Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 29, 1916, Page 4

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shows what the war is doing | for this country, for even though all these goods are not being sent to the nations inveolved in the war, they are = 3 hai H’ Bl WRUNSIEIG ¥ OUE WS e youon:!wofl:d as l: fluttered into her g: cause of the conditions -which are |y 60"g¢ the symphony concert glanc-' caused by the shutting off of their‘ ing atsthe girl in ‘the adjoining seat. former markets. This is revealed by'| “Oh, you QU Jop Your amk - to Subseriptl 12, eck; BOc a | the figures for eleven months ending | the season, 't you 'm so month: $0.00 8 year T on. | ith November which show that the |1 think it makes such & difference who 3 Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, | forefgn trad totaled $4,- | sits next to one, 5 Conil, a8 sccond-class matter. uufl,wo, igi:xr‘:::t 33?55,4%0.050 ’m much about music that it's ‘W‘gfl‘“: ‘l":u‘." ::;:l‘d 1'53::9 have gozlm'r Telephone Callaz the same perfod In 1915 and,$2,250,- |ful help! I dom’t have fo er t0|pm surc Marie asked me about the! Bullet: £11 read the explanatory notes or any: " Bil a A S w 3 e otin Batorial Reoms 35-8. 800,000 in 1913, which was the largest | {iing1" I think it 1s perfectly marvela|l2rvione T was to hear to-day—and| gige. ! 3 : Bulletin Jub Offics 33-2. | total for normal years. ous the way vou can tell instantly}one knows everything that's going on. > {Isn't his play ! = Willimantie _Office, 67 Churca St.f Thus as the war grows older our |whether it is an oboe making the now’ ;;tt na'ge‘:.g {iuns M:gr:t;rmlfil 1.: m:gn Telephone 210-2. shipments abroad increase. This is|or a French horn! . i > = e | 4 (1 gOme Instances o the delivery “I simply couldn’t live ynhou: the h_g:?ol::: ml;.n 311;‘ tx ld::u g'uit“th;%: ey 1 n In His Latest nedy 8 i Norwich, Friday, Dec. 29, 191 of orders which were placed here long | concerts!™ she went on. “It freshens|inow—_one can be perfectly certain ] WILF L AND NCE TALMAGE — ago, but it represents the general |#he up so, uplifts one, you know. And | ot"oon o® i hes Are made in London. RENER LucAs | CONSTANCE AL e ever heard of when you come here! the dependence which is being placed am sure every one who is anybody :‘)h“ltoe;lyhlc!eelothes, then, because I'm upon this country by others, who are O o you foel that | 2bsolute g elther devoting their - attention to | iy agcomes Bere. & an L e et Hacriot Beun other things or who, are forced to| ““Why, I really never thought about|,oq going to marry that lovely wid-| Lee & Oszood Co. come here through inability to obtain | it that way,” the girl next her said. | suer and something happened. though 5 Z them through channels which they |“I come for the music—" TI'm sure I dom't see what could, be- formerly used. There would, how- | “Why, that's what we all come for,| cauge he is simply splendid! 1 the { Centuries. Some of these grooves are ever, be greater cause for gratification | I sure!” cried the vellow haired one | giis°are cragy about him-what's the |as much as nine inlis deep in stoncs it it fact that this forelzn trade |in surprise. “You couldn't come to a|iuatier? My goodness, Is It the inter- |as hard as marbles vas & fact that this foreign trade | ooncert for anything else, could you? [ ifi e fucpel 101 4 could be depended upon following the mission so soon? en I'm listening e U ., | to music 'm simply carried away and ol v s R “Oh-n-hi” she exclaimed. “There's |1 IC, Um0 SURPIY carried apay and Ma, Swite th urple hat and mole- 5 Pom SECOND CLASS MATTER. ry Swite—the purple hat and mole; | ecemed a mimutel T'm so sorry I can't OTHER VIEW skins! stay for the last half of the pro- OLIVER MOROSCO Presents Plofures THE PETITE g : emomionaL Acrress RITA JOLIVET There are a number of recommen: | Why, certainly, you Rnow Mary Swite| oram ‘put Harold is going to be here * f dations which have been made —the papers awere full of her divorce|for me in his new car at 3:30. so I N Postmaster General Burleson regatd- |Sult. No, I ®omt exactly know hef:|simply must fiy! I wouldn't think of | Profits, disturbed through wage in- “AN INTERNATIONAL MARRIAGE” ing changes in the pestal service | SxCeP} reading about her, T UK | missing the music for anything that |creases, group insurance, and a multi- ’ < George Broadhurst’s Fo i which have not met with general ap- | hrst hand. She was Siven ner divorce | Wasn't really important—riot that I|plicity ‘of social schemes, are tangl Georg 's Forceful Drama of International Social Life—Full proval. There are features of the |pbeoause he used to choke her—there's | T g in: ““Rag d_ob’;-! vou understand, |ble evidence that great matic Situations. ‘corporaf 5 e So glad you're|are not entirely soulless. It profits . postoffice appropriations bill which | something thrilling and barbaric about | 45 t to me tha PATHE WEEKLY CARTOON CO! 