Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 29, 1914, Page 4

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118 YEARS OLD l-hma-rflnlfl-‘w-m Goe & wmonth; a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as second-class matter. streams laden with the fruit from what was once a veritable king of the forest- Cals: Business Office 450. itorial Rooms 8S-8. Bulletin Bd g ietin Job 353, Willimantic Office, Room % Murray Bullding. Telepbone 210. iden co! > S ————————— the three manhood. 'He had s 3 "3 Norwich, Tuesday, Dec. 29, 1914. ; ¢ car. Stralghtway the child became the L aling | PSht, %"-:%(“ o3 them 1n-a || Tues. and Aunlmklfl = « o v t came of the year 1914 ana | Dlessed peace. Wed. 565 around th S Sl e 3 . s » World—news that two. sreat nations| LETTERS TO THE EDITOR . s 3 * £ ? ‘were going to war. One of these na- g - MUSICAL W vm 'n]e Ci[mhmn [1) a small red |tions belonged to the little lad grown A Fine Ghristmas Dacoration. man’s estate. ped o 3 X ST | FUN IN POPPY LAND Bn“efin i tudy. him on his judgment, taste and originality of the " Tlle Previously the forest land of that passen trial. * city street department needs high com- o 5 3 e ne beautiful summer’s days came 11—PECPLE—11 Th» Bulletin has the farges* the v&: of the wood ;lnyd um,:ernm“ 5 the first shot, rattling and '!‘z:xr!ung and ::::d;u&ni Th;’;l:;l): its u‘t:-tw:d ;f circulation of any paper in East- 2| it bore with the chances that all the| “Merry Clsmis. killing—the war had begun! hree treets were - At once astonishing things began to| For deys and weeks and monthe it |ly decorated for Christmas._On Pearl ern Connecticut ana from three profit was eaten up by the time thelpapnan The gruff looking old gentle- | laste: ng heaven and earth with | street bordering the gutters were 45 to four times larger than that of crop of timber was marksted. By the|man actually smiled and the bored|the awful din of shell and shot, of | garbage cans and barrels from Dec. 24 any in Norwich. It is deliversd -new law a different method is pus- |lady-of-fashion forgot tobe bored. The| wounded horses and of men, groanirg | unti} 10 a. m. ond Dec. 26, and from 10 3,000 of the 4,u33 houses sued. Instead of the old indiscriminate | motherly persons all, and the fatherly |and writhing in agony. Other nations | to 12 more barrels and cans on Asylum i6 at. [} o er | Pereons g1 rces—more men, more saets, | an Ann streets. e long e S pvon e mimakr tax - theve ars. Io Do three heroatt all, beamed with delight if by |joined fo; a Garbage al th e throe or a2 paopi ln | cominting of ihe tax on the tand wih:| 108 PG p oo e76 of he Dby |G Sesh 0 cetmns morming et cinetat e et | PAULINE BUSH 15 o018 Wor 550 voe soe ; w::h’:m it s deliversd to over out regard to the values that it car- | "*Bit gleu-ly the boy was not satis- | dawned, oh! what & sight! The battles crimsan ?e’n‘:onuona in the windows of - sw houses, m Putnam and ries, a commutation tax on land reg-|fied. Under the golden cufls the baby |fleld strewn with the blood-stained, | the residences. Danielson to over 1,100 and in ectlbtios et b BB S S0 B ALK B COMING < Fard 3 Reel istered as woodland and a tax upon o Ciem strewn with those who in childnood | . Considering the efforts which are on|| TomoRrow « race Cunard & Francis Ford 33 piay als of these places it is consid- the product when it is cut and sold. L had lisped the message of the angels. | foot to make Norwich a city beautiful, crod the local daily. such Jand that he r \ It is incumbent up‘n the owner of e and good willL” Christmas | this seems to be a fine display of co- E oy forty- i lassifica- | BILLS- eh-%fm(. Christmas Day, the same| This is the second time garbage has ‘ :( ) ( )l\l nine towns, ma::u::d and a;n;h:ndm:gonfizflzfigt&x: 5.9533. The bored lady-of-fashion suddenly |rattling and hurtling and killing.” stood on Pearl street sidewalks more L IA L4 l o | EA l RE 2 r holdings | With candy. So many people, so few |Day, the same charging and counter- | operation. felt a sword thrust—not into her side, : The order, , march,” same |than 24 hours this fall, but in the his- sixty-five postoffice districts, the benefi; he wiil get out of the new bludt inmu‘her muff. 'née mge !look‘linl to our n!dl'-h;’r:d"'st.