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The Bulletin has the largest circulation of any paper in East- . . ern Connecticut and from three to four times larger than that of % any in Norwich. It is delivered | to over 3,000 of th 4,058 houses in Norwich, and read by ninety- three per cent. of the people. In Windham it is c...vered to over 900 houses, in Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100 and in § all of thess places it is consi ered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and Bixty-five postofiice districts, and cixtv rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town on all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connectisut. CIRCULATION 1901, average 4412 1505, average ........9..5 920 October PG 9,034 é - WHAT THE ELECTIONS SHOW. 4 Thotlsh there was a variety of is- Sues before the people in the elections | held in eight states Tuesday thers was unity nevertheless for getting idea-as to the feeling of the woters upon matters outside of state Qquestions, and there was & strong re- _publican tendency disclosed. . This was shown in the cases where ‘vacancies for congressmen were filled for except in the rock-ribbed demo- cratic states the republican candidates Were successful. Massachusetts even threw much light upon the subject for mational issues were injected into the ‘state campaign freely, particularly by ‘the former candidate of the progres- sive party for governor, who came out . in support of the republican ticket | mad strongly advocated his election. That it was the first clean sweep of the republican ticket in that state for years is significant, for despite eertain leaders it shows that those who | rly made up the progTessive par- “ are back where they belong and re they can accomplish the .most in looking after the welfare of e country. The republican victory in Philadel- phia, the clean sweep which was made in New Jersey and the strong support Iven the republican ticket in Mary- land and Kentucky even though fis- Wres indicate the election of the op- © posing candidates are all evidences of | the trend of the times. If any doubt [ had existed as to where the progres- ‘gives stood it has been effectively dis- | pelled. The folly of contributing fur- - ther to democratic success and the | policies which that party has ad- vanced has been fully realized. § THE FACTS ARE WANTED. | The seizure of the steamship Hock- ing, recently admitted to American registry and flying the American ‘flag, - while proceeding from one American port to another, presents a new fea | ture in the control of ships on the high seas. It is but natural therefore that an explanation should be asked _of thé British government. From such an understanding of the matter as is possible by the reports that have surrounded the caSe it is to be gathered that Great Britain 'views with suspicion the transfer of this vessel from.one neutral nation to - another and that it does not consider it a bona fide transaction, which means T there are circumstances in con- neetion with it which indicate that it ‘has been put through for the purpose * of giving an advantage to Germany or German interests which have not @as yet been disclosed. The difficulty . which was experienced in obtaining | the American registry may to a large _extent be responsible for the British ction, but it is nevertheless a matter needs to be laid bare. ‘The president of the company which ns the rechristened steamer de- ares that it is not controlled by Ger- capital, that the stockholders are “American and that it was pur- ed from the Danish owner to be ced in the South American trade ‘without any German interest being in- ed. [ This presents & situation which calls & show-down. It is a case where "§ side needs to prove its claims. If g it Britain has exceeded its rights | the vessel should be released at once ind damages should be quickly ad- d while this country cannot help enxious to know if it has been nked in permitting this change IFORCING IMMIGRATION LAWS, * Immigration laws must of necessity ‘such as to exclude those who would be desirable citizens, but they enacted with the idea of having n applied to all alike, and not per- the admission of certain aliens whio are thoroughly qualified and the on of others Who are’equally y ible. This was the situation which confronted a party of Russians ~Who had come to this country recently locate on the Pacific coast, but they detained and denied admission reports from Portland, Ore., they Intended to go were to that there was an over- be no possible chance for them ‘get a living there. us it was conditions in one city the country which were advanced r the purpose of keeping out aliens met all the ‘reanirements of‘the authorities were exercising their judg- ment in a manner which exceeded their right and this is held to be wrong in a decision just handed down by the United States supreme court, which maintains that ecomomic. as- sumptions are not proper grounds for excluding immigrants. It is & decision which is needed and it i well that the situation arose as it did in order to bring it out. “That there is too much labor in one section of the country does not disclose conditions elsewhere and if it did it would be, in the words of the justice