Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 12, 1915, Page 4

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N ORWICH BULLETIN, TUESDAY, JANUARY 12, 1915 :-—‘__—_—————'——’“————'—————_—_——-——fi Jlorwich Bulletin md goufiici‘ 119 YEARS OLD " Subscription price 12c @ week; S0c & month; $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at N Conn., as second-class matter. - b 7 Telepnone Calls: Y Bulletin Business Oftice 480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms 358, = " HBalietin Job Ofmce 85-2. Willlmantic Office, Room 2, Murray Ruilding. Telephone 210. Norwich " Norwich, Tuesday. Jan. 12, 1915. soesescoassasasesseny geeeseee: The Circulation of The Builetin VYhe Bulletin has the larges* circulation of any paper i East- srn Connecticut ana from thres to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is deliversd to over 3,000 of the 4,U53 houses in Sorwich, a . read by ninety- three per osnt. of +7e people. In Windhem it deiivered to over sww nouses, in Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100 and in ali of these places it is consid- ered the local daily. Eastern Connecticat has forty- towns, one hundred and 90033000000000801 06 TINeRRIRRAELRIRIRIR IR LuBA. aine sixty-five postoffize districts, and eixty rural ¢ree delivery ~outes The Bulletin ia esld in every town and on ail «f the R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION srasscss 4412 weeseneee 5,92) 1201 mverage. 1205, average the preliminary een received at Was: ernment of Great Britain the prot forwarde am over the interferenc: rce and the de rel- being made. the answer the spirit which pervaded ere 1s recognized the American appeal and d the willingness to are caused en justifiable. far as it goes, but forth its position is good Britain sets onal safety and its protecti wiming the right to interfere with and destined for the le the reply may not clear up nation it indicates that it is a which can be handled d#lo- atically, and that is the manner in ich adjustment is desired. At the same time there is no doubt that a arge meas of relief rests with the nduct of our trade. If contrak »._A.d rried fc realized that scizure and th contra it the first increase to be noted since last summer. | ‘While the steel trade may be feel- ing the effects of foreizn business it is also evident that it is experiencing the effects of the relief which was ex- tended to the railrcads by the in crease in rafe: That removed the strained economical policy under which they were forced to operate. It caused a relief to the borrowing power and permitted the issuing of orders for cars, rails and other equipment which previous conditions did not warrant. The indications of a change in con- ditions are welcome and it is to be hoped that they are only the forerun- ners of a steadily impro situa- tion. The country needs it. WHO CAN TELL? A few of those in a better posi than others to know have made pre- dictions as to the probable length of the war. Such is based upon flnancial conditions and resources, a knowledge of war, its demands and conseguences. Some of the prophets are bound to lose and it is to be hoped for the sake of the suffering and misery it will shut off that it will be those who see noth- ing but o long war. The losses among the natfons fn- volved aiready total a staggering amount financlally, while there has heen wiped outa physical force which would nearly duplicate the population of New England. and there have been no dec ‘battles, erhaps the | cAusumg of the Turl invasion of Ru Millions of men have been thrown into the conflict and terrible battles have been fought, but the time has been too short bring to view any very early prospect of the e great and An element likely to figure in such an accomplishment, however, the uneasiness which has been displayed Greece within the past month in Ttaly and Rumania. While no match for the armies of the Germany-Austria-Tur- IR lliance, they nevertheless possess sufficient strength io Decome an portant factor in dealing with Aus- tria and Turkey, the countries with which they are like to contend. They have not as yet cast their lot with the allies but they are wavering and when th p in taken, 1 though their war strength may be con- sidered they are inclined to in a way which would hasten the signing of peace. But who can tell when? FAIRNESS IN REGULATION. Striking et comes to regulation a difficuit undertaki ulator is necessary and work right it must amount of attention, For a long time the government has been endeavoring