Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 23, 1912, Page 4

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NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 23, 1912 Borwich uiletin and Coufied. S 116 YEARS OLD, 120 a week; 500 a Subscription price menth; $690 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Nerwich, Conn, as second-class matter, Telephone Calls: Bulletin Business Office, 480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 35-3+ Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. Willimantic Offics, Room 2, Murray Bailding. Telephone 210. Narwich, Saturday, Nov. 23, 1912, TURKEY'S ANSWER. Promptly, and as if they taking a winning part in the victories of the B war, Turke declined the terms offered by Bulgaria for the signing of n sroun much a . [u position he cede istice, on 1sking was not was obliged to ac garia undoubt nd in her demands ay so that could m and still be in a po- tisfied if new terms hal she rkey has reason t Tchatalja there is a kish forces ha making their n view of suffi- suc- best stand fact that aced Constantino- cities which the hat a h tion, whi al of the Bulgarian tro: ulgaria iidable | - to end on as pos- rkish nople arm; such that little grour terms. Sh for end irst de een million, on bush: 19 million months touch a record, s were ¢ new | t = 4 ed to he exports by about that | at when fs the flour is the past the wheat while last and in 1908, s flour was it was big year, the 8 per cent Against wheat, however, meay. v a de Corn corn to and half that last meat will § general | there rm s for home of at particularly bene- drop the are needed HETTY GREEN T ad S DON'TS. are the her 1 desired | 8 m of considera n of worth on | life's 2 the means others en- warm] W her and| e cause of many cold wea The | the | to church u need ng but good, whole- king is the best bust Sooner trou e 3 Is you r grave n all things, , and never kick zained by | eft behind some depart, if your| ned these | E the doors of | Don't fa against charita forget to e and | Don’t forget to take a lot of exer- Walk whenever “Don’t forget to God so doing y ou_can, the will live as God wished into Caesar that which | nd unto God that which is God's." g Speaking from ®experience, Mrs. n gives much food for careful re- flection. 1t is the simple life she advocates without frills and laws. T to—Give s Caesar which | false even-tempered | of llving, regardless of wealt tion, and a proper regard for den Rule oretences, a sen rse With manufacturers urging that the riff revisers let their business alone, s it can stand no cut, it's an un- statement of President Dono- of Boot and Shoe club of Boston, t the price ought to be raised lar a pair. Under the previous re- | uction of the tariff, the price of shoes went up and no better material was used. Now they seek to make the price still higher. It's funny how the vice presidential candidates have dropped out of sight. Mr. Marshall is as quiet as a kitten, while Hiram Johnson evidently hasn't ~ecovered from “missing the train.” had been | the | too | in the | was believed pos- | to con- | | Connecticut can do it. CLEANER LANGUAGE. What looks like an awakening the effort now well under way throu the country in behalf language. operation no one can deny and must unite on the opinion that it not only to those who ‘cannot without swearing, but a relief to t public, who, by force of circumstanc are brought into contact with C #8 habit. There should be a uni ed effort in making the movement success. It being attacked two directions with a determinati is tic response. The Holy ing excellent headw large memberships earnestly devot successful crusade. They appeal to the betterment of conditions. ier direction, the Clean 1 | league, a national organization, Dr. T. H. Russell is the orga s working not only by in but el the en | ot the anti-swearing ordinances of tl Ameriean ¢ This ain only reaching ed to join in » those who st wherever they may be, wi 1 2 limitless ameu h can result from th which, d support. making for the | which jzer effort, to cor not those the remain outsi nd pe tions There is and zement SUPPLY OF POTASM, man ude in relation vy resembles much t yvears in relati of which that country exporter, and which large extent is nent, such as it length on L W controver this country $ OWn resources then, determined made to locat how vield » warrant and according! efforts deposits w of potash 1 The ‘idea. is urce o ply. o this end in Nevac wre being made by t ment, and