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and Goufied 120 YEARS OLD o1 T 0 a year. ¥ r t the Rostotfice at Norwich, G as Second-ciass metter ; Telephone Calle : ustess Office 480. o TR e g ™ Bulietin Job OFaes ds-a. W e Otfice, Room ‘2, ‘Murra; Bullding. 'rehpbn:':ll. = 3 — e _Noywich, Thursday, March 30, 1916, The Bulletin has the largest circulation of any paper in Eastern ‘Connecticut, and from three to four times larger” than that of eny in Norwich. It is. delivered to over 8,000 of the 4,063 houses in Nor- wich and read: by ninety-three per dent. of the, people. In Windham it 1s delt to_over 900 houses, in Putnam ‘and Danfelson to over 1,100, and in-all of these places it is considered the local daily. Bastern. .Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty- five postoffice districts, and sixty rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town and on all of he R. F. D. utes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901, 4412 5,920 . 9,116 BETTER WAY TO SHOW IT. Count Bernstorfl’s announcement to the effect that the German government will promptly disavow the torpedoing {0f the Sussex, make proper reparation 'nd punish the submarine commander, 42 it is established that a German sub- mersible was responsible, is considered in some quarters as indicating clearly that the German authorities are anxious to avoid any difficulties with the United States. That interpretation’is of course pos- sible, but if such is the desire of the German government it is difficult to explain why it continues to permit those in the submarine service to per- sist in going contrary thereto and pil- ing up violation after violation of the poliey which it would have us belleve that it sanctions. Germany with its organized subma- rine service is certainly capable of ‘maintaining discipline among its com- manders, and if it sets forth that the Pprovisions of international law and the rights of neutrals are to be respected is good reason to Helieve that Such orders would be obeved, but in wlew of the manner in which these have been disregarded it is difficult to tmagine that any such thing has been done. That however is the most. satisfactory way in which Germany can assure this country that it is anxigus to keep out of difficulties with it. It doesn’t show much sineerity to keep on doing those things asginst 1905, ‘average......eue NMarch 25. whieh protests have persistently been and in the face of repeated to the contrary. Germany can @emonstrate by its action, better thag by words that it is not advocat- ing the very kind of attacks which are in ion. TARIFF COMMISSION. h a favorable feport from the ttee the prospects for a tariff lon which will he permanent are ifestly improved. “There has been plenty of opportunity for observ- ing the need of just such a body to give the proper amount of considera- #lon to the questions wkich arise in ‘making up a tariff schedule. This was dong ago recognized and steps were Jezken in the previous administration % & 5 to meet the situation, but through dlemocratic action all that had been ac- eomplished was knocked in the head and an end put to the svod work that had been begun. That such action was wrong is now itted by the democratic measure ®hich is being advocated. The Rainey Bill if passed means that the present hit or miss method of tariff revision will be changed. That it will mean an improvement cannot be seriously Huestioned, for if any matter of that Kind is to be acted upon intelligently the action should be based upon facts, and it is those with which the com- mission will deal. There needs to be a thorough investigation of conditions m.rlly from the standpoint of the try’s interests, and while it may not be impossible to overcome the po- litical influence entirely whatever can be done which will show constructive action in that direction is advisable. serious mistake which was made when the recent commission was drop- ought not to be repeated again by anything which would block its reestablishment, “That there are features of the bill which do not measure up to the pre- one is probable, but there are s to believe that experience, if else, will show the wisdom of {have our insular problems, the negro ‘| problem, the oriental problem ana the NORWICH BULLETIN, THURSDAY, MARCH itself as well as this ccntinent,: there is no desire to step in and tackle, elther that country’s problems or those which would pile up in eddition be- cause of any annexation that would bring within our limits an untriendly race. It 1s not to be forgotten that we immigration problem, all of which makes this a great melting pot of na- tions. We must continue to set an example in the treatment of these ‘which will inspire our neighbors to do.