Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 1, 1919, Page 4

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T = A5 e e g ' ). IN TROUE " Vis | ' : TUESDAY NIGHT violates the federal constitution. - - - This section requires that tertain| I should have had more sense,” and a club. the Mitings ;3 = ATS : OCTOBER 7th - g amounts over and above a fair return|burst out the Hyde Park ma njmpul- i &mfn gnlletm to the railroads should be taken by | sively, “having been married cohsider- "j}'.:’“;.‘;:*’gma‘"’":;é WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY the government but Mr Hughes main. | able voars, but I'm.fust as easy & mark e things and that I was He Wasn’t Really Bad tains that when the proj authori- | for Imogene as in the gay and man- -lnplr made for the style. I was ties have fixed rates forrmp‘m tized days when .we Were engaged. qm 100 large nor too smatl. It I Meorely Neglected By and freight service that are considered upon_her word as wl ad been built like Smith, the banker, Wealthy Father When to be fair to ali concerned whatever is| truth and the way I let her infiuence 'ho was elephantine, well I Mother Died, So He Ran W‘Id. "THE FERSHING OF COMEDIES P AL me is_something scandalous. Yet a| hesitate, or if I had been a shrimp like SEE e | o b e e oclongs (o el child of 3 would have halted at this!” | Jones, the lawyer, I would be foolish to J WARREN KERRIGAN - s h| < What've you done?” his friend from | put on a light suit. . Eoteied st the Postofies at Nerwich. Coma. | from them except by law, though such| wwoodlawn inquired, removing his i e e matier would be subject to taxation. A 1aw | oigars to his farther vest pocker ~ Tetephone Catis. that would give such earnings to the| . “Thank you—I didn't see where they . t.on the street whenever T saw a “COME AGAIN SMITH” e . e government would be confiscatory and | were before,” the Hyde Park -man|man in a cream color suit I would : — malies’ o6 fice 33-2. | there is good reason fo believe that|murmured, reaching over and filching | hasten toward him and walk areond % Spiendid Cemedy- Hiramn wimimazttc Oice 3 Chuweh St Telohoms 105 | quo weight will be given to the opin-|One. “Imogene is a great“believer in |him, eyeing him eagerly to see how he | ive Acts PR — ==|{on of the former justice upon this|Deing ahead of timd and of late she has | felt about it.- Sometimes these victims Bu‘ when put on his mettle and 3 S been stating that pretty soon we were |looked hunted. harassed and apolo- glven a year in which to “make Norwich, Wednesday, Oct. 1, 1919 |point when it comes time to act upon| S0 *(5H0E [U50 RO 000 That we |etic, often they were “starn” awa good” Jos Smith, Jr. showed th, the railroad bills. must begin making a special’ point of | brazen, daring anyone to bat an eye at old man that there was some. 3 v keeping ourselves up to date, spick and |them. When that suit came home thing in heredity after all. THRIFT. span, abreast of the times sartorially [and T knew the time had come to put 5 It is nothing new of course when|as well as mentally. And she insisted | it on, I tell you I quailed. lnmmfinml NGW. on my getting one of those pale blonde e Secretary of the Treasury Glass|Zy, ol & uits which originally evolved | “It was a horrible expcrience. T felt Vod-a-Vil Movies makes an appeal to save through a|gown at Palm Beach, where they don't |as though I were in my E. V. D.'s, or & letter to the school children of the| are what happens. T was appalled. I as though I had swallowed a large -Happy Returns — Some Comedy country to be read on Thrift day. It|told her that I had innured myself to a | hardworking incandescent light which it ——— is an old story, but it ‘may be told in|habit of dark suits. I didn’t care how,|illumined me so that I shone effulgent EDDIE POLO a néw.and more interesting way, and | thin they were in summer, but I yearn- | for miles and miles. I had creeps up certainly it is one that bears often|ed for shade and shadows. 