Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
123 YEARS OLD a=—--— et 5 & mewth: sume o Se Pesmeffics ot Norwich Comn. ‘. Tetwhess Catte. Offies ase. Biftectal Boems 333 Bulistia’ Job Offies 382 Asmclates Prem b essiusived etitiet oy WEEK ENDING OCT. 11, 1919 10,353 MEETING TUESDAY NIGHT iThrough a regrettable mistake it declared In this column Saturday that the adjourned town would be held this (Monday) Such is not the fact for the meeting was adjourned from last Monday until Tuesday evening of this week. It will thus be held to- morrow (Tuesday) evening at which should be a gathering of the Xpters of the towr in keeping with the ce of the matters that are to before the meeting. Den't forget the date see that vou ars there and your volce and|such being letermined that it did not{cra) hours then scour and wash. The toast can be made over the hot|imProvement in the educational system| ing on Tuesday night. And all signs Exhibition Wte be heard the interest of the|proceed. while everybody was bemnz| When using ironware put it to soak | coals with the bread slices impaled on | in the past seven years under con-| point to the fact that the eity govern- 4 -3 then ,have clean, |sharp sticks. solidation. ~And now another gigantic|ment is on the up-grade still e Detter e tow STRIK ING HARBOR WORKERS. How the idea grows of inaugurating | Jarfe sum was invelved and ships|and :vipe d:yn. PR SRR 2?‘ o:‘?:e; "g‘r::xncflfl‘f::;!e:nén::e: ": BiEh ‘Balel,, Apa; t0S Resthe: Mt ::'r'mfrgl owner as well as for the Known Novel \ . & strike simpiy to cause trouble with | \Were in such need. It seems to be an-| Moisture ana acid caves tunt. WAIS|PRT WA L et o A Y uart| the name of “Soldiers” Memorial> 18| “'No one seems to be striving to keep “THE LOVE QUEST” Wi in view as a lever for getting|O'her one of those cases of red tape|fefP SUR SRESE TR SURGNS fever|of water to the coffee. Bring to boil- | Sed. It is about time’ the soldiers| down expenses, not even the holders|f Supparting Cast Includes Irving October 15, 16, 17 what s demanded is piainly shown by |07 Which explanation amount to noth- | (00, M0 Uotagie pan. but carefully | ing point over your gypsy fire, add a|2Pd sailors resented this kind of pro-|of good offices, and it would seem as f o = Lil Waik: Kath. g cew|ine and upon which bsd results ap-| o “ri paganda. If we need a mnew school| though the latter .would have some mmNes, Joaimn., el A . the rike of longshoremen in New P-| wipe it each time after using with|quart of milk, bring to beiling point - o4 ) P . i y the bi . Satios. . Phishtly BRCE BS BIF F dgain and let stand five minutes. pour | 16U build. one. But don't try to| interest in trying to keep their em-|Jlyn Williams, Nigel Barrie and Lit- /] For a half century the big B e i tu Who =F [ereaieds sinper: E refuily Into the cups (hroubh o sman| Sneak It over on us in that way. It ployers out of bankruptcy. || tie Ben_Alexander. : h make it possible to take care of thel SARGEROUS Avibie SEEAKEREE EINEN oy s " begins to look as if something Or|' The idea is to make the town and amusement enterprise has =mtpoing hat port have stopped 3 5 EN. L somebody neéeds a shaking up, and|city grow but how can that be ac- JOHN been a favorite with the work because, after having their pay| At no time could Secretary Lansing| Colored breakfast linen is in faver. that we need to get down to common | compiished if the tax rate 15 the high- ( LOWELL e ncreased practic: 100 . ner Fent|have presented his appeal to the fur- | Square’cloths which hang only a few SPOTS AND STAINS. sense in regard to school matters. | agt in the state? SN public. r de- ce th g of the war mands for boosting it to a dollar an £ that it extend the war time|Small |1avkh\§.hx\boul ru‘uru;en" inches | in a solution of 10 cents worth ott;hm- h;msd rn::meéri:;d- E:I'-ry !;xpns-er the city stops trying out fads and Rur 1 f for over- ulat:ons y square, are either of colored linen or | ide of lime and one teaspoon of soda | should atten e meeting 'uesday | fanci d trying to be bigger than o : s s touma st oy e e hren Chi s ey | else arc borderea with color. Some in| o a galion of water. Soak only a few | night and st o Neww Fork in the mitter of BubIlo sx- A Stirring Dramatio Offering anniversary of the town, the N e e S & sets show border wreaths of red roses, | minutes and wash in cold water. Take A AND TAXPAYER. . r Boprd to which it was referred for ad-as much eniphasis upon its need than | Soi2 PIP0C PRHTO SEUUR Dright Ereen | o s e tae o ih adon frice ahs| Norwich, Gctobef 11, 1919, S i hings. saliin