to regulate the rail- roads of the country for the purrose of placing these great transportation systems in the proper relation to the people. It is no easy task but when Chairman Elliott of the New Haven stem declares in a Boston addre that the government has dealt abso- lutely unjust with the railr and that its present method of paying the s for the carrying of the mails since the fnstitution of the parcel post has deprived the New Haven of at least $1,000,000 that it has earned for such work, there are reasons to believe that there are facts to back up such declaration, It gets an immediate endorsement from former President Taft who de- im- balance when 1t Bbas always been Still the reg- ntil it does its the proper ad a (hre~‘ that the pendulum has swung 20 far in the work of regulation. First 1!19 railroads went too far in their defiance of authority and now in the endeavor to get back to justice the st the road s too far. ible to i to wel \vl a 1s to the other, but it doe indicate permanent progress to sw from one extreme to the other. S means a continuati £ just whereas it on to all whicl T the following of cne extreme after other may have its value. It will if way of relief. sported between neutral consignment so deflnite that the the traffic does nc n be done hers eviaent that | 3 ce for both to do somethi | DEFYING THE NATION 7 e pus! !m ' hip purchase bill indicated in re, pet meas before ¢ Wwas 3 & mm He voiced W as q»-.r:rv not only against | but against the manner s been hoped to push iti He even 4 (la"M)[ the will of the nation | en as a matter of fact there s no| le upon this| s in November can the wiil of the : © warran "hat the president is worried over 12 oppositio 1 he snap p in his declaration that they € nation, but some of sition comes from supporters Ti declaring re~ terly unbefitti the ich he was d. t the declaration that they “to speal arrant or knowledge » exercise a nd of pressure V\h 10se gentlemen would be thorou 1stified in resenting. Also the Boston Post feels “com- ¢lled to range itself with those who ppose the bill and it has as vet seen » arguments sufficient to change its nfon. that the plan is inadvisable ind would not do what it is intended > do. Tt is not Uncle Sam’s Business :nd he ought to keep out of it.’ The proposed legislation is fraught ith many®dangers and the pre: may yet find that the greatest e comes through opposition. PROSPECTS IMPROVING. Better one of the things rich has long been sought and from reports and opinions of those who re in touch with the avenues of t their outlooks, the prospect: rightenipg. The country has been ting #he benefit of a much in- “reased export trade. The filling of war orders is keeping a great many ihousand hands busy in all lines of work and is tending to make up the iciency in rerular business channels. Especially encouraging is the report from the steel corporation to the efrect that its unfilled orders for December | show an increase of over a half mil- lon tons. It is the steel industry which 1s one of the important refiect- ors of national business conditions and to close the year under those condi- Yons gives encouragement to the out- is for 1915, perticularly since K - o e M e ser- business is ade are results in striking the middleground and holdi to the policy of fa to EDITORIAL NOTES. resident Wilson to be re- minded o spe dianapolis { for some time to ¢ The ord s 1 that all New York subway cars must be of steel. A tardy measure for safety first. rvous sTows the nation that itching for war, but think of the dis- | covery that tl is a man in Ru-i{ Santar i —_— | meone ought to call Mexico's at- tention to Canada's example when | some of its s shoot over | boundary. who have heard ¥ help Dut believ 1t man rall day bt if the suggestion Mexico from Villa w gh, he would be on title. put > glad to thro defend the v n on the cor says: The n many do not succeed hat ttempt to grasp of rite kid gloves, The practice care of the unem; ficult economy and taking loyed presents a dif- to some guiders of proposition welfare, Connecticut mon sense in There are few velop weak will Taw, spot: inm:' upon ex which com- laws. t de- don’l Seventeen prisoners in Kansas are asking for parole. Their misfortune really lies in not havine zotten into a South Carolina penitentia Having gotten ex-Pr and Rocsevelt onto the rather looks a the right trac idents Taft ame train it if the colonei was on once again, The captain of the Emden is now in England, but stories of his es- capades will be heard with more