solu certain lakes whic found, mmercially va If depos ) Wo broug of tr w lakes westel roper iral bed EDITORIAL NOTES. man hasn't ted t er yet, but gemocr s for rain. fam The man w Cannon for up if he » defeated “Uncle that h Rose ind and m * the platforn on t Is it poss rd of the old-fask nd cide Er mill calling £ the game or ame hunters mpanied by not. operatives, pay numbe increase iff revis int ng their They which will f It makes no differ ral college how gered a ving nce in. the who w s are h 0se half-million nery The Mexican re but, then, s ready olution has quicte one war is enoug Orozco time th where, The German bomb maker who cal d on the Los Angeles police claime the next greatest man to Lir Sounded like a revival recent c coin mpaign. Putnam dese safety of every mands the ves sympathy, and th other community bug will use no more matches When Vincent st birthday 8th, is it pos Astor works on h ible the great majol joyment ou of work they ought to After ref ecting the an arn Turkey chief i red in the field. tion tice, s commander resume his is the f urkey field ha s e There is a call for Whitman for ms s the of that office, He the man for the might well District vor of New his excellent ne resuit work office he holds and sep him there. be to When it comes to raising appl pays they tend gy the attention. to Reservoir development is the need | Norwich | of many cities of this state. took action in the matter of a great water supply none too soon, imple which others will do well follow. It is necessary to rainfall when it comes and the on way it can be done is to have a su ficient ponding capacity. London another Greenport, L. I, has been spo New now ted as an ideal harbor for the,location accommodation It is claim- than Montauk to any of big piers and the of business at a terminal, ed to be far better Point. If it doesn't more than the many amount other fine sit of cleaner That it has a wide field for possiblé of an untold amount of good, tal from which is meeting with an enthusias- Name societies are mak- y and enrolling are individual From nguage idual cement. who can movement, in poliuting their conver- |t is'a | refle thi depen: sy, to realize was time to develop, if possi- have suffi- spment for the dependency ind ex- conditions | ! ceount. woods | guide, tten their pay envelopes. elec- | California goes, but | acking time, | to get into action any | limelight isn’t working else- | of the de- running down of that fire- ind the placing of him where he ind Hetty Green on her | of people are not getting the en- | Balkan terms for | operations st real in- | has been in the | Attor- | York | 2 has been found to be | However, tree will not bring forth big, tempting fruit | fruit trees, and | this is being realized more and more. It's an| hold the worry, is gh THE MAN WEO TALKS T When we think “he is an odd stick,” why don't we ask ourselves the ques- tion: “What am I?” There was once & simple minded fellow who turned up- on an assailant with this: “What you sez 1 is, you are!” How does that he | sound to'you? You've heard your fel- N | jow worker cursing the grafters and it it-| jever dawned upon him that every a [ man who loafs on his job—who by any art of idleness swipes mones he has ot earned—is also a grafter! There is nothing better to it than padding the payroll or charging up losses to good eustomers. The spirit which prompts us to get all we can out of a customer regardless of hon- justice’ or honor is a thieving spirit.” It tempts all of us too often, and catches too many. It used to be a crime to do a customer—now it is only commendatory sharpness. Crime can get popular and command respect from the fallen. When we are calling down the wrath of heaven on the grafters or the unjuft we should see that we are not ourselves upon the | black list. all is he es, on. ed of n- he ms Why do we talk of s0ing down the hill of life?” If mortal life is the childhood of immortalit will you be kind enough to rect it man in his mortal career doesn't get out of his juvenility. When he is on his way up how can he be going down inatively we are inclined hiS | {4 make life too hilly, we border it e- W 100 many bugbears, and in the we see a thousand bridges we What a mess we make A8 our world takes on its color most of 1ts tone from our mind are individually to blame for not iking it B makes the mind like the mirror which distorts all tions. It can reflect no true pi In piety it is just make it well graded and invit- s hilly and muscle