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nnd Goudied 119 YEARS OLD tlon prive 136 3 wesk) 50o & 06 & Fasx. teted at Postafice at Norwich, | conie b sacond-slass matter. Ferwtsnd Ouins Bulistin Business 485, ‘Bultetin ial Reoms S5-8, B aliatin Jab Ofhcs 852 Wilitmaatte Ofee, Moom % Morsay ildfug. Telophone 316. The Circulation of The Builetin The, Bulletin has the fargest sirculation 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 ths 4,053 houses in Norwich, and resd by winety- thres per cent. of the people. 1n Windham J¢ is ¢. vered to over 900 * houses, in ~Putnam and Danjelson to over 1,100 and in all of those places it is consid- ered the local daily. s‘m. Connecticut has forty- nine “owns, one hundred and sixty-five postoffice districts, and cixt- rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town on all of the R F. D. routes in Eastern Gonnecticut. CIRCULATION 1901, average ............ 4412 --5,920 1905, average November 6.... ARBITRATION AND DELAY. The latest American note to Great Britain meets with the approval of the country because it stands up for the rights of the United States as a neutral nation. It causes some sur- prise in Great Britain, but that is only what might be expected, whichever nation received it, while Germany is said to approve, although it considers the action too long delayed. The for- eign views therefore are only the nat- ural ones in view of the disadvantage or advantage which is expected to re- sult_therefrom. After all has been said and done, however, there is little to indicate that the note will result in any immediate relief. The note refrains from giving any indications as towhat this coun- try would do in insisting upon the observance of its rights. It carries no threat but it reiterates the . position which has been set fortk on previous obcasions and it sets forth the de- mands in no uncertain terms backed up by international law and procedure in_other wars. What action Great Britain, backed ‘@s it will be by the other allies, will take remains to be seen. That there will be a delay is certain and it is not fmprobable that it will mean the ex- change of notes for some little time to come with the probable result that the entire matter will be referred to ar- bitration in accordance with the treaty in existence between the countries. This gives promise of no immediate relief, but rather a long delayed de- cision, barring the possibility of some minor concessions. The protest, how- ever, has been Tled and it is easier to become reconciled to delay in this instance inasmuch as the rights do not involve the iives of neutral sub- jects and non-combatants. CARELESSNESS WITH FIREARMS. This Is the season of the year when carelessness with firearms is brought “to light in no uncertain manner by the large number of people who are killed by hunters in mistake for big game, and despite the experfences of the past there appears to be no diminution in such a waste of human life. Not all- the instances of reckless handling of hunting pleces and small arms are confined to’the hunter in the fleld, however, for there are altogether too many instandes where it' prevails in the home. Allowing: children to play with guns which were not thought to be loaded, the playful pointing of a loaded revolver at another and’ snap- ping the trigger only to be prostrated by the killing of the ‘person aimed at, or the leaving of loaded weapons where children can get them, which of course they are anxious to do without understanding the fatal consequences which are in store are all old stories gud yot they are repeated with all :oir appalling details as regularly as the seasons. roll around. It wos ovly A few days ago that a Litehficld father left his shotgun on the kitcher table. While one ciitld £ louked into tze two barrels another fondled the trigzer and death stalked in as it by invitation. Even more in- excusable was the act of o New Jersey father who pointing o revolver at his four year old puiled the halr trigger ~ thoughtlessly ana the child was shot shzough tho forehead. may be impossible to look upon ruch acts as intentional, but there is certainly a gross carelessness which needs to bo abated and as in mission- ary work the place to start is right At home. In mo household where a _fivearm 1s kept can there be too much care. A B1GQ OPPORTUNITY. When the report by the bureau of forelgn and domestic commerce shows _that the import business which this _ country has done with South America during month of September, amounting to over $80,000,000, was al- ‘most twice that which was done in the ame month of 1914 there 18 reason believe that the efforts which have % STEAMSHIP FIRES. . Every fire which breaks out on a steamship 1n these times throws sus- picion at once upon sympathizers with the central singce’ it is only vessels_of tho all the precautions which