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\. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1921. Foreign Advertising.Representative THE AMERICAN PRESS ASSOCU't tC ir—it— tfr-i>— is—•&—•&&— ft— -ti~-fc-4t—it— tf L The Nation's Pride J *b—fr—it-^tt—tr-iy-iy- fl.— ty-ty-xy- ij \I pledge allegiance to my flag and to the republic for which it stands> one nation, indivisible, with liberty and justice to all.\ TRUE CITIZENSHIP. True citizenship is\not all in \Rally Around the Star Spangled Banner\ of our country and singing \Hail Colum- bia.\ The spirit of true citizenship is shown by the person who patronizes home industries first, last and all the time, and trades with home merch- ants. How can I help ? There is one sure way—spend your money with Cape Vincent concerns; do not let a dollar leave here that will purchase what you want from local merchants. Does J;he average person realize what a calamity it would h e were our merchants to close .thjnr doors ? It is to them, largely, that we owe the suc- cess of our village. What would Cape Vincent be \without her\ big, loyal and liberal business men ? Show your patriotism by continued loyalty to eveuy enterprise in Cape Vincent. Your money spent with •local merchants will help' to keep Cape Vincent to the^foremost as a commer cial center. Be a true citizen. Buy in Cape Vincent. Cape Vincent can serve you best. INCOME TAX FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW Salaries paid to state employees, including also employees of a town, county, or hamlet, are exempt from taxation. Thousands of persons en- gaged in business for themselves or as employees in private business re- ceive such additional compensation. A storekeeper may be elected mayor of his town. The amount paid for such service should be entered on his income tax return, but it is not tax- able. '• State employees, however, must consider carefully their income from all other sources. If, excluding the amount paid them by the -state, it equals or exceeds $1,000 or $2,000, ac- cording to their martial status, a re- turn of income must be filed and the tax paid on net income i.in excess of those amounts. The return must be sworn'to be- fore a notary or other person author- ized to administer an oath. The tax may be paid in full at the time of filing the return or- in four equal in- stallments, due on or,before March 15, June 15, September 15 and Decem- ber 15, 1921. At least one-fourth of the amount due must accompany the filing of the return. Salary exemptions allowed state employees do not apply to employees of the Federal Government, such, for example, as postmasters'.\ THREE OLD PROVERBS. \A rolling stone gathers no moss.\ Do you remember how- often your wise advisers have quoted it as an un- - answerable argument against any new move on. your part? The statement is true, but the application is utterly deceptive. Who wants moss, any- how? Do you want to be a moss- back? The dictionary says a moss- back is \a person so sluggish jin his way of_ life or thought that he may be likened to a stone or old tree cov- ered with moss.\* Even assuming \moss\ to mean wealth, the proverb is misapplied. The people .who have taken root and refused to budge from one place or one way of life are not the people who have achieved great- est success. The most successful men are those of, wide and v.ai-ied inter- ests. 9 Then there is.that old story about \sticking to your bush.\ It is not true that the boy who stuck to his bush < after the b'erriesi were hard to find carried home the largest bucket full. The \boy who moved often enough to be where \the berries were thick- est had the best chance t o come out ahead. We are told, too, that \persever- ance conquers all things.\ Don't be- lieve it. True, a certain amount of perseverance is essential to a success- ful career. But the man who em- barks upon a new and untried enter- prise with the unalterable determina- tion to stick to it to the bitter end; is liable to find the end in his grave without having accomplished 'his pur- pose. We are all liable to make mis- takes in forecasting the outcome of a new venture. When you have put forth every effort and tried every turn possible and still the trend is in- exorably against you; -when your path is blocked by a stone wall too high to climb and too strong to butt it down, it is better to take some other path than to butt your brains out with no effect upon the wall Many a man has been, mined for life because he Wag too persevering, to- quit while there was enough of him left to achieve success elsewhere. ^When the old proverb contradicts common' sense and universal experi- ence, forget the proverb. » FORMER GAPE LADY MRS. LAVINA C. M'WAYNE WAS NINETY-TWO YEARS OLD ON SATURDAY LAST. • Mr's. Lavina C. McWayne, for'many years a resident of the town of Cape Vincent, celebrated the 92nd anniver- sary of her bir-th at the home, of her daughter, Mrs- Carrie Watkins,. in Watertown, on Saturday last; a party being given in her honor on the eve- ning of that day. A large birthday cake, bearing 92 candles, was one of the features of the party. Mrs. McWayne was born in Wa- tertown Center on February 19). 