Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 30, 1915, Page 4

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. iyl and Qunfied 119 YEARS OLD price 1Zc & weeks 500 & = year. at the Postoffice 88 eecond-class matts Telepnone Calls: Bustness Office 450. Editorial Rooms 858 Bulletin Job Office 35-2. tle Office, Room % Murray The Bulletin has the largest * firoulation of any paper in East- ‘ern Connecticut and from three to four times larger than that of _any in Norwich, It is delivered over 3,000 of the 4,053 houscs in Norwich, and read by ninety- three per cent. of the people. In Windham it is elivered to over 900 houses, in Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100 and in all of these places it is consid- ered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- ,’inl towns, ome hundred and Eeixty-five postoffice districts, and sixtv rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town and on all of the R. F. D routes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1#Y| average . 4412 . 5,920 9,117 STATE AUTO LAWS %% i position that is entirely A4 taken by the Bridgeport Tel 3 it inquires “le it poseible th “pg eftort can be made in t [ Comnecticut to amend and improve automobile law so loos Seen scores of deat] serious accident: Sthe cry of ‘fool tinic 4 There is no doubt that of a proper enforcement *aws in order ecure “Hons and regulations that are dem: %3 and are already provided, bu ,i8,mevertheless a fact that as the U of the highway the automobi _has developed it has been accompan By a needless increaso Bulletin s Norwich, y drawn thet under its operations in 1914 there has and hundreds aths and chau provinge which it wrested from | ‘German control and which it premised | it _would turn over to China. Tims| will b required to reveal tlic real| | sftuation, but it is hard to Believe that Japan would attempt et this tim when the war according to Kitchener | will not start until the ovening ¢ Spring { Chinese. Not only is it against word of leaders in Japauese affairs it concerns a matter in which } than China and Japan are i | It must be realized that Great b [:md the other but | more | ed. | omathing to say relative to any ad-| i5 made ! And again the demands | buted to Japan &re in| exorbitant as to sup-| that Japan has mot Jjusement that {02 the world. = | which are attri themselves port the belief made’ them. CHANGE N POSTMASTERS. postmaster_of Norwich | n Mahan follows in due e the action of the recent con-[ nce in this city, That the nomina- | the office was not made some | e ago caused no litt at it was realized from the s the multitude of candidates contribute any aid illing of the office. Harmony re the getting together the art aia quired has just political taken place. e of 1912 of th those fitness and that time has not P. Murphy, who will ster of Norwich, whole life has stal affair: witnessed directed demon: the have rated | ynducting for be the o8t replace 2 man whos the postofiice alously guarded of his office territory en he turns over depar nd o viable record behind. Politics decreaing that change, the choice fal known citizen whose racy has been 1 He is a mz upon a rigld economy. are re tement of Secretary T of econon: parent eif strations this or other er is 1t t :limination of the po . { and with the count : P! taxes as t ult present pol- tes | cing a still greater drop i o2 | revenue wh full effec 2] in the sugar s felt, i tari papy of the drivers assume the Te- | gotten along without is bilits of their position. 1" Dven the wi it of 1 Nothing is dome (o determine ths| . ~{0 TIO 4 Bss of those who are licensed 10 sy an ar d te motor cars even thdugh it is| oo ving but witl #asic that calls for ‘skill and 200d|;pqications that year re- €| quire over thirty to meet the sent, and nothing is doue in t of uniform enforcement of the ¢ and regulations throuzhout the Ftate. | expenditar: sufficient hortage, sut wi At the present time autos can chier s e dfiyen through the street with such| =70 "€ Ilions, t Drilllant headlights that they dazzle y-five millions, it is| and confuse pedestrians and the driver | bered that the democratic | of any vehicle gzoing in the oppesite | 5" o e dana direction. They are an aid to speed,| 37 ooz [0 exopleioriG - t a decidedly dangerous improve- |t - E opening of the *fent which has been the cause of | ™07 : A = Umany accidents and no ome lnows it| .