straining, end- last in a toboggan slide from there is no rn. We are up, not down. Th rified soul eaves down hill behind it ose who are de th nt of it! to he n | see that some earnest souls have announced their determination the church on a scientific basis if 1 sible. If they knew how such a de: ration makes a wicked world smile they would stop right there. What is there about science to equal divinity? Isn't divinity the only thing which 1a | Science tends to make obscure, if not % |actually to deny? There is nothing in €| the New Testament teachings which ble | can be interpreted as “faith sc ath 1nade the whole aith in God i|and divine power does that, it -| When the church needs a scientific | base to make it strong it has wandered long ways from hor One great defined science ¢ h to nd as “th ving agency science h and conser How on? S doe necessary to make hing of earth better., are guilty of ¢ wpar me 10 be seem he great- Wanderi r doing in What mean things lack of 1 leads fomd parents v child a_disappointme e of risis in it than m think. What hen is roblem, and that of the in life where one he other ts are the ts. to.- The day is on. do as a rev child and perhaps not making them nd it is times cod thing for the child that paren- were blasted. A child's and dreams have more to do 1is future than the. parents’ hopes to t mental sul him to become a r instead of a successful whole- chant. Do not try to drive s into round holes. How queerly we mortals intery independence. ~ 1t applies to the | and action in many ways. Ther le who never think they endent unless they do something | their hest friends advise them not to le| do. There is no such thing as being i- | independent of experience, and whe - | experience warns any of us it is time to take heed. Dependence on virtue | safe and honorable, and indepen 4t | of vice is respectable and commer hopes the is real- e | 1 ams prove true, with an look n- compel a he square pe ght m m. Are ny, and the inde ndenc is creditable is self assertive along lines of better promise or gr er re- ward. The independence which lea to waywardness is a counterfeit article .| and the open way usually to degreda- | tion. Independence is always limited by laws and conditions which must be respected or else trouble will True independence needs no ordinarily, and there is no reason why it should create friction. - 1 How many thousand years do vou think guilty ‘man s been saying to his offended co nce, “Am I my brother's eper ? Cain has the cred- it of being the fir: to ask this qu tion audibly, and has been repeated by men of every race in U S from that day to this. have of dodging e averment that “if we selves as other d not believe it,” ed h. | us is no joke. we | We | all see ourselves in our own mirror of | conceit, ang we are fine looking folks, | although some of us have to admit that ‘we might have been born hand- somer. ~Selfishness and crime lead to he | indifference with reference to the con- ition of others. There is no doubt the man who wants te know if he is his brother’s keeper, could rob him with impunity ‘or see his brother want, without a thrill of regret or an im- | pul odness. These seem to be 1S | the of whom it is d that estate shall be worse than first; and they don't know it.. It be bad to discover it at a time 2 | when th is no retreat. 2 r- | It is the part of a good p duty to lessen his practice by lishing better health conditions, he would meet with more marked suc- cess if we did not all have & never- ailing remedy to recommend to a § | friend or neighbor, and perhaps you do not realize that it uaily some- thing we have never tried ourselves. For a simple cold, a score of remedie re prescribed—one of the oldest fash- ioned ones being to soak your feet in hot water for an hour, then eat a quart of hot boiled oniens and go to bed—you'll be all right tomorrow! I | You have rheumatism someone is like- |iy to advise you to carry a horse- s, | nut in your left-hand trousers pocket, and a coil of copper wire in your hip pocket—sure cure! If the influenza is making your bones ache, in in | it It | | picked out, it will still remain Green A Washington woman fainted when she was awarded the sum of $18,000. That it was not larger, she has reason to be thankful. A pulmotor would have been required if she had fallen heir to a fortune like Vincent Astor's. er to ly £ I e g Turkey displays a bravado and as bold a front as if she had been put- ting up a good fight against the Bai- kan allies. She has been losing