1 really |my spine, blushes on my countenance. In the 16th Episode of repetition, could not resign myself .to wandering | anguish in my writhing soul. With it ‘The Lure of th Ci e aid s ¢ forth in ice cream apparel. all was the knowledge that 1 could B e Lircus = g oming waste are never sit down in those clothes, hav- by no means duties that should be re-| .5 414 per piteously that T should | ing been warned by Imogene that ev- stricted to children. Everyone should| geq precisely as though T were taking seat in Chicago was dusty. thoroughly understand and practice|one of the celebrated nightmare walks asked her why she did not pro- these things that can play such an|we all have suffered, wherein we saun- | vide with this suit she had wished important part in every day life, but|ter forth amid the hooting populace in- {on me a wire cage contraption to _ CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING SEPT. 27, 1919 il i fliciently clad. But she turned my | shelter me from dust and adverse ) . . . REPUBLICAN TOWN TICKET. | o inds of the childetn are.the most | FUms against me. saving these excu!es!';ihds and support me. by the neck w0 Original New York Production 2= ibl b = nex| Simply showed how set and middle- | that when my weary legs gave way ! : Skt susceptible to advice along such lines| 07" was gotting and she certainly |should not sink to the ground and With a Cast of Favorités Who Have Appeared More Than R K. BAILEY. and let the idea be sent home and| % 1.3 she had noted the tendency | grime up the suit. She burst into P. BUSHNELL. the good results of it seen in practice!;n ijme. She pointed out how hand- |tears and said that was all the thanks 1,000 Times In the Principal Roles. Board o8 Anscvewsy as well as tie bad results from thelsome Mr. Timpleton nd Mr. Grooves | woman got for trying to keep her Today and Thursday T FRANE e e lack of it and a lasting impression is|jooked in their exnensive new cream [husband young and good-looking. Th Onl C . ODWORTH. ooked T : X ) O RANK H. WOODWORTH i o TR R color suits and arifally ‘inferred (hat|T don't wear that infernal suit T shall | Sesidoony s Noves oy Be Fer- e y CLompany Un 1iour % 11 < 3 s f when T once zot mine on T wouldebe a | break my t gotten. ou Have Never Seen 2 5 ! A Kok Al b o resular parade. wear ‘it 1 have a feeling - that the ! Nifin Don't Fail To See Him Now. Seat Sale Friday—Prices 50¢, $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 FRED G. PROTHERO centuating a policy that should be| "RG0 20T o it i« when a woman | strain s going to be far too much for § . Tax E. AT O X followed every day in the vear. It di-| ., "GO0 V00 "G "anvthing—a mere | my system. I tell you, I'm up against | TOM MIX Mail Orders Now. War Tax Extra Town Clerk mnd Treasurer, rectly concerns each and every indi-| .5 might just as well resten in the |it. | CHARLES S HOLBROOK. vidual and when a special appeal is|firet round and save casualties. That “See if you cam’t catch a real do-| In His N i < made to the school children it means|guit T ordered. T never shall quite |mestic. home making moth mille n His New and Thrilling Picture Tax Collecto: THOMAS A ROBINSON. the presentation of the idea to those|remember whether T ordered it of mv »‘1 ss;srg‘d sis Isyrg\mlm:{#m "‘{"3‘?1?‘?& who in not so many yvears are going|own free will or whether Tmogene stood end. “and p i i i over me with a bottle of chloroform !the most good.”