| likewise but as for being anxious or willing to bring Mexico in, it must be realized that it is the last thing to be dreamed of, to say nothing of se- riously considering it. EXPERIMENT WORTH TRYING. In connection with prison reform work much stress is laid-upon the im- portance of giving the convicted men a chance. The claim is even made that it Is because they have been de- nied that that many have departed from the straight and narrow path, and that all that is needed is just such encouragement in order to bring them back and make them worthy citizens. Whether he had this in mind or not, it would appear that Governor Whit- man of New York had apparently de~ cided to give it a trial in taking the action which he did in pardoning Tony Moreno. Tony was one of those who ‘was impressed by the idcas of Thomas Mott Osborne when he became war- den at Sing Sing and he was one of the enthusiastic supporters of the Mu- tual Welfare league. Stung by the suspension of the warden when indict- ments were brought against him, and expecting that it would mean the re- turn to former conditions, Tony, Who was a trusty, managed to get away trom Sing Sing and was ready to leave that section of the country when friends brought it to his attention that he was not treating Warden Osborne or the league right in the course which he had taken. The result was that he returned and surrendered him- self jn respect to the honor system to which he had subscribed. This demonstrated that he had been helped by the attitude which had been manifested towards him, and the par- don which he has now received ought to be sufficient, if such a helping hand is all that he has needed, to start him on a different career in the future. Ap- parently the governor considered it an experiment worth tryins. ONLY HELPING VILLA. In order to facilitate the movement of the United States troops in the re- public to the south this government is now demanding of Carranza that he take action at once upon the request that the use of certain Mexican rail- ways be permitted for the transpor- tation of supplies to the punitive ex- pedition which is operating on his ter- ritory. The delay has been too great already, as a sensible view of the sit- uation quickly reveals. ‘When Carranza agreed that there should be cooperation between his de facto government and this country, in the effort to run down and put an end to Villa and his outlaw band, he must have realized that half-hearted action would not satisfy.. Conditions called for the lending of every assistance possible to this undertaking and the quicker it can be accomplished the better. Yet when Carranza continues to withhold his approval of the use of Mexican railroads he not only serious- ly_obstructs progress, but he fails to take into the consideration the oppor- tunity which he has for lifting his own country out of the state of revolt and outlawry which had prevailed too long already. It is for his interests, and for Mexico's welfare, that he should do everything possible to aid in the work which Has been so well start- ed by General Pershing. There may be opposition to having United States troops on Mexican sofl but it is cer- tain that they will have to be there much longer unless he furnishes the cooperation which Wwill aid them in quickly accomplishing their task. Cer- tainly he has mo reasort for helping Villa, but”that is just what he is doing every day that he refrains from giv- ing consent to the use of the railroads by this country. EDITORIAL NOTES. “Danger point in hard coal is past” says a headline. Does that mean that the gas has burned off? No one dares to say much about the weather for fear that March will per- suade April to adopt its policy. It is apparently taking a long time to get the von Tirpitz spirit out of the submarine branch of the German navy. Every householder who removes a double window, knows that it will not be long before the screen will take its place. The man on the corner says: Man can’t kick himself, but the fact that he feels like it is a credit to his con- science. Although it has been putting forth its best efforts of late March must leave it to April to bring forth the dandelion. The advocates of antipreparedness are now hiring halls. They better spend their money buying padlocks for the barn Goor. It Villa is looking for money, he ought to have negotiated the sale of the exclusive moving picture rights to his escape from Pershing’s net. lly adding this strength, pro- the right men are selected for ‘commission. NOT TO BE DREAMED OF. ‘Bven though there is no serious bt of this country taking over or in fact anything which be interpreted as a movement such an end, thero have been those ‘have allowed themsdives to dis- such, a matter it for no other ose than'to air their views upon question. The idea would never approved.even should one have the ty to advocste it, for this coun- ¥y hassufficient territory, it 1s opposea and has enough problems ‘own already without adding any troubles as would be sure to with Mexico. J. Calhoun, former ambas- to China, hits the nail on the d:ad-u a,gitt, he dacla: all the territory we want, ‘the mixturs ‘'of races that we » This'is in accordance with the ' ~view upon such a matter, That was a profitable investigation of the Boston schools, which result in the conclusion being reached that what they needed most was education. “What are you going to put up this coming summer?’ the younger wo- man asked Mrs. Simmons, loosening up her furs. “Every year as soon as the holidays are over 1 begin to plan for the warm dsyn.fiud always pot up a great deal of fruit.” “I suppose that you will consider me a perfect heathen,” Mrs. Simmons laughed, “but I am not going to put up anything at all. I hayen't for years. 'We bty all we need.” “Um,, well, yes, of course, it's a great deal of trouble,” murmured the call- er, “Lut the homemade ones are 5O much more delicious. And so pure, you Inow!” “A long time ago whefi I set up housekeeping I thought 8o, t0o,” Mrs. Simmons said. “But that first year I liad nine glasses of jelly and fourteen glasses of jam left over at the end of the season, and I began to have my doubts. Then, too, I wasted a lot of material making things that didn't succeed or that spoiled and I was dis- couraged.” “Brides always have such trials “I think Mr. Simons had more trials than 1. Of course, 1 thought it was my fault because I was young and in- experienced, so the next year I sent for a professional who put the whole lot up for me. When I saw her after- ward she said that it was a bad sea son for preserving and the fruit was *o_blame for her lack of success. I did not know till then that there could re good and bad years for fruit “Yeas, indeed!” the caller said. “Some years I have had to add apple to everything and even then it did not go well.” “I took lessons at a cooking school,” Jrs. Simmons went on. “Still my preserving was unsuccessful. Besides, even if it did by chance come out all right, I had to make such guantities of each kind in order to make it pay “conomically that my family got sick ond tired of my offerings. Finally we began to buy of the grocer some things Lut up by a woman, and in that way we have had variety and purity at one and the same time. There’s no dan- Zer of their spoiling, because we buy only as we need and if the goods aren’t good, for any reason at all, can get our money back. You don't have to consider breakage, either. I well remember the time when my pre- serve shelf was overloaded and fell with forty-six glasses of Jjelly and every one was smashed to little bits.” “Yes, such an incident would _be nard_to forget” said the caller. “But une feels like such a poor housekeeper %o refrain from putting things up whe; «verybody else one knows is doing it. “Yes, 1 know, 1 felt that way once, Mrs. Simmons conceded. “But I brave- 3 got over it. You see, when people Fecame aware of the terrible fact that 1 was doing nothing to help the fruit merchants along they sent me in glass- es of their own work, and their kind- aess has made me realize a few things. At first I relied on ghe gifts and set ‘hem aside to use # Sunday tea or for a luncheon or so, but after awhile I became wiser. “One famous epok, whose skill at treserving I had heard praised for years, brought me four glasses of various things, I remember, and I was so pleased. One was burned, one was spolled and the other two hadn't jelled, so that we had trouble eating them even with spoops. Of course when you have guests at luncheon and the jelly insists on running to the four corniers of the dish you can always say that the room is too warm, but When the thermometer shows a below LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Crops and Weather. Mr. Editor: Since climate and wea- ther closely affect human affairs their study is ever timely. Heat and cold, rain and_sunshine oft determine hu man weal or woe. For India and China, where half the race lives, a single rice crop fallure means famine, disease and death to myriads. Nor can our land of plenty wholly escape mature’s panicky moods. Po- tatoes cost douMe today, and are of poor quality, because of last summer's heavy rains. Spring a year ago growets Tould hardly give them away for the season of 1914 was favorable and the crop fine and heavy. Last winter fine appies, by the thousand barrels, rotted in Connecticut orchards, not worth the picking, but inferior fruit now brings fancy prices all in consequence of the weather's help or harm of the growing crop. It seems that unusual fluctuations of weather appear in cycles. Winter of 1884-5 was very cold, Philadelphia rarely having over three or four days sleighing or cold of 10 below, had heavy snow and ice with 25 below and vet the spring of 1865 was so warm that the writer ran barefoot by mid- April. Summer of 1367 saw heavy rains, flooding the flat country of Southern New Jersey, bursting mill-dams and ruining crops. A later winter of that decade had almost no ice and gardens were made in February. In more recent years we had a light winter in 1889-90 with hardly any ice or snow in the Middle Atlantic states. Farmers gathered ice, too thin to bear, on rafts, and peach