so steadily back along that she evidently thinks the negotiations a great victory. lIt's one thing to be whipped. but a {greater thing to know you're whipped, down and out. This ought to be broken to Turkey gently t- o8 NANCY (Written Specially for The Bulletin.) Looking over an old letter of late, the word Nancy caught my eye, and it carried my thoughts back to a little hamlet in northern New England and to some very interesting characters who dwelt there. Strange, isn't it that every hamlet, however small, gener- ally contains all sorts and conditions of men! From the prosperous up- to- date farmer, at whose house I was staying, to poor white trash, as they would have been calied at the South, all classes had at least one family to represent them. Among those em- ployed by my host was Nancy, a faithful worker on the farm, earnest and steady at his work and devoted to his employer’s interests, for Nancy was a man and no eye-servant. The lady of the house was one of the most delightful women whom it has been my fortune to meet. Capable and active in her household dutles, un- complaining and cheerful under all cir- cumstances, her sympathy and inter- est reached every one in the neighborhood came to serve or help them, and she was highly valued by all in the community. Most of all | by Naney who, faithful in all his work | outside, was doubly so in his devo-, tion to the housew | He was an unmarried man whose tender care of a feeble mother had made him famillar with'all kinds of | papoi® 19 “cheerful withal household duties. Since the death of | o e T that parent, he had lived alone, the| The erratic Jeth Agl“:d;::{ acher 1 lite of a hermit, but his house Was| nsound in mind elsewhere; also tk vicinity. ~ Some of his woman com- | st way brought the mail regardless petitors wondered how a man could y_brou 3 . ’s | of all national requiremen it was s bt ‘“{,”“g("f ,mlml“"f | more than hinted that he knew the in- last days many a bit of helpful at- (T e Al S o tention’"ala hey , recelvey from _ths |AI08 of AU Igtiere a8 el 64 the out; gracious lady whom I have described, |Side, and thal var e Gt ks and nothing was too much for him to | OVer to boil whenever the m: do in return to show his gratitude. | eXpected. il particularly was he happ?‘ when ‘)}:et h";-’d":mi e tion could secure the chance of wiping the | Showed itself iwhe € i the quick hands of the mistress. Be- | bassing on the road while she did her e of that evident liking of his We | litchen work. What has become, 'I came to apply the name to him, for | en . Wha s ancy” seemed so much more fitting | L};:'pdg:vngrl;g Wosiiin, B0 could a0t e b Aol sy B sy he ™25 | of the surprise party planned for him, presume he never knew how he was (;:;1‘ “'.“{"‘“,.,f;‘?&‘“2;";,“{," (“,.'\l‘h\fl,,f: e i Heare ot | £irl, somewhat feeble-minded was in- that it would bave troubled him, I |lerested in w”fl'llnlm “i'h' postage think, for he was too delighted with his | Stamps 15'1;" h;flhwn foig et poe serving of love to mind any slight jest [one Would buy them if she collected of that sort. ' S0 e se he What happy days were spent under "”h‘{"- e ot el that roof, and what pleasure I find |°t ;X.“ s f;uu y certain of a in recalling them! Lady Helen, as we | [0 be Teaped In return Sohl called our hostess, has been sum- | buttons which were to be forw moned to her reward in the world be- | o€ In a far-away state. She vond, but is still remembered and Z;fllfflsb‘”‘ One coull ho revered in her old neighborhood by |of the buttons on one's so many whom she befriended. No one | her presence. Innocent “.m“ Amr’ n in sorrow or need was forgotten by her | Surely, ;mfil Eomias i fung ,),l No merry-making was considered | Peniss in those indulging in them. complete_without her cheerful pres-| Not many of them all remain tI ence. Her flower beds furnished [now, I fear for many were then p: the decoration for the little church |their prime. ~Even Nancy must 1 nearby and were afterwards carried (gone to a higher service, where the cemetery and placed in lov- | will be sure to be helpful, I 1 ce ing remembrance on the graves of her | How I should like to go again parents. . What would have annoyed | their midst and renew old act othe never seemed to trouble her. ces. ‘ew would remember She might have served for the model | course, but I should dearly of Field's poem of “Patience Mercy |revive old memories of them, Jones,” for her patience also extended AN even to bores.” /Other women there were in the vi- inity, who