g e ~wBAE PATHE NEWS 50th anniversary of the Fair joStment. They were awarded an in-|right now. With {he country thor-{leaves. They suggest breakfast sets of | salt. 3 T e o el Ahote 1o Jebration of the return of crease of five cents making their pay|cughly stirred up as ihe result of the}English china with its gay colors and| Perspiration stains in colored dresses| Concerning the Police Department. | combined tax rate of 40 mills in sight Py «“ 70 cents an hour but the board even on of the agitators, Who are in ev- | stff figures. The all-colored sets show |may be removed by soaking ah hour or | Mr. mditor: Replying to ~take Up.” | for this municipality before the end the service men and “Old pointed out as it granted this increase instance showing ro regard for|pink, blue or yellow flowers on tan ortwo in coid water, and washing the! who takes offence at the failure of| Of the city year, and how can the |As the oxygen-laden air sweeps up Home” week tha: the conditions at the present and order but deing averything|8ray linen. * |stained places with corn meal instead | the council to appoint a third sergeant| Chamber of Commerce, or men who|through the molten iron, it touches the “ trying to push Norwich alons, get in-|moiten carbon and silicon, which con- were almost ruinous from the - wer because -along | ading racieal e 3 e el e of et nAEna% 1| Health and animation are the color |cream of tartar wet with water and| fcer ‘and who asked for the creation|rate. A tax rate of 40 milis will not!them away. Millions of red and white I . .+ > and short- ot or ameh meamre Tt we | bearers of the complexion. To take|placed in the sun. of the office; also why the matter)appeal to a manufacturer who wants|sparks fili the air, as it some demon Week er hours there has been a marked de- [F enou fJuch reople i this| uicient exercise to Keep the bady| Coffee and fruit stains will generally | was kept a secret from {we of the {0 come here whem he sees rates of | within the flery fluid were giving & ee &rease in productiv Consequent- | countrs now. The fact of the Matterf yong and robust, and to so exercise | disappear if the fabric is held taut over | police commissioners until it had been( 19 1-2 in New Haven, 22 mills in New | pyrotechnic performance. A thousand Iy there was no justification for a fur- |is that we bave 100 many and the{ong's mental machinery that it fumc-|a bowl and boiling water is poured | presented to the legisiature? To what| London. 17 mills in Ansonla. 20 mills|engines, with safety ' valves hissing || All ~the Best Features of ther increase s there would have|sreat regee: is that we are experienc- | ions briskly. 1o loo much trouble for | throngh it Quties shall a third sergeant be as-|in Bridgeport, 17 mills in Derby, 22|under {remendous pressure, have the Pro, e Co Fa Bhén had the shortening of the hours|inz i dificulty as we are in getting | some lazy women. Hence the rouge| For blood stains soak in cold water | signed? ° Will the first and second| mills in Hartford. 27 mills in Meri-|voice of a zephyr in comparison. |} & gressive untry Fair | act one as rounds-| den, 20 mills in Middletown, 20 mills| First the flame that pours forth is vi- and the doubling of Blater resuits At the time the matter was submit- the pay shown much greater distance, ertheless the heavties can, those whe like to ought to walk. There s 70 better time of the for the pedestrian to get the benefit of his favorite exercise than right now. In fact thers is no better time for sryone who walks, whether he does it by preference cr rezessity. asd even within walking distznce it is possible to get in toweh with the same delight- ful colors as nature makes its changes. It would be for physical improve- ment if more people who arz engaged in sedentary jobs would resort walking for exercise. Not only would they get acquainted with many things they are unfamiliar with but they would get good air and evecy such ex- cursion into the country would be for their physizal weil being resulting in better appetites, - better complexions, better sieep and better health. TOO MUCH RED TAPE. In connection with the wreck of the Eritish ship Port Hunter in Vimeyard sound, the fdve million dollar cargo of which Was greatly diminished when salvage operations were undertaken because of the time ths goods had been in the wate: and the fact that people living along the Sound had visited the wreck and removed pocsibly goods of many hundred thousand dollars value. We are just learning at this date, almost a year since the steamer went aground. that the vessel