trees bloomed in March, a month ahead of time. Winter of 1894-5 was hard, below zero weather, twelve-inch ice in south- ern New Jersey, and railroads demor- alized by heavy snowdrifts in February Spring of 1896 began warm by April 10, closely followed in summer heat and early tomatoes, Jersey outdoor grown, were in market June 11, the earliest on_record. Spring of 1907 was cold until June 15, and summer so brief, even in southerly latitudes, that corn failed of maturity, rotting in cribs the following spring. Spring of 1914 was delaved by snow in March, cold in April, and yet May was a record-breaker for heat, but June and July were cold and rainy, retarding all tender crops. Weather prediction is risky but we may safely assume that extremes in weather follow each other and calcu- late accordingly. For instance, government reports show deficiency in rainfall several con- secutive years preceding 1914, S0 we 1t isn’t such a long time to the open- ing of the troutfishing season, but it is likely to be some time beforg the streamwhippers can get anywhere near the brooks. ‘While the department 6f labor is ¢laiming that food prices were one per cent. lower in 1915 than in 1914, it would be difficult to prove it by the ultimate consumer. That follower of pugilism who put all he had on the wrong man, worked himself into jail by asking alms of a policeman, instead of getting his fare home, but previous instances indicate that he will probably do it right over ‘again. — ‘With-railroads tled up with an un- dented amount of business and he steamship lines unable to handle may reasonably expect the current ex- cess to continue a few years, A real need of the day is increased interest in exact observation, accurate record and frequent review of weather conditions, by the people most vitally Interested, the farmers themselves, Every intelligent wideawake farmer's home might have a reliable local wea- ther bureau and certainly the papers would be only too glad to publish their findings, JOHN R, DOWNER, ‘Willimantic, Conn. War A Year Ago Today March 30, 1915, Russians stormed the mountaln crests In Crpathlan Austriane began blg drive acress Bukowin i Turkish seaplane dropped bombe on a British warship near Darda+ nelles. all that is awaiting shipment, it is cer- tainly an auspicious time for the train- men and longshoremen to threaten Turkich nt promised to profoct Christians. in Uramlan. CASTING OFF THE SHACKLES %ero temperature outside you feel a little foolish. After that had happen- ed three or four times it got to be Joke in the family and Mr. Simmons had a regular speech that he uséd to deliver on these occasions about the jelly being overcome by the heat. “Perhaps some people don't mind ttat funny vellow sort of taste that a jar of jam has when It is_touched,” Mrs. Simmons went on. ‘But the very idea of it sets everybody's teeth on edge in this house. I don't want 10 be snippy when people are so very kind as to give me things that they think are nice, but' I never bother to open a gift of that sort now, because I know so certainly that it won't be worth anything. My only trouble is in dodging the giver afterward, so that I won't have to toll any nalghty fibs. ‘They lave done me a very great favor in showing me that T am not so stupld as I thought T was. A thing like that is a_housekeeping fad, my dear, like the fever for housecleaning that stili makes so many women crazy, a rellc of New England days that i out of place in our hardwood flats with their own rugs. Of course. a young woman like you thinks she has to do every- thing about her home just as her granamother did or be thought a poor househeeper.” t isn't my grandmother who in- ences my conduct in this matter, sighed the caller. “Is my husband. You see he says he wants jams and jellies such as he had In his bovhood days, and mine are always such a ter- rible failure.” “Don’t waste any sleep over it! 'n Albania. A half pound of bread chuckled Mrs. Simmons. “It was your Fusband’s mother who told me to buy all mine. She said that she always did."—Exchanged. I Stories of the War 50,000 Died in Four Days’ Storm. Henry Haller, formerly of the Fifth United States cavalry, who wis one of the few Americans in the Serbian re- treat, declares that during the journey to Podgoritza in Montenegro in a four days' snowstorm more than 53,000 men died. “They died so fast” he said, “that they fell every few yards all along the 10ad. The wagons and carts went right over their bodies. Nobody thought of trying to turn out of the way, but there were so many they could not but drive over them. The roads were full of mudholes. At one place I saw no less than 17 horses dying in one immense puddle, unable to_pull themselves out. “I saw hundreds and thousands of ragred men, with their feet swollen too much to wear shoes or to walk on them, crawling along for miles on their *ands and knees through the blinding snow, finally stopping and dying soon afterwards. They never made any