are taken and the regulations which are observed, that fire can occuron steamships with- out being deliberately or criminally sot, but the circumstanced under which this country for Europe since the opening of the war, to say nothing of the many cases where it has been thwarted by the timely discovery: of fire bombs, makes it certain that there is a well organized effort underway for the destruction of steamship property and the demoralization of trade in whiclgthis country has a right to en- &2ge Wwith any of the countries, When fires break out in several places at once as they have in the sugar ships and more recently on the Rochambeau, where it was discovered in the reserve coal bunkers, good evi- dence is furnished that they follow well studled efforts. Many of the steamship lines have established strong guards on the wharves to overcome the placing of fire bombs, but it is more than likely that the plotters have gotten in their fine work before the cargoes are placed aboard ship. It is likely that they have been doimg their contemptible work while the cargo is on its way to the ship by secret- ing the explosives at times when their acts would not arouse suspigion, and in a manner which would Ininimize detection. The frequent fires, however, call for the greatest care not only aboard ship and on the docks, but at all stages of the shipment from the time goods are packed or sacked until they are stowed away in the holds of the vessels. Laxity in this regard is what contributes so much to the suc- cess of the schemers. .BUMPER CROPS. £ A tremendous contribution to pros- perous conditions is made by the crops of the country and there is thus gen- uine cause for elation over the an- nouncement of bumper crops this year, the value of.which is placed at five and a half billion. Last year was a record breaker in many ways, but ‘with full recognition of the demands that were going to be made upon this country in supplying outside wants, preparations were made for meeting them with the result that the agricul- tural production is this year given a money valyation a half billon greater than the rating of last year. This is a most satisfactory showing. It means much to the farmers of the west and south, but it also means much to every line of industry throughout the country for Wwith in- creased crops there will be increased credit and that means that there is going to be a corresponding increase in expenditures. Mor ges will be pald off and the improyements which have long been needed are going to be made while there will be larger sums to put into the regular channels of business. This is reflected by the report of salesmen who are showing orders which have exceeded anything for a long time to come, especially when one announces the sale of 100 autos of which just half went to farmers, for When they are spending their money in such improved means of transporta- tion they are certain to utilize it in others for the general good of do- mestic industry. With big crops and the country flooded with war business there are promises,’ temporarily however, for an unprecedented prosperity which to a large extent has been thrust upon us despite detrimental legisiative action. EDITORIAL NOTES. November is certainly doing its ut- most to brighten up the melancholy weason, who are complaining because it is necessary to recall the iceman. By suppressing one of its prominent newspapers, Berlin, like London, is having its troubles with the unruly Dpress. From the price to which eggs are soariug it begins to look as if the hens had again caught strike tever. The man on the corner says: Aver- ze men like o cuddie- up to great- ness, where lhey get the warmth of reflected glory. From the way in which Villa refuses to recognize him, it might be sup- posed :hat he had never scen Car- ranza’s picture. : In his need for food and money Villa finds himself thrust among a great disorganized army which is by no means confined to Mexico. Cleveland's determination to have & munieipal chicken farm furnishes just as gopd a chance to demonstrate a faflure as something more important. The report comes of the birth of the $1st child to the president of China, but it doesn’t begin to get the pub- lcity that the of the young- ster by the Shepards did. That commission which found a thousand useless offices in the state of New York ought to be kept on the job. It is one instance where a com- mission amounted to something. Another wave of investigation of conditions and. agalnst fire in factories and schoolhouses {s following the recent horrors at Brook- iyn and Peabody. Too bad it could not have been done in time to -have saved the innocent Hves. she had finished her recital of a friend’s matrimonial troubles, “I know friends, and. after hates to lie!" Byron long st the thought of | forward cousin's co it has broken out in 18 vessels