-date west has hit upon a sensible and ingenious device for se- curing the services of physicians. Coh- ditions have become such that small rural commurities are being deprived of the dogtor's services. This has grown to such an alarming extent that in many places community homes are being pro- vided for resident doctors rent free. These “doctorages” have enough land to help defray the occupant's living ex- penses. The whole community pledges to employ this doctor, when needed. It 1s not a sign of total depravity if we are disinciined to put ourselves to any nconvenience. The average man is go-| ing to put himself to no more trouble than he can safely get away with. Prob- ably the stern age of Jonathan Edwards wouid have called this natiiral depravity. In this more liberal age we simply call it nature With the “dépravity" left off. This thought came to my mind by the re- cent condition of our sMewalks during the last snowstorm. There were some scctlons left to the fortunate considera- ‘Won of the sun to do the work wh'ch somewhat taxed the patience of pedestri- s where there was no made sidewalk. fud mingled with slush made sireets almost impassable. Good work was certainiy done in the heavy business section by the removal of snow. Nar- row streets laid out before there was any dream of trofleys has made thi 1f the trolley tracks ar: snow must be removed from the streets, or motor vehicles will be tied up. Somehow the whole civilized world shown inierest in the marmage of the Princoss Mary. It seems to have been a I love affair between Lo - e ble oung ith o u of pa warranted in- rmances iticians ut there the s not carefu As the princess abbe car n found ser curiou has 1tal unbalance. e continued until nd noia prim min then as it does nov does the nswer wl vou were or or you are phy plain You were everyday n old New steeped the you would prob- that the hoy snowballs becaude i sin and cannot hide hi If you are a psychoiogist you ay that the fined objective to be aimed at, which it accompiished, produces mental satisfac- If you are a vhysiologist you wiil ¥ that the alternate expansion and con- raction_of the piceps, its momen- ry reigxatich, is good for muscular development. It is play, and all animals love to play. If you are a miitarist You will say-that the hoy loves to snowball because he wants to beat the other feTow If you are sociologist you will say it is the crowd. There Is fun in hitting Nellie in the back and Mary in the eye and sending both squeal- and schoo theology, of the Mathers, de- ing into the presence of sympathelle mother. But if you are just a plain Anglo-Saxon, with no frills about you, you wili say that the boy loves to snow- ball for pure deviltry. and you are right. No nation, however great, can afford to lose the high moral valuation that other nat:ons put upon it. Never in the history of mankind has there ever come a nearer approagh to unanimity of sen- timent in regard to an international treaty than the one mow pending before the senate of the United States. There seems to be no partisan lines in this country in regard to the four-pact treaty and people of all shades of opinion are clamoring for its immediate ratification. If the senate turns the treaty down, Japan will have a good excuse for r garding it as a personal insult. The re- markable reception given the Japanesa: envoys at the arms conference and the assurances given of our -good will must be repudiated if the treaty is rejected The good name of the senate hangs in the baiance. Let us not despair, brothers, God can make good use of the blots we make in life. Rossini. when composing pne of the sweetest of his shorter wonks, has this to say about an accident and its result: “While I was writing the chorus in G minor I suddenly dipped my ven into a modicine boffle instead of the ink. I made a blot, and when I dried this with the sand it took the form of a natural, which instantly gave me the idea of the effect the change from G minor to G major would make, and to this blot is all the effect, if any, due.” How true it is that many a man whose life has been in & minor key when some blot touched by the Master's hand hes turned the whole life into & major key. Once a fittle girl nearly drove the guests of a summer hotel distrected by drumming on l brought to Boston from the shores of the Bosphorus by Mrs. Foster Stearns, to represent the work and the sacrifice, the suffering and courage of the 34, 000 Russian refugees now in exile at Constantinople, On tae one hand Were many of the last vestiges of the comfort and pros- perity which these people formerly