in- terest there some years hence, I£ as claimed Eurc wants shoes and is able to get them, there appears to be no good reason why we should not do business together. e our If Governor Blease's idea of reforma- tion takes with South Carolina crim- inals there ought to be no further need for penal institutions in that state. Favoring, ndication before advocating a three mile racing course Coach Courtney of Cornell is setting an example not calculated to inspire the other colleges in hasten- ing a change. {e GETTING AT A SECRET. Jim Hathaway and 1 were not only hums, but occupied rooms in the same bachelor apartment house. Jim was a_secretive chap and especially fond of making a mystery of what was an ordinary habpening. I poked fun at him for doing so, but this seemed to have no effect in stopping him from continually {rving to impress me with ability to do things without my having any knowledge of them. Then when the denouement came he would assume an air of superiority as much to say, “I don’t go about blabbing of my affairs. There came a time when I beiieved that Jim had an affair on band with a girl. Tho reason why I came to this conclusion was that he began to show a contempt for women. “Tho best thing a fellow can do with a girl,” he would say, “Is to let her alone. E dotng so he avoids the expense of the- atre tickets and flowers, only to find out later that she's encouraging some other fel > 1 was not interested in Jim’s Jove affairs, but I saw no reason why he should take ins to deceive me in the matter. However, it did not trouble me that he thought proper to do so. I was very fond of him and coneidered his idiosyncrasy of no real importance, not doubting but that I ad others myself just as absurd. Jim and I occunied a common living room, and one evening. when we were about to go out to dinner together Jim dicked up an envelope that had been ie the postman during the day, unsealed, and took out a booklet ad vertising some kind of %oods. I no- him looking at it, or some part ,_with apparent interest; then he tossed it in the wastebasket. The next morning 1 happened to go to that same wastebac<ket to recover a bit of paper I had thrown in it con- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Immunity A-ainst Scarlet Fever. Editor: T it's a good ldea nowdays, when we have su scarlet fever cases in our sur- reo children of my own are exposed to it also— Cliff and High streets, etc., with the probable permis- highly spirited and elegant icer, Dr. Lewis—about inuse rous méans of belng the ways of by the -called streptoc are the red \l instigators of ln( dangerous disease, scarlet lever. nly 3 because there thin many of course sion of o nealth other maladies of our up-to- |daie seculum which we should be atraid for. Not at alll The germs of cholera, tvphoid, dysentery. divhtheria, cetant drophobia arc under cou- trol of ‘atory man. We can handle those germs just as well as the circus man handles his beasts, and if we do nc lose our heads and cour- we—I mean the bacteriologists—- are able to joke with them, to play with them and to kill them any time we want to. The famous Pettenkoffe B Munich, slera and typhoid ame appetite as we .pples and prunes, s ago! What ress was made mean on the brilliant way to se- curing of the highest immunity against the most dreadful diseases. We handle he vaccines, antitoxins, serums, tuber- ulins, etc., with sueh a strong hand General von Hindenburg the Rus- n hordes and tk and ger-breeding holera, re all delivered The breedi has bacilli eat in been eating with the Norwich and he did that 24 a great, er since. mighty the lepros through Russia place of scarlet fever is the Kauka Certain animals of that section of the world are excellently im- mune again . because we find the ongest streptococci there. Proba- bly as soon they are transplanted to the United States they lose their virulence. You probably noticed it, 1at the present scarlet fever epidemic t so vehement as it was two ago in the eastern states, be- ise the great w rs_do mnot let them pass war zone. We are glad that the germs arc kept there. immunity in general is usceptibilitv a glven nt te o or to a given or; 411.:'n or toxin, e “)(-" ditlona expirimen iy pradus munity is, in fact widely 1 nd has c ondingly rela- > its envir omes so modified ences which 1 would have The lower are immune eases t in man, and certain families marked resistance to some dis There are examples of natural ¥ dual may be im- ue « s being of a cer- 1 fam! Classic is the | observation, on the other