was allowed to rest on the shcal without markings of any kind. indicatinx of course to the people that it was abandoned, and without any effort at salvage opera- tions being attempted for fully a month after it struck, and this course was followed because it was a foreign ves- sel and the delay was beczuse of safe- ty. It is astonishing to leuvr that the navy department wasn't in touch with the ownersnip of the vessel, nx well as the ownership of the carge immedi- ately it was reported aground. and acked to give until it hurt, 10 hasten the salvaging of the cargo and ihe raising of the ship inasmuch. as such ons committee of the house, e 1o show rheir disregard for it rid of some of the worst of them. Fiie extension of the regulations “sked for would mean the right to ex- ‘Wash yellow linens and bleach them in tne sun. e Never put away a garmen need ‘mending. An electric sewing machine is a vast saver of energy. of uniform size. Y B make large quani o el at once. | Smaller quantities bring make a fowl of doubtful age tend- ar:r:dlil C of Jjuice to the water in which it is boiléd. To prevent meld from forming oni top ¢ the liquid in which pickies are kept, pat in a few pleces of horseradish root. A sthall piece of orris root piaced in the beller in which handkerchiefs are Dolled will give them & perfume that will las . Wax and candle grease stains may be removed by Scraping, covering with blotting paper and pressing with a hot iron. You can cut up eld kid and use Fhesa for Any of the following pur- Dell or baby shoes, pillow cov- case agticles or of ers, little travelfhg novelty belts. i Machine oil or axle grease shou be covered with lard, washed with cold water and soap, and then in hot soap suds. CARE OF UTENSILS. Always coat the inside of any new utenisfl with mutton tallow or lard. Let this stand a day or two, then gradually heat until the fat melts, and theén wash with hot water and washing soda, ‘which should be in the proportion of a heaping tablespoonful to a quart of water. Use a_dish mop or a fork to hold the cioth. Rinse the utensil in hot water and wipe dry with a clean towel, rub- bing it very hard. Another good method of preparing new iron kettles and spiders for use is to boil potato parings in them for sev- as soon as emptied: hot water and wash the inside and outside carefuily, rinse in hot water inches over the edge of the table and HEALTH AND BEAUTY. pot flourishes. Walking, circulation, because it increases the does wonderful things to Marshmallow Sauce — Eoil three- the ideal season for ordinary pienics | quarters of a cupful df sugar with one- where one sits on the grass under | quarter of a cupful of milk to about whispering trees, but autumn for the|six minutes until it spins a thread. automobile picmic—autumn with in- vigorating_ air, col ‘wonderful sunsets! Set the syrup aside to cool. When loring and | about blood heat beat with a spoon If it is chilly ome [until thick and white. Set the sauce- sits on the car to eat luncheon and |pan into boiling water and stir until hot coffee comes out of thermos bottle, the cloth may be spread on tl in some sheltered nook and be_boiled over a gypsy fire. Have you ever tried hot frankfurt- ers on an autumn picnic? miss such a treat. but take frankfurt- ers along the very next time. Hang a pail of cold water over vour out door fire. Put in the frankfurtexs and when ,the water boils they are idone. Plade them immediately be- tween the halves of split rolls and serve with mustard. Sandwithes for the picnic may be made in no time with bread slices cut thin and spread with a paste of deviled ham and mayonnaise, or with chopped sardines and mayonnaise.- Wrap each sandwich separately in oiled paper. If vour guests are fond of your special Weish rarebits you can make the rare- bit at home, carfly it along in a bowl and heat it over your outdoor fire. If you perfer freshly-made coffee to that carried in a thermos bottle, put a For mildew, place the stained article of soap. Grass stains may be covered with and wash in soap suds. If kerosene is spilled on a rug hang it _over a line and leave until it is evaporated. Many stains are best treat- trusty | thin enough to pour. if the day be warm |of marshmallows with two tablespoon. ground | fuls /of water (in a double boiler) un- ree may | til smooth. Mix hajf a pound Pour the syrup over the melted marshmallows and beat thoroughly. Keep warm, but not hot, It not, don’t | until ready to serve. LETTERS TO.THE EDITOR « That Schoel Question. Mr. Editor: We see by the report of the superintendent of schools that he