6
THE FARMER: JULY 5, 1913
RIDGEPOR T E VENING FARMER
(FOTJXD ED 1390.)
P ablibhed by The Farmer Publishing Co., 179 Fairfield Ave.. Bridgeport.
Conn.
UNIONLABEt
SATURDAY, OTTLX 5, 1918,
David Lamar, "Unconsionable Liar"---What
Is, His Part In The Great
Scheme Of things?
high
The law contains many loopholes. A crime in law,
not in morals- must be strictly defined. Every, man has
a rierht to know what it is he must not do. In most states
. if not in all, it is a crime to impersonate a policeman. I
is not a crime to impersonate a congressman. David La
mar is probably safe enough in confessing, with candor
and brass, that he represented himself , over the telephone
as divers members of Congress. His motive, the only mo
tive capable of proof, is innocent enough. He desired to
secure employment for the lawyer, Lauterbach. t That it
would be of advantage to the stock speculator, Lamar, to
have the legal adventurer, Ijauterbach, employed by the
Morgan interests is neither here nor there. 1
"Lamar is interesting from many standpoints.' Ho
raises questions of human nature. He is a problem in
psychology. He throws sidelights upon the methods of
"high finance., T';f Y -V.--. :
A most enjoyable person is Lamar; a man of intellect
without heart; of shrewdness without honor; candid be
cause he has no picture in his mind of anybody who will
not lie, except from fear of being caught; one who believes
that every man would steal, if it were not for prisons
The CBmHTAL INTELLECT has played its part in
developing the world. It played its part in past con
quests at arms. It plays its present part in conquests in
finance. : v.- -h v.
Harriman 'a lawyer said, "Mr. Harriman moves on a
different plane than ordinary men.," He might as well
have said; "Mr. Harriman has made himself so influential
with the government he can do- things which would cause
other men to be sent to jaiL That was the fact.
Remember that Lamar, wolf of Wall street, testifies
that some $82,000,000 of bonds in the Harriman system
had their origin in a forgery; and that certain great tor-
tunes are rooted in that forgery, as in a morass.
These representatives of high finance do move-on a
different, plane than pther men. Their, thefts are trans
acted under the protection of laws, which they secure
through their lobbies, and their use of such means as the
lobby understands.
The domain of MORALS is beyond the reach of these
High finance may break one, or ten commandments, but
cannot destroy) -the fractional part of a single command
ment. ; - - - ' --; ' :
Iniime the new methods of loot meet face to face with
the-old. morals. New criminal statutes follow. The peo
pi are aroused. They send against the rotten system.
In a- day they come upon the guilty ones. The criminal
law is lifted to an equality with the moral law, until the
equilibrium is one a more disturbed, by the operations of
the criminal intellect, which seeks and finds new ways of
doing the old thing. .
: . It is not at any moment easy to divide the sheep
frornrthef goats. Nature contains, in her domain, some
ugly 'creatures, who, nevertheless, seem charged with cer
tain necessary functions in her scheme of things. The
tosdtis not pleasant to the eye, but it is the original fly
ewatter. , The fly is a valuable agent in a community un
familiar with the laws of sanitation.
The Harrimans, the Lamars and the Morgans are
variously charged with a mission in the evolution of so
eierjv ; They have been "catching flies, which is to say,
'destroying the little financiers, who have stood in the way
of what Mr. Mellen is pleased to describe as UNIFICA
Tioxr.
So let us mingle sympathy with our detestation of
these men, who seem so frequently to defy the moral law.
They are giant angle worms of the social order. Work
ing down there in the darkness they fertilize the soil, get
ting it ready for the great crops it will bear in the future
What shall we do with them? Nothing; until their
work is done. But when their work is done, ruthlessly
extirpate them.
Out of evil, in the long process oi the ages, good has
more than once come. The crusade brought light to Eu
rope. Napoleon overthrew political feudalism. The
Rockefellers, Morgans, Harrimans, and Lamars. with
their legal and judicial retainers, henchmen, footmen,
lackies and servitors of all grades and orders, overthrow
industrial feudalism.
H Napoleon died at St. Helena. High finance is march
ing to Waterloo. Blucher will arrive too late. The rule
still is "WOE UNTO HIM BY WHOM THE EVIL
COMETH."
Let us be grateful for Mr. Lamar. "I am," he says,
"an unconscionable liar."
-., JThere .is a certain dignity in the admisson. Most
unconscionable liars go to church, conceal the truth from
themselves and get to believe they have deceived the Lqrd
God of Hosts.