rendering the decision, “an amaszing argument for immigration of- ficlals to refuse admission to the TUnited States because the labor mar- kets in the United States were over- burdened,” and especially so when the applicants had complied with the re- quirements of the nation's laws. RESULTS ON SUFFRAGE. Not the least interest in election day questions was manifested in the suf- frage issue before, the people of Massa- chusetts, New York and Pennsylvania. In each a hard campaign -had: been waged by both gides and even though any other resuls than that which the ballots disclosed would have been much of a surprise, the test by no means puts.an end to the movement. ‘When New. Jersey - turned down votes for women after the president had come out 2s an ‘advbcate of it and supported it in his own state, it was generally accepted as the prob- able outcome in the otkers, though it did not diminish the ardor of the ad- vocates of it or cause those who op- posed it to relinquish their efforts. All the eastern states which have voted upon it have shown that they are not ready for the change though the large number who gave expression to their opinfon indicate the tremen- dous amount of effort that was put forward. o That there was not even the satis- faction of a close vote in any Instance will not, however, %nd the issue. It simply furnishes a basis for future action and from the persistency with which the question has been advocated in the past it can be expected that it will be continued with the samé char- acteristiz determination by both sides, with the advocates of it striving to increase the number of those who are favorable and the antis working to gather support for their side. Thus far, however, the antis are the victors, but such results as the suffrage work- ers have obtained will be regarded as sufficlent reason for encouragement and greater devotion to the cause. CHESHIRE REFORMATORY. The whole state has been deeply interested in the movement which re- sulted in the establishment of the state Teformatory at Cheshire. It has ap- preciated what an opportunity existed for the work of reclamation in which it is engaged and from time to time the reports which have come from there indicate that it is rendering a valuable service to young men. This reflects to, the credit not only of the advocates of the idea but of those who are engaged in the ad- ministration of the institution, and one feature which will particularly im- press in this respect is the announce- ment that during the past vear the reformatory has been conducted with- in the appropriation and nearly. $: 000 has been returned to the state. It was not long ago that_attention was attracted to the manner in which the reformatory was being conducted Dby the employment of the inmates for the improvement of the highway lead- ing - to the institution. Instead of keeping them practically idle and in- doors there was undertaken work which was needed and the opportunity for preferable outside employment was offered to the young men. It was accepted in the spirit in which it was suggested and it has resulted to the benefit of all concerned, the state in- cluded. This appears to be the plan upon which the other affairs of the reform- atory are conducted and the state has Teason to appreciate the gratifying re- sults that are being shown under the capable direction of that institution’s officials. Wise guidance can be ex- pected to yield the best fruits, EDITORIAL NOTES. It was a stalwart fisht even though suffrage for women was defeated in each instance. The man on the corner says: Peo- ple seem to tire of good habits much socner than of bad ones The election results again go to show how little dependence can be place upon the straw vote. Possibly the claim will be mdde that the horse tbat thréw King George was spurred on by the Germans. ‘With coal selling in Italy at $30 a ton there is good reason for some people dreading a cold winter. The election returns give indication that some sections of the country are again headed in the right direction. This is the season of the year when the burning of brush and leaves had better be reserved for a windless day. Texas boasts of an 84 old mes- senger boy, but the chances are that he doesn’t linger on the way playing mumbletypeg. Now that the date for the president’s wedding has been approximately fixed & sigh’of relief can be heard through- out the country. From past actions it is never advis- able to picture the Balkans off the fence until they have actually landed one side or the other. “The cleim may possibly bs .made thot the stiff breezes of the past few days bave resulted from the whirl- Wind finish of the political campaigns. It may be as claimed that the Aus- tro-German forces are short of men in the Balkans, but that does not seem to prevent them from going steadily ahead. — When told not to eross the border without instructions, there is reason to bellgve that the govornment imows what Funston would do if he used his own judgment. ———de The sheriff of a Maryland county is going to enforce the law against gambling with a vengeance when hé glves notice that no prizes must be offered at ¢ard parties. When Russia declares it is willing to pay as high as nine per cent. for a credit’, Joan, there