recommends the location of his office in a Iflorc' suitable place and centrally located, three flights of stairs being too long to climb to thi most important office of the depart- ment of education. Some of us would like to see some of that educatioh put to work in the schools and the office abolished altogether. We fail to see the need of it where the supervisors| are doing the work in their respective districts, and we also fail to see any scheme is proposed and is being forc- ed_upon the already heavily burdened taxpayers in the town of a junior Some of us think the committee are on the police ‘force. I ask him to tell the public the need of such an of- sergeants still man, and the other do patrol duty, at Greeneville, as they do now? Or will the third sergeant hold a soft berth A MusicaL DIFFERENT AUGMENTED ntrancin, PRICES80c, §14 SEAT S, SfiMEBOD‘fi Encemble of Gorgeous Girls. 150 and TODAY AT 10 A. M WIS ‘Monday and Tuesday SHE Was a Prisonor with a Half Mad Man as Her Jailer — And Then Came the Great Crisis of Her Life—How She Met It Is | Wenderfully Tel h‘ the Great 'NAZIMOVA —iN— ‘Out of the Fog A 6 Part Picturization of the Stage Suce: “ 'CEPTION SHOALS" ————— e DOROTHY DALTON N OTHER MEN’'S WIVES A Delightful 5 Part Comedy Drama —_— ‘WAR WOMEN. OF LONDON Burton Holmes Travelogus v War Tax Extry erataion of that type of education which will best fit it to become self- supporting, JULIA WELD HUNTINGTON. ‘Norwich, Conn., Oect. 10, 1919. Danger Point Reached in Taxation and Expenses. Mr. Editor: It would seem as though the danger point has about heen reached in the matter of taxation and expenses in both the town and eity of Norwich, for a higher tax- rate never confronted the town than the one that comes before the meet- Taxation is certainly getting to be a burden and it must be for the large There is no reason for it being so, if dustries here with a prohibitive tax- in New Britain, 19 mills in Water- bury and smaller places have lower. tax rates. a fal Adapted From Lenors Coffee's W stitute the olet, then shades into orange, becomes THE STAFFORD FAIR We Want You With Us Fiftieth Annual KIMBALL YOUNG And Her Own Company In Wednesday, Thursday and Friday THE CLOUDED NAME This year comes the 200th impurities, and carries It Will Be Some CATTLE, HORSES, POULTRY, FAKIRS dazzling white, burning finally to a int blue, which is a sign that all the 384 to the board it was agreed that its|Ciude from the country bolsheviki, an-!the whole system, naturally toning up p L It Norwich is to grow it must|impurities : the freight bandiers didn't get all they | TCYOIUUONIStE 1t scems to be a mat-|and resuling o better oolor, MOTe|(ine’spot) and put awaf in a drawer|in all kinds of weather? ~This would| perimentd that are of mo avall ' |that is necessary to replace the needed o L T S @sked for. and were told that they| (" "7 Which congrass cught to svend | SQTOT I ETer ot MO A R mg is|for a week. Shake out and the spot|be like sending the chief out om| It is O T e & e ifhin_ oue| Portions burnt out is added, the great were not g o it they have pro-| (¥ little time in debate. The fact is| fopiivGone, the muscles of the whole | has Wholly disappeared. Franklin square for day duty and put- | England method of only for' the | Dok and steel egg swingm back to| THE EUPHEMIAM CIRCLE their |they represent a type of -people who gL ot - — ting the second sergeant at the desk|{means and spend money only for the| ositjon, the carbon is mixed with the B o their agresmant| L Geaiier Bive'at pay faERtand | oo Areokihentn with furiher TO BLEACH LACE. at headquarters. What an element! things that we are in great need of.|fervent fluid, and then the ofE tips or e s Bemds dscision su8 inly we 4o /not dsiise & Noog of |2 cicions (o health. < = | of discora to inject into the depart- ANOTHER CITIZEN. |over on its side, and out of the top e DRy going ouvt on strike have tied up all o Moo e i e A chair for an invalid or an elderly| You find that some of your ‘old bits| ment that would be! The force should| Norwich. Oct. 12, 191 flows the liquid steel into a great ladle. or THE port business. no: only causing stag- | T o Upon | o son may be made convenient by |Of Irish lace have become yellowed,| pe treated justly, fairly and with a ‘When it is swung back into position, . mation as far as the movement of | NOIICH Just 3¢ s00n &s peuce i de-| ,iicing a drawer beneath the seat, | POSSibly with perspiration. and the best| desire to maintain its efficiency.’ An| . THE DAY’S NEWS & man with colored glasses walks out| CREENEVILLE CONGT, CHURON ships is conc, b ausing the | CATed. Whether that be suon or far|arranging it to pull out at the side. It |Way to remove this is to bleach it. To| officer who has a record of fifteen or IN over the converter and peers down in- et g &potling of many thousands of dollars| . It i plain encugh.ihat they would|can be provided with a“lock if de-|do this you would :ns‘i bem:e your| twenty vears of faithful service ought| 1, view of the mation wide atten-|to its white-hot depths to see if the WILMA DEARBORN CARTER @Btk of perishable zoods belonging to | (oM [0 N0 £00d and as many others|gired. The drawer can he readily)Wastlng Process by ‘acking the laceto he promoted before a man Who|ion pow directed toward the strike of [heat from thé last charge has melted —~IN— Sose who a ey oncerned, 1t | B2Ve might be able to squeeze by our {manipulated by any one occupying the Pplece HOr, ! en | has Dbeen on the force five or SiX |grael workers, the National Geographic |away any of the fire-brick lining. If{ READINGS AND SONG STORIES s x trance rezulations. The best thing|chair and make the infirm feel farily | il comes to bleaching it the lace may | vears. Is it fair to appoint a man over | Yoo\ “has issued a bulletin, based on | it has, he hurls a ball of putt-like clay AND B nother case of making the public | e een them oui while thes | independent, a many useful articles|be 1aid out in the sun without danger | the heads of six or seven who are his| JOeo0y Mas 8Ned, & MUCOl T MRCC B | oo ®nls The holen to stop them up o MABELLE SOHOFIELD, sufer. and ragardiess of the injustice |0 40 i *|ana treasures may be kept there, ana|Oof coming in contact with anything|seniots in the serviee? If it is mec- & COBRAMCIIOL TR (TN or | sets a crew. of Workmen o patching F ‘PIANTS i B = Which hai been repu-|®F he or she will not have to ask for|that may soil it If possible let the|essary to create the office of third| 00" Thich he terms “industry’s|the damaged whell. This done, the big ) @iated by their union heads, the ferry- | B every little thing wanted. bleaching take place on the green grass | sergeant. he should not be placed in(SUCCh (VIS8 "0y "Tllietin follows: | eggs swings back again, gat another “o“,\:"v'r:‘mnsw:‘rml‘:l_.r - EDITORIAL MOTES. with the sun beating down on it and | keep it wet all the time if ‘possible. A position that would in fact elevate - 2 . is on him higher than the first and second| The story of Bessemer stecl = qne | charge of molten iron, and begins the {of the fascinating chronicles of the in- Boat empioves process over again. The whole ope- and there is ev have joined with them | 2 i v | Now tnat the Turks have seized Ko-| The cold bath, taken immediately AT 515 O'CLOCK. n 2 refusal on the par arising, will help Sou to begin the ; of the lonsshoremen to take cars of |Meh Who is £oing to biamé them af- | 350" SCPE, Dl AR (2”0, Fuaken ||, OF Course, lace should not be ironed | officera of ne rank of sergeant The of bt faseinauing RIS SL N o | Rition takes. about 20 minatena ton sasernmen: vesscis neoring port. It|'°f (N® eXample set by D'ANRURZIO? |iired and ragged. The cold bath how- | 1o, OT4r o smooih it it should be | scheme was sécretly hatched and two|o 2% Hose cases where (wo men|of steel a minute. Bessemer steel in s it £ 2 ¥ on a clean ironing | of the three commissioners k | o At tie - 9 R ; Tdo €ertainly represents a deplorable sit-| oo oo ers inorming | S5 canvet be recommended to every | hoarg. | fng ‘concerning the matter until they| Working in different countriecs eachfused for structural materials, railroad |the open hearth furnace, which oan pation and there i= no wender that| “1::"»" he «:h_ :’ hmnz woman. Some women have not slum. were asied to appolnt some one third| Without knowledge cfhwhfu the n(ler rails, wire, and pipe. use with equal success ores which the 5 Sre anxious to learn whers| 70 ve a great thifg for the red|cient -vitality to recover quickly from bes e v . ing.