'l'he Clrmhfion of are far from satisfactory but in spite | that, isn't there? Not that I'd like | ;"5 JICK 10 e oy Hothing, 2 e SR SN TR " e l ol : don't wish her any ill luck”lacti of all this and the stand which Mr. |to have my husband choke me, but—| grimiy” murmured the. he actions are prompted entirely bg‘ s:g- trend of foreign trade ana indicates | then, you meet every living soul 7o | Oh—he's an American? Well, he must store ____THE MICROSCOPE MYSTERY —Five Part Triangle ? an de; 3 : 3 Lelpless vic-|interest. The men at the he Burleson has taken for one cent post- What's that? Oh, tx‘;.“svmv!vh ¢t Gy |tim, “but I hope Harold’s car gets|business are realizing more and more > age, when the postal service Is so far [ have btei'"'l- .bhg,‘,’eI";im 5 adore that! | Tunning on high and never stops till [that the loyalty of a Wworking orsan- from standard that all the funds |{Re first number? 7 stmply, adore WHEL. 1it hits the ocean!"—Chicago News. |ization is best secured by giving its Friday which are obtained from the present|insi = new for . trotmot the whole e members a liberal share of the, profits A DITORIU SHOWS 2:30, 7, 8:49 The Bulletin has the largest$|rates can be used to excellent 2dvan- | {hing, of course, but just a few notes? which they have been so0 instrumental S;mdgy Mat. 10¢; Eve. 10c-20c circulation of any paper In BEastern $|tage in bringing about improvements |I think these concerts develop one THE w AR PRMER in securing.—Meriden Journal. Connecticut and from thres to four | without attempting any such radical | musically so much, don't you? I am times larger than that of any in o " 1 eograj Not the 1 interestis hase of ELS.E LECLMRE Norwich, It is delivered to nver§|SteP at this time, other changes ar :i}avayls tm::kmhg that xhreciogmzedcé::r By National G phic Socioty e °aglm2m:“zvel:_ e - ' - § | sought. | delections in the symphonies an: g 3 : Wich ina"read by aloety-thres Ber | This in disclosed n & rider which | TG it helps pass the time. o i e wiituge of e o o (| I €A VA Orman Wiills”? cent. of the people. In ham £ | 1as been attached to the postoffice bill, | Why, I'm crazy about music! I don’t| The Desert of the Sea—The missioners. True to the ind they 2 i G 3 — proc- ks B e Doyt ey houses. $|in accordance with a praétice which | think a person can really be called | jamacion of the Grand. Shecest ot |38Tee With pretty much all that is A FIVE PART FEATURE DRAMA 2 - | cultured unless she is fond of music, | Mecc. 5 1 b |=2id, “have long had the improve- 100, and in all of these places it $| ought long ago to have been perma. gt 2 Oh fndeed ] jecca amnouncing the formation of | i %o §n " ming. The answer is that > is considered the local daily. nently stopped, which calls for the|do you? What? , yes indecd. 1ithe new kingdom of Arabia gives es- [[ORE In CHRE The Snewer i3 Chat 14th Episode of the BEATRICE FAIRFAX Series. - 3| abandonmen ng | think what they are playing is Per-|pecial timeliness to a communication Eastern Connecticut has forty: a s t of the one cent a pound 1 ive - provements would always be in mind, rectly beautiful! I am s6 senstitive|to the National Geographic society at > pine towns, one dt’mna:&d and -:'xxg; rate for second class matter and the{{o®hYe mijic 1 can feel It In eVery— | ity hendumastons o Wi hineren 2ron [and never anywhers else The most ve postofiice districts, and establishment of a sliding scale which | ., i direct route to all j provement is = et Bas Caltves Saiih : s O Oh. my goodness! Lock in the|Archibald Forder, of Jerusalem, a|JiFect route to all jall improvement is| BERLIN TO CELEBRATE NEW leaves it at one cent for distances up | fourth row from the pillar! Did You |part of which is issued as one of the YEAR'S The Bulletin is eold in every$|to 300 miles from.the office of publi- | ever see such hair in your life? Oh, society’s series of war geography bul- | COURtY commissioners. Real progress R’S IN USUAL MANNER town and on all of he R. F. D.2| cation but runs up to six cents a|do you? Well, I can’t help it if she is | jetins. Mr. Fordre deseri Arabia | IS made when that it done and the bR i THB AN“UAL tes in Ea Connectl . > ; gl e (doncriies way is then clear for constructive | Restaurants and Places of Amuse- foutes in Hastern Conuactiout. pound for a distance of 1800 miles. your doctor's wife and a splendidias one of the oldest known parts of | Way, - s work.—Bristol Press. CIRCULATION e e e e et i W ety g Ve o S e ; ; s =g v . . ion.. | hairdressing! “Long before the sons of Jacob went > S per D Jubleatigns mhich ars mation= beople to fook 2t such a wad of hair. | aown to. EEyDL. the Sons of Iohmast| It will be recalled that fifteen years | Berlin, Dec. 25, 11 a m. via Lon- F 1, averag . sevsea BA1 3 & “Is it, really? Yes, course, new | had settled in the land Provid: had |2g80 some one in Connecticut ought , 6. . m.—Answering a strong publications which are now purchased | ynis number was o novelty. 1 could |assigned them. The boundaries — of |We needed a change in our organic |Popular demand, the president of po- . $905, average....... .5,820 8| for $2 a vear in the east would cost| el right away I had never heard it|Arabia are outlined in the Bible as|law. A convention was held. The best | lice has issued an order permitting Y the mechanic or farmer on the west- | before. I seem never to forget a thing|early a: TR bably | thing about that session was that we | restaurants and places of amusement OF THB 1 ly as -Genesis xxv, 18. Prol ly . ern coast the sum of $5. It means|once I've heard it—or, not_this num- |many centuries aj Palestine, Syria |did not waste much money on it, after | to keep open New Years night until g S e I i 1 o'clock. I} R - 9 that in many cases he would be forced | ber, but the next? You shouldn’t speak |and the Sinaitic Peninsula were im- |the true Connecticut manner. It wass n?lc = 'his nc‘tlanhw.vm make pos- C ht l B t t December 23.......... g to abandon hig means of keeping in |so indistinctiy and mix people.up so! | portant parts of Arabia. Isaiah speaks |& nable body of men who gathered at | Sible the celebration by Berliners of entra ap 18 g L touch with the progress In his partic- | _ “Isn’t that violin work exquisite! |of it as ‘the desert of the sea’ (xxi, 1) | Hartford. Yet when the people came|the new year in the usual manner. 1 " jed throuehout | What? Is it? Well, a violincello i8land when one considers it a land |to vote on the fruit of its labors only | Much dismay had been caused by the s d S h ular line as carried on throushout | i, iolin T can't see what dif- |largely desert, almost entirely Sur.|31,000 took the trouble to go to the | Prospect of the restaurants and the ungay 3cnoo other sectlons of the nation. That it|ference it makes. 1 wish they’d play |rounded by water, we conclude that|polls, and more than two-thirds said | amusement resorts being forced to AR s will receive strenuous opposition can- | the harp more. I'm crazy to play the | the amcleny seer was mot far wrong e | they Wid not want it. That was good | close at 10.30 or 1130 oclock under . not be doubted and there is no ques- | harp mysef, only it’s such an uncom- | his designation of the land. Arabia is |Judsment. There were but one or two |the system introduced several months WILL BE HELD It plainly indicated by the atti-|tion but what it deserves a prompt | fortable instrument to know. You|petween Egypt and Persia, to put it |things in the new organic law which | 880 = P tude“Which 1s being taken by Car- |and positive defeat. can’t cart yours around under your|widely, and between India and Eu- |could not be done by legislation, and Ffldfly Eve'“ng Dec‘ 29 ranza in his failure to approve the re- _ arm all the time and none of Yyour|rope. It has a seacoast of about 4,000 aot one wuflmflv n::ge:- 'g';f::fl“;; TWO MEN ASPHYXIATED 9’ PABLE TEUTONS. = | miles. onal conventions port of the joint commission on Mex-| THE UNSTO D A i e T s