leaving | hax Nevertheless there are some people | | ! “I thought that you had mops. fidence in me,” he complained. you thik 1 ever try to that you're as open as the me, Jack” She rumpled ek hair, for she was perched on the arm of his chair, and he snatched her hand and gave it a forgiving kiss. “But u would ive another man's wife if dear, I'm equally sure tbat try to you thought- it would help him. “I'm Dlessed if I can see Why you sych an opinion of me.” “It jen't my opinion of you particu larly, it's my knowledge of mankind. “Well, -youre way off! Men are loyal friends, Tll admit, but they're not so carried away that they forget truth and justice. Most certainly mot, my dear.” “Perhaps not,” assented Mrs. Byron with an unconvinced smile, and _the discussion came to an end, for they each took up a book. The next night at dinner Byron caught a glow of excitement in his wife’s pink cheeks and sparkling eyes. He inquired what she had “up her sieeve.” “You lopk like a young person plot- ting mischief,” he said. “On the contrary I'm most inno- cent” she replied. “I'm as easy to read as a primer, am I not? But, Jack Byron, you're the gay deceiver in this house! I.must ask you, eir, to tell where you were last evening: “Where I was last evening? What's the joke? Don't you know as well as T do'that I passed the evening in front of the living room fire in the sleepy hollow chair, which you insisted upon sharing with me, though it wasn't built for two?" “Well, oddly enough” said Mrs. Byron, “that was my recollection, too! I thought I remembered quite clearly that you were home last evening. It seemed to me, as I thought it over, that you didn’t even step out on the porch to examine the weather as you often do.” “Of course I didn’t. With the rain coming down in sheets I knew all I wishied to know about the weather. What made you ask such g senseless question?” “Because this morning I tried a lit- tle experiment. I telephoned Tom Lawrence and immediately began to think that I must have dreamed last evening. I asked him whether he, by any chance, knew where you were last night, and he replied without hesita~ tion that you were playing billlards with him at the club.” “He did, the old—" “Then I called up Dr. Clifford, and he told me that he had hauled you off to a scientific lecture and he beg- ged my pardon for taking you away from your own fireside on such a rough night. He was really quite dear about it, Jack.” “I daresay, grumbled Byron. “By that time I was growing so confused as to your whereabouts last night that I phoned your Cousin Jack Kaye, and he assured me that you had been with him all the evening at his office talking over the plans he ras made for his new country house, He said it was a shame to have kept you out so late, but that Nell was out of town, and he hated to go home him- self. I think we should have him here to dinner while Nell's away.” “T'll be hanged if I will,” muttered Byron. “When I asked Mr. Bentley he ask- ed me right away whether 1 wasn't aware how tremendously busy vou all are at the office just now. He said he stayed down night after night to work in quiet and that I musn't mind if the jumior partner does sometimes, too. I'm glad to hear that your bus- iness is so rushing, Jack.” “Gammon!” was Byron's only re- sponse. “George Morse- informed me that you played bridge until the rain ceased.” ner and News. When ilton: Saloniki, landing force the town. gained general currency that the ex- pedition was huge fleet of transports outside thy harbor. sion among the populace as ethics of a landing and crossing of neutral Greece, and one hears sugges- tions here and there that it was - what the Germans had done to gium,’ but nowhere was there any at- titude of hostility to the allied plans. Indeed, when opinion was expressed at all,'it was in terms of cordial wel- come. “On October 5 the transports began to arrive in the harbor proper. They were crammed with French which poured over the grangplanks onto the ‘Serbian quay’. ki of the addied forces. the whole operati: tered formal complaint, but was shut- o1 ibly, o buying them a din- thea er *tickets.”—Chicago Absolutely Pure - | Stories of thegWar Allied Troops Saloniki. There was an International flavor to the crowd which watched the landing of the first allied troops Salonikl, a large number of English and American Red Cross workers having come down from Belgrade and Nish to awalt the course of events at the Greek part. Several of _these eyewitnesses reached England week. The Rev. A. H. Sewell, chap- iain of the Red Cress detachments in Serbia, spoke in enthusiastic terms of the. completeness, quiet and with which the allied expedition dis- embarked and of the cordiality with which it was recaived by the populace. “A British vanguard reached Sal- oniki on September 30th,” “consisting of Brigadier General Ham- hom everybody —mistook