| Was doing, reached the same conclu- “In 1900 there was twicd as muech | contain a large or a small amount of TLie e 1 aiaous to learn where |, jicals. but It would be a bit hard on | the shock. For theme the tepid bath SYRUP CANDY. - fergeant. A very queer proceeding | lloh about the same time. Both Were!sieer produend in e Gonen arich | Shoepnoroue, | Iargely | replaced the o $he-Hng ‘|is best and the waier can be cooled | One-quarter pound sugar. one-quart- | o 1o o8% T8 10 RS PONCC AERRRCRTUN| granted American patents: but upon | by the Dessemer as by the open-hearth | Bessemer converter.” gradually: or. the face, neck and arme | er teacupful water. one-quarter tea-! o, T 8"S 0" was Toundly abused for|application for renewal. the Patent|process. But with the rapid exhau “A subsequenl bulletin wyl. fleal CUTTING FOG DANGER. When one stops to realize the dan- gea that is caused to shipping, the vefiels that are shipwrecked and the igyes that are lost by fog. it will be e3Pnestly hoped that the problem of overcoming this peril, on which inven- 197 have long ben wo-king, has been solved by mea of wireless tele- graphy Seme progres least seems to 3t ::. been made in that direction by new device of the federal bureau oE&tandards which 2d a severs ory test and is about to be given aSbractical test in connection with the Ighthouse bureau since its use is in- between lighthouses and ves- or between vessels at sea isthing has as yet been devised to away the fog. and to a certain tha radio invention acts along the line of the submarine bells, but if effective it will be more far. ing and pu: ship and chore in| close touch that a great deal of ougnt to be avoided. ing to this arrangement itter s placed in a lighthouse it sends out its location by radio Iy, the same as 2 fog horn is—eperated. omly that while it might mot be pessible to hear the horn over the noise of a storm the radio mes- sage would be cauzht by the appara- aboard ship and from the shore it would be able to ascertain its position. !I that from Washington to L York It is quite ewident that it should Soth I ! sterm ang fog. & wenderful array of colors that is im- a”l-fln"l!h valleys and all contributing ctheir part get out to mee them for though it blessem time it is The one great trouble with October is that it isn’t 2 bit considerate about the wav in which it sends forth its hot =nd eold spelis Remoraber th> town meeiing Tnes- day night. Every citizen should be in attendance to look after his and the "own's interests. How Jong have” we got to wait be- fore someone comes forward with the annual and of course never failing goosebone prediction for the winter? Now D'Annunsio € having trouble with the head of the Fiumians. That doesn’t look as if harmony was going to prevail there under existing condi- | tions. Now the soft coal miners are going on a sirike regardless of the fact that their war time agreement has mot ex- pired and will not until peace is com- pleted. The man on the corner says: A good many people would be frightened. though enlichtened, if they should keep. books and find cut where the money goes If what Frank Perry tells about the riches unteuched in the frozmen north s correct there is due to be quite an exodus in that direction in the not distant future. Herbert Hoover thinks that fair sal- aries may pot be paid te teachers in time to prevent their conversion to adicalism. It wouidn't do to take tes- timony frem the children on that sukb- seet. 1 the announcemen: that has gome forth tha: Clemenceau will not be a candidate for is correct, his labsence from the movernment of nce will be greaily mimsed outside 2s well as in that country. s e 3 Bonding companies in New York are calling for armed guards of over 30 to accompany carrying large sume. ThatIs one way of trying to put an end to such large and -easy thefts of securities as have -been ’made. Scme are terribly surprised that and luring the they will be at their those who ride, they may be able auto or an elec- or able to cover a Semator Walsh is againct the peace treaty, but none more so than the president will be for he It is said helped in the senator’s election by de- claring that he kmew that Waish would suppert bim as much as he knew that Wesks would oppose him. cangbe treated with a quick sponging. Ond Wise lady wears a coarse mitt oF cotton glove. dips her hands in ice water and goes over the body briskly, one part at a time, and drying quickly In that manner the body has mo chance to be chilled. The effect is invigorating and refreshing. Dull eves brighten un- der this treatment and the blood comes to the surface of the skin in nice biushing, flushing glows DON'TS IN CANNING. Don’t have any empty jars on your shelves at the end of your canning sea- son. Don’t forget to blanch and cold dip all vegetables. This improves color and texture and prevents the shrink- age in jars. Don't open a jar to put on a fresh rubber after removing the jar from canner without replacing the jar in canner and resterilizing. Don’'t allow less than five minutes for resterilizing of fruits and -fifteen minutes for resterilizing of vegetables if it is found necessary. CHRYSANTHEMUMS. Ragged chrysanthemums made of