Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 3, 1919, Page 4

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o g Sntered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Comn, w |protesting hecausé ‘it 4s plamned te|Inan ealls at least once .a year for and Goaufier " 123 YEARSOLD on price 12 2 week: month: § moupd-cliss maer. Telephone Cally. Sulkets SR RN o sea Bulletia Job Offtes 35-2. | independence is not being planned by of the wiiderness,call to us. The soul Wilimagtic Offfce 23 Church St Telepbone 105. . Norwigh, Saturday, May 3,/1918 WEMBER OF THE ASSOQIATER PRESS 1n order to create and encourage in- terest in the beautifivatton of the city public spirited citizen of the Brass city who appreciates the importance of trees and shrubbery. to every community generously. fyrnish- ed & supply for free distribution: How this offer and’ ‘the object which wag hoved to bé reached thereby is very clearly demonstrated by the fact that the demand for. them has been so great that:the supply. is exhausted and many“who woyld, like to take advantage of such an’eppor. ity to improve the appearange;of their property and at ‘the samestime beautifica- tion of the city cannot me accommo- of Waterbury, well received was contribute e g ol a mate. 1t s thus plainly indicated tiat| +BEATING;THE BOLSHEVIKL' | Those whe Thad The Bullatin do. ot who had given ‘little or no| ~From:the Yeparts that are being re- . turned in that direction by the offer of the t ecom changes if given couragement que: aine or of trees an ate: work which it will have good rea- |directed by Kolchak has bean of con-|cicnt interpretor can’ re ons to be pre of in the years to|siderable influence cannot: be doubted.|gpen hook - without any come. This with'thie success of the anti-bol- | The Sunday-go-to-meeting D « e shevik forces has given new hope to|made up. mal one dread WHAT EXPERIENCE HAS SHOWN.! those who Have acknowledged holshe- guehiomaticreny [0V Wil b . 01 Ing turne Aok 5 bl | vism si ¢ hec: 5 - day by and by. T ng face si Havinz turned back the cable|vism fl‘"‘”"’, acanse, “;‘;- Shag oy with piety looks more 1 lines to the owners, the country is|While the.cxperience in Hungary can-|, than a wholesome glow looking forwardl o the day when the 0ot fail to have a certaln beneficial{ ss which warms the b teleBiinns ‘4nd telagrabl Ahes will: al; feHECEE |lights up the face, and makes the eyes et With the refiorts now belng received | dance, impre that <0 be restgred Wi ca ner- * 5 = b restored to those who can oper-| Vbt ol PSR o aielo rear e inp¥ovemen ate them eficiently and economies S i iy 1 much £a as prevailed be- i pogts of their losses because of the ef- | § o fore the government.took them over.|fect which they would Spen theie importancs w was hetter .than the service |adherents, it di sjtupdion] = Semorana hus, weked: “Hoy: do 3 whieh has been rendered since they 1 must ‘he regarded as dny 55 o Shals hards il e 1At Tane were placed in the hands of the post- ging for Lenmne and Trot-lrunge and 1 ¢ feal any embarrass- master general nd certainly it would appear|{ment unti B T It one of the telegraph com. | sufficient to call for a carefui reving ! neve 1 i cgether in ke that ite DD O {out of any plans which may be un- fanticipation of difficult problems. One rath e 2 tder way for sanding foodstufis to R half the difficult proLlems of life turn onee without waiting for | s 2 Lot ., | Out to have been bad dr: sion of congress to make |- IF may he a time to break \]ovuil“ ovision for recempensing the come ] (he bolshevik jmerale but if must be | it in . v done. w 0 where it will not do The Assoclated 18 the use for republication eredited to it of mot/ Daper and also ihe local néws published . AU rights bereln are o CIRCOLATION WEEK ENDING APRIL 26th 10,022 CITY BEAUTIFICATION. rees ne ion ase as 1 in it, ik least resp Preai hat ms den sts BELGIUM'S D to the gener: to the matter of aading to the ind shrubs, that people will |Of theftrain under which they havelfrom the