ap- Deals for help. It wouldn't have been any use. Besides, they were too far gone to know what they were about, that they were dying. Their last effort t0 keep going was merely a mechanicai operation. Of course the great mor- tality all along our route was due to the barren nature of the country we were traversing, with no skelter for but a comparatively few of us. There were even no forests where we might have felled trees and built temporary Guarters. Our fires for the most part were small, with barely enough wood to_heat water.” Hatler, who was on a visit to Buda- pest when the war began, enlisted in the Austrian army and was serving as a bugler when, six months later, he was taken prisoner by the Serbs and then finally marched with 75,000 other Austrian soldiers across the mountains into Albania and “there turned loose on the shores of the Adriatic to fight for life against cholera, fever and star- vation.” “We were supposed to have started cn that retreat,” said Haller, “with a Serb army of over 200,000 men and about 75,000 Austrian prisoners. Not many more than 150,000 of tae whole ot got over the mountains. It was rot because the Austrians or the Bul- garians pursued _us, however. with inuch activi We 'died merely be- cause of disease, hunger and starva- thon. “The worst part of the journey be- gan at the Albanian frontier. The Al- Lanians have in times past been badly treated by the Serbs, and they took this chance to square old scores. They shot, killed, robbed and murdercd us at every step of the way. For in- stance, at Linn, some Serb officers and a company of stragglers on_ horseback were met in the middle of the road Ly a few peasants and ordered to give up their horses and their money. was plain highway robbery, and they ’_“l ! DRINK EHOT WATER IF YOU DESIRE A ROSY COMPLEXION Says we can't help but better and feel better after an inside bath. look: To look one’s best and feel one's best 1s to enjoy an inside bath each morn- ing to flush from the system the pre- vious day's waste, sour fermentations and poisonous toxins before it-is ab- sorbed into the blood. Just as coal, when it burns, leaves behind a_cer- tain amount of incombustible material in the form of ashes, so the food and drink taken each day leave in the ali- mentary organs a certain amount of indigestible material, which if not eliminated, form toxins and polsons which are’ then sucked into the blood through the very ducts which are in- tended to suck in only nourishment to sustain the body. If you want to see the glow of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, you are told to drink every morning upon arising, a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless means of wagh. ings the waste material and toxing from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, thus cleansing, sweetening and 30, 1916 refused. The peasants ran away and ‘within a couple of minutes more than + thousand shots were fired out of the wsi hillside, killing most of the “The food problem was terrific even PERUNA TONIC was sold at ten dinars, about two doi- Jars. As I had a little money at St 1 bought five pounds of oka beans. 1 not been able to get these beans, I would today be a dead man. Ihad just £aid to myself: ‘I can’t go any further, when I persuaded a peasant woman to sell me the beans. I ate beans twice a uay, making a sort of soup out of them, putting in a little salt. At that I was far lickier than the fellows who had to iie“. Doll harness leather for five or six . ours in order tc e the hot water taste like soup. 1 saw men act like What would you give to be eavages, eating pieces of brown p‘:cn pofiova weil? n‘“ ym;. have ‘There were perhaps not more than || &0t urse. It may be that 2,000 women among the retreating Porde with us and it is a fact worth || nature. Catarrh of the head. recording that they were kindly treated Catarrh of the stomach. Ca- and given whafever comforts were |l tarrh of some internal organ. available by soldlers who were other- If so, Peruna will help you on wise dead to every feeling. I havelll the road to perfect health .If seen such men, gaunt, staggering along, || You want to be convinced, buy half naked, with a few pieces of cloth (| One bottle. No further argu- for shoes, unable to speak, with barely (| ment will be necessary. strength left to stop near r:o dying ;lorT: angd cut a stringy steak from its flank, Straighten up for a moment near one|| Coughs Colds of ‘;ha ‘women's cm'mfld rll'lrnll:xl! tender their last mouthful of food to some of the women. PERUNA ‘The treatment of the women on this dreadful retreat was to me the 0st wonderful, the most moving, the most heroic part of the whole retreat. These poor women in their flight from their homes had in many cases been tnable to bring enough clothes to cover hem. Often they were without stock- ings or underskirts, or hals or shawls or cloaks. I have seen time and tif egain some freezing soldier take off bis overcoat and force it