et a e NI for SN e D Y BY ILLUMINATING GAS ANl inembers and friends are ia- lcan and American affairs, that he is Ever since the Teutons began to i £ the - uiator, hunter.advent- |and make other people uncomfortable. vited to attend. not satisfled with thelr accomplish- [ show their sapremacy in Rumania end | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR |tion of the specuiator, hunteradvent- |ang maye othot b A Sheriff and Superintendent of Prisons i ment. The members of the dommis- |to make it evident that the enemy, 34 T i i country presents sp large or mew a of Oconee County, S. C. sion from Mexico put off their decis-|In spite of the reinforcements which | Nauséating: Odor and Poor Quality of | fielq. Many .are the obstacles to be| The 'formation of a league to en- o fon as long as they could and then|It was said to be getting, was by no the Gas. faced and overcome ere one can see |force peace would be an extension of Elizabeth, N. J.,, Dec. 28—~John W. when it appeared that they had agreed | means a match for the cl:ver generals | ar. majtor: May I ask how much |and learn for oneself what is beyond |the idea underlying the Monroe doc- g:;grfn:ze:%agw&cal:e?u%;y{e?o:‘:h VILLA REPORTED TO HAVE to the demands of the United States| who were making a double drive into et 10 h to a the mysterious and almost waterless |trine, an extension to the old world. . o - as to the time which should be al. |that comntry, it has been expected | forsismiing e macking use ondus |belt of uninviting desert that aimost |It would net be an -entangling alli- | Derintendent of prisons of the same| KILLED THREE MEN HIMSELF o g o g e S is | encirclen thin.Iftle Anown land, but - the phrase coined by | COUNty, were found dead today from i lowed General Pershing to retire, in [that the Russo-Rumanians, or possi- | the nauseating odor and poor quality |encircles this litle known land, but a|ance” to use D the effects of. inhaling illuminating | After the Recent Occupation of Tor- ; 2 few have penetrated the tountry from | Washington ,but -rather an alliance E 2 T O O e | ot Tor T o o e | oS S oen, Ui have electricity, and | different points and each has shed |to stop entaiglements jeading to the |8as: The oficials had come from| geon—His Secretary One of Them. American commission upon that much | campaign for the purpose of outflank- { We cannot all have eleci 5 ful | Walhalla, S. C., to take back John pressed point, they put tho final de- [ing the armies of the central powers |it is deplorable, with the price of coal |Some Usht on the interlor. . jhorrors of war. We must be carsful | o6, ™, Seers, ‘accused of murdor| Fl Paso, Texas, Dec. 26—General clston up to Carranza and he has|and cause the recalling of those forces | Where it is, that we are forced to opem | o, 5 opctacle with which the trav- | the path of the future, not o let wise |10 Madison, S. C. The policc are con- |Luis Herrera, Colonel Manuel Orozco, backed and filled, though all the time | which are pushing through to Bessa- | Wide our windows, as soon as we light | © /€ " OPSEaCS prior to the out- ' words of the eighteenth Gentury block | Vinced their deaths were accidental. |Carranza officers, and Villa's seere- It was to be inferred that I 1a|rabla under Generals Mackensen and [OUF, 838 and also that we must light | DE0 120 TG 0 European war was the|wise courses of action. in the twen- e tary, a man named Garcia, were re- ROt RETesEo the protoost | . Paikenheve at least four burners to obtain sufllc | 0N persistence of the ' Turk, Who |teth. American indcpsndance ported here today to have been killed This country has given Carranza| Such however has failed. to mater- | “We are told that “it is not un- |Ppractically controlled the entire coast|gained by an alliance, but not an en- | NINE GROCERS OF TOLEDO z‘l; ‘glo‘: ;‘;",}fgeoflgtfl the recent oc- s 3 line of Arabia up to the time of the [tangling one. We must avoid entan- INDICTED BY GRAND JURY pat . his way in too many § lalize. Russia has made efforts to at- | healthy,” but surely when it causes us 1 y y instances. He % i = |Tevolt of the Grand Shereef's follow- |gling alliances, but not alliances that gt s Garcia, who is understood to have has halt effo tract the attefion of the Teutons |to choke and cough there is