effusiveness and, stilted ox- nterested in such desirable | een fand: the diff A ey | B O e e haw it a0 are experiencin ‘optroiling thces P o - Buiian giyie . We. have the right sort of en-jare €Xperiencin: capts 2 doubtless abandened the style for sub- \d there can De little|Whe have been farsed into their Sup-lgiance; length and elegance of but what saem Interes because of the terropism sion have ziven way to brevit: tim, fa practiced. point. We have marked all those long | goes on and the ef ar unquestionak i< of course only is to sair treatment - certainly shou it out” prominently prived of t he the idea of the gover lines permanent And in this o overlooked th likewise on given even the roads do not desi s P P e 2 dc in winter : SYSEYOI® shouldywant fo: bave-a ispering | than in summeér, the other ol 5t 156 tihe thavwac htlping put the and you | hand,( stormy conditions are more S 3e V18 LS, LY MAS) over til<iop. | s the | provalent winter, and the net re- in all ability there} Qre can imagine the joy of Carran- in_ifs|sult is about an equal percentage of S meupton :M the |0 when he hears the sugsestion that ine-mile beach, The| favorable days in the twa _scason ¢ the former state reg-ipe iJnited ‘States be named manda- | \¢ cybress, Is gentle in | yoreover, the greater fog pe ag: in preutng for this|tory Por Mexico. 1 b SR00 i never sereame anin {summer just avout oy the Le: « the L 8 Vil i > ¥ i greater percentage ol cloudine: in Hey of tho Pennsylvania; The man. om . the -cevner savs: ' It sueys and sighs and | Sier. Jog 18 4 disadvantage ohiefly it in the regulation of |{akes the pain of taday te nrove. to impressive way: and!pe, of its interference in making « over, the employe aad | some, peaple the miscanception of their It ba P fthe hymn | ghgervations with . be vepresented, that!pleasure the day before. [T ot sl douner, 2y creed and | phe Newfoundland fogs in ¢ v ‘mml-m.a :'n\'(;ml Group ~ moetings of the dandelions| oy hecome eonseious o 0 Welas m?l;:zfl \-gnlma{ extent and do not pital adeguate “in e heing quile generally held. Al | Maker's works bestow upon him jextend far inland. nd that the rehabilitation of {yhat 15 meedad 1s' a “Hitle ‘surishine -to | v should not, therefore, prove a zin, while the Iines are st nment contral, ngeestion. Press Is exclusiely emtitied mnmmu- ise cradited in o i s never less of a city-or the value|tliat comditiong ore chang more popular or useful than today. have Hiaitheir thoughts Letters are not, thank Heaven, what is, do- which Ty i G 8 § ahe { ef £ as | ith what other cities have|SWeeplug'. everything by the quire, not by the ream; and we ire doing. Tt 1s the kind of | They -were - controlling prefer to what we say woll, and needs attentiop h year i through - foree:or conversi say it qu 2 ! ficent results are heing -ob- |ideas,’ but-bacause” star ation was thel po you realize the such a thing| tics where @4 certain -num- | ©nly alternative to foliewing tho - red| 1 hs Some people ot out each vear by |forees.’ The eppesition, even theugh it : the habit ef conden by cither for the improve- | Das experienced severe reverses at - speech s or the replacement ‘of | times, 'is :mevertheless fast gaining ¥fe have had to be removed, |Strength: That the plan of remgmz-‘;;‘u]n;‘ and - engaged 1y, probable that it will I right if one which witl be i g in salving the ed to get.all/it desired in connecton with the léague of natious but in Gther - = — | THE MAN WHO TALKS | respects it .is apparently satisfied.| What is the eall of-the wild? The Italy’s_delegates witharew because of | 1227 chad of the Tarm and e aos the farest and mountai: the fallure to have its claim for Fiume | jogs 1t as often oe passibe. The recognized - and they “have not as vet|sportsman and the picnickers and the returned, though tHe helief exists that|vacationers of every sort have heard it they will ‘befoye it is time te sign, |already and are fussing or calculating But the latest rumor is ' 'that Bel. |coneerning it. The call finds an urgent &tum will refuse to sign untéss the al. | TeIROnEe within purselyes, and to the i big it B o- B 1‘;5 ;‘?fl to givg it w targer part of | tine wall looks as good as the shining e indemnijty which is to be exacted|strenm or the eyer varying landscape from Germany. in the first year.. It is|or h The primitive spirit. of 00 breadth, or a distant horizon. Tt calls allot it only a tenth of the five billion £6r. more than it city. cangive; or B the allies. 