may be a reason for 's announcement that he s not.seeking financtal assistance. “I bought the most wonderful thing today,” announced the stout woman who vas industriously crocheting pink borders around washcloths. “Its-a regular carpenter's tgol chest all com- bined in one little weapon that -un- screws in. all directions and lets the different tools sort of pop out You can do anything with it, tuning a planc to sharpening a lead pencil, and I now expect to save enough on fepais bills to buy a set of fura! John 8o clever aroundthe house, gnyhow, S it i - “You poor thing!” feelingly breathed the thin woman who was tatting. hate tc wipe the cheery _expression from off your cotiitenance, but I feel it is my duty to do so before it is too late! Take that marvelous little won- der worker out in the back alley and let a grocery wagon run over it or dig up a paving stone and bury it se- curelyl Then try to act as though nothing had happened and maybe no one will taunt you with your criminal foolishress!” “Mercy goodness!” gasped the stout womar. -What— T bought, one of those things once,” went. on the thin woman in the tone that oné would use in confessing that he had on occasion robbed a bank and wrecked the noon train laden with an orphans’ picnic excursion. “I thought 1 was doing something smart and when Henry came home I ran to him like & gleeful child. I explained that now our troubles were over and the song of the turtle would be hearg in the land, so to speak. “Henry was interested. He said, by Jove; that certainly was a clever lit- tle instrument and it was bright of me to get it. It ‘was just what he had needed to fix those bathroom fau- cets that were driving him crazy, leak- ing as they did. No need of a_plumber to do ten minutes'’ work and charge for an hour and a balf time! “Henry took the tool and disappear- ed and presently he yelled for help. When I got there the water was just beginning to run over the top of the tub with Henry frantically trying to stop the open pipes with toothbrushes and soap. He had the faucets all un- screwed. 1 dashed in and tried ty- ing wash @oths around the holes in the pipe, but they weren't much good. We had to plaster the whole ceiling in the rcom below, because so much water leaked through the bathroom and the plumber was there three hours putting back the parts of the tub Hen- ry had taken off. “After it was all over and the bills paid Henry sprang to his feet ome evening as though a bee had stung him. “There, he cried, ‘I know what has been bothering my subconscious brain all along about that danged bath. Toom affair! “The trouble was that I didn’t shut off the water at the base- ment cutoff! Of course, it was a great satisfaction to know what really had been the trouble. Every time I meet that plumber 1 want to stop him and forcibly take that money away from him! “Then there was the time I tried to use it to tack down some matting with the little tool. The place where I hit my thumb turned dark purple and gave me blood poisoning and the doctor’s bill was in proportion to the pain I suffered. Even that didn’t cure us. Henry used it to fix the back gate and he left a nail sticking out some way, and the Dilliger's horrid _little boy hunted around till he found it and then deliberately walked into it an@l came so near putting his eye out that his mother still gnashes her teeth at sight of me! The Dilliger's little boy said ho was only playing ball and tumbled against the nall, but I_am positive he did it on purpose. What with the lawyers calling on us at in- convenient times and the excitement in the neighborhood, to say nothing of the Dill we paid for Tommy’s eve, we ought to have known better. “However, when I inadvertently said that upper E was out of tune on the piano Henry hopped to his feet Will Head the List. Mr. Editor: I read with sorrow the loss Scmuel Clark met with last night by the burning of his barn and Hve- stock; also of his loss about a year ago of 30 cows with the foot and mouth disease (of course, he got par- tial pay for that) but not,their full value, and his abandoning his milk route, as he could not fill his orders. Now he is a stranger to me, but if some one will start a subscription 1 will head the list. JAVES L. SMITH, ~ 129 Broad Street. Norwich, Conn., Nov. 4, 1925. i 3 Henry in his with the tool. . e o :: back pores and ‘Hudled (bat_fendish collection of tools with alt my and muin—and broke the cellar win- o130 %ma S aeant 5 “Mercy!” e ‘woman, * guess I'd better stick to & plain ham- mer and screwdriver and use a hair- pin for other things!” “You will it you're wise,” agreed her friend—Chicago News. | Stories of the War [“‘ On the map of Europe the portion of Belglum that remains to the Allies is not large, but now it is such a busy part of the world that one who whirls through it for several days in a military motor car, as an Associated Press correspondent’ is now doing, is likely to think that it is a very I part of Europe, the _villages are so tull of French, Belgian and British soldiers, there are 80 many _camps, hospitals and bases of one sort and another—here an aviation campthere an ambulance station and so on—that to visit the country is to realize the many sided activities of warfare as one perhaps could not