1829. \ Her parents were Daniel T. and ICatherine Patterson. Both of her parents lived to sep old age, al- though neither lived as long as Mrs. McWayne. Mr. Patterson was , 75 years of age at the \time of his death, while Mrs. Patterson was 83. When Mrs. McWayne had reached the age of ten years the Patterson family moved from Watertown Cen- ter to Chaumont. .- The- -family had- formerly resided at Chaumont, leav- ing that village a short time before Mrs. McWayne's birth The epidemic of fever ague which held Ghaumont in its grasp for some time was the cause of the family's leaving Chau- mont for Watertown Center. __ , In Ghaumont, Mrs. McWayne at- tended the district school. Only one other member of the classes she at- tended is now living, Mrs. McWayne states,, and that person is Hiram Copley, of Chaumont. Mr. Copley is several years younger than Mrs. Mc- Wayen, he being in the lower classes While she was completing the courses offered in the school. An uncle of Mrs. McWayne, John Dingman, of Ghaumont, holds the record for longevity in the family. Mr. Dingman, a brother of Mrs. Mc^ Wayne's mother, lived to reach the century mark before death overtook him. Mr. Dingman resided in and about Chaumont the greater portion of his life and was well known in this section. In 1852 Mrs. McWayne was mar ried to Andrew F. McWayne at the home of her parents in Chaumont. Kev. Mr. Averill, a Uinversalist clergyman, performed the ^ceremony, Four children were born, three of whom are now living. The remain- ing children are Mrs. Ella A. Adams, of Ludington, Mich.; Fred McWayne, of Cape Vincent, and Mrs.' Carrie Watkins, of Watertown. The de- ceased daughter was Mrs. ICatherine -Wiggins, of Chaumont. Mrs. McWayne retains excellent memory and spirits, despite her 92 years. She has vei'y good control of all of her faculties, although her health has been troubling her for some' time. Each year i for the past four or five she has buffered illness during the fall-and winter months, but is in fairly good health at this time. Speaking of her past life, Mrs. Mc- Wayne mentioned the time of the Civil war. At that time she was liv- ing on the farm south of this village now occupied by John Clemens. A brother of Mrs. McWayne, \Tompkins J. Patterson, enlisted in the Union forces at the outbreak of the war. He was assigned to infantry service, but his health necessitated his transfer to sea service and he was put aboard an iron clad vessel. He was in the party that met r General Sherman at the close of his march through -Georgia. The effect of the war on conditions in the North are very well recalled by 'Mrs, McWayne. She told of the scarcity of cloth and explained how her mother, Mrs. Katherine Dingman Patterson, had flax raised in the fields and then spun and- weaved into cloth for all sorts of uses, making home- spun wearing apparel as well as the articles for household use. ' Mrs. McWayne has resided in War tertown with her ' daughter for the past five years, going-to Watertown from Chaumont. Her husband, An- drew F. McWayne died in the town of Jape Vincent in 1900, on the^f-arm ivher'e he had lived for over 50' years. Mr. McWayne was lacking but one day of 80 years of age when he died. -* Mrs. McWayne has in addition to her three children living, eight grand- children and five great grandchildren, ren. \ Correspondence courses .in agricul- ture are like medicines—beneficial if properly prescribed'and administered. Your state college of agriculture now offers a limited number of courses' free to residents of New York. A new bulletin, E 41, describes them. PEOPLE OF OUR TOWN ©us Hangdog,. Nobody's Friend, got Fined for Selling Short-Weights, and ho -is going to Ask^the Editor not to Mention it in the Paper. y Gus always- knocks the Editor and the Paper, nev- er spends any Jack for Ads, and has Ills Envelopes printed out of To\yn. GiiS Will get tf column on the Front Page! r « Albert Babcock, of Limerick, visit- ed friends here Monday.