2 of mchl:i;ehfjan »ffifmqs t?n go farth ‘:g After ' what Belglum has gone|find . behind the :sun @ through at the ‘ham!‘q or and | shadew’ curtain we. eall Life. the eendition that it is in 3t the pres- | We -think rubber is pretty -elastic, #nt time, it cannot be fait that the al- but I wender if it is more elastic than led matiens will do anything but see|the average conscience. As consciences are classified there are bad consciences w 5. o and good consciences; and there is no and doubtless will receive proper con-|yway of adjudging hew good or bad any. sideration ‘and it is het imprebable|one of them is, since it is capable of that the talkk about its ppssible refusal | accampanying the possessor in his to sign is due to a lack of understand- mllay m:o.\iis; and ;nay b}zt !fl{; ltflm, i '3 bt i 3 good or bad in amy hour. is just as foe Br. e 3L DARe Sinaiite Tauoh the foundation of trile misery as STREET ACCIDENTS. of true joy. If: conscience was really ¥ “the’ still small voice” spoken of in While there are many accidents in|Scripture, it would make one serene all the streets of a city enat are unawvoid- |of the time instead a disturher of the able, there are 'nevertheless many |peace in the name of the Lord. Con- which can be prevented if there is the|science seeéns t%be alclose ’;g’fl on “z S . conceit, and as Bovee has said: “Wha Lxe:‘:n aftther V:?D!r amo;m:h uthca;e we eall conscience is, in many in- on the part of all users of the high-|giances, only a wholesome fear of the way. It is perfectly evident that all|aonstable.” the fault is not due to the carelessness| : ow we do enjoy the May sunshine apd recklessness of drivers of vehi-|anq sky and birds and flowers and in- cles though a large responsibilty rests|sects. The May air carries not only upen them.in the ebservanes of the{memories of March and April, but as- laws and regmlations:i” At the same |surances of June and her avalanche of time it is ihcumbent upon the pedes- | Foses, f'“l dona“doest notihke 110 Wor‘; 3 3 " 3 n e fields al ature is a lesson o triane o use fue Sonsideration In the lindustry. The May odors and the May crossing of streets and to take the|gonsg' are an inspiration to all who necessary bprecautions for their own|paye aspirations, We learn to logk up pratection, for ft-must be realized that|in the May-time and form the habit self preservation cannot be wisely dis- [in life which prevents us from looking ed. < down; for we @0 not feel the Spirit Surprise is often expressed, how-|above all beneaih our feet as we do ever,: that_there are not more serious in the heavens, although it is ther:;I e * . working . wonders all the time; an accidents in ghich children are in-| yajienging man to. know and to feel is-mot to he wondered | the. everlasting force which is provid- at »whcfif:lt isrealized what .chances|ing for him bountifully every day. they také:-hot’only in dodging in front| Some one has said “it is the looks of vehicles of all kinds, but in jumping |in other people’s eyes which give us onto the baeks of wagens and aute- |our spiritual orientation,” hence it is mobiles for a ride. Without stop-|necessary that we should look into R B z these windows of other souls if we do ping to realize what danger they.are,,+™ yiways ‘therein see a pleasant in"theéy 'plinge heedlessly along..With|gight. The effect of cyes upon our- nothing ‘il ‘mind except the attainment | gelves reveals to others if not to us of. their ‘object and all the timeé they|what we are. It was Franklin who ate jeopardizing their safety cither by |said, ‘It is the eyes of other lpetm{e Fetting’ cAugh. in the. whasls of the | (801 ruin us” e glance of the ere i i b ta » 2 3 e vehicle thegiare tryipg to “Jump.” OF|,,o wonderful things in nature. Em- being throwh to the pavement in front|go.qoy, “The eye transcends of another.: y harsh words are of- | gpagch, and is “the bodily symbol of tenhanded . etit to drivers who warn|our- identity!” As the pulse of the children ‘away ' from such intended|soul the eye tells what we are. We pléasures .but:it is nevertheless ' for {have the eloq;ljem, the Deautiful, the thelr' well befne that such is’done, It{Wanton and the warring eve to con- is, & move in bohalf of preventlen, and tend w and the eyes of interest, if all useérs of the highway were as careful as sugh drivers there would be féwer stréet accidents. us. The glance of the eye has heen love's wireless means of communica- tien ever since man becdme conscious come a lost art, for it constantly bears witness that letter writing wi céived fhere arc ressons -5' helie hevilkk “orcés are showing evidénces|they’ were ance, for they -h fallen. The: fighting strsT viki has wavered letter: when read them flecti hast and, we have time. we ing the Russian govesnment at Omsk ture in this leavink Peirograd and w be | ) mora harm than good. ical probyem to state pro- | w o divide five pota- | in EDITORIAL NOTES. {toes equally amomy six ¢ but | "“ i £ 2 the colored «cook in “the st | 1t IH!}G! help being noticed that them - and “does her sum inj| 18 [Italy '3 16t ‘insisting upow peace at| . with & spoon ' hLecause she! i- | any. price. Low te serve better than sl knows how to figure. for no difficult conditi by them before classifying them. It was John Muir, the great natur: , who used to face the tempe g0 out and hear the trees sing 1 ons, Iy Next thing we know they will he ing a tax on the cold Waler«‘!mr"‘fsi 1t go with the plates of ice cream. | Mr, Burleson will never gst a job in|i Lhe movies from the n which he at to ons which have|p.s heen handling the ta » has {@nd pray. Few people realis th e b ey | Daon &tven. ltho ocean beneatri the tash of Horeas| perfoctly evi-| Tharg are plenty of reasens i a Aeearit ide re ! sn't ni 1 Do not concorn yaurself about what | junte. 1 in.one general conveniion. | folks s bout you: and look ! It cannot be imagined that the for-'io o+ what people sa i getting ready to - aqDen't ¥ > time v ng down talk,; plea of suiity, but e will be looking |OF PUSENL tery. A lie is usually | % s 2 .7 [too short lived te and the for all the leni that can be ob-|iyyih cannot he dowi - arzument tained. s d by vour pers What | about ¢ anon- | iod ian . Chauw. a promgt response to the {and fret ¥ s ; clal Wivigtinge In kecpinis fnore> Nine-tenths of " e 1 ¢ to! 5 tihere should e }1!\(\ world ‘is gossip, and usual it he known whot some of *the ! the fame cag to help in ending |one-tenth of 1t may be true. Be ear-! . for mecting the ‘demands|it by, socing the bilis gre naid, I nest and honest in action. and learn to} 1 voeents of the allied, t Fram the way in which he hag han- | leush \\'xt‘h thogsie who and m]: ) 1t ldled: the ni serwice - amids thwire | S9mIort thase who mourD l e . 1 yossible thut: * Presidest | 7 PUAEs (Ere 1dmans . thit L iupgest M, Burleson a3 | A Real Darodevil. | RETETY i8] vafuse 10 slen Sp of goes into Kentud dry codevils, Dan Roper | v and tells themn that law will be put inio effect— ! en Post realdent of the league of na- From th: way machine I * ¥irtory Gardens.a get just ungry after Iy so plant that ‘harleston it as uf the foderal ax well a8 the New York love and x{myer to protect and inspire|, . *|plane traveling from I to’} America by the northern route would | do so under the chance cf running into a storm hefore reachi is side the 3 { south i nerex ‘When Columbus and his three cara- vels sailed westward on the first tras tlantic voyage, the great dis- coverer found that by keeping to the soythward he was favored by winds that bore him away .from the ol 'world