white, pink, red or paper. The circles are cut from one o five inches in diameter. crinkled be Yellow | from the center, cut in strips reaching almost to the cegter, and then strung on a wire on the end of which a wad of paper big been secured. They are® then passed through the hand as if they were a pieee of paper to be crinkled, a calyx pasted on, leaves are cut from the same, and the stem ll'!w and fastened to a natural twig. PREVENT BURNING. Place eake pan into a jarge pan with salt enough to caver bottom of pan; let pan of salt heat with the oven. This is sure and tested. Salt may be used over and over. It is best to kesp a pan of salt always on hand. Never tails, even in gas stove. DICTATES OF FASHION. Geodet fullness is a characteristic of many of the new tailored suits. Italian gray is one of the new shades for felt hats for motering. A white cotton veile is daintly trim- med with bands of pink voile. A waistcoat in color or white adds te the smartness of the suit. Louis , VI, influences are strong in garments for the advanced season. Knitted fabric capes have collars of angora wool in contrasting colors. A style which will appear extensive- ly in the fall frocks is the bloused ef- fect of bodice with haremed tunic and skirt. spoonful cream of tartar, one-quarter | teacupful golden syrup. Boil all these together very quickly for ten minutes, then beat iill the mixture becomes cloudy and thick, pour quickly into a deep plate and when it.is firm cut in squares and wrap each in wax paper. FOR MOVING DAY. Prevent the cartmen from putting everything in the wrong room by using different colored tags. Tack up a big red tag in vour guest room. for inst- }ance, and put req tags on all the fu niture that is to go in it. © A CLEANER’S HINT. 1f you have light trimming on a dark non-explosive cleaning fluid. When the fluid has evaporated. brush off the dry meal and the trimming will be clean. | CONCERNING WOMEN. { Two-thirds of the members of the - | Retail Clerks’ Union in Richmond, Cal, are women. Miss Jane Gregory, daughter of for- mer United States Attorney General Gregory, who has pledged herself to support three Belgian war orphans has been awarded the Order of Queen Elzabeth. 5 ‘Women employed in the Bureau of Engraving and Printing at Washing- ton ciaim that they are doing skilled and. semi-skilled work for less wages than those paid unskilled laborers. Heusewives in Covington, Ky., have effort to cut the high cost of living, Countess Feodora Cleichen of Lan- genburg is one of the world's foremost sculptors. Mrs. William Booth Jr. conducts a commercial schoo! *+ Pekin for Chinese boys as well as men. al FLUTED RIBBON. Flutea ribbon is a fashibnable hat trimming, particularly for small hats of duvetyn and of velvet and hatters' plush. RAINBOW GIRDLE. Quite the loveliest finish for an over- blouse in delicate coloring or in black for evening wear is a razinbow girdle. made, as one may readily surmise, of many colors of soft satin ribbon. RECIPES. ' e biue | in another room, green in a third, etc. | Junior High School W dress that has become solled. cover it | with corn meal saturated with some | ber must begin at once to be self- organized a co-operative store in an|them they are best fitted for, which Steamed Ginger -Pudding——Chep one scant cupful of fresh .béef suet with a little flour until as fine as powder. Mix with a half a cupful each of mo- lasses and syrup one preserved ginger andea half cupfuls of bread crumbs, Maay little children appear charm- ' two level cupfuls of flour, one tea- doing a_first class bit of detective work and his traducers put to shame. Now that the democrats in the eourt of com. tilting at wind-mills, let him apply his soubriquet to himself. He may learn that th democrats in the court of com- mon couneil know how to practice the| American spirit of falr play, in their| treatment of the volice force. dealing | {out justice to republicans and demo- crats alike. i Respectfully vours, FAIR PLAY. 1919, Norwich, Oct. 11th | Help Prepare | Children to E®rn Their Living. | “Mr. Editor: Over 2 uvate each year from schools. The majority i 00 pupils grad- | the Norwich | of this num- | | supporting. They have had, in thelr | school course. very little training that| will he of value now. The boys may have spent an hour a week at car pentry or joinerv and the girls have been given an hour a week of cook- ing. To get this information many must_have spent an hour or more traveling back and forth on the trol-! ley, for cooking is taught only in the! Broadway school. ‘With the junior high school In