Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 15, 1915, Page 4

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ULLETIN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 15, 1215 G et it i the Philippines wo more than has becn promised during the past sixteen or = more yeare. Such may be the actual s 2 working out of the program, but there s {should be a careful avoidance of any o nm wrong impressions as to what this = particular piece of legislation is ox- sud oufie pacted to do and what it will actually ot accomplish. 119 YEARS OLD e in overy way to prepare them for = - self government is and always has #2 Price 3¢ @ week) 000 ® | heen the aim and purpese of this L g country. That they have not attained £9 &% the PostofMice a2 Norwlol.| e experience or the ability to carry - it on now, and that they are not like: 5 ‘Telepmone Calis: Iy to for some time to come is the ] R DMy s opinion of experts who know the con- 4 etin Baiterial Rooms M8 % s.a.| ditions. Untll that’time approaches 2 1“ = Murray | It 18 unwise to push onto them re- . meflame R ™ sponsibilities which they are unable P ¢ SApp . to handle. REFORMS SANCTIONED. If the recommendations of the con- greseional naval committee recelve se- rivus attention two important reforms are likely @t this session of the na- tional legislatore. These are the end- . inz of the plucking board and the cre- “le Builehn ation of the rank of vice admiral. The injustice of the acts - of the Plucking board has long brought forth Vho Bulletin has the Mf opposition. At each announcememt of @lrculation of eny paper in Bast- 3| ;,." ;(j0n there have been loud pro- @rn Connecticut ana from three 2| ..c; raised. It is a body, Which whils %o four times larger than that of 2| ;¢ 1, have acted in all sipcerity has any in Norwich, It is deliversd §|p,.0n "o say the east, most unfortu- to over 3,000 of the 4053 houses 2/ ,,cc in ite accomplishments. Tt has i Horwich, a « read by nirety- for a long timo been a sore thumb in three per cent. of #70 people. Ia the navy departmeént.” Created for the Windhem it i3 delivered to over ¥ purpose of determining the officers &.« nouses, in Putnam and who are the most valuable to (h»e navy ielson over 1,100 and in and bplucking these fo_!t reure}'nent Ry th..:. ,m";, consi from amongst those elizible to higher ot g daily. places in the navy, some of its de- 3 . §| cisions nave been difficult to cxplain. Eastern Sonnecticut has forty? 21,1, sy hecessary to have some nine towns, one hundred a method whereby those less proficient sixty-five posteffice distrists, 3| _ 3 ooie ey for those who are nd sixty rural fres deliVery £y o be of greater value tothe “routes. department evident, if those enter- = The Bullstin is sold In every ing the service each vear arse Lo get towp end on all of the R. F. D. 3! any chance for promotion, but it has 'm&- in Eastorn Cennectiout. been demonstrated that the plucking board 1s mot the best. Certainly it is CIRCULATION not the wisest and theré will be no tears shed 1f it is abolished. rasrarvecy G812 sessreeane 5,920 On different isccasions the need of those in charge 6f American warships of foreign nations. Though no more capable than a rear admiral, if Amer- ican officers are forced to take second place because of the absence of that particular rank it should be,supplied. % been demonstrated, especially where H & e e TRUANT OFFICERS. There are truant officers and truant officers. Some hold the office for the <onor that i it and others for their ability in securing school at- tendance. According to the United States board of education the old idea being, however, small in comparison | o¢ the truant officer as z -kid cop” with the 200 were killed In|is passing away. The new officer is the Messina disaster six veers and|a man of entirsly different tppe, quite 2 Falf ago. Burthquakes have alWaye|froquently, in fact, a woman. In sev- een a menace o that locality and there is no reason to believe that there wié bo any immadiate cessation. It no sooner gets back to normal condi tions from one disaster than it is plunged into another. Dodging earth- yuakes and voleanic eruptions are re- cairements which go with residence in a large part of that coungry. | That it has visited the smaller rath- | eithan the lapger cities, for its worst dagage, is one of the reasons for no © Jarger loss of life. Had the seismic disturbance centered at Rome or Na- Dies far