^ Rev. R. J. Thompson, of Philadel- phia^ will preach at the Baptist church next Sunday. The Ladies' Aid society of the Bap- tist church will serve a 25c supper at the church Thursday at 5:30. Mr, and Mrs. Daniel B. Schuyler, of Watertown, were- guests of their mother, Mrs. Adelle M. Schuyler Sat- urday. Dexter Perkins, of Watertown, oc- cupied the pulpit of the Baptist; church and fiey. E. D. Spaven, of Beaver Falls preached at the- M, E, church Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Perl Phelps, of Ghau- mont, wi're Sunday guests of Mr. and ; Mrs, G. D. Mount. Mrs. Phelps is spending the \Week here visiting her ; mother, Mrs. Mary Mount. -Mrs. W. A. Vincent and JMOrs. Everett C. Klock attended the Wash-_ ington birthday party at the home of Mrs. Louis Moore, in Watertown, given by the D. A. R. Tuesday. Last evening the local basketball team defeated the Eyans Mills team at Grange hall the score being 30 to' 15. T-hursday-evenihg-.the Bay squint: will play the Liberty five, of Water- town, on the local court. , Ward W. Mount has soldthe cheese factory in this village to E-W, Coon. David Mount, who has made cheese here since the factory was owned by his brother, will continue in the same capacity under the new management. The first degree was conferred upon seven candidates at the..grange last Saturday afternoon. Three applica-* tiohs for membership were received and referred to committees, v A pic- nic dinner w,as served and a partial report of the State Grange was giyen. by Rolla Van Doren. , The annual \donation of the Metho- dist Episcopal clurrch for the benefit of the. Rev. IVm. Eddy will be held at the church Friday evening of this week. Supper will''be served at the' usual time and will be followed by a, musical and literary entertainment to which the public is cordially invited. We sympathize with those who went to California and Florida last fall, thus missing one of the most de- lightful balmy winters northern New York has ever known. While other por tions of the state are buried in snow the St. Lawi'ence regions has been enjoying dry roads with weather more nearly resembling April than Febru- ary. Automobiles have been running all winter and the auto busses are making regular trips in schedule time Who would want betterjyinter resorts than Cape Vincent and .Three Mile Bay, .' _iUI. O.rd Told Me.\ ii ni.i'ii •(\ti.-rcKHlon \A little , .lid me so.\ rmimis that Infonna- tnii respecting n mutter has come to /.person iii soiu'e secret and perhaps mysterious manner. The saying Is not a literal quotation, but Is borrowed from the twentieth verse of the tenth chapter of Eccleslastes. The verse opens with a warning not to curse those In power, and even In thought or \In thy bedchamber; for a bird ot the air shall carry the volye, and that which hath wings shall tell the mat- ter.\ Simple Food Agreed Wlth,.ThemV. The wealth of the Ceylonese is usu- ally estimated by the number of coco- nut trees they own. Native boats from the Maldlze islands sometimes arrive in Ceylon, built, rigged, provi- sioned and laden with the produce of the coco-palms. A shipwrecked crew was cast upon the South Sea Islands, where the party remained for 1 several months, living solely on coconuts and a little boiled flshj when they returned they.had all increased In weighty Arbitrage. This is a term .applied to transac- tions taking advantage of difference In price in different markets for the same articles. At. the same time that the trader buys in the cheaper mar- ket he sells in the dearer. The mar- gin betwiien the two prices must be more than the -cost of exchange in order to show a profit. .Arbitrage transactions are usually In bullion or coin, bills and exchanges or stocks and bonds. Symbolism of Animal*! In the symbolism ,of animals, the ant typifies frugality and .provision; the bear, ill temper and uncouthness; the bull, straightforwardness; the bull-dog, pertinacity; the Butterfly, sport! veness arid living in pleasure; the dove, Innocence arid, harmlessness; the fox, cunning, artifice; the goose, conceit and folly; the grasshopper, old age; the mule, ohstlnacy; the owl, wisdom ; the peacock, pride; the swan, grace. *\ , EVERY TOWN HAS IDEM AND, OF COURSE, THE CAPE IS . NOT AN EXCEPTION. Every town has some one store where the loafers congregate to reg- ulate the affairs of the universe. _ Every town has a post-office and a lot of folks who call for mail every: day and never get any. Every iown. has a horrible example, He gets drunk, won't work, but his wife supports him and loves him with a dog like fidelity no decent man can ever hop© to receive. Every town has its own skinflint who discounts notes, buys up land, dresses like a tramp and won* get his wife a new stove. Every town has a bad boy that all parents hold in horror and all boys love. Every town \has its champion liar who lies lor practice when he can't find anything else to lie about. Every town'has its vicious tongued woman who makes trouble whenever stie gets the chance. Every town has its village atheist. , Every town has its arguer who will challenge. any statement you- hiay anake, and prove it's .not so. -,.