were not so attractive. There was one who was a frequent visitor wherever sae was well received, for the openly avowed reason that she did not like to cook and cnjoyed oth- er people’s victuals. Her slatternly housekeeping was well known, yet she was not entirely without method, for they said she always swept the dirt into the same corner of the Kitchen. Then there were two, mother and daughter, who tried to be superior to their neighbors in displaying what they called city style. They spoiled their quaint old farmhouse by dressing it eddlers and other smooth was one who endeavored to be very correst in speech and was so afraid of saying “criters,” as did many of her neighbors, that she always said “creatures” with a strong accent on the last syllable. I remember one who scandiized the community by insisting on a consti- tutional walk every day, to and from er mother's ysually. Every one else hitched up” dnd rode even if it were for only a half-mile. One family ate no meat and all wondered they could be so well as they were. They would raise no pigs for market because they could not in conscience sell for food what they felt to be forbidden. Lusty children theirs were, however, and to his built his wife new was so feel secure ck when he to in, jaint- me, of love to IDLER. put an ounce of the flour of sulphur in your shoes and look pleasant— will be the end of that. The doc know how it i for they meet pa- tients who tell them they have tried everything and it's no use! If we are only patient the doctors will yet give us a medicineless Eden. L P R l IDEAS OF A PLAIN MA! I Sr——— e . T The Bed Necktie. Perhaps it because it is of the color of blood, or of fire, but there is something smiting, revolutionary and individualistic about red Particularly when it is tie. When the soberest, staidest of old bachelors wants to indicate that, away down in some obscure corner of heart, he is the devil of a fellow, what subtler means can he find than to put on a red tie? Red is the foe of the proper thing No preacher would wear a red cravat in the pulpit; and those who wear them out of the pulpit are probably guilty of cracking jokes among nies, We speak of “the scarfet and what implications in “the scarlet letter!” The French say a man “sees red” when he is angry, and American slang has it that a debauch is “to paint the town red.” I admit, when I see a particularly grave face, a cold or distant expr sion of the eye, it is with a sense of genuine relief that my eye as it ranges down falls upon a red necktie. Thank God! the man is human. is | sometimes think I preach too much. An honest minister once said of his pulpit efforts: “I always roar when | I have nothing to say”; and Rowland declared he did not like the ne ministers who rounded off their sentences so beautifully that they rolled right off the sinner’s conscience. Whitfield felt sure that “to preach | more than half an hour a man should bé an angel himself, or have angels for hearers” There is a peril in oreaching, I tell you, if the parsons, themselves are right. To be a success- ful preacher, one must have the power to break the hardest heart, and te heal the broken one, said John New- | ton. Who wants to be a preacher of whom it can be truthfully said: “His | ife of piety is visible rhetoric”; or | that “he had the faculty of aiming at nothing and hitting it!” It is the truth that sinks deep and does good work when uttered by a live man with igniting force. OTHER VIEW POINTS in a neck- cro- woman,” the words What the Country Thought. Occasionally a suspicion must arise in the mind of George W. that he was persuaded to financing a large political Washington Star. Two dangers threatened today, as recorded by the New York papers, are the shortage of coal for that city's poor and too much Wagnerian music in the Boston Symphony concerts.— New Britain Herald. grouch.