greater would have been the “be wrought, and with the uncer- tajgty that surrounds such upheavals thére no surprise that these and other neerpy cities are thrown into pewics. It is a danger with which few can feel thoroughly at home know- ing full well the conscquences that face those who happen to be in the ITALY’S EARTHQUAK Gues again the sympathy world is drawn upon by Ital n it is becauss of nature’s action u that part of the globe. About every =o often a great number of lives are lost in this manner, the number thus far reported in this last eral cities a large number of truant officers are college graduates; in other cities they are men and women with as social workers but college graduate or not, they are required to know and under- stand the home conditions of school children. Attendance officers of the new type are interested Temoving funda- mental causes of truancy rather than in merely catching the offenders. The chief cause of the failure to obey at- is inadequate family life. In order to give better protection to childhood the national league for compulsory education has urged uniform marriagc and divorce laws, better requirements concerning marriage licenses and that juvenile courts be given authority to Place parents as well as children on probation for truancy and delingwency The alm of such an endeavor is t get at the foundation of the trouble | and it is a recognition of one of the Little can be imagined by most of theworld of the conditions surround- ind° such disasters and while people of many sections will be forwarding their symipathy and rellef (o the unfortu- nates, while appreciating their free- dom from such frightful catastrophes, there are other portions of the globe ways for the removal of one of the great handicaps to childhood and edu- ant officer be done away with, which know too well the full meaning | EDITORIAL NOTES R SRS oifais Rumania has one foot in the air| T T r— ready to step Into the sreat conflasra- Ey its action the seneral assembiy Em ik L ST has taken the preliminary steps for| Thers are days when spring seems the elimination of the absurdities from | a long way off, but it u 1hecivil service law so hurriedly | screnely pusbed through the last session. The matter has received early attention| Wi ally bobs up I on The proposed ame: be__given the req and sucth thing to 4 into operation without a realization of its full meaning or scope has been demonstrated from time to time. There has been time to realize that it Permitted far mor> than was an- tidpated or intended, and that instead) of covering in under civil service men whose experience and merit deservad it,Jt made a job for life for those who SO et hafl hut recently received their ap-| 1In the present order of things it « ~pofntiments under a now political or-|was Belgium and not TItaly which def of things. Instead of putting the|should have received that earthquhke. lay into effect at a future time when rales of the service conld be ap-| Turkey sees the wisdom of making new appointments or when | restitution to Ttaly and saluting the tion could be made of those|flag, but it required much German who had Dby years of service dem- | persuasion. woagtrated their ftness for the posi- R RS L N TR Sl the exis law, the interpre-| The man on the corner says: There tatlon of which os made by the com- | is only one trouble with ‘being the logi- anifsionere hos becn sustained Dy the | cal candidate. He seldom gets the ap- utthroes gon s simpl pointment. ng permanent lebs for & ol sty ¥ 9eMO°| Now that Governor Bleass has gone i e the inclu- | SOUth Carolina will have to pinch it- os where | %¢If to find out whether anything has evferah with been left of the state. of the vassed ments wiil { sSbeeding up. ol hearings| . == is of course the advisabie| The results vary greatl e sigtad 87 rship or an Alaskan prospect rhat the lav is a warsl Dprospector, i aw Was DUt|ipat strikes a mine. The new craze for kmitting appears to be bringing back some good old fashioned enjoyment, The whale that drasged a 5000 pound buoy till it died from exhaus- tion certainly found its Jonah, Billy Sunday is creating about as much of a furore in Philadelphia as than{ the portheast blow did tb % he n q hroughout commissioners and the DPIODEr | scuthern New England, have been taken to apply heg remedy i 1 ideq, that Mexico should he al- H — | lowed to shed its own blood does not BARRISON CN