—Chicago News. The Wilderness Trail - Registrar of Voters, to not omly be concerned with their AUDITORIUM _ER D. GUY. own welfare but wrestling with the saditor. areat problems of the country. It is % ; R e S ANTEL F. MNBIL fitting therefore that they should be IN THE DAY’S NEWS e ieate romartions. Thae wommis. (] A Marvelous Story of Love, and TWO DAYS—FRIDAY AND SATURDAY < of Town De u taught thrift, that the many interest- o fss sion's report resulted in negotiations|f] Adventure in the Fur Trappers’ apiis o8 ."f“ ;,n\',';';.' e, ing examples of its benefits should be Liberia, America's. Only ‘i"':”y‘; for an adjustment of Liberia’s debt. l Land. FRAEY RotniEp presened to them ‘and that they| Liberia, whose president-elect has|illy lacing of United States offcinis ONARD O. SMITH {should be urged to take advantage of b";" '°““(‘“5w‘ ;0"0"‘{:mg bu‘;mm trom |in_charge of Liberian customs c . Town School Board, the opportunities that are - before|SEDISCt of the folowing. I tions. The following vear the Ameri- Bessle Love B. P. BISHOD. them. Thrifi is certainly not re-| iy M0 O ubli ,ca‘r(lhgl?or{!msntPrn;;g;g’ll:d a’g:n:snm:m E | stric o o EEn - - wi onglan, 3 " NORE e g Ay e, It 15 a matter|oniy colony, has an area equivalentljisumed supervision of finances, mili- CYCLONIO of every day concern. to that of Kentucky, and a total popu- | FR0diore, SonCt s O O, ndary ques- g v S lation estimated 1o be greater than that | {27 i The l lttle BOSS NIGHT SCHOOLS. {of any one of thirty states of the un-| " .German merchants offended the! ason of the|ion. But of these two million er MOTe | chief executive of the republic in 1912 vear when the evening schcols are due | Inbabitants °"‘3(":°""n;fl-n orimn s |24 out of this incident a quarrel de- | to open and there should be no mis- ‘.’,;“’nu‘;“;;‘m_f,;‘:‘,i“;';d o T py | veloped which resulted in two Ger- taking the service that they perform| ;= pe rovernment rr':lan :lmxl;oats fo,r;rlng}‘;ln apol}:f!' from ate awiiling 1o, peiforin i SORL i iberia is situated on the west coast | ¢ President. But the president r We are reaching the HAROLD LLOYD COMEDY 2 5 4 taliate iving English trades spec- hout =iving it proper eon-|Sufficient number can be inlerested infof Africa at the point where the coast|{aliated by giving Hnglish trades spec” out nevertheless making it | S°tting the rudiments of an educa-|line makes the great bend to form the |y yeria cast her lot with the allied na- t the reasons. advanced|ton- § o Guinea. I SO Pt e |tions. The government of the repub- » convince him of the nec-| DXcellent results are accomplished |directly on kKne of ocean 5""""“;';"?‘1' lic is modelled after that of the United > toh i sovernor Hol.|DY these schools which are conducted | tion between Burope and South Africa |:grgyes, deciin & session of| 10T the purnose of reaching those who (}"}”1"'3"“!*_ reached by way of Cape| -Now that the stream of colonis egtsiat have for one reason or another been[CGOQI HOPE. - o . s At.|Dhas long since stopped. the future of deprived of tunity for an ed- s B s ite Liberia lies in the natives ranging from tion was used | d€Prived of an opportunity for an lantic coast line of some miles. 3 : R was used | ORI R it e T faiea] 1o e How ;| barbarity to the verge of civilization zetting the| UCAtiON. s = : ©_this| On the west he British colony of |y practically all splendid raw ma- T A B H country to make their homes but have| Sierra Leone, where futile attempts at = ssembly to-] 3 = e D terial for civilizing influences. se was to|little or no knowledge of the language | colonization were made before Liberia | “IR}ore Gre no pygmies im Liberia. | customs a ose illitera wi W a E he east and north the amend t to the|OF customs and those illiterates who| was reached, and on t and some tribes, such as the Mandin- | 3 e Skl he|Tealize late in life that they have|are French possessions of the Ivorylgoe Gre fine physteal speciment. with TONIGHT AND. DARING INTRIGUE granting the right c : i i i omen. It was a weak | Missed something. coa !