upon some one of these women, and seem almost ashamed to look upon her chivering body as he made the ofter. Then he ‘would search along the road for hours until he was able to strip some dead man of his clothes to replace that which te had so freely given.” What Haller regarded as Iis most remarkable experience was the sight of a mad soldier dying from starva- tion. “Clothed only in a ragged un- dershirt he was running barefoot down A snow-covered Albanian road straight :s an arrow, bellowing as he ran.” he sald. “He ran on and on down that road, seeing nothing yet wonderfully avolding stumbling over the bodies of other dead and dying soldiers and the | meat-stripped carcasses of the army horses which blocked the way. Suffer- ing intensely as I myself was, 1 turned and watched this strange figure. At last a half mile down the road he pitched forward and as I passed him iater I saw he was stone dead.” “Other than that incident there is cne other that will stick in my mem- cry so long as I live” said Haller. This was the hanging of a Serb nother by the Austrian troops before 1 was made a prisoner. We were marching across a rough country near Lochnizter when we stopped near a wayside hut at its spring to get a drink. As he arose from the spring a shot came from the hut. That shot was fired by a woman. She stood at the door, an old shotgun in one hand, a baby in the other. “One of the captains ordered her hung. There was nothing else to do but execute her. As a rope was placed about her neck and she was led to the nearest tree all she sald was this, in a_hard, cold voice: “My “husband a soldier. I too die for Serbia’ She inade no appeal. She did not cry out. We left her body hanging there in th wind. The baby was picked up and sent to the nearest prison camp, to be cared for.” Through the efforts of Robert Have- rick, representing the United States among the Austrian prisoners, Haller was rescued from starvation at Dur- azzo and later mbassador Page in Rome interested himself in the case. Catarrh TONIC ———— “I am going back home the best Amer- ican citizen you ever saw,” declared Haller. “I wish I had words to ex- press my feeling for the kind of people -hat dre grown In the United States.” [ omHER view PowTs | Working in this city during the last week or so, collectors for an alleged home bave succeeded in getting aid from Bridgeporters. While we would not hamper in the least those who Fave claims upon the bounty of the community, nor prevent the exerciso of generous impuise, we feel there are 5o many worthy causes which need as- sistance that ‘money should mnot be wasted upon those who use their alleg- ed charitable scheme to obtain an easy living, giving no adequate return in service. Such methods lead people to adopt apparently hard-hearted atti- tudes towards all charitable schemes. teal need appezls strongly to most everyone. but there is so much bogus ppeal that real want is sometimes assed by. In connection with this lat est effort to collect funds, it may be interesting to learn what the Charity Organization soclety has found re- g it. Those who feel impelled to contribute to this or any other charity should call up the C. O. C. and ascertain whether or not the object is worthy.—Bridgeport Standard. fon. the for its per to rail per ing tha cen: If this endorsement of the liberal Sunday movement by certain liberal church leaders in New Haven resuits in a revision of our antiquated Sab- bath laws, there will be swept away, in part, one of the most aypocritical situations in our local life. The Sab- bath laws cf the present are not en- forced except in part; they have not the backing of public opinion; they | grant special privileges, work many injustices, and give rise to a consider- able contempt for laws in general. No state can have a collection of statute laws it dare not enforce, and yet main- tain proper respect for other laws. Dr. Maurer's summary of the situation was _excellent. Let us hope that enough church people will come to see the Sabbath problem in his common sense light and withdraw their former blind opposition to really imperative changes. The situation has been dom- inated by the narrow and the Purl- in to ern: to mu a bl No the mus —HEATS YOUR HOME —COOKS YOUR FOOD —LIGHTS YOUR HOME and SAVES YOUR MONEY No need of worrying about coal supply; or coal bills. SOCONY Kerosene in a Perfection Heater keeps a few cents—portable, always ready heat . —whenever apd wherever you need it. SOCONY Kerosene in a New Perfection Cookstove cooks the family meals for six for about three centsa meal. SOCONY Kerosene in lamps means clear, mellow, smokeless light. high prices—when SOCONY Kerosene saves moncy Wh and Yab%:)?' o coal, wood or ashes But be sure you get SOCONY. It is clean and pure, burns without smoke, odor or wick erust, Remember the name SOCONY and look for the grocer whose store shows the SOCONY sign. purifying the entire alimentary traot, before putting more 00 Into the stom acl Men and