PHILIPPINES. | indicate much faith in the powers of Whils Secretary Gamdsen appearcd| the A- B. C. mediators. ; Dure e Phiisono commities Of! One of the most difficult propositions oabs DA 1t 15 quite outden: fem mig|to De faced is the convincing of the ks h oot uneat BiS{unemployed that the present state of = ents {hat he looks upon tha| ZEWPIOVED thS - d of this country t> {ke islend] At passessions fo a @ifferent light than| 1¢ ne pr m;:’ g ll:n olgof !fl:::;::r cfcthfléma.nup until theallies batter their Pro] =ecretary Gar-{iphrougn the Dard: flflfl“ that it was fmicespie| (ATOUEh the Dardanelles, no descent | fo overlook the dutr of this country| “" U° 2% i" tself and, in view of the position| 1, Maine the seiection of certai 7 it has y taken, its duty o] state officers Is loft to the lature, . the Filipinos. He gave evidence of|ang it has already taken several daye. | fall appreciation of ihe work of the|When left to the voters it only takes | administrations In the is-|one da. I ‘and it was evident from his s that he was mot in accord| 1t depends altogether on how ac the idea of fixing & definite time|a part it is Intended to take in tho That it is desired to help those peo- | tween Norw regular and such an officer as a vice admiral hasi 5 ha ence and other b and also cial proceedings under hi duty as treasurer 1 dues or any other a have been reguired to act with thosed Meetings shal aceptabie Lo the tendance laws, as investigation shows| BULLETIN'S SPECIAL YALE LETTER Norwich Club Organized With Seventeen Charter Members | and Charles W. Willey as PrepidentfiRetiremefit of Walter Camp From Active Connection With Athletics— | Prof. Corwin His Successor. Haven, Jan. 14-—A most suc- cessful meeting of the Norwich Club of Yaie University was held Haughton Hall last Wednesday The meeting not only marked the opening of what promlses to be a mast prosperous year for the clupb but the actual launching of the first Norwich Club at Yale University. fourtesn men present at this first bus- iness meeting which was Since the vpening of college in the fall it has been th oug endeavor of a fow of the members to_organize this club, officers for the term 1914-1915 resulted in the choosing for president, Charles Norwich Free and for-secretary and treasurer, Raymond T. J. Higins, Norwich Free Academy, 1813 The constitution which follows was adopted by an unanimous vote: and Purpose: This club shall be known as the Norwich Club of Yale Univer- The purpose of this club shall be to promote fellowship and sociability among the men at Yal larger registration of club will form a link h and the Norwich Free and Yale University. Lership: Any man who is enrolled in this club providine he has either at- tended the Norwich Free Academ at least a vear or i application making his permanen Norwich or imme: eption second, to In the absence president the secretary-lreasurer n the the secretary-tréasurer a president pro tem shall be apointed. The election of officers shall be held at meeting of the college year. The officers elected shall serve for the college vear. be held onee a month at vlace that shall be most majority of the mem- arrangements meetings shall be ma Dues: There shall be no regular dues, and othe e sments. The c drafting the constitution deavored to attain brevity and conci ance to the members were document. The « presented to the membe; who acted for _The list of the present members of ises Thomas A McLau: Harry V. Champion, White, Harold . I David L. I ortunat Robert 1 . Lathrop and Wilia villages, by means of open conduits s one Cou Captain Wilson 'of the football team has named Prof. Robert N. Corwin, '87, of the faculty of th Sheffield Scientifis school as the foot- representative on the university athletic assoclation year, to succeed Walter Camp, '80, Mr. Camp'y retinement as tressurer of the association was announceq last Octo- ber, and this second step is in line with bis announced intention from offices connected with ath- services as advisory There were mast_zea- couch ta the coaches will not be curtailed by this change, and it is hoped that his cral usefulness to Yale athletics will not be diminished by it. representatives of the captains on the association George B. Case, '94 base- bail, and J. R. Kilpatrick, 1911, track. These, with Professor Corwin and a fifth graduate to be elected, the under- graduate captains and manager four major sports and the