(‘raflgmilif:r‘bfl‘)flr‘flfi;‘efl;’“fi back | #_Pronounced European cast of feat- Ry F ‘ax| 1n the last few vears more particu- - s e - ures. 4 o e s | 1ar1s Rave e "been imprassed with | o U5 cotel Liberis nas ben ceared | *“Fnere are quaint customs amons|N O WLAND’S JAZZ BAND | T= 3 : War Tox E Pstie o g taten the importance of increasing our er-|%nd developed but from the Imaginary | (he natives, many of them bearing a Prices, Matinee 25¢c; Evenings 25, 35, 50c, War Tax Extra : 3 Sorts it AmericEnialion. Weik. %0 - SR B similarity to civilized practices. such as it others are go- mitive people, and Sir Harry Johnston | fpe yo 1 BT 08 Bots b ot retifiabs have realized the necessity of teach-|encountered b hirds and reptiles 2 ingo of courtin: v |ed windows represent about its stock rceded ratification | RaV® realized e — 1 : ; presents, which, if accepied, signify a[in trade and at exorbitant prices de- g x ing the aliens within our limits our living today which, he wrote ‘are s 5 ary f this vear. emergency such zaf 0B Lle AEERS T Moale. ol mE oy O e fom o ttons ¢ | tacit consent to further attentions, and | spite the low value of the kronen. Few |as late as Januarv of this : sension, eng|RBEDRES. our Bove and e e the wearing of mourning bands. not|of the restaurants and cafes that once|There is no warrant whatsoever for e ley que jhave ‘seen (He necessior of FRpreRste o Thus thaie ththe SoRtabt o of|1POn the sleéve, for the native garb|made Budapest fumous for food and mmoning Roosevelt from his grave € eguls upon them the imwuortance of becom- DVE thele A5 ihe coniuas Lok ome is often exceedingly scant. but around | music A snlendidly dressed people the colors of the vronosed league i reguiar | 5 in|the most unique. experiments in poli- ind snlendidly peopl = ing the best possible citizens and in ‘El g : oy by dWl | the fingers or about the head. These | are open. and idle and poorly dressed of nations advocated bv Mr. Wilson S B Bate for Hho. raf fact to elevate the citizenship of the Efgfl‘:’z‘“;‘,d‘f%‘;n:‘:?’t‘a ;‘;‘;;;;,__“‘: bands are made of dried grasses or|crowds fill the popular streets. |in the belief thit such a call is jus TODAY the Spettal sesbion an < to]Country for the purpose of insuring|.riiq the least known region of the |PImS: 3 The factories. are closed for ik | fied in anything that zreat Americ: e P P appears o[ " nited rather than a disunited COUM- | oro i Gorn comolamnts Other practices are not so harmless. [ of coal and raw materials. More than|had ever said. The two men had e the comviction of the governor that|( : A Especially objectionable, some travel- [ 200,000 persons have flocked to the| nothing in common in life and the: sentiment is sharply divided in Con-|"J1 (o . Al the| Planned as a reparation for the|lers repori, arc the initiation ceremon- | city from the surrounding regions.|have mnothinz in common now. We necticut on t question, thal thel b % ’”_“_J‘ e - ht | Seizure of its natives as slaves, and an|fes when the vouns folk reach marri- | The streets are filled with soldiery,|refer to the matter. with no intention present membbrs have expressed|“ork in this direction to © Di8DY| experiment in transplanting a far flung | ageable age. These are conducted by |both Hungarian and Rumanian, and!of giscussing it further. but as addi- i hools. Such is to be thought of i i . X 5 fhemselves upon the suifrage question|SCROOLS. Such is not to be thought oflrace once more in their native Soil|the ‘he-bogeys’ and ‘she-bogeys’ re- |detachments of the latter march com-|tional proot of the staiement —made 1n, but there is a large amount of work|ihe beginnings of Liberia had many | spectively. for the sexes, and while tinuously through the @ that the matter by the correspondent of the tion, if f ratif o Canmot be decided by 4 ecadom it that they can do and it is quite im-[contact points with early American|they inciude some instruction in dut.