women with sallow skins, liver spots, pimples or pallid com- plexion, also those who wake up with £ro00nteq tongue, bed taste, reath, others who are bothered with headaches, hillous spells, acid stomach or constipation should begin this phos- phated hot water drinking and are assured of very pronounced results in Sy er o el o e al T DoUnd of limestone phoss phate Vi little o& the drug store but clent to demonstrate that just as hot water eanses, purifies and s the sliin on the outside, 5o hot water and limestone_phosphate act on the inside organs, We must always consider that internal sanitation is vastly more im- partant outside cleanli poa be- e biowar “whlle th We rocommend the Cookstoves and Water Heaters, m’n STANDARD OIL COM NEW YORK BUFFALO illo the ALY 15—PEOPLE—15 ARNOLD DALY in “The House of Fear” Five Reels ENTIRE CHANGE OF PROGRAMME TOMORROW “YOUNG LOVE™ . seeeeaanan “A QUESTION OF RIGHT OR WRONG" . “SNAKEVILLE'S EUGENIC MARRIAGE,” tanical long enough.—New Haven Un- Over in Waterbury they are telling found in the fact that the road pays it has to pay the same wage at points on its system, and raised result of the controversy seems to be amount of censure for Waterbury con- signees who order too much freight.— Hartford Times. That old bugaboo of dual ment bobs up piainer tha: published elsewhere from Washington. down as a place of 13,000 population. That The real population of Middietown is over 22,000. official figures from Washington bear Midietown. The industries dletown proper would swell least. how much longer the people propose in the considerable time considerable amount of money to bring about the change: but on the other hand if any one will sets of officials should be transa: them come forward with their argu- ment Principal Offces AVIS THE Secured for Thurs. Fri.and Sat at Enormous Expense IMPERIAL JIU JITSU TROUPE Athlctes From the Land Cherry Blossoms i & Startiing Gymnastis | Offoring—Boven Beopie—bly Fime. Haadliners COLLINS & MANNING | HARRY HANSON | ——Singing ard Dansing Dy | __The World's Worst Wisard .. Betty of Craystone {7 Yohotie aien 4 SHOWS 2:30, 7, 9 Today AUDITORIUM Uil 5l'sl oo A FARCE COMEDY THE HONEYMOON 477508 Presented by the Winsome-Winning-Winners Musical Comedy Co. MOSTLY GIRLS Today =COL ONIAL. - Today 3 Parts—THE HAND OF LAW—3 Part Edison Drama . Selig Drama . Vit, Two Parts 8. & A. Comedy over to the detriment of the city ot town, but the taxpayers if they were but given a chance wbuld not refuse to make the improvement in the form of one government and that a united one for the bemefit of ail the peo- ple in preference to the division of sentiment now existing and showing itself at every turn. So when you read the statistics from Washington just wink your eye and put it down to another instance why people on the inside refer to Middietown as a small place. If is that way in the census. in fact it is that way every time when official figures are given out. How long do you want to be & party to dual government *—>igdletown Press. railroad officials that one reason the freight congestion is to be freight handlers but efghteen cents hour and can't get inen enough do the work at that figure. The road counters by explaining that all that if it the handlers' wages one cent hour it would increase its_operat- expenses $700 per day. The net the rallroad Mas t reduced its A specimen of the devil-bird, which cracks nuts and makes strange noices, and which Colonel Roosevelt “discov- ered” in the West Indies on his recent trip there, has also been “discoverod™ in the Brooklyn museum, where it has been for many years. The colonel is going back. There was a time when he could bring forth things that no one ever heard of before, but age seems to be telling on the man who first made “nature-fakers” what they are today. —Hartford Post. govern ever in the manufacturing industries in this issue Middletown is put sus of is the population of the city. So when you read the mind that they cover the city of of Mid- the total say the Speaking of dual form of gov- ment, the question might be nsked Keeps on the Jump Don't see how Judge Hughes gets time to do much judging for denying that he's a candidate for the G. O. P. presidential nomination.—Macon Tel- egraph. a respectable showing to put up with it. Those entrenched political make-up of the com- nity shake their heads and say it is ig undertaking. That may be true. one doubts but what it would take and by the way a Learning Every Day. Evidence accumulates that Jo- cephus Daniels is learning more about the United States Navy every day.— Birmingham Age Herald. iain why two ing . let For Remembrance. Every time the people almost forget about him, Justice Hughes arises to insist that he is not a candidate. — Indlanapolis Star. business of one community This is & conservative com- mity. No ome wants to make it a room warm all day for to bother with. the hest af thely kip p-mu Qi Heaters, R-'-?‘-pudhm PANY of NEW YORK ALBANY BOSTON