something I 3 — 5 ed the rt to dispose of = s to | wrong ers a few months ago, but who never | will bring about more independence|Charged With Combining to Fix a|Dbeen at one time with a band of In- Villa and by his attitude towards the | elscihere Lut they have amounted to|WOnS: = o L i estigation |Deld sway far inland. Travelers land- |and security for ourselves and other Uniform Price for Butter. dustrial Workers of the World in Ca- United States troops and by his fail- | nothing. They have not even served | Uan wo not bive an Wvestlgation | "on"the coast with the intention of | peoples—New Haven Union. : fornia, was said to have been killed ure to handle his own problem for |to delay the steady progress which is for us who have to pay the gas biil | Proceeding to the interior were met —_— Toledo, Ohio, 28 cormol: iF for destroying property of ‘floreis'nen himself Villa has continued to become | being made in driving the Rumanians | o o5 onty » by smiling officials who politely re-| tyaterbury is such a hilly place that o Ol Dec(r i 1,9f|at Bermejilo against Villa's orders. a greater menace. out of their own country together with ONE OF THOSE. |duested their ‘permit’ from Constanti- [¢he Connecticut company, nor any %:sm‘racgn nmb:r: po- mme S Herrera and Orozco were among ' Had Carrgnza -undertook to crush |Such Russians as have been sent to Norwich, Dec. 27, 1916. nople, and on failing to produce th:t other company can afford to run cars [ §ocers 21l members of the Retall prisoners captured. the handit &hief and succeeded in so |aid them. o e T el o) g;gf;lfgmp‘mf on its hillsides that are not properly | Lo?c™ 0 ;503 by the common pleas doing, he might be in a position to-| Mackensen continues to forge ahead | Glimpse of Chivalry Which Animates |08 Yo jrecantative. in the Turkish |m2pned with properly tested brakes|court grand jury this afternoon. The| Middietown.—The barbers have voted day to insist that he could look out |daily gathering in large numbers of Southerner. metropolis—a _ costly and usually {:, he it:gpedu“o:‘:l‘llsfde switches. The | indictment specifically ges S s go.gn: ‘Z,, :g ;‘pt,, "fl' = - iform 0 sho; .. atur raf e for the. border in & manner which |Prisoners in the meantime and also| . paiyor: In her letter in today's | hopeless procedure. other afternoon’s accident was a very | bhcY, Combined to fix a uni g 1 R b s for butter. d k re- would be satisfactory, but this he has} etting the benefit of the stores and | piie: HALOT n Ret fetter 1o, ofay S| RORE €0 DEUCE e entrance was gain- | Sener, afternoon’s accident was @ very |for butter. failed to do. Villa has been playing | Supplies which the retreating army is | (1o Fate of those who have answered |ed .as has been done, troubles of oth- | oni"joule OO DOt i (IOPBTINE, Lo horse with him, to such an extent | forced to abandon. Where this is g0- | jer letters in The Bulletin had they |er kinds had ‘to be overcome, such 25 loffices, with the records of a day's that this country cannot rely upon the l};:s tolatoxn is ;oltlu y:t :lr;iitcatiei made the same statements in the ;l‘:;e gsi:lig;xll‘tifi ‘:fiet;a:t?ggmznvl;e: mlsh,;m mmutgm;ut tl:le symm.d onl}t' do facto governmemt to keep him in umania is certalnly nof ening | south. upe . a trifle out of the ordinary and no check. It is therefore but reasonable | the end of\the war in the way it an- | Here we catch a slhiml;:ee oxt the sph;‘lé g“""fih"; lt:: ncfiié‘??‘;ué"?z’fit per |pad atngat. “Iitimay look‘ .:?a same _lgo D ticipated when it made its entrance.|of true chivalry which animates tI aps the public utilities commissioners. To n:n this Sountey ARG st SpdifLiclpated e itomatn it ron. | Southern man, “Prompt to proclaim |most formidable. the people of Waterbury it looks bad, ) ey have to { the 40 days for the withdrawal of its o8y P his honor without blot and answer| ‘“Arabia is probably one of the old- | njonty bad, because they h: t ( troops ‘after the protocol is signed, |lem in that quarter and they are|g . or o™ %en Dace shots est of the Oriental countries and at|hide on hillside roads all the time, and % and the right to chase raiders across |making the most of it and if it con- The south has given us many ex- | different times has played important | they want to believe that the trolley