— A Great Natural Triumph, The triumph of the Gulf stream over the coal dealer makes even the Balkan victories over Tyranny seem small by contrast. Hartford is complaining about the smoke nuisance-from railroad train: We are worse off here when the en- gineers take advantage of the Meri- den stop to stoke. Some day we will up with draperies and portieres. There | | the grasp of the sea he w | SUNDAY MORNING TALK The Sacrifice of Thanksgiving. Mere politeness should impel men to the expression of gratitude. We count him as lacking in courteous instincts who receives favors and makes no sign, it is not much to say “thank you" but the words are often sufficient to mark the gentleman as distinguished from the boor. There is in many of us a disclina- tion to acknowledge obligation. We de- sire to be considered independent and self-sustaining. It frequently costs a struggle to give graceful credit to an- other for help received. Thank you's often represent real moral effort and come hard. In some mood like this perhaps, the Pealmist declared, “I will offer unto thee the sacrifice of thunksgiving.” The independent ,self-sufficient atti- tude rests on a complete fallacy when we ponder the facts, No life on our planet is unindebted or supports it- fpr o minute of the day. Setting aside the myriad toilers on land and sea, who have ministered to our neces- sities in our own age and all its pred- , we are finally dependent for air that we breathe on that great Power whom men call God, There is a universality about the Creator’s gifts that blinds our eyes to their inestimable value. We take them 2s a matter of course.” In His divine magn imity God plays no favorites but “maketh His sun to rise on the evil and on the good and sendeth rain on the just and on the unjust We are trained in this world to pay for what we get and to distrust any realm in_which such payment is not demanded. It is well to remember that the most colossal gifts that life af- fords are had free gratis by the poor- est of the sons of men. rth gets ives us; The by die in, The Priest hath his fee who comes and shrives us , We bargain for the graves we lie in; At the devil's booth are all things sold, Each ounce of dross costs its ounce of old For a cap and bells our lives we pay. Bubbles we buy with a whole soul's tasking Tis heaven alone that is God may its price for what Earth gar is taxed for a cormer to given awa had for the ask- It is well to praise God when all goes well with us.”'It is harder but better t praise Him when events are . not shaped to our liking. St. Paul on one occasion “thanked God and took cour- ” At the time he was emerging from one peril and about to fall into inother. Having barely escaped with his life from a foundering vessel he s en route to 2 Roman prison. From s falling in the hands of Caesar, Thanksgiving in an hour like that has the ring of hero- ism in it Whny there will be at this Thanks- giving sesason unable to discern a ppropriate for gratitude. Life has yielded little of joy or success. Charles Kingsley's prescription will t the case at least of some and them a warrant for raising the Jubilate Deo. “Thank God every morning when you et that you have some thing to do that day which must be done nether you like it or not. Being forced to work and forced to do your best wil] breed in you temperance and self-control ,diligence and strength of will, cheerfulness’ and content, and a hundred virtues which the idle never know.” If the circumstanc of life, however straightened, form a gym- nasium wherein we are permitted to develop moral m e, that in itself should stir our hearts to thankfulness and open our lips in praise, THE PARSON. Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Winter Boots FOR WOMEN We are offering very attractive Beots in dull black, patent and tan leather at moderate prices. M. d. CUMMINGS 52 Central Ave., Norwicfi, Ct. F. C. GEER, Phone 511 PIANO TUNER Norwich, Conn. THERE is no advertising medium in Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bul- letin for business resuits. have a smoke ordinance—Meriden Journal. William Flinn, the Pennsylvanta boss of the progressive party, has an- nounced his intention of returning to the ranks of the G. O. P., and Con- troller Prendergast of New York has laid down the law to Colonel Roose- velt. Truly, the battlefield of Arma- geddon is stil.—Waterbury Republi- can. The chofera is spreading in Con- stantinople, and as the war may soon be over it is likely that the disease will occupy the attention of those who are now looking after the wounded. Cholera is not a disease to be trified with, and when it becomes epidemic in such a place as Constantinople war is nothing to it in the victims that it finds. It i¥*no respecter of age, sex or person.—Bridgeport Standard. The appeal to Mr. Munsey from Con- necticut bull moosers to establish @ new progressive morning newspaper in Hariford emanates chiefly from a gen- tleman who admits that he knows nothing about the newspaper business. But he wants the Courant downed and would be glad to have the Munsey money spent liberally on the job. It is to be doubted that Mr. Munsey desfres to increase his collection of lame ducks.