realize them in any other way. For one man in the trenches there seem to be fifty carry- ing supplies and ammunition, buil ing roads, repairing bridges, stringing telephone wires . and _constructing barbed wire entanglements. This trip comprised almost two hun- dred miles of travel in what may be roughly described as a triangle with euport, Dunkirk and Ypres at the three corners. “I don't suppose we can go Ypres?” asked the correspondent. “You would be a fool to try and you would be a dead man if you got there,” was the chauffeur's reply. Between Dunkirk and Ypres one can find all grades of demolition. What happened to Dunkirk by the action of a Krupp gun over twen:) miles away almost evérybody in_the world knows now. But what hap- pened to that gun it would be of greater interest to know, and neither the French nor the Germans are say- ing anything about it. But the peo- ple of Dunkirk know that it has not been in action In two months. As one travels inland from Dunkirk towards the southeast through Ber- gues he can readily _appreciate why France, Holland and England are full of refugees wearing their hearts out with thoughts of their demolished homes, for there are to be seen little villages with not a buflding inhabited, hardly one unmarked by shell fire. Handsome sixtcenth century facades, modest brick structures, artistic little churches have all gone into xr‘ melting pot. The streets are as astated as the sections of S8an Fran. cisco or Baltimore after their con i grations. The French are holding the dunes along the coast, then come the Bel- gians, then more French, then _the English, then still more French, then the English again, and finally the long line of French reaching to Switzerland. It is not often pointed outh that the French are dwished in between their Allfes in this fashion. Stopping before a 106mm. gun, cleverly concealed in a grove, a gun which had been silent but a few mo- ments and was “doing its bit” in an artilery action spreading over one hundred miles, a correspondent asked the licutenant in charge when he in- tended to fire again. “Whenever they telephone us,” was the reply. “We have fired only twice this morning.” When the line of act- ion is as long as the route from New York to Philadelphia, each gun has an easy time of it, and there is plenty of into Thirteenth Year Attention, Farmers! DOLLARS BONUS They must be natives—hatched and For Fattest and Big:- gest Turkey Raised $10.00 Next Best $5.00 Third $5.00 The Bulletin proposes to capture the three fattest and largest Turkeys to be offered for the iving market In Windham and New London Counties. grown in these two countiea The Bulletin will buy the prize birds at the regular market price in addition to the prizo te be awarded. The turkeys offered for prize must have feathers off, entralls drawn and wings cut off at first joint. The first prize Heads must not be cut off. $10.00 to the largest and fattest Young turk: second prize of $5.00 to the second largest and fattest young turkey; third prize of $5.00 to the largest and fatest turkey raised in New London or Windhar: Countles. The contest is open to any Ijan, woman, boy or sirl residing in these counties. The tarkeys must be submitted for examination and welghing the. Tuesday before Thanksgiving at 12 o’clock meen. For the largest and fattest young turkey $1000 will be awardad in addition to the market price. Rock Nook Home. This turkey wiil be given to the To the raiser of the second young turkey in size a prize of $5.00 in eddition to the market price will be given. This turkey will fur> nish the Thenksgiving dinner for the Sheltering Arms. To the raiser of the largest and fattest turkey over a year old a price of $6.00 in addition to the market price. This. will go to the County Home for Children for a Thanksgiving dinner. _ The jud at Somers Bros’ market. will be &sinterested persons who will welgh the turkeys All turkeys that are eligible for competition will be purchased at the market price, so any turkey raiser who enters a bird in the con- contest is sure of selling the bird whether a prize i won or not. ,IG”"'“: ffl{kl wWh Kot ot seden, A caclous that bring back "aatl streaked or ed hair. i dandruff, and leaves pusy and 1 charaot ing ‘them of Usatenant Ba besa MpC to ] as = result of poison gas. should have left the hospital after three days” said the Meutenaft, “but my orderly would not let me.” “Have any shells burst around here ‘This big gun is pretty well concealed and if the éne- easily from “Not very near. my’s aviators see it we can move it.” You can’t see any Germans here, can you?” “1 have at the front eleven months,” said the lieutenant. “I have seen many dead Germans and many German prisoners, but I have never seen a German In_action, except the man in the Taube.” o A half dozen privates gathered round and the conmversation became general, being interrupted occasional- Iy by visits to the observatories. in the trees, where the correspondent was shown the German lnes and could see the shrapnel bursting over both sides. It all seemed too remote. The correspondent observed: “It does not_seem very close to us. “Perhaps not just this minuté, but in the road there not over fifty feet away they blew up one of our cais- 88 a few days ago and