SCRAP BOOK FOR TO-DAY :
Pitteburg-h's -project for perpetuat
ing the memory of Stephen Collins
Foster by preserving: his old home as
a memorial will meet with general
approval. The immortal composer of
"Old Folks at Home," "Old Uncle
Ned," "My Old Kentucky Home,"
"Maesa's In th Cold, Cold Ground,"
and other negro folk- songs, was. born
eighty-seven years go, July 4th, 1826
a date marking the eemi-centenary
of American independence, and almost
simultaneous death of John Adams
and Thomas Jefferson. Foster ,knew
little of the negroes and; their folk
songs, and it was the (popularity of
blackface minstrelsy that led him to
compose the Songs that made him one
of the most honored of American
song writers. ' ,
Many quaint and curious customs
dating from ancient times are etill
observed in the Isle of Man, and not
the least interesting ' of these is the
ceremony that will be enacted today
on Tynwald Hill. Mien, women and
children from all over the little island
of the Irish Sea will gather on the
hillside and listen' to the official who
will read aloud: the book of Manx
laws. For centuries this archaic le
gal ceremony has been, carried out on
each fifth of July, except when that
date falls on Sunday, and It still re
tains most -of the novel features that
make it the most (interesting obser
vance of its kind to be witnessed any
whereelse in the world.
It is no longer possible to read all
the laws, that govern Manxmen, since
the House of Keys, as the local leg-
islature is called, has of late been as
busy in adding new statutes as sim
ilar bodies elsewhere.
A Manx law that Is no longer en
forced, but which retains a place in
the statute book, provides a 'penalty
of $50 and the loss of both ears for
anyone guilty of libeling the lawmak
ers. The death penalty was long im
posed for the theft of any amount
above thirteen cents, while a flogging
was the punishment for stealing a les
ser sum. An exception was made in
the case of horse and cattle thieves,
for It was set forth that,- as they could
not' hide such criminals, their act was
more foolish then felonious.
Hall Caine, whose youth was spent
in the Isle of Man, ihas described many
of the interesting customs of . the
Manxmen in his novels.. Of late years.
however, the Inhabitants have shed
some of their pecularlties, owing to
contact, with tourists.
The firBt company of the Salvation
Army was organized by William Booth
at Mile End, England -! , f prtyeight
years ago to-day, -and the branches of
the army throughout the world are
already making plans to celebrate the
semi-centenary two years hence. The
founder, the late General Booth, and
his wife, started out from the Metno
fllst New -Connection to reclaim the
wayward, the neglected and , the de
graded. They organized their work in
the east end of London, naming it the
Christian Mission," but the project
was not very successful until the idea
of a military organization was, to use
Booth's phrase, "revealed to him. It
was noV until 1S78 that the military
organization became runy eneenve,
with Booth, as "general." The army
had to- fight its way to recognition
for its street meetings, both In EurcS-
npnn and American cities; were at
times broken up by the police, and the
leaders Jailed or fined. The uniforms
of the men, the poke bonnets of the
women, the songs, and the " music
of drums and timbrels, served tne pur
pose of drawing crowds to hear the
preachers, who held forth at the "bar
racks." The plan was successful from
the first,, and in 1880 extended to
France and America. The army now
has branches all over the world, ,ln
fifty-six countries and colonies.
The first Christian Science associa
tion was organized by Mrs. Mary Ba
ker Eddv and six of her students thir
ty-seven years ago., About a, year la
ter the first church of the organiza
tion was founded "by the leader of the
denomination and twenty-six of her
disclnles. Christian Science was dis
covered bv Mrs. Eddy In 1866, "when
apparently near the confines of mor
tal existence, standing already with
in the shadow of the valley of death."
The ; "bible" of , Christian - Science,
"Science and Health with Key to the
Scriptures," was published In 1876. At
first the book seemed doomed to ob
scurity, and, as previously stated, only
a half, dozen followers rallied to tne
standard of Christian Science at the
first meeting in 1876, held on the cen
tenarr of American Independence. In
1878 Mrs. Eddy preached in the Bap
tist Tabernacle, Boston, and many
testified that they were healed by her
preaching. From that time the new
sect began to spread, until now there
are nearly a hundred thousand mem
bers in- the United States, 5,074 In
Canadan. many thousands in other
countries, and hundreds of thousands
of unattached adherents.