president af the minor sports, now form th- asso- The treasurer Henry W. Hobson, 1914 The election of The other Walter Cam~ ve connection with Y: will always be regarded by Yale men as the central figure around whom the particularly foothall, have come to be developed to their present organization since mod- ern college athletics began in th Regarded by the publi of American Football iy stands among builder of that remar ball organization which, with the cap- tains and field coaches in ground and himself in continuous ad- visory relations in the background, be- time the most 1 intercollegiate football ma- Mr. Camp played orwich men at who now retires from at the time of Y to these require- ment§ will be made at any a_three-four the members present. shall be two officers, a secretary and treasurer. the duty of the vresident to conduct all special meetings of the shall act “ex-officio mmittees. The manage ali cor cretarial work of the > shall have ail finan- s vote Officers: president and It shal t shall be efficient and chine in the count ae Harvard game of 15 Camp bas been interested football activities at Yale, made treasurer of the Yale Finan- and in that capacity w: Jle to sot aside a foctball earnings that had become c $100,000 when the bowi was built the adoption c charge. the new at mp became the football member, chairman and treasurer. Reorsapiza- and the larger athieti stem, has fin from the obligal n with the Ya :h he had done ilv relieved Mr. Camp sanization wh! de by the officers T will, howeve his contintied close t Tt is Loped that | terfere -with Yale athletic Prof. Robert N. Corwin, '87, of the German department dersraduate d the | weather of tha fiz and datc tree land. | money Harold jknown to a very ia II LETTERS TO THE EDITOR cation. ‘When home conditions are| known and bettered then can the tru- | primal cause of th of #he artificial disease set up Here is Doctor May's let- seven more weeks ahead | but it is assured of fair treatment.|CODSress must realize the necessity of whether it | that the latter never s disease figures whi rayages of c of water has health, whic! of any money boastful Pennsylvaia sade against dent's cabi ;; independence of those people. | general assembly as to the satisfaction it will give to'caused among the members. advocate of the Jones bill | the committee appointments have | body Cause of Disease 1 bes to offer communication Thomas J. May, a physician, witich t the prevailing theory of diseas, upiversally accepted. ioculate some di to the heaithy is not proof used in the inoculation are disease, but only Editor of the Just because the lus, when injected into the that animal a mption it is believed caused in the human inhaling the bacillus under ondinary living conditions. been perpetrated. a cauge of consumptio the bacillus is As a matter of satis- is treated less suc todey than it was thirty years ago. Thus, are obtained from leading sanatoria York state, containing a treated from pesied of seventeen are compared with those of Dr cases, treated hospital for consumption in London and his private from 1540 to 1870 — a period he former sl 2t the ‘end of seventeen vears the latter at of thirty years 50.50 per cent. results sound str be safely at, it all of the wealth of into this tuberculosis out of the state by work- ing on the bacillus theory), it will have influence in checking nsumpetion is infinitely more harm- causes a great deal more act- val sefféring than in the exploitation trust has ever inflicted/| STHOMAS {r. Editor, calls to mind one viterances Dixon. superinten state board of ho, in the varly history of tuberculosis, made the pregiction that ent of the pa: of the placing a - in the tuberculosis would the past by 19 stalement was Owens when ip for final Senator Gallinger, then in the that tie was talking beging, 19 fuok, as 23 Tight, for he people 100} inasmuch as they have g scen no evidence of results, Drinking Water—Systems qualified drinking ident of the F so that even the dolon could not produce better material. Al 7 ng, to speak populurly i depends on good d ater, one should pay the most atte tion to the aqua ranarum d upon by some of our com- rades, who prefer to dri dictu—even But—believe me. | Chancellor—which position he had oc- {he was past 60 yvears of age, he re- ;{ceived a note one of the commit- amount of that cylated and ambo—chlorised Naturam et Fuca expelle their original and best