\.. Every town has its loud-moutlfed citizen who can't talk without making a noise like a megaphone. Every town has its leading citizen who heads every committee and al- ways has a seat on the platform-when there is' anything going on. Every town has' its nice, speak-easy creature, who tries to be popular with everybody and whom nobody likes. Every town • has its grouch-face, who is unfailingly confident the worst ig yet to come; Every town has its good woman that .everybody likes, and its honest man'whose word is-as good as his bond. Every town has^a group of men wh'o know thatf the town is morally the worst in the state. ' Every town -has a man who never wears a collar, and a'dude who pastes down his hair and sports a pink- striped shirt. Every town carries its own peculiar type of religious cranks. Every town has its particular brand of-big fooh ., Every town has men v and women who hate the place and are always wishing that they had lived some- where else. In other words, every town is as chuck full of human nature as is ev ery mother town. » NO HEAVY ICE IN GREAT'LAKES There is little ice in the lakes; none to impede ^navigation excepting - in harbors and bays. Superior harbors as usual are ice bound and there is some at the straits but it is not be- l .lieved\'that it is as heavy as usual. There is how everything to indicate-ah early opening of navigation. There •are 'large quantities of grain and ore to be car - ried and as the lake freights follow the rail a better freight list i s looked for this year than was receiv- ed last.. Lake Superior shows less wai^r than last month by 0.17 feet; Lake Michigan, Huron, 0.18 feet lower; Lake Erie, 0.10 feet higher and Lake Ontario 0.14 feet higher than last month. Lake Superior 0.04 higher than a year ago. Lakes Huron, Michigan, 0.12 lower; Lake Erie, 0.69 higher and .Lake Ontario 0.23 higher than a year ago. Fii.d Go:d ip Trees. • Theresas fe'\ 1 \ '\. treoSr .Tests have been made l>y taking the wood\ of certain tiers,* burning to ashes and assaying the -ashes. It has been found that the ashes of almost all trees showed traces of gold. The hardor the wood, the'more gold there was. Ashes of the black irbn wood contained from four to ten shillings' worth of gold~-per ton. The metal tends td collect In the trunk hear the roots, and the quantity naturally de- pends upon the auriferous nature of the soil In which the^ trees grow.^- Toronto Telegram. Good Old-Fashioned Buckwheat Cakes. Herrick's old-fashioned buckwheat flour and MORNING GLORY Buck- wheat, makes the good old fashioned cakes the easy way. Just mix with milk or milk and water and fry. Get a sack from your grocer and see for yourself. A.H.HERRICK&SON MILLERS WATERTOWN, NEW YORK To Write Well. For a man to write well there are required three necessaries: to read the best authors, observe the best speak- ers, and much exercise of his' own style. In style, to consider what ought to be written, and after what manner he'must first think and excogitate his matter, then choose'his words-and ex- amine the weight of either, then take care In placing and ranking both mat- ter and words that the composition ije' comely f and to do this with diligence ind often.—Ben Jonson. ' ' Pronunciation of \Viking.\ \Viking\ is a .Norse word, the Eng- lish form •<#- which is \wlcking.\ It ought hot to be pronounced as \Sl- icing\ any more than the French words kalf and galredge. Th,e norsevadjective \velk\ means \weak\ N in English* The viking's were- anything but weak. In fact,' weakness barred one from ever being accepted as a member of the aare.devll bands of vikings. The very Idea of weakness is therefore Inad- missible. In connection with the heroic word viking. /•pi Various Forms of Bread. While most countries bake their breads, there are some where boiled bread Is the common form. Two of these countries are China and Africa. The daily bread of a large portion of the people of Africa Is made from cas- sava flour. The cassava roots are loaked In water, left to dry ana then ounded Into flour by means of,crude wooden or stone mortars and pestles, The-cassava flour is mixed with water till a sticky dough Is formed. !') E::LE SCENES IN CHINA Fault Finder Loses Out, . Uncle Ab says: The man who al- ways finds fault with the weather won't have any real indignation when he needs it for a cause that he can do something about. Explaining a Term. It Is presumed he Is called the ulti- mate consumer because he Is the last man to get* anything.