| One custom still survives in spite of | that Mr. Wilkon is mot the same man o g g ondiyt vote of thel portant that those who need just such | history. les of fatherhood and motherhood, of- | want and genera! dreariness of thelwho lefi Washinglon on fne third of B : be help should have explained to them| "It Will be recalled’ that the move-{ten are orgiastic in charactor™ city. That is the afternoon promenade|September. Hastily hatched chickens [f DELICIOUS upon by a legislature the members of | JP SO0 ANy red and be urged |ment for emancipating slaves had its on the splendld terrace overlooking|are coming home to roost—New Ha-|] “THE ch are chosen with the understand- s % beginnings a year after ‘the Declara- the/ Danube, but the poorly dressed|ven Journal-Courier. LITTLE DEVIL” jto improve them for their own as| . of independence was signed. with |- STORIES OF THE WAR throng is a ghost of old Budapest and hat jwell as the country’s good. Wherever | |}°] uch a question is to come A Waterbury saloon is to be turn- before them abolition of slavery in Vermont there is a striking apathy and sad- i 2 e 3 The aecision Governor Holcomb | there are enough needing the school-|,nq that as early as 18308, the im. Budapest Hungriest City. I e fon tho taces: of the promenaders:|ed. into anfloe. crlsmpptylorodsom In Six Parts is to the effect that no special emer-{iDE-_and not many cities could be|portation of African slaves into this | (Correspondence of The Associated| IFrom its terraced height across the | former el “h(“ SaLISRIo0EN § A gency ex and therefore no |P2ssed. the night schools ought to do|country was prohibited. Meantime Press.) iDanube the magnificent palace looke lhe? sirol “h‘)'“ A Haly ks thaY spec ession should be called and it | CAPAcity busines: George Washington having set the Budapest probably is now the hun-|dawn on its changed city, its spaciousperience a o I"‘ bRt KEYSTONE COMEDY special s n should be called and it} oy L example, many slave owners made pro- | griest of the greaf cities of Europe.|apartments. now occupied by govern-|note that all all ave gone, Jhe o is be that it will be generally EDITORIAL NOTES. vision in their wills for freeing their |From France eastward there isa grad- | ment officials. In one splendid suite|familiar places.—Waterbury Republi- approved y i R human property. ual tightening of the belt and an in-|of rose brocaded satin and gilt thejcan GAUMONT WEEKLY S E——— Everybody up fo. the word's series.| .y .o it came about that the free- | Creasing absence of nutritious food |inter-allied military mission sits, and| One of the things that no fellow HELP THAT COULDN'T BE HAD. Rt e dom's problem antedated the Civil War | until herg there is a dearth of fats of | General Bandholz, the American mem-|can understand is the government St 1 aekion of M it Mileve in SHABHIE grabbag is| jged over a meeting in Washington,| On meat days one light ration of|once was used by Emp, stooes . There A4 jnp: consitency, orlor | MBS St st LS B open. D. C. in 1%16 to form a colonization | beef. mutton or veal of poor quality is|seph. 2 persistency people it will have reason to hide its society. Bushrod Washington was the]to be had at the midday meal in the puzzles and discouragés people. A |be furnished the city? What is behind face for shame. It is presented a| 'For some reason or other we|first president of that society, formal- | larger restaurants that remain open, OTHER VIEW POINTS short time ago a plan for parcei post|all this vacillation of deplo: A »efore the nation|haven’'t heard much from Colonel organized on New Year's day in 1817, | Put on such days supper is meagre. sales was announced and a consider-|good work?—Bristol and of examples| House of late and after several expeditions had met | TOnight at the largest and most fash-| o more striking illustration could!able number of cash orders were which n sufficient to R T e with misadventures through epidemics | ionable hotel in the city, supper con-|y. . peen wiven of Mr. Wilson's state [ placed here and in other towns. Then restrai The wise hoisewife ~no can gct and |and opposition of natives, the Rev.