drink—the wa- ter—it not elsewhere they do Bad water contains an immense num- and billions of obia germs. the resources of showed—hydrop 1 constant examinations. Wells should always be sufficiently protected, and should be lined and ce- project creted with a and a raised 1 advantage be buil vent surface drainage flowinws The suction pipe should be piaced at the side of the well, not im- S0 as to pre- than a drop a chance of penetrating the feather coating of a duck’s hack. irrational propositions question Whether greater perversion to distort the truth about commercial transactions than it lead the people in matter: would not liear to a postponement, and have been emploved for the detec of suspected sources of contamination chemical substances spected source of poiln- |Wwere determined to proceed without and certain used at the si currs. = The system of carrying wa- ter from open reservoirs to towns and to be condemned a3 dangerous wing to the great risk of _contamn- iy Tebennd Fovome contpmmaiza What Should a Man Do? Sug- by receiving the contente of sewers estion of Ohio Druggist to 50 Vilages bu Dieir banke euf v ne Such Man Saved His | Life, So He Says. { know, that even the mildest bacteria live in the excreta and othtf Mith at DR. S. R KLELY, * Nelsonville, Ohio.—*‘I was all run- Norwich State Hospital Jown, weak and nervous and had no FATRF {/netion by the unsanitary habits enc BPECIALL T FUNNIEST GOMEDIAN. IN THE WORLD—SPES et & 5 : Rivers as_a source of water suppl CHAS }are not liable to so much pollutio: jsnder warm climate, as one would im- {agine, owing 1o their greater volume In & 2-Resl- HIS PREHIS CrnAPLS Y The Funnisst Picturs Ever Made—2000 Fest of Lau NEW IDEA TRIO e LORETTA CLARK Female Baritone The Passing of Two Gun Hicks, 2 Reel Broncho W MUTUAL WAR MARR .‘ E'VANG Fi WEEKLY. orw least 10-20 Qdays. h, Jan. 12, 1815. appetiteatall. Infactlwasverymuch about Vinol and asked me to tryit. I THE WARF PRIMER did so and it bas certainly been a life { 2 DAYS ; gevertome. T ean giadly recommend By National Geographic Society inol to anyone wl a 4 i nerve g;‘nie.y’—S, 5. STEENROD, Nelson- ville, Ohio. - a potpouri of races, ‘When a man js run-down, weak and tonS::: a:d l:euzxo!:\s.L Nowhere else mervous, he needs a good appetite, good in the world can one find on a eimilar digestion, better blood, more strength, area so many types of peoples, S0 more vitality, and we do not know of many languages and dialects, S0 MaNY any medicine that will supply it so religions and sects therzof, as in this q,i’d{,y B8 ViobL Russian government where the troops : B e & of the Tsar and those of the Crescent It iathe active medicinal ciples of are continuing their generations—long cod liver oil aided by the blood making but mortal feud. The Caucasus. foI gtren; ening‘proremes of tonic iron, the most part, stratch above [r\{:!;h:l contained in Vinol, which makes it o land. and every fols-stream Which cicient’ in building up health and flowed their way has left oddies wit I In their closed, world-isolated valleys Strength for weak, nervous, run-down “The cosmopolitanism of New York Inen and women. is provincial compared with the mag- ‘Weask every weak, nervous, run-aown nificent, regardless confusion of CaU- person in this locality to try Vinol on casian peoples, There are some seven LorCugrantee, and if 3¢ fails tohelp you discouraged until our druggist fold me [ AST 2 SHOWS—2.30 and 7 p, m. | Prices 10c and 20c AUDITORIU THE MUSICAL FOLLIES OF 1915 Presenting an Entirely New Bill for the Last Half of the Week THE BIG SISTER'S XMAS ANIMATED WEEKLY 3 COMPLETE SHOWS ON SATURDAY—230, 6.45, Mfi COLONIAL THEATRE 2 neels — +H_PE FOSIER'S MOTHER™ — 2 weels Featuring Edith Storey of “The Christian,” and Mrs. Maurice “Fate’s. Tangled Threads,”—Befoved Adventurer—“The Fatal Nete.” Buster Brown and the German Band,” Edison’s Juvenile Absurdity HAERBERT RAWLINSON _NNA LITTLE IN T _Xi 23 ty dialects strange to the West spoker . Within its boundaries, while business, We Will Feturn your money. touring, engineering and other. techni- e SR Sl S S| ossnss sy o pauie || OTHER VIEW POINTS | in. In this modern Babel divell ¥rop., Norwich, Conn., and at lead- The majority haven't the backbone temptation to become parasites.