you oan & st and pick up some souvenirs if you wish to.” These obscrvator:es would be fas- cinating additions to Adirondack camps, Jbeing _successive flights of stairs %ith strong, landings, winding round the highest trees, painted the color of trees and covered overheal with foliage. There is no military se- cret about this, for it is wsll known that both sides have the same kind of lookouts. “You men all seem very happy,” sald the correspondent. “We certainly are. We know what we are fighting for; we are well treat- ed and we know that we shall win. It is men that will win this war pour la Patrie.” When a French soldlers says “pour la Patrie” he says it with a thoughtful earnestness that gives one a firm taith in democracy. The firing was evidently within short motoring distance to the south- east, and the correspondent got up ta leave. “Sorry we could not entertain 'yon with our 105mm." said the leutemant, “but we never know when we shall get the telephone call.” £ In an artilery action of such mag- nitude wait for orders like policemen or firemen, by telephone, and lke po- licemen and firemen they are giad to sce callers in the sintervals of thelr ac ) ik Fouht at Dardanelies, Wilfrid Doyle, the 19-year-old son of M:. ana Mrs, Edward Doyle, of Yonkers, N. Y., is back at his home, after seven months of adventure of the Kind that most boys dream about but never experience. He has fought the Purk in_trenches knee deep in water at the Dardanelles, he has been cap- tured by the Germans in Belgium and he had stood watch many nights on the deck of the superdreadnought Queen Elizabeth while she patrolled the North Sea enforcing the blockade against Germany. The spring fever wearied young Doyle of the simple pleasures of life in Yonkers and he ran away . from home. He made his way to -Boston, where he obtained a place as horse hostier on one of the transports en- gaged in carrying horses to the war zome. In Liverpool he left his ship and enlisted in the British navy. He had little trouble in getting into the service, although an alien. ~ He told the recruiting officer that he ‘was an Irish boy, ang so he is, as his name proves His enlistment was for the duration of the war, but after six months of effort the State Department of the United States plucked him from the service of King George at the be- hest of his parents. A postal card he wrote to his mother directly after Ianding in Liverpool supplied the clue that led to his discovery. Gallipol, Doyle says, is now a sham- bles and & ruin in the area over which the Turks have been siowly driven back by the Allles. Not so much as & drop of clean water may be obtained ere. been polluted by bodies and biood. All the water used by the Allies is filterea on the battleships. The trees in the woods that before the war dotted a fertile farming country have been re- duced to stumps. Dovle arrived at the Dardanelles in May, soon after the attack om the Turks had begun. During one period of heavy pressure he served for - 48 hours on land in 'the third line oOf trencles, The men of the allied forces suffered fearfully, he says, at that time from the rains that flooded the trénch. es and the intense heat that made life most unbearable. The i not reach the third line, luckily. they donesss they. would ha: used t; rifles and bayonets. £3 ‘While on this expedition Doyle saw a Turkish girl eniper captured. A T were " standing. nest '"’"’nflm‘" fesic luty were near a One of them playfully thrust _bay- ‘onet into the hay. gu ez'?g- : t ol v Sl The streams and wells h.lvb] NIGHT The The The Rolli The_Strongest Cast the oid o 1 Play Kentucky 6—Kentucky Thoroughbred Horses—6 THE FAMOUS PICKANINNY BRASS BAND SEATS NOW SELLING Nicolson was later. He Elizabeth America, he met Nicolson by chance. They spent much-time in each other company for days.- Nicolson is now at his home, in Edinburgh, disc from the army, permanently disabled. His right leg was badly multilated by shraprel. . In July the Queen Elizabeth, ‘with others of the newer English battle- ships, was withdrawn from Turkish waters and placed on patrol duty in the North Sea. While his ship was being overhauled Doyle served for a time on the battleship Drake. During this period with 50 others he was cap- tured on the Belgian coast. The small landing party was surrounded by a large number of Germans. They were captured and marched a mile inland | to a_barbed-wire stockade. That night 20 of them. including Doyle, escaped. Their guard was insufficient’ and they surprised_and bound the only sentry barring their path to freedom. They reached the coast at 10 o'clock that night. The searchlights of the Drake were active and they had little difi- culty dn attracting her/attention. TUnder present conditions on the blockading fleet in the North Sea the men serve four hours on duty and then have eight hours off. The food is good, he says, and the conduct of superior officers considerate. The disciphne is of the iron kind, however, and the slightest infraction of the rules brings a disproportionate penal- ty. At times the Queen Elizabeth was part of a great fleet; at other times she was quite alone at sea. OTHER VIEW POINTS It the people of New Haven, Hart- ford and other cities could see how successful our sewer beds are they would not long hold to the anclent and unsanitary method of dumping sewage into a river—Meriden Journal. Derby is looking forward with real interest to the report of the revalu- ation committee which will be due in a short time. It may not increase the grand list as much as was expected but it will help considerably with the next tax levy. And by the committee are made on the reasonable basis of the equality of all property before the tax gatherer then objections will be few and far be- tween.