en- Joyed in the Tand of their birth—the ol¢ sliver, precious laces and embroldered linens which some of the refugees had suceeded in carrying with them into exile, to be soid, if possible, for the Price of a few days' bread. On the other hand, there were specimens of the art and the handicraft which now the Rus sians af" Constantinaple are ceaselessly laboring to produce—paintings in oil, simple garments of rough material but often of rare and striking design, carv- ed woodwork, anything and everything | which can possitly be offered in honest exchange foF the food that will stave | off, during yet a little space, the final panzs of starvation. For it is starvation” Mrs. Stearns says, “which these solendil people face. Constantinodle, in these times, is gom- mercially dead. It is literally a city In recetvership. In the Bosphorus, instead of the countless cargo-laden shins which once made this port busy and prosper- ous there are only the vessels of the allied flect>on guard over the lifeless capital. The native municipal govern- ment is practically extinct and those entirely apathetie. British military po- lics have' taken over the protection of the straots, “Chn one imasime a hartes nlare n which to find wogk for thonsands of ref wrees Christianstin a Moslem capital, ecaking Ruseian where the mative non- sheaks Turkish. dnemnloyed n city of unemployment? And Rassians—net S etaT it cientific work rad—are all so anxious to watlon whote n fact, even n they witl the Amer- One ehild ¥ | “Start ha murder London to M wa tuna, and was try tha e th o He two were ompan whi unguardedly large sum of had a party retired to two spective hers, the friend a double-bedded room. hours fter they had retired heard ns from an ining chamber. went to investi and red fou a the Hayes' room they an standing over him with a one hand and a knife in The man seemed ag petri- fied as Ives. The gentlemen covered the man v no than thefr host. They seized Bracfe d him his knife, and charg th be- the murderer. By 16 had recovered s composur an air of immocence, positively the serted that he came thema e humane intentions as riions wers of little avail custody !l the tal before the ken peace. me, but with such an anmnarent indieation lmr zullt that the fust'ca mad~ use of the extraord'nary exnression. “Mr. Brad- ford. efther you or I committed murer.” This extraordinary affalr beoame the conversation of the whala countrv. Bradford was tried and con. demned. Fa pleaded “not enfity.” hut nothing con'd be more conclusive than the demnsltions of the twn gentlemen They testifiel ta the findine of Haves murdered in his hed: Bradford at the side of the body with a leht and a Ynife: the knifé and the hand whish hell it bBloody; on their entarine the room he betraved all the sitems of g Ful'ty man, and a few moments hefare thev had heard the groans of the de- ceased. Bradford's defense was that hearing a moise he had secured a leht and a Fnife and hestened to the room, amq the terrors he dlsnlaved ware marely those of humanity on beholdine such a horrfble scene. But this defense was considered weak. contrasted with the powerful circumstances agatnst him Never was circumstantfal eviteq more conelns There was little nee1 of commitment from the fuge In sum- ming up the case. The fury pronounced the prisoner guilty without even leaving the box. Jonathan Bradford was executed due course of the law still declaring he | Was not the murdered, but he dfed yun- ipitled and Alshelieved by all. Yet were these assertions not untrue. Tha mur- der was actually committed by Mr. Hyves' footman who. immediately on stabbing his master, rifled his breeches Dpockets of his moner onid watch and snufbox .and esann ® ynobserved to hs own room. Th's eould scarnely bave been five minutes before Rratfarq entered the unfortunate man's chamber. Bradford though innocent and not a ATty to the murder for which he suffer- naturally a in | the murderer in design. He had heard, as well as the footman, what Mr. Hayes had said at supper as to his having a lange sum of money about him, and he went to the chamber with the same dia- bolleal intention as the servant. struck with amazement. 1 the bed clothes to assure himseit of the fact, he in his agitation dronved knife on the bleading body, by which hoth ® Sentence. itten on the subject of | toras w ed the extreme penaity. wes nevertheless Ho was He could not, { belleve his senses; but in turning back the clergyman who attended him after An exhibit of objects has just been|With you to your patry (“patrie”) the some Who onge shoulered authority now seem ! i | ] Mrs, Stearns placed on view gave WH-| How did these men, writing independ- ness of many brave efforts made bY!enty produce such a book? Other books these Russians to maintain. their £00d goo out of date when they are ten or i sn i | | {ter 1 now most urgently the ! his hands and the weapon became bloody’.