for Sir Ian Hamilton—and his staf, with a following of twenty strapping Brit- ish_Tommies in brand new haki. “Both officers and meén made them- selves as inconspicuous as possible in their purpose being merely tc inspect the camps prepared for the ‘some two mjles outside Four days ler report: already “waiting There was academic discus. of news side by side—Airst, that the Greek government had lodged a_ ‘pro- test” against the land that the Governor of That Landed at at this speed unmistakable he said, tenting, seemingly in great quantity and spic and span shape—was on hand, and the troops simply marched out to|j their encampment and made them- selves at home. plateau-lke area quite close to the|eves of many troubled millions have been turned in the keen hope that the | — bright mountain city may soon attain) tons, Trench and Greeks set in with out . hi - o, more Trmedtate Tatharns betwenn | the enviable fame of sending forth the the Greeks and the French, for many |call to cease hostilities in the world's ;fu e;htry Greek soldiers talk French |greatest war, is described in a state- to the 1- physical must. be making & fortune, ous edibles on sticks, almonds, pis- = tachios, all are bought up by the vie- | Of Lucerne, situated in an amphithea itors as fast as offered The news- oys are able to sell ail the papers they can obtain, whether printed in | Leoutitul and most picturesque towns Greek, French or English, at their own price. “The hotels seethe -with the waiters are Tast becoming into: erent from overwork, and Saloniki |- i dt.’e!gmh’\fi to dread a failure of tives of all the peoples of Europe and loodstuffs. whom are quite straishforward about | 1§ throush the place, to and their business, are everywhere.” troops, The Salon- newspapers published two pleces ; and, second, niki harbor had given orders to clear it, in order that no otif®F trafic might interfere with the comfortable disembarkation typified | Greece had_en- wing back toward Mazurian lake: and occu The War a Year Ago Today Nov. 10, 1914, advanced between Ypres rmentieres and between Reims and Berry-au-Bac. Russians _drove German right d Miechow. defeated Serbians All allies issued formal declara- tion of war on Turkey. German cruiser Emden d stroyed by Australian cruiser Sydney at Cocos island. Russian fleet sank four Turkish H. Lody shot as spy in Tower of London, Thirteenth Year Attention, Farmers! DOLLARS BONUS 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 ’ru':;l Turke k:um be oftered for the Than! lving market in Windham and New London Counties. ‘Chey must be natives—hstched and grown in these fwo counties The Bulletin Will buy the prige birds at the regular market price 1n sddition to the prizo to be awarded. The turkeys oftered for prize must have featlierd off, entrails drawn and wings cut off at first joint. Heads must not be eut oOff. The @rst prize o $10.00 to the largest and fattest young turkey; socond prize of $5.00 to the second largest and fattest young turkey; taird prize of $6.00 to the largest and fatest turkey ralsed in Now London or Windhara Countles. The contest is open to any b these counties. The Curkeya mmust be submittes for. etamimation and weighing the Tuesday hefore Thanksgiving at 12 o'clock neon. For the largest anJd fattest young turke a in addition to the market price. This tmzay'% :.mn":..'?fi Rotk Nook Home. To the raiser of the second young turkey iA size a in addition to the market price will be given. This tur) nish the Thanksgiving dinner for the Sheltering Arms. of $5.00 ‘will turs To the raiser of the largest and t price of $5.00 in additon to the wmwm"m’rmm;ax’:razun: County Home for Children for a Thanksgiving dinner. The judges will be disinterested persons who will weigh the turkeys at Somers Eros’ market. All turkoys that are cligible for campetition will be purchased st tho market price, 80 any turkey raiser who enters a bird. in the con- contest is sure of selling the bird whether a prize is won or not. OTHER VIEW POINTS Some of the disappointed democrats | the see a black bogey of the “hyphen vote” accounting for much of the Wilson tide. venfent excuse, but it does not seem real to Register. opinion that ercise than goif. much like real work, while _golf is|Part popular because it turns a long, tire- | standing, while the town-hall is a sur- ting her eyes to the actual operation. | walk into a syncopated recreation.