|Sisted of a green pepper stuffed with|,r mind under keen disapvointment|came an order abruptly cancelling the But is horrified at[hiG a cook is kieping the process : | Jehudi Ashmun, in 1521, founded Li-|Fice and tomatoes Dolled spinach and|ihan_his adroii but_ sinnink appro-|sale. This was followed by a plan this latest manifestation of lawless- | profound secret. beria. a fragment of poor pastry. priation of Colorel Foosevelt as a|for a chain of stores to deal directly vess and regrettabi St JoF g The country’s name, signifying the R"m“x"“: 5L "l‘ad" supporter -of this league of ions. lol‘sll‘.\ and th;:)mzh the parmlmnos(y ress and r le display of race 4 6 Brraiit arder an already serious situation. : ic s so confused no one seems to S o i e M % Of thuke inj. |The hoshiesy, hct 1s betas doge n';irr\‘fvp:lf b bty i[:.;ogiru‘;; The Rumanians stout the surrounding S s S cossvait i 1914 In e et oot hor tidp 0 e For Infants and Childrea Washington and Chicago, It seems|safety razors shows the effect of the|;;. han President of the United States, | cOuntry for suppiies. Interruption of{ hi v PV on) “eovorea a league of | two weeks past New York has been InUse ForOver 30 Years most unfortunate Omaha should [high cost of getting barbered. are variously attributed to Rev. Raiph |Failway traffic. due to the coal short-|,.tions for the preservation of inter- |conducting a great municipal business have been left to mercy of such N R. Gurley, Ashmun’s friend and bfo- | #8€. is another factor. As this is writ-| o4iona) peace. which has been the|household expenses have been materi- | Always bears Carranza may pay a visit to north- iberi: ten Hungary is passing through thel - o n\" <", "\ ing ror a century and |ally reduced thereby in many a home the M a w b, in which women played grapher, who drafted the first Liberian % no small part and seem to glory in it,|€rn Mexico but therell be no recep-|constitution, and to Robert G. Harper, | §0Vernmental crisis that followed thel iy 15 Mr. Wilson ignored the con- | Right in the height of the usefulness | gignature of when there were sufficient troops|tion on the international bridge. of Baltimore, Md., a patron of the col- | Fesignation of Arthduke Joseph as| i icions o: Mr. rwosevell expressed |comes an order from the war depart- ; i ocsie s R el 4 i chief of state and this. with its uncer- within a car ride of the city to . 4 onizatien movement. Sitnty a5 o futtre Gevelophients: = - — — —— - — guell the disturbance even as they| 1t Will not be possible to gt the Within a decade of Ashmun’'s ar-|peightens the general depression of g 4id after the worst of the trouble was|(2ns interested in anvivirs but the|rival the Amer! n population had | this once gayest of cities. vy world's series for the next weck risen to nearly 1,500 a daily newspaper | ' The magnificent = streets present had been started, and a code of laws | plocks of sreat shops with shuttered That was a fitting climax to clean|was in practical operation. Originally | windews. Oniy here and there is a up campaign when those interned ;h? F;orlufiiuese and l:(el I])“h"h and | gtore open and usually it= poorly fill- 2 ans were started on thei oug! sold, pepper., slaves from could have been called upon to deal|Jermans were s n thelr Wa¥l Liberia. Today, as then, it has vast, witn the situation after it got beyond 4 1 undeveloped resources, both mineral y the local authorities, but there are two| x.iner side seems to stop and fig-| 274 agricultura B;xl:."fietf::e;:xe war- it m t t army posis close {0 Omaba from|u.. out just how much the public ‘s SEDGEISY oy anaulithes dr raibes fo T Port syemtunlly MERC/Bt| setting out of all the steikes In MGNEiaas: Lo Ty o - gt A R R “Liberia_is asserted to have one of . Ut W VISNRCS bk the hottest climates in the world, and wr r as accomplished all and more than it had| The man of 58 who is to enter the|few areas have more rain. The yearly set out to do in the beginning. If for|{cambridge High school certainly be- |fall amounts to nearly 13 feet of water. no other reason than to deal with just|jjeves that a fellow is only as old as|“The colonists declared Liberia an in- such