{lgent'u u‘::e, ané tory of the :‘lmt p#r to 1914, noth- m i rural free delivery method of taxation. There will be|old gentleman saw a drum ng de- | running double-quick they rushed upon | ing so strangely peculiar has occurred. Featurii Miss Edith “The Christian.” st no change unless he makes it. postted on his knee, while the Fun |the adsancine o re oy Loshed up § eaturin Story, of the street department goes much 'On Moonshine Mountain,’ “Man from > Cleanup.” il ey The plan will receive the attention | Wavered between an e“{:,"y lady with| "1 the enemy's line was a tall fellow | father in this direction instead of call- Tn]m from New v.rk“luu-n-, “ANN! =P Vocalist The Bulletin nu‘. '-‘. e of other states for the results attained | SP0W-White hair and a boy some years | with raven locks and black, black eyes. | ing on the Cit{ Beautiful committee|§ Matine 5 Cents—Performances 2:30, 7 and 8:30 — Evenings 10 town and on all of Kl as it is put into operatlon. 12 as it oA The fair-haired boy charged upon him. | for aid we shall feel compelled to call routes in Eastern Connectie 15 “expebtid I will _ emiiioasts - il = Mmd mua‘ht the odt‘her's eye—a‘ nd fl"dé out the board of health. e e % as ev fired. recognition ieape A . ClRCULATlON woodland owners to permit their tim- THE WAR PRIMER from the black eyes ere he sank un Norwich, Dec. 27, 1914, the fellow that shot the ber to reach its best growth before conscious to the ground. Whe.: he re- matter who he may be. Foxes are al- cutting an additional benefit will be % gained consciousness some one was Shooting Fox Hounds. together too troublesome and des 1801 @VErSge..cessveces. &892 ~ained aside from the adjustment of i i b e S A putting a cup to his lips and biddine BT @ tructive to poultry raisers and others the important matter of taxation. him drink. Mr. Editor: We read considerable|to protect them for any personal whim. 1905, @verag®..ececsacens 5.92] > g . e He drank, sip after sip until he had }n the paper: notwva-dayatmutdnme xnk;egu-d to nflnh!hnu tgr :tmme six s e e e s i " drained the cup. He sat u d | laws, game protection, etc., an no| weel past now the sound of a rifle 'WO~mi e lanne REASON FOR CRITICiEM, “Belgrade, The little Patis of the|ioueq” about’ him. The columhs had | Mmatter how much we may be interest-| within a mile of this village has boen|That, coupled with the regular muni- Much has been said in the past few | Balkans’, and perhaps the most bom- |moved on, the smoke of the battle had |ed in various game and game wardens|very common at ly morning. cipal tax, together with the special weeks in criticism of the navy and|barded city of the present war, has |lifted, he and tbe fair-haired boy were | eScapades, the angle appears to get| Rifles are not u to _shoot skunks,|taxation the government has levied, § Decomber 26 ... H war departmerts for the purpose of|probably seen more batties fought falone, lyipg side by, side, wounded, | Worse rather than better. and game in season, the only thinglwill make the owners of anything real Tessesassiesessesscssussersesses: bringing attention to the existing | under its walls, and _experienced the | mortally wounded- While this is a fact, it looks to me| they appear to be used for this WAy, cONTILUTOI= (v i Lie LSS OF GIVilie s—————————————————— lfacts. Not a little has been said of |surge, shock and eddies of war more| He lay back again. Suddenly an = {f we dhl;’ L Lo htel‘e ilnfgdn?fiflt is kfll{)n!tfouou;!d! a8 )?“t!-r::d fllel!:: zation—MIiddietown Press, . e = & A ‘ MEXICO GOING BACKWARD. |the manner in which the entire bus.]Often than any other city in Europe, |aWful thought came to him. “Say,” he | that needs looking into, the bee: rrels with coi B - s i whispered, “that water that you gave | quickly. Evéryone knows that a fox is| meat, Oh for a Charley Torrey downm & o In spite of all the combinations of | ‘ness of the government is conduect- :S:: hn?elfizf;?:?a:..d 223,%.:2.‘,‘&“' ©f | me—was it ail you had?” an out'aw. He is a bad pest in more| this way to stir up thinks. Wedm-lflmm o enlist ":; S leaders, the situation fails to clear|®d and has Deen for a much | “Belgrade has more than 5000 years| But the fair-halred boy did not an- | ways than one. Yet we have in our C. B. MONTGOMERY. [considerablc number, no matter how i v dE Y much poetry William Watson writes at blic to the south of us.