If you happen to -be a "Borrovian
you will attend In spirit. If not In body
the great Borrovian celebration to be
held to-day In Norwich, England. For
the benefit of the unitiated, it may be
explained that a Borrovian is a disci
ple and admirer of George Borrow, the
English vagabond writer and author
ity on gypsy habits and history. - The
celebration in Norwich to-day com
memorates his 110th birthday. Bor
row'S advocacy of pugilism, his jeers
at the conventions and the proprieties
and his sneers and sarcasms directed
at everything that was considered res
pectable, led to his genius going with
little recognition during his lifetime.
and even his centenary a decade ago
passed all but unnoticed. - Now the
Borrovians form a cult with devotees
throughout America and Europe, and
they propose to do delayed Justice to
the memory of their mastor to-day.
Borrow was born in gypsy camp, near
Norwich, and his youth was spent in
traveling about England, Scotland and
Ireland with the gypsies. At seven
teen he was articled to a Norwich bar
rister, and spent several years in that
city before he resumed his wander- j
ings. Later -he spent several years
with the Spanish gypsies or gltanos,
and wrote a book dealing with their
history, customs and language "The
Bible in Spain," a humorous work
dealing witn ms experiences as an
agent of the London Bible Society in
Spain, became very popular. This
was followed by a semi-autobiographical,
semi-flctltlous book entitled, "La
vengro, the Scholar and the Priest,"
and its sequel, "Romany Rye." These
works were denounced by Borrow's
contemporaries as brutal, vicious and
coarse, but they are a source of In
spiration to the Borrovians of to-day.
life. Perhaps the most famous of the
Pacific island monarchs was Capt.
Benjamin S. Osbon. He was the son
of a South, sea trader, and was born
on the brig Gazelle severity-four years
ago, July 4, 1839, "at 8 bells In the
morning watch," as the log testified,
His youth was spent on board ship,
cruising about Australia and the Paci
fic islands. Osbon Pere carried on
prosperous traffic in sandl wool, been
le-mer, and birds' nests and sharks
fins for the Chinese market. Encoun
ters with savages, some of them can
nibals, were not infrequent, but the
lad regarded his life as tame and un
interesting, and longed for the excite
ments of civilization, of which he had
read.
The ambition to return to the white
man's world was eclipsed by a greater
passion when he met a dusky princess,
the daughter of an Island king, with
whom he Immediately fell In love. The
girl returned his affection, and the
monarch was willing that they should
wed, but the 18-year-old lover feared
his father's displeasure. He ran away
into the hills, and remained there un
til his father, giving him up for lost.
lert the island. The marriage festi
val continued for over a week, and the
king was so pleased with his new son-in-law
that, as he had no son, he de
clared Osbon the crown prince and
heir to the throne. ,. Within three
months the aged king died, and the
white boy became the ruler of the sav.
age kingdom. . .
For three years the white youth and
his dusky .bride ruled wisely and well
over their subjects. Then one day
the Gazelle, the birthplace ' i of the
"king," came into port. The sight of
the trim brig, which had been sold by
the monarch's father to another trad
er, aroused the spirit of wanderlust
In the breast of the boy. . . When the
vessel returned again a year later,
the king and queen secretly boarded
her and sailed away, leaving their un
suspecting subjects without a ruler,
The brig proceeded to Hong Kon
whence . the couple took passage for
America, as they had learned that the
elder Osbon had retired from the sea.
following the supposed death of his
son, and settled in Portland. Me. King
Ben" and Queen Lulu were given a
hearty greeting by the mariner, upon
their arrival in New York, and spent
the next few years In acquiring an
education. Capt. Osbon's last ap
pearance in the limelight was as
supporter of the claims of Dr. Cook
during the Peary-Cook controversy.
THE HUMAN PROCESSION
"A CORONER OF TH3J RIGHT
. - ,. SORT." :"
(Editorial
New York
in To-day's
World.)
Coroner Phelan's statement respect
ing Individual responsibility for the
Stamford wreck Indicates that the
conclusions of the inquest may have
an Important bearing on . the ques
tion of personal guilt. ' Announcing
that he would fail of his duty to the
public If he held the railroad company
responsible as a - corporation .without
naming "each of those of it or in it
whose conduct shaped that responsi
bility," the coroner added:
"I have a public duty to perform In
ascertaining, to the best of my ability
In accordance with the law, whether
any or what man or men rightfully
deserve public censure In the prem
ises." '
These are enlightened views. ',. They
both .evidence an appreciation of the
powers and duties of the coroner's of
fice and reveal a full understanding
of the doctrine ths$t responsibility Is
personal; that It cannot be shirked
or screened by a corporation name.
and that what it is wrong for individ
uals to do Is equally wrong when done
by them collectively as a company or
association. ;
There would be fewer occasions for
Indicting corporations If the man be
hind the train wreck and the Individ
ual directly accountable for the abuse
or violation of the - law for which
the indictment Is found, were more of
ten identified and personally prosecut
ed., ....