and toward the.Indies. o Now that Columbuses of the United tates navy are préparing to cross e Atlantic in the first journey by airplane—in three big seaplanes—they find that the winds that wafted Co-. lumbus are still blowing westward, making it impracticable in the pres- ent stage of aircraft development to follow the southerly rdute from America to Europe, even if the great distance were not prohibitive. But they find that farther north, in the latitude of Newfoundland and Ire- land, the prevailing direction of the wind is from west to east, and that under good conditions they may cut three hours or mare from the time that would he required to travel-from | Newfoundland to Ireland at airplane speed in still air. The same thing ap- fillei in an airplane journey -from ewfoundland to Portugal by way of the Azores. ‘Wind is the one element of para- mount impertance to 'a suceessful transAtlantic flight, according to Professor Charles F. rvin, chief of the weather bureau, United States de- partment of agricuiture whose bureau is using its daily reports from all its stations in the continental.- United States to give indications of the most faverable day for the long flight to begin; it has arranged to receive wireless apd cable reports from ob- serving stations on the west coast of Europe from Spitzbergen and Ice- Jand in the north to the Azores in the south; and other reports are to come by wireless from naval vessels, ranging in clags from battleships to submarine chaers, posted on the bo- some of the Atlantic. All these re- ports are to be compared, charted and summarized in Washington by the official forecaster, who in this case will be Major E. H. Bowie, who w on duty as forecaster for the Amer- ican Experitionary Forces in France during the war. His forecasts and detailed advices concerning the meter- ological conditions will be transmit- ted to Willie R. Gregg, a bureau me- teorologist who has studied extensive- ly the relation of weather conditions to trans-Atlant rplane flights and who has gone to wioundland. e s equipped to teill them 1ot only when no ‘storm to indicate the toward which headed to an airp! ¢ course, and ta aaleulat. the assi that will be furnished by the wi As fay ato: ue naval When North tic are clear of ave littie to Ame: and the great atmospherie disturbances, it is almost sure that an plane could travel over the whole breadth of the ocean, from west %o cast, wethout encountering a storm. The reason for that is the eastward drift of the at- mosphere, credited sometimes to thej revolution of the earth, and regarded ible for the invariable ten- torms in northern lattitudes 1 from west to east. great this country is likely to ap- Europe within a few ¢ was put fo use during the meteorologi vith the E ar in if an airplane gets off fr tinent in clear weather clear weather ahead, no op. wfter its departure i catch it. On the other hand, an air- ente tly e Ocean sligh of f It is probable that will be made at an to 2,000 feei—much I intained on long r this i belief of -Atlantic awiator would not ne as high as would E | i thelr. belief 1 ce. winds at a4 are s strong as those on land, {s h altitude over the! m over the land.| Stratford voters certainly djfplayed on fhis. contine ,,Lix.mwxngp lack of realization of oppor- urope, is nearly 9 { tutiity in again turning down the Port per cent. in about 1,600 lof Bridgeport: bill a the referen- Whatever the wind dum’ proposition is attached to it. the meteorolog els above the erous than Mr. pecially along the For the westward of fav make tra tion impracticable s 0 air t i n extent that ¢hey | independdat of wind oue centage to this di cruising until are conditio! All conside conditions an eastward flight are most fav- able along the northern course; for westwar 1 flight they” are most rable alon; the i er nor th T { Ambition TIRED MEN and WOMEN whe ‘‘feel old befare their time,”” who are langyid, have no enmergy and lack ambition—these sre often sufferers from kidney trouble. Weak, overworked