— It i‘marpre’;ad popular fnu:x. ‘which | Providence Bulletin. is vigorously sympathetic with the Mention of the intention to teach “When the news of Venizelos' res-|German in the higher grades of the ignation and the causes of it reached |grammar schools was sure to raise the Saloniki on the gfternoon of October |superficial question, “what's the use”" the public: was stunned. not understand. pletely at variance with the spectacle | istine with his “practical unfolding itself before eves. It was like a thuhder-bolt. “Meantime the Anglo-French land- |the grammar schools. If continged. _The crowded® with troops, once disembarked, straight away from the through it. portunity for pro or con. at any stage anything approaching a |same. hostile reception. The Y tion took place beneath a broiling sun | with their plans. such as New York experiences in mid- | support of the July, but the heat was not interfere with the workmani clsion of the operation. comers brought with them every soli- tary thing an army needs 1o live on and ‘fight with. They needed to ask their Greek hosts for nothing except water.-Artillery, stores, horses, mules, It could [Whether it be algebra, Latin, science It seemed so com-|or what not, there is always the phil- objection. Saloniki's own | Meanwhile, there is abundant justifi- only one streets were |modern language is to be learned, by spectators, but the|all means let it be German. It is a marched | noble language, and knowledge of it town, not |opens to the students one of the rich- Thus there was little op- | est literatures in the world. Of course demonstration either | the objectors cannot be expected to There certainly was not | see this point, but it exists just the So the managers of our edu- disembarka- | cational system may as well go ahead wed' to | Haven. Register. pre- The new- THE WAR PRIMER By Natlonal Geographic Socicty cation of the teaching of German In! They will have the | understanding.—New | SPECIAL PRICES Seat Sale Thursday at 10 A. M. in the Order of Receipt. Matinee —25c, 80c_and . 75c"— Boxes Night— 25c, ' 50c, 75c, $1.00 —$1.50 Mail Orders With Remittance Filled Evening ............. Matinee 10 cents and 20 cents ARTHUR CHATTERDO! A-Repertoire of the Latest New York Succes: ALL THIS WEEK Matinee Daily AND HIS INVINCIBLE " 'COMPANY IN ) THE WITCHING HOUR Evening 10c, 20c, 80c, 50¢c Today AUDITORIU VAUDEVILLE PICTURES NINEEJIESEEH THE BROKEN co'N THE I?IARGERED TOPS, TOPSY and SPOT ... Combination Novelty Act LEO DULMAGE . Unicyeclist BELL. & FREDA .. ........... .Funny Victor Comedy THE COUNTRY CIRCUS .......... . Musical ammunition — everything . all peace paths of the world now The camp s bn a|take their way, and upon which the “Fraternizing between Bri while only occasionally is issued_recently by the National one found who speaks good English. | Hont On the other hand, there is a great |\ oosraphic Soclety. Prince von Bue resemblance and British khaki flel most exactly alike. ‘The street vendors in lcw's visit to the city strengthened g Roeen, e peace rumors which have been srow- ¥ ng in assurshce during weel past o mnitors ke i« gy centered peace activities in Lu: cerne. The war primer telling of Lu- Salonikl | cerne reads: > < “Lucerne, the capital of the Canton tre of mountains upon the exquisite Lake of Lucerne,-is one of the most in Switzerland, and, in the land of of the principal tourist centers.. In tone, it is thoroughly cosmopolitan; for, during normal times, representa- officers; both Americas are continually pass- from the famous St. Gotthard. More than 100,000 visitors were entertained in Lucerne each year in normal times, and, though a place of only 40,000 population, it possesses 70 hotels, many of them as pretentious as those to be found in New York and Paris. “Mountains ~wall the city, save where the wall is broken through by German spies, many of Now we are writing notes to Eng- | the torrent of the Reuse, which drains land to a explain. tice our epistolary style will become |berg frame the crystal waters at their really severe. the government to please | Lucerne lake. The Pilatus range, No doubt, with more prac- | Rigi, and the Alps of Uri and Engel- Torrington Register. |feet. Lucerne is primarily a city of s peace, because lis support depends Staying at home seems to be a dis- | UPOR the good-will, ~the prosperity, frona business this year, as doss in. |and the leisure of mations productive e e e e xt” ba% | annual 100,000 visitors pay the run- seem to have been able to deliver the | PiN§ expenses of the place and fur- pigskin goods—New Haven Journal-|Dish 1t with plenty of pocket money Courler. Tt has | 8nd at peace with one another. The for incidental luxuries. s “Before the outbreak of the war, 5% R Lucerne was a resort patronized all year around, by vacationists, those in search of Winter sport, moun- ebbIng | tain climbers, by the infirm in need of It may serve as a con-|pracing air and inspiriting surround- ings, and by the small army regularly bound for the passage of St. Gott- hard's pass. The town, itself, is full of picturesque and historic values. the unblased.