—Ansonia Sentinel. In many cases our port officials may be men of limited experience un observation, but the higher represént- atives of the government know or ought to know that the second cabin of a great Atlantic liner may be well supplied with “ladies” and “gentle- men” in the usual American serse of those terms. A decision to make no difference between these “genteel” persons and the “immigrants” of the steerage would be an inexcusable er- ror.—Torrington Register. Hartford seems to mourn sincerely the passing of Willlam Waldo Hyde, and it is apparent that his own city The War a Year Ago Today Nov. 4, 1914. G s lost along the Yser but o v o 1 m’th of Verdun ng and Lyck and lodged rear guards from Kola and Przedbo Austrians front f oz Jap: captured guns and 800 prisoners at Tsingtau. g Germans defeated British in Ger- man East Africa. [Russia began invasien of Arme- niay Gorman cruiser York sunk by mine in Jade bay. : Austrian cruiser Kaiserin Eliza- beth sunk by Germans to prevent ure. merican warship sent to rut to protect Christians. it the changes | | Vaudeville THE BANJO MAE NASH I In Comedy Sang ! Musical TRI Entertainers ‘LEONDER Goredy Sirgins va-Tatking 18th Chapter of- THE BROKEN COIN and Other Pictures Friday Saturday Clyde Fitch’s Moth and the Flame Paramount Feature Colonial Theatreo OIL AND WATER, 2 Reels, Blanch Sweet—H. Walthall “A MAN AFRAID” Three Reels Essanay with Richard Travers “THE PAY TRAIN,” Hazards ofHslen || “Taking of Mustang Pete” Saturday—Clara Kimbail Young in “Hearts in Exile,"—~World Film. knew him and loved him as many in- dividuals In other cities of the state knew him and loved him. The man who has so lived that his own house- hald, his near and far neighbors and his_acquaintances everywhere grieve at his passing, has lived well and s0 as to obtain the of the good and faithful servant in the life be- yond.—Waterbury Republican. M. Hanolaux, former minister of France, , reflectively: “And we we actually loaned to Turkey 4 (ew days before hostilities opened $100,000- 000." This 1s now considered a very shrewd move on the part of the crafty Turk and one that gives him consid- erable comfort, but what sort of a move was ‘it on the part of irance? Was it not a_good deal like most of the moves, of one sort and another, made by the allles—a little too lute: Can France afford to throw away $100,000,000 at this stage of the war game, or did she get security for her Toan in some of the sultan's crown jewels?—Bridgeport Standard. Thus far the returns from the tax on billboards under the new law make the statute, or rather-its enforcement, a farce. This is largely due to the sulky attitude of ‘many billboard own- ers. They constitute .themselves a court. and because they. disiike the law decide that it is unconstitutional. and therefore not deserying of atten- tion. That attitude is common engush, but it falls far short of ideal citizen- ship. Furthermore, it is risky busi- ness sssuming. the functions of inter- preting the laws, A few convictions for failure to comply with - the- re- quirements would undoubtedly have a salutary and stimulating effect. It is belteved by those familiar with the situation that the income to the stte from this source of taxation should be at least $50,000. In two months less than $200 has been. collected. Obyi- ously it is up to the officials to give & demonstration.. of _enforcement ard collection. That should rot e aiffi- cult, for. billboards are not so_easil bidden. a5 some . taxable properties.— Rristol Pres In the center of Kildane, an island in the German ocean, is a curlous lake. The surface of its waters is quite fresh and supports fresh water creatures, but deep down it Is as salty as the greatest depths of the sea and salt water fish live in it. Catarrh. an Trouble Suf Took Peruna d Stomach fered Much Re- sults Wonderful ; Mrs. John Underwood, No. 82 Cy- press Ave., Columbus, Ohlo, writes: “Haying had catarrh and stomach trouble and having suffered very much, I, after being doctored a long while, as a last resort, took Peruna. The result was wonderful. | would highly recommend it as a remedy. I still use Peruna and would not be without it. I always have it in the house.” Our booklet, telling you how to keep well, free to all. The Peruma Co., Columbus, Ohio. Those who object to liquid medi- cines can now precure Peruna Tab- fots. come off in come places. TRt e could met 1t moppos. we co et mo] U 1 thought sure our floars were ruined, but it never hurt them a le. T would not bave be- Ternich soud that without we mtisfactory or your 2 Prigted jpstructions for using Val- spr tofrestly aif n oct uE beawte ful Valsper Poster Stamps can be obtained: from us free of chargo. money back. 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