conditions as that in Omaha|pe feels. dependent republic in 1947, and it was | The Fear of Indigestion Often Prompts there ought to be closer relations be- recognized within a few years by near- One to Start the Day Wrong. t®een municipal, state and federal| The man on the corner savs: The|ly all countries except the United authorities. The troops were _ready|closing davs of September give the|Statés. Previously there had been a Eat What You Like, Take a wmd had they received orders a few |impression that the vacation seasin is|SPlit. and Maryland, now the southern Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablet s ] the republic. was a rival ’ hours before the disgraceful out- about to return oty ol And You're Safe. e . Gocia (ke Dedis SGREERIE D6 e state to Liberia. It had its inception In the first place had this trouble >ccurred in amany other cities there would have been state troops that GRAND AUCTION SALE At Eastern Park 40 CHOICE BUILDING LOTS WILL BE OFFERED AT PUBLIC AUCTION THURSDAY, OCTOBER 2nd, 1919 e from a second colonization society Breakfast offers many of the mo fore it ot beyond bounds. linw veuld the leagme of maticns tate of M I wll the th ; . o s e Loverate wers it in fores to- deal it | (romed Totatip” °f Marvland. in ine savory disnes of sil the ihinez w< st | Also Friday, October 3, and Saturday, October 4, at 2 P. M. - Presi Roo 2o without breakfast save a roll and e Feate Suo Tlemuist Sevelt | Sip of coffee for fear of indigestion. If you like a fried egg, or some buck- |, TAKING RAILROAD EARNINGS. |the situstion at Fiume? is something Legislation has not as yet been en- | that mizght De explained at this time. ek wheat or ‘sausage for breakfast, go to Beautiful Presents Given Away Free. e e il Bovern the rallroads| wiih thousands of millinery workers - » 1t and foliow witn & Stuart’s Dyspepsia y Remeltnhcr after they have been retiirned to their | oV otnee shorare 1o Gaaeie bur s Tablet. ~Youll have no. trouble. The JAPANESE VASES, This owners. Several bills are before con- | jau T eac s Nia will @0 White the prise average person who neglects breakiast s Sal gress and others are to be expected.|or tne proposed ome will be put into Smmoks 10 KiTl The Appetite, or munch on CHOCOLATE SETS, SILVER, ETC. ¢ There appears to be no chance what- profit and ioss. 4 something to carry on till Junch time. ever for the Plumb plan and in all] - An empty stomach under these -condi- probability none of the plans as pre-| It doesn't make the gemeral publi: tions is not storing up, energy, but on ented 1o congross wil be adopied in | eel amy better over high prices. nn: e ieambie o s Remember the dates, and take Westerly Trolley to Garden its en! ¥ . thy xt eal, i TS seanedubn 1t i mbeei| e A R DO b T Tt o oar Rt - aod t top of Fox Hill and get off on the propert e - be told “thak “A man- feky . DS CowE 5 meals a day and digest them. -If th to mote that former Justice Hughes of | but ha rever is out.” stomach seems to be weak, to help it me- Y 'I' the supreme court of the United —_— > - give it aseistance is the ratianal thing EAS ERMS States has recently given his opinion The people of Pennsylvania as well ¢ f? ‘me'J‘srtyu:"x,no‘d);r“;:f‘ngr-c;l"(nno: ’ e 0 1 2 Dyspepsia Tamiets s regarding the Cummins railroad bill|as these of Massachusetts have rea youll 'soon learn thai resmiarity of |ll Norwich Office, RAYMOND LAND CO., 28 Shetucket Street. and therein he maintains that sectiom|son t0, be proud of the faét that they \ meals follows a natural tendeney. not . six of that bl as to the payment of | have a governor who is ready and b \ & acquired one You wiil find Stuarts JAS. R. McCLELLAND, Land Auctionzer, New Haven. “excess” earmings. in its application|anxious to see that law and order is 3, Dyspepsia Tablets on sale in almost all t6 carriers mot operating undar a fed-!ubheld. ’ S e Shaauetane - <he' Dliltety i/

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