~ These circumstances he aoknowledged to the | Tate thronch the tortuous strests of Con- memory about us in your hearts and tell everybody, that little Russlan chil- shall thank and remember always| their good' American Friends.” But by all odds the most significant feature of these testimonials is the par- tioular time which the Russians in Con- stantinaple chose for presenting them, During & number of months, consider- able funds had been supplied for the re- e of the olvilizn refugees in - nople by the natlonal authorities of tha American Red Cross. And then, one day. word came that the source of sup- ply could mo longer be gontinued. (Mean- while, in Russia itself, the ald of the population which had driven the Con- stantinople group into exile, the vast campaign of Amerioan governmental re- llef was being launched). It was sure- 1y a moment when petty spirits, angry over what must have seemed to them an for- gotten, 21 mess for past help received in Constant nople. Not so the Russians there! This was the very moment which they chose for bringing in thelr written expressions of gratitude. “Is it any wonder,” Mrs. Stearns aska. “that the Constantinople chapter of th American Red Cross deolded to go on | sunplying suoh people as these with| whatever scant assistance our local re: sources could muster? Hundreds of the Russians there are the very flower of ! their nation mot of the sort which has the charm of culture and only the charm ' but people Whose very ability to survive the terrile ordeals through which they have passed proves thelr Inward strength, thelr moral force, and thelr | greal powers of achievement under mor-| mal_circumstances, when you take Father John's Medicine for” your cold and to build new flesh and strength, because it is free from flo:y&:eh:hmrvhls‘: codeine herein. erous gy nly . ugs and alcohol. — The Earl of Derdy, who has been of-: Iknq the secretaryship for India in the British gavernment, is one of the rich- est men in England, as he s one of the best known sports men, owning nearly 70,000 acres, chiefly in the most lycra- tive parts of Lancashire. Lord Derby Was educated at Wellington College and | In his early career was an officer in the ' Grenadier Guards. During a part of his | career in the army he acted as alde-de-! camp to his father, then gogernor-gen- | eral of Canada. After his return to Eng-, fand he was elected to parliament. When | the unionists came Into office, he became ! 1 | one of the junior whips of the party. He | Trom the very heginning of the bol:| srved 1n tho' Somth Afclean whr fiat| shevik revolution, many of the best fam- Ties of all Russla found thelr way across | 43 chief postal censor. and then as pri the Turkish border, drivem mercilessly| Y2le secretary to Lord Roberts. Lord from their homes. But the situation did; DeTPY has aiso held the posts of finan- not become acute until November, 1820, Sial secretary to the war offics. post- when Wrangel's defensive campalign co SRiueral secreiniyof . eae SOk lapsed. Then, suddenly, ship after ship| ¥a% and ambassador to France. appeared in the Bosphorus, bearing thousends of refugees into Constantino- vle. “Thanks to the leadership of General Wrangel, unflinchingly faithful to his troops. and_thanks to the ration of one| 1755 Jonm O Camonn TODAY'S ANNIVERSARIES. 1 thau 8 £ tamous South a day gemerously provided; Corolina statesman and vice pres- WS Dasaitle. Wik proyicey} ident. born in Abbeville, S. C. i Died in Washington, D. C., March Diy b but 31, 1850, nis with varlous Bal-fg918 Trnit-d State reat majority of them Tiles ncomerated into special ocuiside of Turkey, heen possible to arrange good many civilian refu- n' Europe where, With the ives or through some definite ment which has been found for advance, they something like a existence. But still 34,000 Rus- romain in Constantinople. Of these, 15.000 have found employment, ¢ 9.000 have been unable to work ant city, and 10,000 are elth- to work or too for refugees, congress granted pensions to needy soldlers of the revolution, | 1837—Grover Cloveland, 22nd and 24th! president of the United States, born at Caldwell, N. J. Died at Princeton. N, J., June 24, 1908. 