hand, that one attack of certain infe immunity “an pro- - active the injection of an im- mur, s, as diphtheria antitoxin, confer ve immunity. In | other words, ance the pa- tient supplies antibodl active immu second in- stance ihe antibodies are supplied to » natient—g ive immunity. £ active | ki mm from following recov- »pathic infection or an infection artificlally produced, re are developed in the blood the antibodies which are inimical to the toxin or to the activity of the bacteria themse or ‘which accomnlish the destruction of the causative agent by phagocytes (the sol- courageous soldiers, of the normal blood serum has structive effect upon varieties of bacteria, and this D diers, body). Do many t power is found to be greatl in a patient who has been with th( e bacteria, either naturally or artificially. that in all ca There can be no doubt es of acquired immunity either active or paasive, the lencocytes (the white blood <ells) perform a large and important part, just as they do in natural immunity. in acquired im- munity the phagocytes are much more apable of absorbing or destroying bacteria than in susceptiblo conditions. In cases of scarlet fever tie lencocytes must be in perfect strength to stand the attacks of tae streptococci, which are the most ~owerful bacteria of the le germicidal camvaign, 2 no whooping cough, no anisms can beat microos . For that only reason we are fraid of them, but we have against tiem, 12 or 24 hours after they entered t! the horse serum _the st rum—and this, to te sh e matter. This is the most powerful serum we have in modern medicine-——no more general In- fection, no more septhchaemia, no -a..w,, more li ling nowadays—we have the gun nst them. as the Germans the ho\.. ZETE. . Before the ad- vancing guards of “the s reptococei ap- pear on the horizon we can use azainst them different kinds of germicidal dis- infectants very successfully—as we usually do it against the acrobic germes. T should be protected by expulsion of the colon bacilli, peing they the best, helping friends of the streptococci—calomel—that's the best BUNPOW¢ M. D., Ph. D, Pathologist Norwich State Hospital Merwish, Jan. A 101A taining an address. I stumbled on the envelope containing the advertisement and noticed that it was addressed in a feminipe hand. 1 thought nothing of this, since girls usually emploved to address advertising matter, and was hunting for my naper when I raked up the advertisement. It save a list of articles that wowld alone Ipterest a woman. This set me to_thinking why | it should have been addressed to a man. While meditating on this I no- ticed some lead pencil marks on the booklet. They were §, 16, 71 Now, had it not been for what I haye said about Jim and his mysteries it would not have occuired to me that these figures were not merely some- thing put there by some unknown person for some very ordinary purpose, but intended Lor a Cipuc First, advertisements of especial in- terest to women are not usually mailed to men. This suggested that the book- let had been received by a woman and had been used for cipher purposes b the recipent. What better method for communication could there be? Whether the figures had a meaning or not, I resolved that if 1 ever got a girl whose parents would not permit me to visit her I would use this plan of cummunication. I tried hard not to pry Jim's af- fairs, but the puzzle was tvo fascinat- ing for me to let alone. Besides, there wos the temptation to beat Jim at his own game. What 8, 16, 71-2 meant haunted me till I hit upon the faet that the present month was August, the eighth month in the s Ehe present day Was the 13th. Did not the figures contain an appointment? If S0, it was for Aug. 16 at bhalf past 7 (probably in the evening.) I could not quite bring myself to 2dow my friend on that evening, but during the next month or so I noticed that he received a number of adver- tisements on which there were lead pencil mariss. T did not try to decipher any of them. Indeed, 1 had I liberately tried to decipher t one. I had come uvon it by accident, it had got mto my head and I couldn’t get it out till I had solved it. W I did was to buy a wedding pre and leave it where Jim could see it. He was above askine me what it was for, so I told him that it was for a friend who was about to he married, adding that 1 could not name the person since the engagement was a secret. The reason why I couned on Jim’s coming marriace was that it is difficuit if not impossible for two men to live together one of whom is engaged