—Philadelphia North American. Hstive Artist Had No Conception of Any Other Land Outside of His Own. In north Fuklen province there dwelt an artist who painted pictures on silk for the gentry of his little village. The people In this secluded hamlet nestled amid the hills, had never seen automo- biles or airplanes, nor did they take the long journey to Shanghai to watch the great steamers come in laden with merchandise and messages from the ports of the world. But they knew,the words of Confucius and Lao-tse and .they lived and died with simple dig- nity as their fathers .had done before them, One evening the artist, jvho had been working all day on a.me- morial, portrait^ strolled out Into the dafk, cool street to refresh his tired soul, writes Elsie F. Well in Asia Mag- azine. ' The tiny white church of the foreign god beyond the tea shop was brilliantly lighted. The artist sfpod a moment In the open dodr. The young missionary was talking most eloquent-, ly'; he was not preaching, but' he seemed to be telling stories that were as\fascinating as those recited In the bazaars. Almost in spite of himself -the artist sank unobtrusively Into' an empty seat. For the first time' he heard some of the beautiful old stories of the Bible, which have held the peo- ple of the West- enthralled for 2,000 years. And the artist returned to his home and made pictures of 'the story\ Of Noah and the flood, and of the pdr- ables of the lost sheep and of the prod- igal son 'and of many others that were Itf* the book of the western missionary. But he h.id never heard of tne Pales- tine. To him .Noah was Chinese, and the lost sheep belonged to' a farmer of' his province and - the prodigal son might well have been a dis'solute youth of his own village. , . ; NATION'S DEBT TO PILGRIMS ,f heir Famous Compact of Government Pightly Treasured*a8 a Great State Document In the harbor at the tip of Cape Cod occurred the.first birth and the first death, among the Pilgrims in America. On board the Mayflower, as she lay at anchor; was born Pere- grine, son of William and Susauna White. Here was another child for the ship's nursery, already occupied by little Oceanus Hopkins, who first saw the light of day far out at spar The death was that of Dorothy May,' wife of William Bradford, future gov- ernor of Plymouth colony. She was drowned. - , First of Importance, however, of all that occurred here, and. also in the sequence of events, was the draw- ing up and signing of the famous com- pact <?£ government, originally desig- nated by Bradford in his history as \a combination.\ And so it was, in .the most literal sense, a combination. This agreement, made in writing by a little group of Englishmen, who had been dismissed\ by their mother coun- try as \good riddance to bad rubbish,\ is now treasured by'-the nation in America, to which they contributed as. much as one of three great documents. The other two are the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution. of the United States.\ Primitive East Indian Dancing. In native Hindu dances virtually every muscle of the body is in some way brought into play. There is a good deal of pantomime used, rather cryptic to the foreigner, and few of the professional dancers appear to have had the training necessary to give real rhythm of motion. FREED FROM TURKISH YOKE Chaldeans Promised a Measure of In- dependence Under the Guiding Hand of France. The American army officer, chosen by the 'Chaldeans to present their ap- peal for independence to the council of allied premiers, reports that he has been unable to get a hearing for that ancient people. They made some at- tempt during the' peace conference to obtain consideration, having heard that \self determination\ was to be a guiding principle in the settlement of the world's affairs. Those at Ver- sailles who had some familiarity jylth Biblical history may have recalled the Chaldeans, of course, but they failed to make an impression on minds sur- charged with acute problems of twen- tieth-century statesmanship. SChe Chaldeans', or Babylonians, how- ever, may count on being better off' than lias been their .lot for many cen- turies. They will get some benefit from the new era. Residing In north- ern Mesopotamia, which France now will control—the southern region be- ing confided to Great Britain—they will be freed from their old oppres- sors, the Turks, and the French gov- ernment