1865—The Confederates States Congress adjourned sine dle, after listening to a last address from President, Jefferson Davis. | 1872—The Workmen's International As-| socfation made a demomsigmtion in New ¥ork. 1874_Osslan T. Hart. governor of Flor- 123, dled at Jacksonville. 1897—A union of the Transvaal and Orange Free State was reported. nr Georze I of Greece assasi- nated at Salonfa. Rorn in Co- penhagen. Dec. 24, 1845, ake by General 913 ro at least 3,600 chil-| 1° ‘nd practically all of the 34.000— those who have found some definite gaining a liveliood—are wit sroper shelter. Many Russians ha quarters In the Tiokety a red ruins of that part of the which has been so wrecked by fire cven the Turks have abandoned It. living in subterranean dug-| teen hundred men find their | n ol astable h never | in its wals to let In the light | And yet what piucky attempts| order and cleanliness I have The men elected an officer a ‘commandant’ One me to Inavect the ‘improve- which he had organized. He had | coused each man to mark off a little rectangular niot on the plot on the bare ground of the stable—set off by pebbles Which had been pounded into the earth! —so that this much space, at least, should be known as each man's ‘own private oroperty, where he could sleep at night and where he could keep, dur- ing thé day. his few stray possessions.” But despite all the suffering, the se- vere and protracted under-nourishment, amounting | to slow starvation, which these people have been'forced to under- g0, photographs in the exhibit whic TODAY'S BrRTHDAYS, Victor Murdock, well known Kansas editor and politician, born at Burling- ame, Kas., 51 years ago today. Dr. Richard P. Strong, the Harvard | medical sclentist who has been named | director of the new Gorgas Memorlal In stitute in Panama, born at Fortress| Monroe, Va.. 50 years ago today. William Sulzer, one-time governor New York, born at Ellzabeth, N. J., years ago today. Edith Storey, a popular actress motion pictures, born in New York cf 30 years ago today. Frank Moran, well known heavy- weight pugitist, born In Cleveland, 35| years ago today. SUNDAY MORNING TALK The Bible, It required fifteen hundred years to write this book, and the man Who wrote ow nication with the man who began s s and to keep life flowing along In (wenty years old; but this book lives on as natural a manner as possible. For, througn the ages and keeps abreast of one thing, they have improvised a chad-: the mightiest thought and intellect of el where chuhch services may be hexd.g every age. ceting from the Red Cross stores| e tyrn to the Bible for the Ten Com- ng been utilized Ly the refugees as| mandments, which form the foundation ground for the painting of pictures| oe oy statute law; and to the sermon which heautify the church. Again, the¥|on the mount, which lays down the rules Pave constructed a rude theatre Whereif . our spiritual growth, sometimes they give lttle plays, usually| m e = The Bible gives us the remembered from years in Mosoow and |, € o PO Fl€h,C¥ oo Petrozrad, bit sometimes newly WIKEeD| o, tne resurrection, and the ascension OF he. Sopanon: Him whose coming was foretold In Again, many of the paintings done by| °f . 3 % voung artists in the refu=ee colony and|Prophecy, whose arrival was announced Shown in vesterday's exhibition manitest | ‘zod 'm’,“mc i e Pl e Sl s COourag El e n- > 1 i e ‘;"“ffi""‘,’f "fn:':‘{“"{""::d‘:, the world a code of morality superlor to Shich. are so charasterlstio of theve Runs| S2TiEing that the woeid had kugn he- e A ore were amusing carloatures,{ [0 or has known since; the story of e i ot ke Turiish Dentist » | Him who is the crowning figure of all I A arionn Salior on Leavest| time, the Saviour and gerfect example. 5 S = Sl Wherever the moral standard is being tha latter drivine a horse at a furious titted up. wherever life is becoming farger in the vision that direots it, and riches in its frultage the improvement is traceable to the Bible, and to the influ- CONSTIPATION Is the Curse of Creation and 90 per cent of the start of every serlous sickness—causing de- pression of spirits, irritability, stantinonle, But ahove all the Constantinonle chan- ter of the American Red Cross, of which Mrs. Stearns is executlve secretarv. is connentratine its efforts for the welfare of the children of the refuzee colony; and it is for this purnose that the chan- n need of funds Outside the walls of the old clty 2 sohnal has been oreanized for the Rus- slan chiviren. called the Neratov Schonl. and there i the Mttia punlls can only he maved from starvation. the trainine is Peing sunnli=d which some dav mav go #ar toward the salvation of bolshevik- ruined Russta. Many of the examnles of children’s work, in the exhibit, disnlay