LADY SACKVTLLE IS
STAR WITNESS IN
FIGHT FOR MILLIONS
London,. July 8 'The fight for the
minions," the suit in which the rela
tives of the- late Sir John Murray
Scott are endeavoring to have pro
nounced invalid on account of alleged
undue influence the will by which he
left the bulk of his fortune of $5,000,-
000 to Lady Sackville, was resumed,
today, before an -audience composed
largely of women and including sev
eral wives of British cabinet ministers
and Judges as well as other notable
persons and which filled every seat in
the .probate, divorce and admiralty
court. '''.
As soon as the presiding judge,' Sir
Samuel Thomas EVans, had taken his
seat on the bench, Lady Sackville re
turned to the witness stand. It was.
she said, in the spring of 1900, while
she and the baronet were driving to
gether, that Sir John first told her of
his intention to leave her l.XJ,ooo.
He said to her that now his mother
was dead, Lady Sackville . has taken
a great place in .his life and he was
going to leave to her the Ji.wo.ow,
his furniture and his houses at Baga
telle, near. Paris.
PATENT RIGHTS ISSUED TO
CONNECTICUT INVENTORS
White kings of South Sea Islands
are favorite characters in fiction, but
The following were issued July 1,
1913. List furnished from office of A.
M. Wooster, Solicitor of Patents,
Bridgeport, Conn.
Frank A. Cook, Hartford, Type-writ
ing machine.
William F. Helmond, Hartford,
Type-writing machine.
Charles J. Jolldon, Hartford 2 pa
tents: Magazine firearm.
Burdett Loom's, Hartford, Apparatus
for treating furnace gases and pre
paring fuel.
Daniel Heaming, New Haven, 2 pa
tents: Cigarette rod severing device;
Machine for pasting the seams of ci
garettes and the . like.
Frederick Reutter, Waterbury, in
candescent lamp socket.
James Kelley, Wlnsted, Machine for
mailing pine.
Herbert A. Howe, Thompson vllle,
Carpet or rug, design.) .
Trade Mark
J. N. Lapointe Co., New London,
Broaching machines and broaches.
EAGLES COMMITTEE TO MEET.
Preparations for the state parade
and big field day of the Eagles to be
held July 22 in this city will be ad
vanced at the meeting of the general
committee to be held tomorrow morn
ing at Eagles' hall. Some important
matters are to be acted upon and all
members of the committee are urged
George M. Cohan celebrated his thirty-fifth
birthday yesterday. George
recently bade farewell to that dear
old Broadway which he has celebrat
ed in song and melodrama, and de
Clares that after a year on the road
it will be back to Providence for his'n.
The man was born in Providence on
the Fourth of July, 1878, and it is on
a farm near the Rhode Island city
that he expects to spend- his declining
years, in the buzzum of his family,
surrounded by cattle, turnips, chick
ens, cabbages, strawberry trees and
other flora and fauna. His father
and mother and. the other and nu
merous Cohans are also going to leave
the great white streak and settle down
on a farm.
It was about twenty-three years ago
that George started his stage career
as a boy violinist, and since then he
has done nearly everything in the
amusement line from circus performer
to singer, actor, oomposer, dramatist,
nroducer. manager and theatre owner.
He is reported to be worth several
millions, more or less, and as he has
never been a wild : and regardless
BDender. the report is probably true.
Mr. Cohan believes that "Little Johnny
Jones" is his. dramatic masterpiece,
but well, there will be a lot of long
winter nights down on the farm, and
George expects to spend tnem in writ.
Ing "the great American comeay.