u;l: bon:ler. Carranza may look upon | tinues mu:(l: longer Rna—!ih will h;‘:e amples of this famous chivalry in its :oles in ‘;h:h ma’;;gh‘;lfn"hgs‘:%‘:g ssnh(lrfé cars they ride in are safe. It should this as humiliating, but if he stops to | cause to some worrying over the | homicides, the gentle efforts of the | tory, and the probs v is t not be necessary to wait until a eor- k. refiéct upon it he must realize that|position of its armles to the north |Ku-Klux to inculcate correct political [Trevival of the Orient it will yet fig- |oner’s inquest is necessary to enforce there is l::) one responsible for a" b:t :"}flch are fighting their way into Aus- | principles, its lynchings, and pou a | ure prominently once more. the rule ?hat unsafe cars be takem out himself. tria. crowning monument for all tHé world | ‘The northwest part of Arabia is|of service even if the schedule cannot AR T to see, the case of Leo Frank. tnmkt;us 131 its “‘T“&i‘,’,‘},‘flfi‘;‘;”&ffl;‘ be steadily maintained—Waterbury roc! and crags, in! it . THE CHRISTMAS SAVING PLAN. EDITORIAL NOTES. It R Tt et oiing | has been hewn many a fine tomb, tem- | RePuPlcan For several years banks throughout| The turkey has by this time reached | the law to take jts regular course in- | Ple, dwelling, and theater Ebv the 3bfi Tomato seeds ground and pressed the country have been encouraging |the point where it is pretty much in |stead of settling affairs by the honor- | athean, Roman, Greek, or Egyptian, all |, "0, S 0 00 o0 valuable cat- Christmas savings plans, requiring a |the soup. able method of the bullet or the rope, | 0f Whom have left their mark be- | (. 357" vertain deposit every week or month - supplemented at timies by the tar bar- | hind them. ot e Al and the accumulated savings are turn- | The man on the corner says: There | Tel and feather bed. The great need of the Arabian | e ———— We are even sunk so low as to tol- | Deninsula is water, for without that 3 ed over on defand at theapproachof|is a serious flaw in the peace offer e :nu‘l‘da:‘bl:wf o of | all-important factor of everyday life Coughed Fifteen Years. i the Christmas season. Millions have | which makes the enemy show more | ST88%, &, OO OO0 eflwtm,y";d,,mm little can be accomplished, and the en- | Coughs that hanz on and grow . 3 been distributed this month through | fight. our opponents by the very effective |tire absence of running water in any | worse in the night and weaken : H just such ‘schemes, and if it were means which Southerner intimates | Shape or form accounts largely for the | suffcrer are relieved by Foley’s Honey = known there are undoubtedly many| No man has a better opportunity of | provags in the sunny south. lack of any forward movement or at-|and Tar_ oftener than by amy other : enrolled as members in such clubs or | Proving himsel? a friend of humanity | * A shining example of southern chiv. | tempt at industrial or manufacturing | remedy. R. F. Hall, Mabe, Va, writes: H participants in such a plan who had | than by sanding his walk during an |alry was Brooks of South Carolina, | aChievements. o 2 Farb 15 years 1 v#_, affiicted wltih a : Pever previously had a ‘pamie sagouns. | ion stormy Who gave Charies Sumner so severs | “Where water is obtatnable it is | troublesome bronchiul wough and.jeri- g stk e o scadait, 5 beating that his life was despaired of | Eenerally lamm wells o fgl're‘:x tep , | tatior: o c threat. «o,e‘);uA oney : = — There is no reason why the ‘Christ- | upon the occasion of the latter’s mak- | C2USIng a large amount of labor to get . A T SEINE G : savings is drawn for holiday or other ing a speech displeasing to the slave it to the surface. Some of these wells sed and has not OUR Busm ls To mom YOUR . use at the end of the year,is probable, g::su;g:fi :;l:':::x ‘flto:v e!‘):e 0;.1;:::! 