has indicated- a purpose to' give them a measure of autonomy. The Oliakleans were once a warlike people, capable of demanding .what they de- sired. More than 1,000,000 of them are now said'to be dwelling in the region_ that-will he'redeemed from Turkey. ( Buy W. S. S. TWO IDEAS OF CIVIL LIBERTY Difference Between Governments- of Greece and Rome and Those of the Gothic Tribes. There was this radical difference be- tween the governments of Greece and Rome and those of the Gothic tribes. In \the former the state was every- thing, the individual nothing; the state was thought to have a perfect right to the property, liberty, and even life, of its citizens. In the Gut- ter the individual was everything and the state comparatively nothing; all rights were thought to exist, to Inhere 'by nature In the individual; and the state could demand nothing from him for public \use without giving him an equivalent. Here we. find the funda- mental principle of civil liberty; that principle which has been so carefully guarded in the English and In all the Anglo-American constitutions,, .and which was so happily and tersely ex- pressed by Jefferson in the Declaration of Independence. Our rude Saxon an- cestors, though under' a kingly goveru- ment, had more real liberty, and a more just appreciation of the true-dig- nity of man, than had the polished cit- izens of the republics of .the .Mediter- ranean. The legislative authority whs vested in the witenage-mote, or assem- bly of. wise men.—Dexter A. Hawkins. How Fabrics May Be Tested* The thumb test will help to deter- mine strength and weaving quality of goods. The fabric is held between the forefingers and thumbs,, -while the knuckles should be forced together, causing a fieavy strain on the fabric. Its strength will be shown by the ease or«d.ifflculty with which It tears. Job Printing? Yes, we do it D-O-W-N G-O P-R-I-C-E-S 0 \|N this sale you will find.many suites priced at less , than wholesale cost. Good suites, the finest made j^la by. American manufacturers. These remarkable reductions apply to bedroom, dining room and living room/ alike—no piece of furniture has been spared. -Reductions are always 25 per cent of the original cost and often up to 50 per cent. HIS offers an unusual opportunity to obtain some of the most distinctive .FURNITURE made for your home at decided savings. Don't fail to take advantage of this sale. Remember we said \DOWN GO PRICES'VCSt Them to the Bone!\ Come in and convince yourself that we. can save you money on your furniture purchases. * - , • $14.98 This Steel Bed is made of an excellent gradej of light weight steel tubing. It is very strong. Has 2-inch continuius pillars. Reuuced from $20.50 This Massive Suite CEJ 1 p *7 C5 A Big Value at €p A # O Here is a massive Queen Anne Suite l^hat will just fit into your living room. It is beautifully designed throughout and finished in a rich mahogany, Has- cane back and arms. Seats are upholstered in a fine grade tapestry. . Reduced from $263.00 Colonial Bed $25.50 This colonial four poster bed, of re- freshing simplicity, is beautifully fin- ished in manogany. Reduced from $35.00 Rocker Oak, Upholstered in Imitation Spanish Leather $14.00 Value Special at :' $10.50 Just One of Many Rare Values - - $180 Fireside Rocker 2 Tapestry Upholstered • Mahogany Frame,- $62.00 Value Special Price * $46.00 Library TaHeis Oak , • $46.00 Regular Special at : $33.00 If yqu are interested in good Furniture, we invite you to look at this Queen ^nne bedr'bpm suite. It is of charming design and finished in a rich walnut. The mirrors are • of plate glass. Throughout this is an unusual suite and at the price we quote represents a'real value. Reduced from $242.00 ',/ jRockers COLUMBIA Records for Children Give the children what they want. Fol- lowing is a partial list of COLUMBIA Records that the children would like to hear. Mothers bring in ydur qhildren~ and hear them-. „ A15'27 . (Buster Bear Gets a Good Breakfast) « 12 In. gl.35 (When Old Mr. Toad Was Puffed Up) A2133 (Children's Songs and Games—Part I \10 In. $1.00 (Children's Songs and Games—Part CI A1295 (Children's Symphony) 10 In. .$1.00 (Children's Toy March) $24.00 Library Table A substantial table with two large magazine racks and a drawer. Finely • finished in either fumed or golden oak. Reduced from $32.00 6^ Spanish Leather Seat, Dak ^^ ^^ p]ays & JQ ^ Frame 12 In. $1.95 (Little Joe Otter's Slippery Slide) $12.00 Regular 0««^:„l »» . . dJCI f\f\ AY523 (Bpaminondas and His~Sunt) • DpeCial at . . $y.UU lain. $1.«« (The Little Half Chick) A Comfortable, Convenient Two-In- One Davenette $72.00 Value Special at r $54.00