|'onger period. Ex-President Taft|of history, and has had some seventy |swer. Somehow his wounds seemed | midst people calling themselves men Packer, Dec. 26, 1914, A i s g 1;}?;.20&::2: mc‘my armies in the field | has declared that the war de. Zenemu‘;’i.. of seldom-idle warriors. [easier, far far off the battle sounded | God save the remark——who hide around us. Perhaps he m = ! by aiming at that portion of as thers ore ambitious leaders. New|oariment s twenty-five vears be-| A EDOrant Ky e todny th| Fears conrsed from the DIack syes. | Huvads wha Atson.a foxs el Another Problem. The TEih o T ) alignments are constantly being made | bind the times in its method of do-|on the north; a o P ipper and lower| “Listen!” he cried. “You must lis-| Last week, Mr. Bradford of Plain-| Mr. Eaitor: Relative to the bliad|1Dg home—FHartford Times. for the advancement of personal in-|'m% Dbusiness and even while in the| 2 S VTR Bin SRR Sotput of | tent” field, one of the most honorable and| beggar and brother that died, possi- terests, but slight progress, if any, is| office of chief executive Mr. Taft made | Poman power: at another time consid- | The fair-haired boy turned and|law abiding citizens , heard a valuable| biy the blind besgar was & Sirh e being made towards the pacification |2 strentious effort to hdve conecress|ered the key to Hungary; for five luck- ked at him. & hound owned by him on the trail of a| Jere is another: Tom was Dick's| e have l“'”‘h‘oflm"m neduthi A of the country. Revolution follows|~dopt a budget svstem for the purpose |iess centuries situated on the border | “Once, long ago” went on the man, |fox less than a mile from his house.|-ather. and Dick had an uncle. Harry,|van as a man W ng S d . 3 3 = ve from his ideal of the square ) of gziving needed Improvement i iand between Moslems and Christians, | 'YOu gave me a Christmas present. the | The barking of the dog was suddenly although Tom and his wife Ann never| Wwerve 3 . ;:vz}::iofingh:n:eii‘;!obrlx)k::ly u’:‘“};fi marticularly impormrlt place, nb,,: and now a Slavonian outpost, Belgrade |"niv present that T ever had—it wae o | stopped, by a rifie shot. Mr. Brad-|had a brother or sister. deal and fair play, and we cannot be. i gun—you were a little chap with golden | ford has never seen or heard that H. C. |leve that he made this contest upon smaller units. Carranza fought for | without success. e te Tocl ny eerminty about the|cUris—iv was in & car—s.d I named | hownd since. but 1t I said he gon fnd] Norwich, Dec. 25,1914 his own initiative. He must have tak- the restitution of constitutional rights| That it is not alone the war depart-|/orows peace. you my My Christmas Brother'—and |5 track of some human hound drag- en his orders from the men higher - but he was unable to administer the|ment that is behind will undoubtedly| “The Servian capital was founded in | t0day You pave me water, I drank it | ging the bleeding body of an animal, Tt the: 6 In our opimion Mr. Dumovan i affairs of the country after getting|be admitted by Mr. Taft, for it is a|the 3rd century before Christ upon a |8l and it was I who shot you—my |about the size of his hound, from t the Censor. made a mistake and beco : . - 3 v has besn|ioser. making a sacrifice of his own to Mexico City. His presence there|fact as the New York Sun says, that|triangular. rocky promontory at the | Christmas Brother. where the shot was heard nearly to| The British censorship : u:ly added fuel t6 the fires of revolu- | “Congress and the excessive yom.,,,.. confluence of the Save and Danube| BEut the fair-haired youth only |the door of a house less than a mi'e| beaten at last—the German bombari. polit;el-.l dc:rsel': l:n:n NB‘“J:D";'::; tion, and the regrettable thing is that|of the government, always ready o rivers. It lies opposite the Slavonian |smiled. And after that they lay In si- | away. What I would like to know is| ment of the Yorkshire coast_carr‘ed| his frl 8(;1 - el <4 Mk Bour: there are no others who appeal to a|meddle with private business, to reg- | town of Semlin, in Hungary. Upon|lence, those two—and the Christmas|why there is not some law to capture|its own report—Boston Transeript. |too good a —Norwal sufficient number of the factions to| vlate the affairs of merchants, to tell| Gage Svie, T pioe; hgre about 2300 g manufacturers how to satisty their|the Save, 1,250 feet wide bounds an- ¥ In the meantime Mexico is suffer- [ employes, have never adopted a sane]nther foot of the trianele. The ground ing and the longer such conditions|rule for their own guidance in mak- |Of the city is an