or disessed Lidaeys ar {adicsted by ambitionless, always tired, nervous «condition, by sallowness of skin and pufinces uader eyes, backache, etiff joiats, sore muscles, er rheymatic pains. Joley idney Pills get right at the cause of suifering and misery, zegulate the ki nd bladder and reatore to sound aad healthy co: N. R. Reece, Dyblin, Ga., writes: “I want to otier. Before I startad to take Foley 1s | could not turn averin the b vere pain je my back and hips. cauld net hend over and I had <ot up 3t night ve (o six times. By takiag Foley Kidney Pilia 1 am up asd 2blz to g0 to work.” THE COMING TRANS-ATLANTIC FLIGHT |90 miles an ‘hour, he might stay in- © exempting the jitney from re- | spopsibility, Their enterprise is pure- ly commercial und should Le treated arly | 118 o hindranceé to landing, if the landing field is loeated some distance from the coast.” | Near “the Irish coast the pereent- age of days on which feg occurs varies'ffom about 10 per cent. in summer-to 5 per cent. in winter, ‘in contrast to the Ne ave- rage of 40 per cent in summer and 20 and :856 per cent,’ whinter. Fogs Iy occur near the Azares or be- tween them and Port Compasses have been found to lose much of: their preeimion on airplares, and on trans-Atlantic flights it is be- lieved they would be somewhat near useless. The oscillation of the plane itgelf is 'a’ large deterrent factor, and others are the attraction of the motor or machine material for the needle and the "impracticability of making corrections while making flights at high speds. ‘Under clear skies sex- tant obsérvations make possible the correct determination of pesitions, but in cloudy weather the compass is the only guide unless the aviator can fly high ‘enough to get above the clouds, It is helieved necessary that trans-Atldntic airplanes, in the pres- ent stage of development, should he in constant tfouch with ships that could indicate positions by wireless. Developments. in wireless have made it- possible to tell the direetion from which -an ‘air message is sent. The difficulty of accurate flight would be greater if the airplane were MOTHERS PORTRAYING LIFE FROM BRING YOUR GROWN-UP DAUGHTERS “GENTLEMEN ADMITTED TO ALL EVENING ‘PERFORMANCES MATINEE .. EVENING «. 25¢, 50c. . -28c, 50c, 75¢, $1.00 EVERY 'ANGLE - HEAR DR: GOODMAN LECTURE . ON MOTHERHOOD aiming at a compartively small group -of isiands,"such as the Azores,instead of Ireland or the cost of FEurepe. Professor: Marvin points eut that it || would be quite possible for an aviator flying over the uniform surface of the ocean, to turn his machine un- consciously ‘and fly away from his object. Also, is his _machine, making a hypothetical speed of 90 miles_an hour, should run into a head wind of definitely in- the same position over the ocean. On land an aviator can tell whether a wind is aiding or re- tarding him, but over the changeless sea, unless there were ships within his vision, e would have little or nothing by which to gauge his pro- | gress. Another factor the aviator must reckon with, Professor Marvin says, 1s the deflective influ- ence of the earth’s rotation upon air- plane flight. Ojects moving freely over the earth’s surfaco are deflected constantly to - the right. OTHER VIEW POINTS Local “citizens showed their eager- ity beautiful by the man- ner in which would-be- beauti stormed the Chamber of Commerce headquartess for trees and shruhs. Dwellers in tlic unsightty places ara evidently just as much aware of the trans-Atlantic 1giiness of those places as are the uembers of the Citz Improvement commission. The eagern wita which they are welcoming the oppor- given them to ciothe barren- with beauty speaks well for the city’s future attractive appearance,-- Warerbury Republican 'he bill introduced in the honse to require jitney drivers to file an in- -ance poli v rety bond of from 00 to $10,000 the motor ve- ore being per on the public shouid meet ihat rH) S EATRL . L SHANNON THE MORRISEYS LILA LEE ECCENTRIC ENTERTAINERS RS The Dainty