—New Haven A Columbia professor expresses the | The older part of the city is medieval, zardening is better ex- |threaded by narrow, crooked streets But gardening is too |and built up with ancient houses. of the old defenses are still and otherwise commonplace | vival from the 16th century. In it, is The Inside of the Hotel 1s the part that counts with the guest. The architect doesn’t make a hotel, he only designs it., The builder doesn’tmake a hotel, be only builds it. Pon't select your stopping place from the outside. Look behind the front wall and see what is back of it is the personality back of it, which shows in the lobby, at the desk, in the restaurants and in the rooms. The telephone attendants, the mail clerks, the room ‘maids, even the bellboys reflect the mu:yhck the.*‘House of Taylor.””- We h’tgdfl prices | w-mmmflum $1.50up. I one and all you will find reflected the careful and idea of guest-service that dominates every, i the Heart of Things, only a golf stroke ma hmlmh?w On B;o-d-uyl mu}ukhnuh&-‘ ’h—.’ s plaqpisng ~ “Lucerne, toward which, rumor has | the pilgrim’s paradise, it has been -one |. Colomnial TIDES THAT MEET, 3 Reels, S. & A., Bryant Washburn A TIMELY INTERCEPTION, D. W. Griffith, Lillian Gish “WHEN SOULS ARE TIRED” Romaine T heatre elding and Other Fine Films now housed a museum rich in anti- quities. - “Lucerne is conveniently situated for informal conferences between the warring nations, for it is neutral land almost in the heart of battle-torn Europe, and the only place equally accessible to all the larger combat- ants. In less than a day's time rep- resentatives can gather here from London, Paris. Berlin, Rome and Vi- enna. More difficulty is in the way of the representatives sent from Petro- grad, but, for all practical purposes, Lucerne_is the placid center around hich Europe's cyclonic storms of war are raging .in widening _ circles. As the hub of troudle and destruction, it is a fitting point from which to send out the suggestions of peace and reconstructio: The Warlike Tsars. The Tsar, who has assumed Sipreme command of the Russian forces, comes of a family renowned for courage. Alexander 1 was in the fighting line at Austeriitz, and exposed himself so recklessly that he escaped death only by a miracle, whilst in the battle be- fore Dresden he was splashed by the blood of General Moreau, who was killed at his side. His successor, Nicholas, was described, even by an enemy, as “absolutely ignorant of fear,” ‘and Alexander IL mot enly ex- posed himself as feariessly as any of his_soldiers in the Turkish campaign but literally sacrificed his life to his unconcern for suffering, when he fell by the assassin’s bomb in 1881. The title “Tear” bears a peculiarly sacred significance in Russia. It is seldom used in modern Russia except in the church prayers, the world o dinarily employed being “Gosudaf. Similarly “Tsaritsa” and “Tsezare- vich” are church terms, and in ordim- ary life Russians commonly speak of the nik.” “Tsar ‘Gosudarynia” and the “Nasled- t has been maintained that s not derived from Caesar, but is a Slavenda Prince; igin as “Kaiser.” that had 30,000 car lavatories last year. CONCERT SLATER MEMORIAL HALL Tuesday Evening, Nov. 16th Miss Charlotte Grosvenor Operatic Soprano Mrs. Jesse Hatch Symonds Violinist George M. Gulski Pianist Tickets $1.00. AN‘sents reserved. Now on sale at the store of Geo. A. Davis. word It was stated in a_ recent police court prosecution at Newport, Mont. Company the Great Western towels stolen from Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA varnish wasn’t harmed. A man in Michigan wrote the makers of Vals “I gave my floors two coats of V: spar. Some little time after when Jetting the air out of one of the hot water radiators 1 broke the valve off—and a stream of almost bolling watér came out and ran all over the floors and covered thefn with two inches of very hot water. This water was so hot and made so much steam in the rooms that it caused the wall paper to This ranks with the now universally known test of pouring bofl- ing water on a Val- sparred table and leaving it unin- jured. ’Or with the untold stories of countless housewives who now mop their varnished floors with hot water, who disregard splash- ing in the bath room. kitchen, E come off in some places. “This water stood on the until we could get it mopped up. I ‘thought sure our floors were ruined, but it mever hurt them a particle. 1 would not have be- Heved that any varnish could stand anything like that without turning white. 1 saw this myself so there is no chance for.m @is- - B 5:.':.’- of Valspar. e sell Valspar—and sguarantee it to be satisfactory or your mioncy back. Printed instructions for using Val- spar correctly.and a set of beauti- ful Valspar Poster Stamps can ‘be obtained from us free of charge. - THE HOUSEHOLD Aute Delivery 74 Franklin Street Telephone 831-4 —_— signifying but the generally accepted view is that “Tsar” has the same or- A parallel case is the Lithuanian word for King—“Kar- alius,” from Charlemagne, the great Karl of Carolus.—London Chronicle.