op- eration the boys will ‘leave school | with an elemental knowledge of wood | working, printing. painting, electrical| { work, machine work and the girls. will have had home economies, cooking, | millinery, sewing, while typewriting | and stenography will be open to both | sirls and boys. Moreover these children will learned from their -junior high school experience in these subjects which of i have | of them they prefer. A mastery of that subject will, after graduaation. | be obtained in a far shorter time than if the pupils were to attack it with only the general training that they are Zetting in the sehools tday. "Also there would be less danger of a parent's paying a child's way, say | through a term of commercial “work, only to find that the child had mno aptitude for that work. Such lack of ability_for that special subject would have been brought to light in the junior high seheol. Norwich proper has had no new school building for 24 or 25 years. Y understand that on the West Side it has been necessary to fit up cloak rooms for reeitation rooms and that the result is unsatisfactory and un- 1Is there any truer form of democr- cy than the gitft to the younger gen- Children Cry FOR FLETCHER’S CASTORIA | such a tremendous blast through iburn “out all !latter suggestion was the confribution lof Robert F. Mushet, a Scotch steel Oftice held Kelly to be the inventor. The world, however, gives the credit to Bessemer. and the process is known as the Bessemer process. Kelly was a maker of old-fashioned cooking pots and kettles. It is related that one day he was sitting in front of his furnace and observed a point of incandescence where there s no charcoal—only” the meta! and the air. This led him to contend that air alone would burn out the impurities from meiten iron. When he developed his tilting converter, his engineer blew the first charge that fron and all went up as sparks 1o his discomfiture and the .crowd’s amusement. He finally suc- ceeded in getting the amount of air reguiated, and poured out of his con- verter the first Bessemer steel. Peo- ple said Kelly would soon be burning ice. ‘Since his old converter was first | used. billions of doliars’ worth of steel has flowed out of the world's converters. “Both Kelly and Bessemér were baf- fied by the problem of regulating the suppiy of air so that it would not the carbony a little of which is esstntial to steel. Furthmore. their products proved to be brittie, ow- ing 10 the fact that the molten metal absorbed oxyaen from the air blast. The first difficulty was solved event- ually by ‘the expedient of burning out practically all the carbon. then addding exactly the amount required for the specific quality of steel desired. The second difficulty was overcome through the addition of manganese to take care of the hurtful oxygen. The of maker. Goransson . a Swedish iron- | master, had previously achieved the! same results by using a pig iron ini- tially rich in manganese. Thereafter underdone and overdone steel disap- peared. “To go into a great building where there is a battery of Bessemer con- verters is to see more heat than Dante gver plctured. A converter is & huge | e8g swung ‘amidships’ on trunions. | The. great egg of steel lined with’ fire | brick has the top off. Some twenty | tons of molten pig are poured into it. and then through séme two hundred little holes in the bottom powerful en- gines pump in a stream of cold air and temples with | or Headache— Rub the forehead tion of ores having the proper amounts JOHN HART BRITTAIN, BE-568, Station F, New York, N.Y. with the open-hearth process for pre- phosphorous for converter practice, | ducing steel. LUXURIANT HAIR FOR YOU? OF coarse you desire it. Then read of this wonderful Aair elixir, KOTALKO o 98 e e e e M o 1 S ang nm.'vmuu lotions that &re ealy drying your scalp and delog Foec S TR S S S o S R s e MR e R R B i s g e AL il W, S oL TV o8, P ot T 2 SR B M e e, B e e el Sals e R g j i ) e reons who g ey fotirey you by mail procptly or ool cest = hen & person S St : SRy B R R izl "swin 5 b Kok Sy < E e T T oo i sl i " T R SR B TR Bl otolhe: seni 1o Saxmnich Wil come 10 v, < it Sy 10 ot B o g 5 Tont e g R Baie, o gae et bl Soet i e e KO ALK aie ity A s cromth o % e o Pt P, Yok iy now_ Shikin the eennios T o i tevtine vt by mall NOW, 3By ace s¢ twice daLir Typewriter Bargains 1 Smith Premier No. 10......... $15.00 2 Monarchs.................... $25.00 1 Momarch. ..........0v:.......$35.00 1 Underwood. ................. $55.00 If you have use for one or more of these, you must act quickly. The Cranston Co.