- % © el bnes oon Detter than the autoist |t s i There are good reasons for apposing | (& W COUES UL LOT T tise ‘tinkering with laws whic it i - them worse instead of bette by the Yis quite evident that the Connecticut et me {automobile laws have not reached that S piage of perfection where there fs| EDITORIAL NOTES. not room for improvement when such SR S upon existing conditions. . A PROPER VETO. inBY the vetoing of Sbill President Wilson ‘$s based the ha tto'% well recognized duty but Wwithout a thorough investigation of| p. .. oo - - the step which he was taking de s e A sthe-fact that predecessors had donef 0N G TONE the same thing. There w: S*=Dfity which could not be and it has not been. o & s8ab. a law does not defiands of the peovle and like others is unwilling to sanction Turkey’s idea 4o knows that it doe | gets the chance he president properly says Tes in a move to “hitherto we have generously kept our | Borders open to all who were not un-| ‘. ed by reason of disease or inca-| . ""® 1"v'l&‘ not-be any for self-support, or such per-|.. V¢ OniY Zet a corner of‘that prom- Sonal records and antecedents as were | 1520 ¢0ld wave but a seasonable change €asential relationships of life. In t »ill it is proposed to turn away fr character and of quality pose. tests which exclude and restr Jor the new tests here emhodied Bot tests of quality or of char r of personal fitness, but t rtunity H £ s responsi- verlooked eves that orrespond to the likely to make them a menace to our peace and order or the wholesome and and {o im- ts of op-| For the land of opportunity to im- jose such restrictions upon those who sreat nationa will round h be the watch { ‘There | plovea fa wood s an ar ile The man on ¢ develops s in a ievance properly nursed. . o all* the taseball compii | tions there is cheer. in the oM} that the game hasn’t got to face s conditions -as exist_in Europe. rds during Gover stration in South 1z, but it will never pose of his record as eas ict, ter | o= 1 they were not alrea the ability to read or write in Bethmann Hollwes caus: Sheir own language because of the to say about hi Mailuro of their native land to take rap of papet” woul Sproper interest in their welfaro doesn't ause for war. fwarrant our determination to keep = 5 hem and their children in that condi- | 12 apparently malir 2 jori” and it doesm't insure necessarily eifért to get back, but unless ‘better or more worthy clas ts. It wrong method and the pres © de commended for standing by convictions. From the very demand as a recompensc for 2 Despite its declarations that t was simply fulfilling its obligations “%n ally of Great Britain, that it Swas taking advantago of the opportu- nity to remove such Huropean as possible from the east and same time give protection , commerce of the allies, it has been that whatever foothold ‘able to gain in new territory would retained, interest fn the eastern sit- ‘which Japan is said to have - upen China relative to the Kiau- s of immi- | is restriction based upon dent S JAPAN'S REPORTED DEMANDS. entrance of Japan the war there Lave Deen plenty givings as (o what the real ob- that country was and what It{ e can do better than when there be- fore Mexico City canuot ha of an attraction his = = 5 Even a generous contributor to the {relief of war conditions never real- izes the same opportunity for bett: ing conditions at home upon the rec of the persanal tax DIl Admiral Beatty doesn’t due eredit to the efficiency fail to of the men its| below decks, = force that is too often overlooked, nevertheless highly tm- portant in peace or in war. Tn support of its contention that two Pritish ships were sunt the North sea battle, Germany points to the fact that the admiralty has never admitted the loss of the Audaciou in- to it oAl g Now the effort is being made to have ‘Windham county increase its contri- bution to the libraries for lawyers. Such everlasting and steadily increas- inz drains on the counties should get the strong opposition they deserve. to make demands upon thel|conduct pends §wr }and what prompted Paul to = speech and our speech tain | w lies aro likely to have|l that part|a great man tenses speake selfish ambftion est leave no trace . s, ox- |in the Un SUrPFISe, ©X | ail exported goods 1de: to the speedy | cast factions | 130 a o 5 of the ! ded by the results of the |l tain in | of | velopment of the local | weathe: v at it what Dt THE MAN WHO TALKS been defined : and whe commendable Conduct gettin or you ot his ote busy wpon man thee!” Ou car our imprint ho pians o get the most money ast toil schemes to make thing: than they are, hence ther inaterialized faise and the betrayet in trade; the weakness of hi . Those who igns of deception those who are t £ slackness. our ~characters to our work, so when otting busy we should not indful of effec often wrought res: 1o hide leave 1o reir work oroug prevent. we ar un into what w is it is being recommended that ted States” be 1d the it is a t do en i we trade to natives of forei the United State and _honesty or - “Made i must it the haracter 1 it ork ad name tandard maker must must be ood chara | taining | bear sus be