with- out the other knowing it Jim never told me of his engagement | till a couple of weeks before the wed- ding. There had been no reason what- ever for the secrecy a'tending the af- fair except such as influences y: ung couples in similar cases and Jim's tdiosyncrasy. The girl's parents were much pleased with the match, and Jinys parents were not living. Jim probably would have kept the secret from me longer, but he wished me to be his best man. and it was proper that he should give me timely no- tice. The evening before the wedding 1 -arried the wedding cift I had pro- sured to the bride’s home. Jim was | here, and when I opened the hox in which it was contained Jim started if he had been snot. I laughed, e plained the joke to the bride, and w: all laughed together. But I kept them wondering for many months before I told them how I had got on' to their secret. That ,cured my friend of mysteries out of verv sm t o8 ever afterward he was frankness to perfection. A: for his wife, I _oubt if she had ever been so troubled.— Boston Record. { ‘ THE WAR PRIMER By National Geographic Society | | ere can be few mors won- | | landscapes in the world than | those around Tiflis, the ancient capital {of the Georglan Kingdom w the {center of governr in Caucasus advanced base of the s operating against the tement given to ded, forceful, country overmasterin i beau It fs likely ron this capital that old-tim, Georgians took their iration coura; wh famc and ¢ arei Tuaie beaut Theria’s (,J\'A:httl* is but the reflected 1dor of the wondrous land around. s spread over the floor m'! oth sides sides of the a valley joth sides of the river Koor. st, the r life being in_ tk quarter. It nce of distant Sea, ports ¢ n the cenfer s and tra a city ne n to gvestern read R e hub of the sla; situated rom the connected both waters eriand by Russian a with the d with and » of mili- of Cauca Ru the placed tary roa country acc value ta the in peace a 1 distrib venced bas he capital become the center merce. The busines. . Asia Minor and < one another was largel hAis, and this trade thing else builded population of 187,000 Caspian, the. center of Russia's oii fields, and Batum, on the Black Sea, possesors of the Empire’s great oil and naptha port are and pert of European importation linked by railroads with it, and presperity is dominated to a great| degree by it “Trade is mostly in the hands of the Armeniana. The manufaciures of the | place are unimportant, 1 1 i natives are noted for their | working of metals. Carpets, sill { woolens, silver-mounted arms, and | metal trinkets are among the simple products, Other articles of Caucasin commerce are the semi-tropical and tropical fruits of the o native wines.” FAMOUS TRIALS TfllAL OF BELKNAP. ntry, and t Among the impe id\“.u\‘ trials that have excited morc ne _usual amount of jinterest in States that of Wiil next to that of Presiden on, was the most strikin e time Bleknap s Secretary. of War under President Grant. He had served th distinction in the Civil War, and was Grant's S War from 1869 to March on his being charged w political corruption he at once resigned his of- fice. He was afterward impeached by the House of Representatives before the Senate, on the accusation that he promised to appoint Caleb P. Marsh to the charge of a trading depariment at Ft. Sil}, in consideration of a sum of money to be paid quarterly to BEel- knap or his agent. 2 Tha impeachment nrocecdinzs were down in lihe RHEUMA The Standard Remedy for All Forms of Rheumatism and Kidney Troubles. Are you rheumatis; for tha affering from some form of ? Then you need a remedy t disease only—not a prepara- tion d to cure all the ills of the human body. Rubbing in liniments vill only quiet the pain temporarily, but will not remove the cause. Rheuma cleanses the kidneys of the poisonous uric acid secretions; opens the clogged veins so that the healthy blood ean pass along the dead matter from the entire system; regulates dis- ordered bowels, and enables a. sluggish liver to convert thin, impure blood into rich, life-giving corpuscles. When this is accomplished there is no more rheumatism, for the source of the dis- ease will be wiped out. Rheuma is free from dangerous drugs. During the treatment the di- gestive organs are not deranged— Rheuma creates a _healthy appetite. Get a bottle from Lee & Osgood or any druggist. It is inexpensiv Your money returned if it fails. quashed in the Senate, on the ground Of acK Of Julisdiuull, OUL OL e question of guilty or not guilty, 37 sen- ators voted guilty