Paramount Star in the Five Part Drama FOUR—SHOWS TODAY—FOUR KEITH " VAUDEVILLE FEATURE PICTURES BANKS CO. | IN THE NOVEL COMEDY SKIT “A FRIENDLY VISIT AT 2 A. M.” LAWT NQVELTY JUGGLER The Secret Garden l CHAS. MURRAY in “REILEY’S WASH DAY” A 2 Reel Mack Sennett Comedy Scream’ FOLLOW THE CROWD TONIGHT T. A. B. HALL Rowland’s Jazz Band THE OLD RELIABLE BreeD FOUR SHOWS TODAY 1:30—3—6:156—38:15 ALICE BRADY “THE INDESTRUCTIBLE WIFE”. . BESSIE BARRISCALE <IN— There no ex ine. same as other common -carriers. [hose who patronize the jits are en- tied to the protection that is given em wh trayeling am or electric line stol Press vay (Burleson) he the country. se of government bene- He has shown gz that he - has d any belief in the worth of the for this republic. Because of him Wwe may see congress very soon now restore to private ownership not only the telegraph, telephone and ca- ble lines but also the railroads. The American_ people are fed up with, _ es wwhich have resulted from the| Tickets on Sale at application of the government own- ership. idea. They are only too will- | Broadway. ng te return to the old svs now. mad of efficiency Slater Hall Concert Series ACADEMY MUSICAL COURSE Friday Evening, May 9th, at 8 GUIOMAR HROVAES The Briliiant Brazilian Pianiste Net procecds to be for the benefit of the Red Cross. SINGLE ADMISSION 3$1.50 Cranston’s, Mail or Phone your order | 25 HEARTS ASLEEP . PATHE NEWS VICTORY SONGS WILL BE SUNG TONIGHT BY PROMINENT LO- CAL SINGERS. Tonight DARCE—Pulaski Hall as now drawn has had many removed which invited it- icism from those who seemed over- ensitive. er P common HOW TO GROW Swiss Chard sivel ued are The names of the commissioners or in recent are not mentioned. The first twelve will be selected by the governor.|deners. Perhar equally from each town. Thereafter|for green will Bridgeport and Stratford will fill thejon a small are va cies in regular order. tduce through s=o Other - limitations are provided and |time every safeguard is granted. the average Stratford citizen fferent,” to a proposition which jto »uld of certainty aid Stratford, even more in proportion than it would Bridgeport. ! This would indicate that the town| 100 conservat and is not | to comprenend enterprise which t aid to development distant future— Gan Take a Chance. | We shall know later wRéther three{ four months were wasted by the | conference. Meanwhile, we'fl ke a chance at doubting it—Chicago Tribune. of e ce Shakespeare was evidently mirer of the fair sex—h: many an ad- s heroines are d his heroes few. inches in green. rden vegetables that the seeds the It years 1 and 4 much more. attention from home gs des grown which | nings may be used for early ne of the|As the season advances the come into | 1€ can Music By Tango Band Gents 50c. Ladies 35¢c. be. pulleg from maining plants and used plants g6 on producing” variety known 1 e . YEWIN | partme Agr nue to pro- great a period of ! A woman can get a shiftless hus- ame as com- [band in about five minutes. but it hin plants | sometimes ‘takes wx Hfe to get rid of the rov thin- | him. Central Baptist Church Union Sqimre GREAT SUNDAY EVENING SERVICE. TOPIC: Faith the Avenue to Power. A Good Place to go Sunday Eveninas BATTLE GROUNDS—ALL NEXT WEEK AFTERNOON AND NIGHT The Only Fun of the Season in A REAL JOY CARNIVAL California Exposition Shows UNDER THE AUSPICES OF NORWICH COMMITTEE OF- FIFTEEN. NORWICH —FEATURING— The Circus Side Show, the Rape of Belgium, the Big Wrestling Theatre, the Strange Girl Lottie, the Working World Show, the Hawaiian- Village; the Trench Rat, and THE SILODROME—WHERE YOU WITNESS THE RIDE OF DEATH. Ride on the $12,000 CAROUSAL—THE WHIP AND OTHERS. California Shows Own Brass Bandof Solo Musicians. MULTI-COLOR MIDWAY—As Bright As the Brightest Mié-D‘y Sun e S e et e et VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE—Who Is the Most Popular Young Lady in Norwich? Ballot Boxes at thg SHOE-FIX STORE and CARNIVAL GROUNDS.

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