cornered, alway all, Thi more srated knows ht at ounts har talk [ Ma ired year rd too ma me hink ‘ B mar poke ned met the person hat ought to be vou havesyou are aware wi reward of tak The man and the woman oment well as get deep Since so many preachers have tured write n What do not et our religion eligious h be bes us i expr od road: ter schools, ine trees, pur rel! b s I ur fellowman. with your felio man ight with Go Pick up any of “quotations a vy will find frem 130 to “char- s work; “Th; work He are pre- talented r malkes empty phrases well ex- are hon- upon © can- giving What we are think- made placed upon good w England the cport what make ik deep | d work for every religion: | for | - de-| I Wwoi poi is I on re 1 | we Te e Th 2 tt e § and the | came a paving [ ¥ o to my an, o du (Written Specially for The Bulletin.)| fashioned pot apple pie—her that! T A woman on the outskirts of a New Zngland utomc her w could give us a cup of hot tea! Can't om? That was the end of the wide hall and provident- fally it was shaded by vines. room there for but three small tables; | but she covered them with dainty run- flow |asked for tea did not serve it in a stingy little cup, to be lukewarm before heloss, exchanged for needfuls he Here ia Mrs. just This unnumbered host of a NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, JANUARY -30, 1975 T TALENTS IN°'A NAPKIN i and- | her meighbor | Hard-Up, can Yorkshire y her mother t always seems strange to hear a|DOthers recige: and man, commenting ° on another 8Cross the strect, Mrs. 's success, say depreciating of ee? with “Oh, weil, I could ncver do Al T can do is cook! when, even from a business nt of view, there is scarcely a line!those fine ay in the ich people will pay out so much]den till the frost ruined them: and as for something good to eat! |she such a rhaster-hand at making ' pumpkin pies, too! Nothing Delmonico’s head chel eve Zot up tasted better than does the! fine, old style pot roast, such as Mary ¥ Penniless ccoks—when she wants to but generally she says “Ob, it's too| much troubie!” and feeds her family on cold boiled ham which she buys at the delicatessen stores, or potted | chicken, which she got at that recent | mark-down! way over And s she | t and with an invalld port, took up the sale town old-fashioned rag ¢ residents came in trolley to buy of res. One of the customers said, rk day, “Oh, dear! I wish you a & bave it right here in your living - _And speaking of chicken, the last the tip to the hostess! ftime | was in Now York, we paid scv- ¢re wus an old-fashioned porch atf¢nty-iive cents for what was down ou | the menu card as “minced chicken on | toast”, yet which had a suspicious taster of chopped-up veal. Here arej Jots of long-legged chickens scratching | up flower-beds and borders about the | Down-And-Outs' farmhouse, whick killed, "dressed, cooked, chopped ang { seasoned, would make splendid, realiy- | truly minced chicken, for any | hungry mortal would glad at| least ffty cents! All of which goe or would be, a demand ,for things to eat, if only they weye offered to customers in some practi | i She had Tim, set a_ vase of each, and when garden on caller ted; but brought it on in le Japanese teapot, letting chers serve themselve: rybody likes to do. > coming by cunning the to show tha auto they could buy sundwiches, and wafers, too. they were ‘The modest adjunct to her business 1w nearly clear profit, since the pense of getting -up tho small Lies was light. little %o. _Now it always seems strang, te ride through the country districts during| the Fall, and to see bushels of apples, | prime gquashes, pumpkins, corn dear knows what not oing — while nobody in the houses wh ¢ soems strange, but is a fact, never- | these splendid food-stufrs 1l take that there are many house- | the trouble to save them! which “Mother” and rhej In some countries, every rarely ever have so much as a Sarefully plcked, the they can call their own. | #d in paper and packed them the privile { | place, ess desirable ones tonE AT G marmalade ek would make matter 4 o, one som uade et (ev farmers table je on my corns, don't give me runs the deriding of the s r England ¢ came and rant dried ne old-time way. tell x Toww many a woman lo_extra spending would _strike ss venture apple pies t let one New n he own tool | dried app vhich m\!‘ r mind! 0 raisin a Dit peel war- he'd so Now—what : this: there is Dont you | in city o and lay | not ard 2| tired of | could go we are driving at is rcely a neighborhood, | try, where women arc woms the ci xpensive Slim-Purse, who knows loveliest old- | ! ho how to make the 2 needs iz to standardize life who said en write for it i i L ansthing but live| Again, there are neighbors where, e relizious | Principally on Thursday night, when| most maids the £ the | BT We Give Royal Gold Trading Stamps. Ask Jor All-Day Specials for Prices Quoted Below Bear No Relation to Cost or Value. A Flat Saving of 60 Per Ceni. Come Early. Extra Salesmen and Extra Delivery Small Pig Shoulders, b . Sk Foers b 90 ool 12:¢ ey e ik e SRR e Extra Special Offer-—Fine Heavy Grape Fruit, gl Small Pig 1 Pork Loins, b 82C Lamb Legs, Ib 1250 LEAN POT ROAST 1(), L. BONEL RIB EE)ELSLSS, ... 