and 23 not guilty. it was gencrall~ believed among those best informed regarding the details of this scandal, that Gen. Belknap was .nnocent of complicity as to the im- proper acts charged against him, and hat he was even ignorant of the facts ? the case. in February and March, 1876, the House Commitiee on rxpenditures in are War Department discovered that Secretary Belknap had for six years been receiving money for the appoint- ment, and retention in office of the post-trader at St, Sill, I, T. The total amount received was _about _$24,450 Belknap resigned on March 1876, ind his resignation w ac- President Gran 4, the manager of the im on the part of the House at once peachment appeared at the bar of the Senate, and exhibited five articles of jmpeachment, covering the various receipts of mone charged ‘against Belknap. In his reply the defendant claimed to be a private n of lowa, and denied the power »f the House to impeach anyone who, )y Tesi adon or otherwl had eased to be a officer of the nited State Between May 4 May 29, the qucstion as to whether Belknap was under ali circumstances amenable to 1 by impeachment was argued and lecided in the affirmative by a vote of 29; but the vote proved the hope- ness of conviction, since the minor- ty was too large to allow a two thirds ote of guilty. The evidence and argument on both ides continued from July 6 until Aus- 1, when the vote stood 36 guiliy to not guiity on the second, third and fourth articles; 35 to 25 on the nd 37 to 25 on the fifth article. The majority for conviction not be- ng two thirds a_ verdict of acquit- al was entered. When Secretary Bel- knap was first summoned to appes efore the House to answer harges he admitted his guilt. The harges against him were presented to the House by Congressman J. Proctor Knott While the House and Senate were n]e bating the ‘iestion, proceedings in riminal Court were being insti against the former secrets and he was indicted by the Grand Jury n the early part of May, 1876. The *ase dragged along for several months was finally dismised in February, uted 877, on motion of the district attor- in acordance with the directien > Attorney General, for the rea- his opinion. the evidence Belknnp uld not ecution. fter the sensation v Gen. nap’s fall had eubsided, he settied Wasiington as a claim agent, of looking after the depart- ng a specialty before abl an r. maintained a Ixurious home ‘ashington, and, although for some he d $1¢, into income of year$ did not go into y, he finally overcame the personal _preju- dice existing against him al n the gastronomery Dest a wit D wa. the fou 1 dead in his on of imr whi did not ceount. L Preside inday. will the Hou. Ameri; T industr: prosperity Brockton, » e the about to resume of Hard- Iy, a ds imiiar report of tiv- in one ci at the return of at hand. —Springfieid Ln'mz The record thus far shows t merchants engaged in foreign ave compiled hopestl nd to the very best of theff aoility with these perplexing and arbitrary obstructions of neutral trade, and this appears to be as far as an independent country should be asked to go in the main- CONSTIPATIO is the big trouble in every serious sickness — causing depression of spirits, irritability, nervousness, imperfect vision, loss of memory, or sleep, lots of appetite, etc.~sto) Fwith a reeuiar couree of . SCHERNCKS MAHDRAKE They act promptly and freely, but geatly, thoroughly cleansing the bowels, domforting the stomach, stimu- lating the liver—the specific for indi- gestion, headache, biliousness, heart- burn. fiatulency. Purely vagetable. Plain or Sngar Coated. B0 VEARS' OONTINUOUS SALE PROVES THEIR MERIT. De. J. B. Schesck & Son, Philadelphia morning Oct. 13, ing died some time during t ight of fatty degeneration of the heart. His wife at the time was visit- 2 York. Upon the day his | as anounc flag on the Department ¥ s placed 1 ilding SIMS and THOMPSON Eccentric Coiored Comedians THE LAST OF THE LINE ........ MUTUAL WAR WEEKLY—LOVE TR R(fi\DWAEY AT 4-MAXIMS=4 - Including the Smartest Lady Jugglers on the Vaudeville Stage TUES. and WED. Episode No. 3 ZUDORA in Two Reels 'BIG BANNER BILL 8:45 2% HE o3 00 ROPEAN NOVELTY JUGGLING ACT MAY GREENE _Singing and Dancing Comedienne <ev. 2 Reel Domino Indian Drama and BUSINESS, Komic Komedy From the Novel Star COLONIAL THEATRE Six Parts~-ST. ELMO-Six Parts Stupendous Romantic Spectacle Enacted by an All Performances 2:30, 7 and 8:30 Matinee 10 Cents—Children 5 Cents—Evening 10 Cents of Augusta Evan Cast 'Extraordinary Attrac‘lion l WITH EDDIE DOWLING, F1 A _Three Hour Show Today—THE COWARD Two Reels With Dot. Phillipps AUDITORIUM woot. Fol.ies of 1915 2:30 and 7 P. M. 10c and 20c NLEY AND BURKE AND THE FAMOUS FOLLY GIRLS No_Adv: Advancs In Prices morrow. LOVE and SURGERY Tor | Two Reel L-Ko Comedy tenance of ity own commercial inter- —Hartford Courant. No one who knows Governor Hol- comb will think for a minute that he is going to be a nonentity in the state during his term of office. The admin- istration republican from stem to stern and there will be no escape for any unwise act on the part of any portion of it. Governor Holcomb has been a speaker of the house and a judge of the superior court; he comes into his present high office with a fine record of pu service and it does not seem as if he is_going to play second fiddle in an administra- tion of which he is the official head.— New Britain Herald. Connecti. say, shares comb that the orable and honest, cals, as the World Unquestionably his defense in his inaugural message, such a statement wa: ut erally, the view of Governor Hol- New Haven restored. tire honest zo0d .a.n of How- {ara not believe that be acomplished b such cal any restoration —Hartford Post. will pres; be ent made, “the s it is safe to indicted men are hon- rather than ras- <ars to think. of them unusual as in such a docu- 1iert and dangerous as it would be 1 almost any _government to make ruck a r chord Connecticut It is convinced iott'’s management—and it does n such methods ederal government has under- no ion of to amend the automo- The statute regarding the FEDERAL RESERVE BOARD ON REDISCOUNT RATE Has Almost Completed lts Revision of the Regulatiens. Washington, Jan. 11.—The federal reserve board has almost completed its revision of the regulations de- signed to bring in all possible inform- ation concerning borrowers whose commercial papeer comes up for re= discout to a federal reserve bank. The first regulations were sweeping in character and were suspended shortly after th were promulgated. The board is still of the opinion that detai ed information should be gained to show the standing of borrofvers. &0 that a central credit bureau may be established in Washington with com- plete data for all parts of the coun- try. This will be done, however, with as little incomvience as possible = to banks and borrowers. ys-pep-lets Made only by C. I. HOOD CO. quickly sweeten sour stome ach, stop belching, relieve heartburn, nausea and sea~- sickness; also sleepless- ness from imdigestion. Delicious and economical. They are unlike zoda mints, are not a strong alkali—no bad 5 effect attends their continued use. 1im should, obably will Aty s M‘:gl(nnfndr;fii one or two | They do good work every timb, { st s Iready suggested | Get a 10c., 25c. or $1 box today. . ade with profit. It is ad- | Remember T form rafic | the mame DYys-pep-lets sitfint, in all cities, be in- law so that motor- be subject to arrest when t the state because of S'rETSON & YOUNG conflicting regu jous communities, idea already the law actual t person asking . —New Haven Union. Anoth- brought forward hould provide a sys- to demonstrate the a license Carpenters and Builders Best work and materials at rigit prices, by skilled 1s bor. | Telephune. %0 WEST MAIN ST, most, will be when you ¥ 1se, see new growi immediatel your b e HAIR STOPS FALLING, DANDRUFF BISAPPEARS--25 CENT DANDERINE 1 {SAVE YOUR HAIR! MAKE IT SOFT,d ;Yi"F‘iu’;?‘fn’lhl"’3‘5?3:;‘ brittle end FLUFFY, LUSTROUS AND |aerinn ani carefully’ draw it tHnln BEAUTIFUL, {vour hair, taking one small strand at {a time. The effect is immediate and e amazing—your hair will be light, flufty ou will, after an ar ion |and wavy, and have an appearance of ne, you can not find a single [Abundance; an incomparable lustre, of dandruft or falling 1lsoftness and Iuxuriance, the beauty scalp will not itch, but "md shimmer of true hair health. | _Get a 25 cent bottle of Knowlton's {Danderine from any drug store or i downy at first—yes—but really | toliet counter, and prove that your halr g all over the scalp.|is as pretty and soft as any—that it has been neglected or xmured by care- Noiless treatment—that's all. styles! Also the magnific stunning designs. The Butterick 164 Main Street | Butterick Patterns for February Ready! The smartest, newest and most chic ent Spring issue of Butterick Fashions with its 600 Our salespeople will be glad to give you information on the mewest style developments of the day. Call at our * Pattern Department. Store

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