unsymmetrical razor- continue the more it will suffer. Just| ing appropriations, in creating bu- |Pack. abruptly to the west and more as long as revolutlonary desires are|reaus, in supervising the spending of | S0tV to the east. At the apex of this Busi aided and abetted it will move along|money. There is mo correlation of S L e B Al The Business from bad to worse, malking the task of | departments, no effort to prevent the |rivers. T 11 CI ter reclamation all the more difficult. Lit- | duplication of activities, no effective| “The Celts built the first fortifica- rolleys Lead tle improvement can be &nticipated |lopping off of useless jobs. The states-|tions on this strategic rock. They T. F N - until patriotism replaces the personal{men who are so quick to point out|Called it Singzidunum. The Romans r s of Norwich ambition of those who would rather|the errors of private citizens and es-|Vere the next possessors, and they 18T k dded to the city's strength. The fight than eat. tablishments flounder hovelessly in a 3 . There can be no question but what|bog of bad practices their own care- ?&’3‘2“@?5’3? ,f““‘,zffinl’fiiifi“'rii“’m’ifly Mexico needs a change. It has borne | lessness or fncapacity has created. races, converging from every quarter present troubles long enough and it| The greatest business in the country|of the comnass, Huns, Samatians, is time that the emergy that is being|is the most inefficiently handled.” Goths, and Gepida were, in turn, its Eco N o M Y sAL E o F put into rebellions was devoted to| Not only is the country behind, but | MaSters from the 4th to the 6th cen- the establishment of the needed re- |it persistently refuses to catch ‘up and | 'Y, The Emperor Justinian brought forms, The greatest need of the cour- | as long as such a state of aflairs ex- | o 530 under Roman rule, fortified . an - try is therefore to.be brought to the|ists there is bound to be ecriticism cr&,‘.’é‘éi{éhfif’s ranioen Avetoes realization of its actual conditions|and weakness. r b - ) . < overrun by Bulears, reconquered for and to get the needed assistance to — ‘Byzantium, wrested from the Greeks overcome the present tendency. At EDITORIAL NCTES, by the Hungarians, and then battle- yresent it is making progresé back- dored with rapid-changing fortunes of prese: JMake your new resolutions early. war, among Greeks, Bulgars, Hungar- Things zpvear to be warming up | “of,2nd Germans. ; jenx “In the 14th i An instance of the danger which |0ld Winter. later was held by the Hungerians. 2 p build- T ——— en came the Turks. They waged a ;\::sm:g. > r‘: r:;: a?st i::g?:sonsm‘m' Harry Thaw has probably wished a number of unsuccessful = campaigns e e of i e ved he ot | go0d many times that he had never |@Bainst the city, but finally it fell into th 2oing i their hands in 1521, a prize for th firm people is furnished by the fire| ' °USht of going insane. & prize = S, k] ® £ 2 L i aoaeeomed the ity Eiome x| tmere 5 aoir et westnay | g 1€ frctiaily v || 'We have taken our own large stocks of Women’s, Misses’ and Children’s Cambridge, Mass. Most fortunate wWas | which turns the thoughts to the oil- until 1867, bearing the brunt of every ? . . it fikt fho mmaber oF 1ioen Tast wie) L CucuE e tNOUSNLy & atsek upon tne” ottoman rom e || (Garments--Coats, Suits, Dresses, Waists, Blouses and all, and have made kept down to four, but it cannot help Rent oo Frest. | tufernal disechatons Delng realized that Mayor Good of that| As a prognosticator for the ‘as at peace With ner nelghbors. The 1 1 1 1 city s right when e cxprosses the | vear Chutloe Senwab. corsainis prims | Fasws cons e i e peneorione | the most radical reductions in the prices. Tope that “every city in the country | a lot of cheer to a muititude of un. | for faith.’ will Tearn a lesson from this deplor- | employed. ¥ '}kt“"]f'?" Sthe_ 16th airtld] 18th cen- l - f able affair® g T ries the Servian capital was con- 7 s ust e o bildin e o be used | There i & SninIS V0K over the | SHCreR - pumber of den 430 e : We have also been able to secure from various manufac for an almshouse or a children's|income tax and its red tape, but it|]found its war back th Tertry, coyays = d home, it doesn't mean that any kind | was gentle heside the holler over the [though Servis practically became inger turers, who regularly supply us, many COatS, Suits an of a structure is suitable, or that it|war tax. pendent in the early part of the 19th should not be surrounded with all the century, the Turkish garrison at Bel- safeguards possible for the preven- When ihe crown prince prosents a | £rade Was nof Witharawn untit {567, Dresses at such price concessions that we are able to offer tion of fires and the protection of life. pipe to all those in his army it is| Belgrade is the governmental ana Those are the very places where the | making g00d progress towards a peace | [CLg10uS center, the center of art and greaiest care should be exercised. —_— kingdom, and it is the kernel of th A wheré well and sblebodied people are| It S of course quite natural that|Serbs' national conscioushess. oSinc: SR e M G 05 e s e e S T e READ THIS LIST OF ECONOMY PRICES raq W thei g x o out of New |son, ossomed out into a modern s A fot _Swemih And ol | ktant. city, with wide streets, electric lLights, risks should be taken where invalids R SRS T : v Even though ff has hung a a | places of recreation. It has earned its and bedridden .people are concerned. g, arounalpisces af recsation, . e s et ks ik rice o e e et e copee o for & year Thers 1 atways -« rebne | cmgnation, ot itis Tarisof hebais || COATS, regular $10.00 valves____________-.._____...... --- Sale . e atongart with the last ‘sheet on | Paris-imitated tone, in Belgrade; much . not be exercised in providing modern | e calendar. o sa'a Price s 8-75 = i - SRR T R S e vfi&’fi."g‘s 1:*;::"!‘5; ‘e‘;f“:“:;'d“{‘:sl-“gg Those nations which are thinking| “The capital’s houses are long . ~ of leaping into the conflagration are stretehes of white, with more of garden co ATS I 318 00 | SIIO Price s]] 75 a them than el G deie s, 3 8 Sh R g:mdab;?r:;na&mwm e e e e L T , reguiar B VO = s v B ais P e R e . of the sick and unfortunate. They S are permitted only because of th 5 1867, from 26.000 in 1884, to 90,000 in 5, H pue and 1 ie a oo | not on eheon e oot o4 dY should | 1310, and ts w trvicel Baiken ity mix. (| COATS, regular $22.50 valves_____________________________._____ Sale Price $16.76 : no given tg children on Christmas, | ture. composed of Servians, Bulga ;‘tl“;;n which ought not to be tolerated. | hut he might as well have tried to one place where the best safe-|stop a snowstorm. 3 Germans i s . Fussas shouid ovisr S (T o e L ) e el SUHS, values 40 92200 .. i it liieiiiien S0l Price $12.75 looks as if Belgium might use some |PuSiness structures, numerous hotels a ¢ This weel: grester activity can be|Of {he deserted tronchea for canals|Epieraiy. and & national merary with || SUITS, values up to $27.50_____ antlefpated in Washineton in Dehaif | after the war is over. - i = 2 evident before the first Balkan war. s for its purpose the pouring out of| T1© man on the corner says: The|The exporis of the Servian . people SERGE DRESSES, value $8.50__----_--_--____-_-_---_--__-___--_ Salo Price 5-00 gbvernment money for the buying of | %8380 has successfully passed when|passed mainiy through Belgrade, and e e e e e e e e e e e e 1 e e e o o e e . k. e one is expected to permit a stranger [Were taken by Austrian-Hungary mever enjoved a sufficient period of 3 peace and good management to save fbrought up In congress. One hundred years ago Ghent wit- {005 0 n, " development. struggle for peace between two na~ rick-making, o -My“tho funds mwmb:nl:h' tions, but mow it is much more di- Iness at rates which W~ | rectly concerned over its own peace- Sk AR e b Srancial, Commerciel 3nd them to you at approx1mat¢ly the regular cost to us. headedness to escape, but no such street cars, and parks and Other gay rats in a trap. Too much care can- o opte nowever, due to poversy, =|f GOATS, values $12.98 to $15.00__________ cases no fire escapes are too often population has grown rapidly since to which they are put and it is a con- SHIP PURCHASE BILL. ok a5 1F Beletum miehe s ey | Busincss strictures; Rumeros poree S Sale Price 315 75 ARSI EC T e RS & of the ship purchase bill which has i 1dent ‘Tdore the B7et 8 ar, {0 stand o bis com without making | Enese sports corsiated simost suti. WAISTS, BLOUSES, CHILDREN’S -COATS, at Economy Prices e —————————————————————————— Just how the movernment is going | 7°5%d the ending,of a long diplomatic | Helerade had som g v fulness. ‘When the express companies report increased holiday business it is quite evident that giving just rates to the ~ublic fs reward

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