the mest ingenlous destgn and skill in workmanshin. Mrs. Stearns wIN =et =afl once more for Constantinople on March 28, drowsiness, loss of appetite, con rect this trouble at once, and you« will be as near proof against pos- slble infectlon anc disease. i Btories That Recall Others A Roratched Record. One day recently, Mary. aged ten, and her sister, Harriet. aged §ve. were vis-|~ itinx their erandmother. whom they call A e o Qver §0 Years the Standard ™ BOOKS. mamma. Mary was singing to one of her dolls when mamma joined in on the refrain. Harrlet loocked up and sald very soberly: = Aw, mamma, your Tecord's scratch- All Kinds On All Subjects ed. Starting Early, Johnnte had only four candles on his last birthday cake but he is already well versed in lexal procedure. Need- ing to have a tooth evtracted he went to 2 dentist's ofice When perched In the chalr he declded that he did not wish to part comvany with his alling tooth and, could nat e persuaded to oven his mouth. With consummate skill the den- tist distracted his attention and made him gap with Wonder at a_fabricated tale. In went the forcaps and gut came the tooth before Johnnie realized ft. The hoy did not sav a word untll he started to leave the office when he turned on the surprised dootor and sald serlously: “Blame you, doctor. T have a good mind to prosecute you for this!" During the period when the United States was actually at war, April € 1917, to ovember 11, 1918, the 1oss of |navy vessels was forty-elght of all Subscription 4o all American and European Publications. SHEA’S NEWS BUREAU UNION SQUARE F. H KENYON, General Agent @, N. DELAP, Special Agent = A sensatlonal drama was|were lost. The list includes one bat- Jonathan Bm-l-‘ D. W, LITTLE, Speefal Azent Hartfard, Conn. Now Haven classes, On these vessels 1,150 lives tleship, the Minnesota, transports, tan- New York kers, submarine chasers. vachts ete. | So this book comes, not from the empty NCRWICH, CONN. Telephone 213 147-153 1-AIN STREET Get That New Spring Suit In Time For Easter YOU'LL FIND SOME BEAUTIES HERE. FINE, - NEW WOOLENS—SMART NEW STYLES. THEY'RE FRCM KERSCHBAUM AND OTHER GOCD MAKERS — THAT MEANS YOU CAN RELY ON THE GOODNESS OF THE FABRIC AND THE TAILORING—THAT MEANS BETTER CLOTHES AT LOWER PRICES. COME NOW, AND HAVE A FULL LINE TO SELECT FROM. SEEDS ALL NEW ENGLAND GROWN We Guarantee Our Seed Under Test. Call for Samples. T. H. ELDREDGE 85 Water Street ence of the God and Christ of whom the|script of the divine mind, Bible tells. When we get the plan of this book we find it is something more than a book of g20d maxims and comfortng words, it a book which unfolds the divine pur- pose, and not only reveals the way of salvation, but marks the pathway of the people of God through the journey of life, and foreshadows the destiny of the world which He has made and the church which He has redeemed. When we look at these facts, We sec that this 1s no man's book. When Co- lumbus saw the river Orinoco, someone the unfolding of the divine purpose, the revelation of divine Will. May God heip us to recetve It to belleve it. and be saved through Christ, our Lord. Comets vary in their speed. lke trains. The great comet of 1552 trav eled 293 miles a second. Halley's, comet does not travel so fash—roughly, about tifty miles a second less. said he had discovered an fsiand. He UM&.-« oy replied: “No such river as that flows B Mm‘z_ from an isiand, that mighty torrent must drain the waters of a continent.” hearts of impostors, and decelvers, it springs from the eternal depths of di- vine wisdom, and love. It is the tran- vishs " Over 17 Million Jers Used Y in Chic or Passé ? L ‘Which class is your wardrobe In? Have you any garments that show the of time—have the colors become passé? SUNSET DYES will give them a new lease of life, smarten them up in your favorite fashionable color. o It makes no difference whether they are Wool, Silk, Cotton, Linen or Mixed Goods, ONE SUNSET dye bath will dye all fabrics evenly and permanently. Fast A 22 G, 156 Cake o Stgined Honds P ik o Vtomit) Jou e e shom the SUNSET ol G e can’t mail ws 15¢ and we will send y the color Leon't accept subshisdes. NORTH AMERICAN DYE CORPORATION, Mcust Vernes, New Yark EINSET SUNSVES ONE Real! Dye For ALL Fabrics HOURIGAN BROS. THE PUBLIC HAVE FAITH IN GUR STORE OUK B 5iNESS HAS HAD A STEADY GROWTH FOR YEARS, BECAUSE OF THE FACT THAT OUR CUSTOMERS BELIEVE IN US, AND WE HAVE NEVER DISAPPOINTED THEM, THEY KNOW OUR VALUES ARE REAL VALUES, A*D _ STAND UP UNDER THE CLOSEST INS GIVE US THE OPPORTUNITY TO S Do PECTION Cw YOU. ‘E YE FUR 82.28 MAIN STREET Pt A leliil