—Men- and women iden Record. Georgians, ~ Imeritians, ‘hevsurs, ing drug stores everywhere. grelians, Pshavs, Swanit khasians, Circassians, Kabar- Ossetes, ~Avars, Chechinzes, | delible disgrace, he con; Jews, Russians, of several varieties,|cupp Dai Lesghians. Kazy-Kumykek | ;3 pegged to be dismissed with the all Tush,, Ingush, Greeks and others of the > Occident. Caucasia, indeed, may be|loss of his office. the height cof their power said to be 2 place pre-eminentily On the third of May the great man | voted to language—all kinds and €Om- | wag found guilt~ the sentence being plexions of speech being mative there | [1>® 10W7¢ EN Sresie in bewlldering richness. that he should pay a fine of “Caucasia is the broad, stocky|and that he should he imprisoned isthmus which, extending from the|the Tower during t: southeast corner of Europe to Asia, ivides the Black and Caspian Its area is about 180.000 sguare mlles, or more than four times larger than the state of Ohio. It has sood ports uponr“both the Black and Caspian seas, tum on t one and Baku on the The famwus sheron penin- the richest of the oil fields, and, in general, the us is the mineral treasury of | ;e in | 8OV ever be incapable of any office, piace |try. court. But with besides onal jealousy of a d when the King and the neilors found the temper of the ¢ i first man in En next to His ‘ and fruit lands of this government are Kin~ remitted his fine, | 9% th very bountiful, and could be turned|and Bacon was allowed to get off prac- gfif;;nt:m, vard intemperance. > tertainment sometimes effort to keep up appearances which is | pper, manganese, mercury, sul-| Py (ote goeam(;;yn‘;omyg:c:h:,gurgflzg Jor the in d these offices he hasPhur, iron. cobalt and salt Eits 2 from avarice or | Toads made on Europe’s barrier against southeast- inciple, for he _ displayed | Dutch Tre rall ern Asf e o 5 t = G %ed | nized as in good and regular ern Asia, the » Caucasus Range h ng sympathy for | 1280 28 10 E00G SO T et after the material things < into the richest of garden and farm- | toaliv cortfre aoe ety b a little modern care.|fined in the Tower for four day produced. Among the (ores | erore tue year was out ne W nostly developed for commerce pardon. stretches ‘across the middle lands of it he did not have fairness 0 enough to be faithful to her cause. Ba- to Ciscatcasia and Transcaucasi e ¢ the humiliation of the charges The trustees who are now In-charge of the Conmecticut have been riding over the troiley lines of the compeny with the purpose of making themselves -fami- liar with the plant. They dom't know much about railroading, and it is pof expects to learn much Their chlef duty i3 to seil the property and they neturally want to know just what they have to sell and how the property Can be @r- vided to sell at the best adventage— The trouble with the kaiser ‘essed his gulilt, | to be thathe ll)h\k"fl he can do all th ted the lemiency of his peers | things Colonel Roctevel of the property could do and Jerome could do when Times. S from these trips. 0,600, | While the war has not slack sernment control of the by “rench_pecple cle: S has given the ing's pleasurc. | dence that it is po: it further stated tbat he should for-|matches by private capi experience ple to demand monopoy whe: A friend of The Hour suggests that “weary Willle,” “pans from their etting a goods in_geaeral 1t _is ungracious.” he wWrites, of harmony with the grow:- g spirit of the times to apply thege of derision to every man wHo loding or some- His plea for a square al for these fellows, a large percent- age of whom have undoubtedly been employment by ness_depression of the past few months. should mst go uar heeded.—Nerwalk Hour. or employment in the Commonweaitn, | arouse and that he should never sit in Parlia- | the termination met. or come with he verge of|the war is over But there were other forces to reckon | waste and inefficie; i plc in regard Lo the tment of ’J;rczé'-lxflr;g ‘;)teg‘e!s 2 ‘;1‘0;: of it % 4 s , grain, “grazing | beoric 0, Yegard Lo t = of1it 1s cult to eradicate on_actou all_the Russias. The grain, grazing |ine imeult to eradicate c the drink phase Treating with_drinks terds Treating with | thing to eat.” widespread Dus! hanghai is to have a shipbuilding the mountainous central region Janc for upon his death be found some e mast beautiful |in 162 il was found this scenery in the world. The moun s | pas: My name and memory 1! are heavily forested, pon r | beg ations, and to ledges and within their locked valleys [ mine ow ry er seme time be ome of the mest primitive of | pa veople. ieties