Little Prince Wllhelm, eldest son of
Crown Prince Wllhelm of Germany,
had a birthday party . yesterday, this
being the seventh anniversary or ms
arrival in this world. If he outlives
bin celebrated grandfather and his
warlike father, the youngster will be
come Emperor of Germany ana J&ing
of Prussia provided, or course, tne
nMin Bniaitsts don't succeed in top
pling over the throne and thus deprive
the Hohenzollern family of their im
perial powers. As for sucn a. connn-o-onnv
however, little Wllhelm would
h.M,. T. "T should worry." He
is described as a healthy. , husky, hap
py boy. and to such the present ifl far
tannrtant than the future. His
mother was the Princess Cecil's of
Mecklenburg-Schwerln, a younger sis
ter of the present Queen of Denmark,
and related to the royal families of
England, Norway and Greece.
Aitinniicr'h he was born In Tennessee,
educated at Cornell, and is now vice
president of Leland Stanford Univers
ity in California, Dr. John Casper
nmimpr is more at home in Brazil
than anywhere else. The famous geolo
gist recently sailed for tne conee w
public" to continue the scientific, in
vestigations he commenced in 1878,
when he went to Brazil with the Im
perial Geological Commission. After
concluding his dunes -witn ma.
Dr., Branner remained in the "South
American country many y 3a.ro as ex
nw rnv a. iriininar company and as
agent for the "United - States Depart
ment of Agriculture, which he served
a botanist. After returning to m
native country, he became geowgisi
for the Pennsylvania Geological Sur
vey. State Geologist of Arkansas, and
professor of geology at Indiana Uni
versity. He Joined the .ueiana. o-iani
ford faculty In 1892, was acting presi
dent for a time, and since 1899 has
been vice president of "the famous Cal
ifornia institution. Since his connec
tion with Stanford" he has headed sev
eral scientific expeditions to Brazil,
Mra. Ttatherlne Tmgley, the interna
tional leader of the Universal Broth
erhood and Theoeophical Society and
the "nurole lotus mother" - of point
Loma, Ca.1., will celebrate her sixty
first birthday tomorrow. With a num
ber of her disciples, and a party of
pupils from Raja Yoga College, Mrs.
Tlngley recently went to Sweden to
attend an International peace congress
of the theosophlsts.' The leader of
the milt has spent most of the last year
in . TThimrx. where she arranged tor
Italian and- Scandinavian propaganda
headquarters. -
The "rmrcle mother," wo claims to
be the successor of Helena Petrovna
Blavatsky, the Russian woman who
founded theosophy, and William Q.
Judge, the Irish-American lawyer who
was responsible for the - development
of the cult on this side of the Atlan
tic was born at Newbury port, Mass.,
July , 1852. She claims descent from
early colonial stock. - She - became
prominent in theosophical circles In
1886, following the death of Ur., Judge,
and soon claimed , to be the "outer
head" of the "inner school"' of the
cult, a claim that was denied by An-
nie Besant. The warfare between the
women resulted in a split in the ranks
of the disciples of "universal "broth
erhood," and they : are now divided
into rival camps, one section looking
to Mrs. Besant for Inspiration and the
other branch to Mrs, Tingley.
The Theosophical Brotherhood col
ony at Pont Loma, near San Diego,
CaL, is located on one of the most
beautiful spots in the land of sunshine
and flowers. The -buildings are on a
nenlnsula Jutting out into the Faclflc
and include academies for children of
all ages and both sexes, an orpnan
school, publishing house. Raja - Yo?a
college, a "school, of antiquity." and
other institutions. -There Is also an
outdoor theatre of college along the
same lines as the one at Point Loma
will soon be established In Sweden.
The California colony was established
in 1898. At first there was much op
position to Mrs. Tingley's educational
methods, but this spirit has now died
out. and most . of the people or toan
Dieero now cdnslder Point Loma
-valuable asset as one of the "sights"
for tourists.
Mrs. Tingley has nothing but scorn
for the militant suffragettes, although
she says that many of the principles
of suffrage are excellent. As to the
relations of theosophy to universal
peace, she says:
Theosophy imparts new lire to ev
erything It touches. This Is because
it reaches the mainspring or numan
character, and thereby calls forth in
every man the strength of his own
higher nature. Theosophy may
therefore claim the ability to approach
the question of International peace
from a new standpoint and Impart to
it a now and effective force."
PERSONAL MENTION".
Henry Hlnman, steward of Nar-
ragansett club, 96 State street, has Just
returned after a ten days' vacation
taking in the many points of Interest
in and around the Housatonlc valley.
Mr. Hlnman thoroughly enjoyed the
vacation as he needed the much en-
Joyed rest and is now ready for all
comers as a caterer.
The D. M. Read
Established 1857.