01': e are evidently ancient, as indicated by B 2 e c'ma stands higher ’ but it is more than likely that th: a t the stones of many courses near the |as a family remedy for colds for chil- URITIES 2 eyt i e:?;,..,,zt ',,:;!,v:t ought not to baconfined to December [ We all know that Thomas Dixon. Jr. | |,0,t1"20a the deep grooves worn by |dren and grown-ups. The Lee & Os- SEC AND VALUABLES a large number of participants to open 25. band of cut-throats known as the Ku- | the‘ropes of the drawers during many | good Co. .m o"' ’." mpo"' v.m permanent savings accounts. It per- Kiux. General Sheriden reported that Lores’ The pardoned murderer who at-|tphirty-five hundred persons were mur- p treet Floor! s of a demonstration of its value|yemnts to take the iife of another ( ) and desirability. It shows what can|jmaies much more harder the feht |accosradons and ne sie stered fons be Jone when there is an effort made | wnich is being waged against capital | every ome of these victims belonged The l hames NatiOnal Bank / and it proves that a bank account is | PTAT 1s e 7 %o a certain political party. Quite a WE OFFER YOU T3E BALANCE an excellent thing to have when there number of these gentry afterward had 16 SHETUCKET STREET is nced of. a little extra spending The absence of reports concerning | the pleasure of dancing at the end of ey OF qwhen one Is suddenly con- | any destruction by thé German raider |2 IOoRes A Mce). sxpelient fofi of < F ronted with an unexpected expense. | which was to have sli ercise for them. o P There is the lesson of thrift In these | past tne. Brition . bockade, - ves | 1t Seems unfair that other bandits ;o savings elubs which cannot be over-|ground for the belief that the story | mocir, ®5pi iy aand, the Cam- ¢ ¢ 3 fooket, 1 i pound o mekees s | T iy “eraggeraied o ! nave Had some whie = Don’'t You Want Good Teeth? |- 0 t L pion_to sing their praises as well as . reflection in a manner which makes| While the allies hopes may be|the Ku-Kiox. ec rlc a e am s it possible to leave e deeper impres- | based upon a complete German ecol-| Whether Séutherner will consider o o dvend oh e otk Shaitc: <pucs You S Wellew Wiy Yew . slon than ag if it was the experience | lapse, there is little which would indi- | this letter as respectful or not. I am Crowned o & BSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN. of another. It is a personal education | cate it in the success whicn Macken- | Rot able to determine, but let her re- In saving. 42d its influence extends |sen is having in Rumania. member that she began this controver- CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES far beyond' the immediate object _— sy by taking umbrage at a brief and o e s thit v < passing remark which a writer made STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE = which is the providing of ready funds| Great Britain has sent a fleet of |Passing remaric whi a s °m €0 °¥ for the meeting of the Christmas | disguised warships to the vicinity of [*EhelpS Joff Davis. STERILIZED INSTRUMZNTS : bills. ; Halifax, but from the way in Whichthe name of Thaddeus Stevens. Stew. . CLEAN LINEN : B marlaes re, Jinking Britieh. [ens had his fauits, to be =ure. bue his |} ONLY A FEW LEFT BUT WE NEED THE ROOM et Do s s 4 OUR FOREIGN TRADE. - Norwegian i‘;fl 4;.mer vessels, it rather | pame 1i~.s not t:‘ be mentioned in the LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK That this country has not begun to [ 3%¢m* as though they would have|same breaith with thet of the arch. £ thess appeal to you, call for examinstion amd estimats. Ne slow up to any marked extent in the | Plenty to do on the other side. g:;::rt::_:;he I;(:‘mh. e;rh;:eome of :‘i: charge for consultation. K business which it is gaining from the g e e e e Ptons from the | The New Haven dcesn't appear to|memory so’highly thai ey would not OR. F. €. JACKSON OR. D. 4. COYLE report which has just been made of the exports for the month of Novem- ber ,which shows that a new record has been ostablished. Records have been made and smashed repeatedly in the past two years but the total vglue of goods sent out of the country in Nevember, amounting to $517,900,030 be able to suit whatever it docs: It B of & Nation b paSory: The was only a short time ago that it|there. ¢ S was being severely criticised for high | I wish to say to Southerner that this 3 . " e ® financing and squandering its money, | discussion has been prolonged to 42 FRANKLIN STREET and now complaint.is registered that | UBusual lensth and that it is en it is using too much economy in spite | USTEWith. as far as I am concerned. of the fact that that is just what it "\ REapER was. advised to do. ‘Windham, Dec. 27, 1916.

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