15¢ Mo Zean oLl IONA BEETS 3 cans SEEDED RAISINS, 3 packages. PURE LaRD, b . 123 FINE CRISP CELERY, bunch. ..:.. 2 Grand- H."5 mother’s Maln sl- Brand k- FLOUR, | = 24Y,.1b bag 895¢c NONE SUCH MINCE MEAT, 3 pkgs 25¢ 25¢ 6 CRANBERRIES A&P Free Delivery TELEPHORE 294 We Give Royal Gold Trading Stamps. ¥ | T nan with two tale has not « me for his proper share of at- r ntio The exhorters have spent | £ rch time on the five-talented man - 1¢ d have urged him to put his superi- | Al aneaich at s to use. And volumes of good objections!” s have been on the s of h st alented mar Sdnes it who went sn ¥ k in the earth. But the P the average botween these remes been left very large two | to| greatly > majority. The | how muc f £ it? ;rid iy simply full of average peo- | It would b et As you meet folks day asy to fa h after day | | i find that most of them are neither | tior ts of intellect on the one hand nor — nces on the other; they are neither | Nevertheless, there would be spend- liy good nor wholly bad, ueither|ina money in such a scheme f 1or abjectly poor, neither com-|woman who isn't too—ves, let e happy nor absolutely miser- to work! Who woi Both mountain i and deep getting up some attra t vs in human naturc as rdinary mea - ] mature are far has ent by the plai em T that to discon- tent istance jen and women | w aric of ambition desire to Sy | rise a bit above e common lev Youth especially. will ever hitch its| to a star. People of spirit | - make some sort of mark| Nobody ever grows too big or But age is apt to find |old to enjoy a picnic supper ¢ mns of fif-] these ar o acter comes | Mr 20 b iny way dis- | the a trace of bitter-| even There are mar fruit was & s. Because the dliners kind—fried ) ey appear in the cast at ind their own con- i feriority. If the i on n -talented man £ to 1o « it, that o we-talented o 1 Yet who has a L ¢ than the|in which farmers’ larders aboune e man 1o houl H — < and head hish? The world < Wouldn't the people gather from t do without him. We owe much to| miles around; and wouldn't they put nius. We are the debt of the | | entists But w statesmetn and an poets and singer. we e plain One . of Yon ispired | 1 | e would be ie Humbur Russian pe: t b | ck who sleep | the mud s and fire the ace lives make or socisty 2 plotted fi huyler and later on himself. In June, 1775, he was clime @o thelr appo pointed one of the four major gen- e eve of the Omnisci: . were named by - Con- srews. Atco wanyinz Washington s ;j“‘ OTHER VIEW POINTS E sheif luce for ok an elévated b ar Physician, ever at the risk of personal danger lurk! in the inno- S S ng tabict, it Misht be that P e e e &5 wouid be Iessened if not feriden Record. sntract system nd, ol {at Wetr itut terminated, v and in making state and city supplies, is the puport of a bill introduced at Hart- ford. ~ Passage of such legislaticn wouid work widespread harm and can arise only from someone ignorant of n the C. ut reison ¥ pearls are now x ng at ormal values Lk Loins, B 8C BONELESS 220 SIRLOIN ROAST, 1b 1000 pounds SALT PORK, b.... 1000 Short, Sirloin, l 4c Round STEAKS, Ib. .. IONA PEAS Sweet, Tender, can. ... { Saturday 105¢ ic 6 for 25¢ . 8¢ 135 Fine Mealy Potatoes, peck 20c¢c Free Delivery TELEPHONE 294 Ask For Them To abolish the pres- keeping tne men raving ready n a definit WAR PRIMER Alsace-Loraine,»“Ame Isace-Lorraine chiefly a ¢ nor, ascribin 0 of this smal > in their title is under orests owned sugar-beets, srown in The grapes ar )t pa of e 5,000 mi roads, nearly ¢ le of road to every square mile of territory. There is no better canal system In Ei- | rope of Alsace-Lorraine, these sighways, i o wid ¢ and down the cou means for communi about 1,400 miles of than 22 miles ever miles of territory. With the railwaye the broad macadam and rough-packed, cilushed stone roads, and with the canal mileage, the armies oberating in Alsace-Lorraine wili have beter i under which to maneuver other arm other ern France. Alsace-Lorraine - the mountai hes the D The mean annual than , winter approa s Fahrenheit, while sre ter temperature for the highlands is e mean win Metz has a mean ature of 45 degrees. Ther high Alsace and Lorra however, when the cold seems to reae he intense white biiterness of north- ern Russia The world's richest phosphate mine on the ieland of Curacao.

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