—Springfield Republican, he longer presidential term would be the economical term, then, so far as elections are concerned, and we would have the benefit of the services of our presidents as presidents for 33 per cent. longer time, instead of their devoting so much of it to running af- ter repominations and re-elections. A six year term and no possibility of a second_term is, we believe, a sensible proposition, from the addption of which the American people would be more likely to profit than lose—An- sonia Sentinel. good house- wife of this state. She had been reading my last article on chronic c: tarrh. Her let- ter reads in part: “Dear Doctor interested your article on catarrh. I see by your expla- nation that ca- tarrh is liable DR.S.B.HARTMAN o agect any organ of the body, that it can assume the symptoms of a great many dif- ferent kinds @ disease. There was one form of catarrh, however, that you did not mention. I would like Your opinion on it. I have heard it somewhere that there is a disease known as systemic catarrh. What do you know about it, and what would you advise?” My dear Madam:—I thimk I was the originator of the term systemic catarrh. At least I' had never seen it in print until I began to use it. Systemic catarrh describes a condi- tion of the system closely resembling auto intoxication, or self poisoning. The catarrhal organs happen to be so located that the discharge of mu- eus cannot occur freely. It may be the stomach, or kidneys, or pelvic organs. Now if this vitiated, polson- ous mucus cannot escape freely it will be ‘absarbed by the blood vessels and carrieq_into all parts of the system. It is Nature's attempt to get it out of the system through the kidneys. But In the effort to rid the organ of the poisonous mucus Nature is un- wWtentionally poisoning the whole sys- -.We do not close our eyes to the se- riousness of the situation, and it is in- conceivable that the officials of the New Haven company are not equally troubled. There is something wrong mewhere, or else a cruel fate is pur- suing the company with fiendish de- light. The authorities assert that they will make a thorough investigation. The public will watch it with care, but neither the investigators nor the public should approach the investiga- tion in a prejudiced condition of wind. New Haven Journal-Courier, Dr. Hartman Describes the Phrase, Systemic Catarrh T received a letter from a tem. This is what I catarrh., We hear often today the term auto intoxication, which refers to a con- dition of the bowels. The bowels be- ing clogged up, they ferment and be- come polsoned. The system attempts to rectify the trouble by absorbing the poison and carrying it out through the kidneys. The result is sickness, called auto intoxication. It is exactly this kind of thing that happens in systemic catarrh. The catarrhal secretions that do not escape by the internal organs are absorbed by the blood vessels and carried through the system, and the result is systemic catarrh. The remedy I believe to be Peruna. I believe there is no remedy in the world that has relieved so many peo- vle as Peruna. The disease is not al- ways known as systemic catarrh, Sometimes it is called dyspepsia, sometimes nervous prostration. Some- times it assumes the form of anemia, and then again chronic malaria, also walking typhoid fever. All these conditions are fully de- scribed by the term systemic catarrh. It is especially prevalent during the typhoid season, September and Octo- ber.. I would Not consider any other remedy than Pefina in such cases as these. Peruna is absolutely a perfect remedy for systemic catarrh, All letters of inquiry answered promptly. Pe-ru-na, Man-a-lin_and La-cu-pla manufactured by the Pe-ru-na Com- pany, Columbus, Ohio. Sold at all drug’ stores. SPECIAL NOTICE:—Many persons inquire for The Old-Time Peruna. They want the Peruna that their Fathers and Mothers used to tak The old Peruna now called Ka- tar-no. If your dealer does not keep it for sale write the |Ka-tar-no Com- pany, Columbus, Ohio, and they will tell you all about ! call systemic RO Made so by our large stocks, wider varieties and greater values. W hat- ever kind of an overcoat you've set your mind on having this season, you can count on finding it here in greater numbers and at less price than any other store can afford to offer. Here you may choose from the finest Overcoats from the leading makers. 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