Co
July days, and there are people vho affirm that the
summer hastens quickly after the Fourth. Still, we
venture to sayjthere is a good bit of it left, enough for
many days of merry-making. And we dare to say that
there are few women quite ready with their sumriiec'
wardrobes. For them, and for those forehanded ones
who prepare for future summers, we have some capital
Wash Goods Specials
Scotch Zephyr Ginghams, Percales, Madras, Prints.
Scotch Zephyrs, 5,000 yards in stripes, plaids,
checks, very suitable for dresses, waists and shirts, qual
ity 25 and 39 cts. '
19 cts special.
Madras and Percale, extra heavy Percales, 6 inches
wide, light, " dark, and medium shades, many designs,
quality 12 and 15 cts,
IO cts special. ,
Percales of good- grades, desirable for housedresses
aprons, ets. 36 inches' wide, many patterns and color
ings, 7 cts. .
' Prints, best Manchester weaves, narrow width, all
colorings, ,;
' - - ; . 4 cts".
Gingham, suitable for dresses, i2 ct grade, 8 cts.
Gingham, for children's dreses, 10 ct grade, 6 cts.
. y In the Basement.
For the Dressing Pvoom
Celluloid Mirrors, easel backs,, ' g ctt.
C16ver Cream, 10 ct size, i ' I 5 cts,";
Flexible Nail Files, . r " 10 cts. 1
"Jess" Talcum arbutus odor, 25 cts. '
Woodland Violet Talcum oner pound can, , 10 cts"
Peroxide of Hydrogen, one pint, 10 eta.
Down and Babbit Skin Powder Puffs," o cts!
Paper Drinking Cups, per dozen, - 5 cs :
Large Chamois, for motors, $1.00
Dr. Scott's Electric Hair Brushes, $1.00 mze, . 73 cts. ;
Kolynos Skin Soap, per dozen cakes, SI 50 "
Dr. Iyon's Tooth Powder, 25 ct size, 15 cts.
"Mum", a deodorizer, 25 ct size, 17 c3.
Riveris Talcum, 25 ct size, 19 ctsj
U-lycothymoune, $1.00 size, - 77 cts.
Dioxygen, 50 ct size, r ; ?- '
Phillips" Milk oifMagnesia 50 5t size, - . 33 ct3J ;
1 ' Toilet ection, main floor. .'
- As will be seen these are all at special rates, and
?every one is a necessity in the home.
Safety Lamps
; ; Ail Lamps should ;be: of the safety variety, but the
Stillman Safety is so - constructed that it cannot be ex"
ploded, even if pipped over or turned upside down. An
excellent Lamp for summer cottages. i
Several sizes and styles;
-, Japaned Tin Hand Lamps,
Brass Hand Lamps
Large Colonial Brass
Complete with" burners and chimneys.
Lanterns of the same construction. 60 cts.. $r.oo
and $1.25. " - .
- Basement Furnishing Store.
70 cts.
$1.25
$1.50
The D. M. Pead Company.
1072 Main St. DEPARTMENT STORE, 89 Fairfield Ays.
"THE STORK TO nHD EOABCB ARTICLES
AND THE STORE THAI FAT8 TBJBt CAS FARB
COUPON GOOD
MONDAY, JULY 7
MEN'S TWO PIECE
BATHING SUITS
WTiifco or Grey -.regular price 860
With Coupon
. '. , 25c
THE lRB7rrTEST VACtt
mad tbe most beautiful handi aura of
ten disfigured by an untignuj w&rt.
It can easily b removed in a lew days
without pain by uains jyrua' wart
Kemover, lor & only at Tbm Cyrua
Pharmacy. 26 3 Fairfield avenue and
WE ARE SELLINGS A
GREAT MANY BATIIIITa
SUITS TOR
MEN, WOMEN AND
CHILDREN
JERSEYS AND
10c UPWARDS
TIGIITC!
TO)
1 1
O Th
1 iiit jf
20 Per Celt iisc
Discount On Everything
, Except Auto Tires
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1127 MAIN ST.
SYNDICATE STORES
YOUR SPRING HOUSE CLEMING
Ciet bj STEAM CJjEAKT yotjr Carpets ONCE. Then Ton win umttnXSTXZTB
why PABXICCIiAB people A&WA? as!'?
THE BRIDGEPORT STEAM CARPET CLEANING CO
236 STRATFORD AVENTTE ' Phone 5
Please remember we also make beautiful Fluff Rust out 01 your old cx ' .
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have been several such in real
to be present. "
184 Cannon Bfc .