of | not the oni: imate occur in th o iety, | o ¢ charges agains m the bitter sharp s the | B 3 5 was Lady Whar- the everla tropical | to: t she bad given Lord Chancellor fauna aleo shows a wide range, |and had ved : hing sentence common European speci {immediate afterws mals to the 1 1 office and hon \ who coul and plunge him- heiped 1o | ch: icling of in o number of in- i works. He died 1y made negligible begi n a cold co ke harness, n scientific research, on April 9, 162 trimmed and a fair- transportation ilroads connect AGHING JOINTS EVERYTHING ELECTRICAL You Get Qur New Number Franklin Street . . IN THE NEW SUNLIGHT BUILDING AFTER FEBRUARY FIRST. MORE ROOM FOR US—BETTER SERVICE FOR YOU. THENORWICH ELECTRICC Now at 100 Franklin Street TRIAL OF SIR FRANCIS BACON | I] |RUB PAIN AWAY WITH A SMALL | T. JACOB'S OIL” | TRIAL BOTTLE OF OLD | : | Francic Bacon was one of the ous men England has ever 1. He was distinzuished alike jar and statesman, philoso- | gfty and diplomat. He wa ance of his time, led to his eatment. RRul 1. Jacol upo; tender spot” nes instantly. St Oil” is a harmiess rheun on rose rap 'm one position | aciatica liniment L never disar of eminence to another, and no_one | points and can not burn the skin. wa¢ more astor the Lord|™ Limber up! ~ Quit complaining! Get mall_trial bottle from your Grus- in moment you'll be teumatic and _sciatic pain, svreness, stiffness and swelling. Don't sufter! Relief awaits you. Old honest Jacob’s Oil” has cured m lions of rheu sm sufferers in the last half centu nd is just as good for sciatica, neuralgia, lumbago, back- ach sprains and swellinge. cupled for some time with distinction when on March 19, 1621, and when tees of the e of Commons order- ing him to appe: a hearing that had been arranged between the Com- mons and the Lords. At the time he stood at the pinnacie and in compari- son with him all r men werc ob- scure nobodies s B e el [ Come, Bunions and Inc 3 rzed the Lord || growing Toe Nails treated e i without pain. Comfort erward decided 28 as‘ured' To those who knew the md; othing Shampooing, Manicur- 1d have been more ab than that |§ - Bicon should be accused of orive tak- |§ ing, Scalp Treatment and ne. In replyin to the note trom the [§ . acia % mittee, Bacon sent a “lea of illness acial Massage. at he would not be able to at- Switches made from This is YOUR opportu crease your principal fifty and receive six Your principal will be secur- ed by a mortgage on real estate. stand the most rig investigation and some of New Haven's most conservative citizens have ready availed themseives of this op- enterprise wi Address: Box 1489, New Haven, Conn. tend the hearine But the enemies of .. Bacon, & y made such by jealou: ~ur combings. on Aprih 15 the long rote of cnarzes | Miss Katherine Lanz Was read. Room 22, Shannon Building When Bacon found that his enemies Tel. 548-5 (Take Elevator) him, rather than submit to a trial, *h would stafap bis name with in- nd afterwards looked for in the contaminated waters, v to esamine the that there is not naturally in t any of the substance to be employ- in the test. As a control, Pains and Aches : hivra chloride ad common salt. The|B¢EY'S Mustarine Greatest Remedy on | presence of lithium chioride contaminateq ook “at hest ilt spectroscope examination that of com- |and just rub of < Waiwlll> sll, Eeanut. [Buteés means of silver nitrate|and et ri j T =ou don't |} at 10c test, while fluoresceln gives a uorescence ir presence of an al- f the water contains not to confuse ntrate the greenish color of this metal green tinge of fluorescien. pearance of the fluorescein will be the acts on strains. sprains, lameness. sore Baking Powder, Ib. ........ 12¢ ich the water pass. aters as a rule are very this being chief fact ‘that the suspender for|side, while, owing o the great of ‘water, free oxidal e SRR fited Tea 'mporters Do, matters sub- | {oF PERES M vellov, X, Substitutés won S & Osgood been panse SPECIAL SALE ON PEANUT BUTTER Disappear Like Magic Zarth for Head: s 15 che, - | ’ e | For’a Few Days Only may brine . preumonia, :v',’” notunt '} Try Our Teas at ........... 25¢ and reduce : .1} Extra Geod Coffee, Ib. ..... 23¢ imply wonderful how quickly i coughs zood to : soreness from e (Over Somers) Do supply you KEEN-KUTTER AXE EVERY ONE FULLY WARRANTED SKATES A LARGE LINE — PRICES LOW The Household Bulletin Building

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