Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 5, 1919, Page 4

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s NOVEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, %fi_flmy eatitioe tor o al) newr Comateh- Lollt v Crodiad in e local tews published AD dighte o repoblication of @ecial despated. Bereln are alse werred. WEEK ENDING ‘NOV. . 1st, 1919 | THAMES BRIDGE OPENING. SRegardless of the form the éxercises take the opening of the mew bpidge across the Thames rive l!'!'ll New London ard Groton s much not only to those com- munities and New London county but 18 &ll who have occasion to follow the | highway along the she today in kdeping with the times and removes that part of the ate from the un- edrtain dependence which has hereto- fofe been placed upon When it is realized tha experience the de are required in chines across the it that parties frequently make the tr this city on one side down on the other clated what it auto traffic a Bt at this time converted bri vel from o other wha road ferr to railroad t It wil nicipal ferry cut into its r ferrybos than ¥s that many times rder t ma river point D to and appre mean t of the river the with t afi do even t those who will prefer ry to walking the will be required i but that only emphasizes t ft is not solely New London and Gro ton that goin be ‘ In connection Rowever, there s looked the contributi t has been made by the New H en road in mak- ing this change pi of the reasons forsthe the structure t less was an a recognition. weuld have bec from the fer: entitled to due gift there | ¥ of relief! Bu for n no y GOVERNMENT'S RAIL CONTROL. As If they had bee ling the pulse of the country a found | that it was against t a | quiring eontrol of the r country and running ¢ Plumb plan. the hoods are now that there was plece of proposed vor the keeping of are—under government for two years lo thing about zovernment ope the brotherhood ble that they fi after two years to plan again, and cert ua ing the roads would be ea government in ations th. hands of t At the ed by the government in of the railroads rh #d to over a auar lars. Th K« 0 the owners has heen fixed fo fisst of the year 0 le lation has beer ed to g afler that return has bee less than two months ren to adopt it The chances seem s for the passage of fore the first of wquid think of pu was of vern made and n which is time anvary, and no one g them © der the old conditions prevailed | previous to the war. On the other hand the roads should not be turnéd back until provision has been made whereby their income provide stifficient funds to keep t after the return the gov not be relied upon to me it.is doing now | And yet it will not re twol| y#ars to pass the needed railroad leg- islation or to allow the rates necessary to do business fair profit. The idea of extended control as advocated by the brotherhoods is mot for thc aid of the railroads, but it séems probable that short ext sion will be required beyond the first of Janeary if the roads are to be return- ed:in as 500d condition as when taken. KEEP THE BOARD. ‘When the sugar equalization board suggested that it was about ready to wind up its affairs it apparently start- ed congress to thinking what would b the result of such action wrder the existing conditions, and it is in keep- ing with the present state of affairs that greater ac should be shown in_getting through the legislation that i« meeded to coniinuc the board and to_give it the authosity to pirchase stigar ‘vea thoug: the delay has been costly. What the-board has done in only one instance is shown by its report to the effect that it has through the margin of just a trifie over a third of a cent a pound which it has received in turn- ifig over the sugar acquired to the re- fimers piled up for the government the sum of $30,000,000, an amount which it takes care to explain has not meant igher ‘price for the consumer but only what would have been abscrb- By the growers, refiners or dealers , the board not received it. h%hh the board receiving that amount: from iis small margin it can be appreciated what would be the pro- fils all along the line of the services of the board should be dispensed with, restrictions removed and prices be al- ax» e aware of the crossing to keep out fto have been demanded by certain “bootleggers” in Philadelphia. Sugar has been kept where it has Ibeen through the work of the sugar board. Conditions are not such that the restrictions ought to he oved and it ought to be plain to gTess that the quicker it acts in extending the life of the=board and giving authority it seeks the greater will be the benefit to the sugar consumers of the ‘country. CROSSING RAILROAD TRACKS. With due regard for the protection of lives demands are constantly being made for the elimination. of grade crossings or the protecting of them by flagmen or signals, but-the fact cannot be: overlooked that there is a large -responsibility that rests upon the shoulders of those using highways that cross railroads if safety is going to be obtained. Overhead or under- neath crossings prevent collisions; so does the exercise of the proper amount of care. Flagmen, signs and signals warn all users of the highway and cause many who wquld not otherwise of the way of the lecomotive ,but there are too many instances Where too much dependence is placed upon a re- straining hand to keep one out of trouble, wheén'proper care and atten- tion would ‘do it. This is well illustrated by the frightful grade crossing accident in New Jersey where 14 young people ivere killed and 13 injured when a pas- senger train crashed into. a motor- truck filléd with humanity bound for a pleasure trip. It was at a drossing where rh(‘ view of the railroad was not blocked. The engineers of the in had whistled for the crossing and the signal at the crossing indicated that a train was approaching vet the driver of the truck proceeded along without slowing down until sameone shouted a warnin In this case.it is entirely probable that the noise of the crowd or the Yruck was sufficient to drown out any rumble or whistle of the train and that is frequently the case with any. automobile, but there was the signal totally ignored seemingly in the same attitude as many drivers used to plunge through the lowered gates at Long Island crossings rather than to slew 1p the car. Thut grade crossings sko at the minimum anq some sort of pro- tion provided at svch danger 11t the responsibility of looking for self and party cvery auto or vehicle too * recognize, d be kept ine ou whici cannot mething driver NEEDS EXPLANATION, ving been named to wind up the of the committee on publicity hich George Creel was at the head during the war period, E. J. Ells rth has le his report and any- but creditable statement in alf of the committee is presented, This committee. it is shown. dis- sed over six and a half million in ic struggles to find something to do and keep itsel? busy and the dis- closar re sufficient to cause the in- to charge negligence and vagance in connection with the nmitige's worlk. s fact the irs of the commit- were in a deplorable state of af- when the investigator began to ravel the tangle. as can betimagined a that checks pa government were thrown in- that megotiahlé papers and on the | re were from 400 to 500 cases in which checks had been to issued for Individual expenses to amounts far heyond $1000 though it was fixed by congress that that should be the maximum amount. It seemed ave been a case where nearly ev- eryone on the committee disappeared from his job iust as soon as the ar- mistice was d without regard for| puiting the affairs of the committee er. X Being at the head of the committee the responsibility would seem to fall pon Mr. Creel's shoulders. He thus scems to be kept under that same fire that he experienced while dminibtering the committee’s affairs. t may be in his case that silence i siden but he ought to feel the need iining some of these things if n be explained. in or heavy EDITORIAL NOTES. Join the Red Cross and be sure you re o member of a worthy and popylar nization. Trolley cars on the Lanrel Hill- Boswell avenue line attract about as much attention as the high buildings in the meétropol Try as they would no body of vot- ers could keep up with the rash pre- dictions of some political leaders. greatly to the eredit of Massa- chusotts that it has reelected Gov- ernor Coolidge. Think what it would have meant for any state not te nave upheld a governor who stood fearless- Iy for law and order. It i Gvery householder is keeping his r to the ground to learn what ef- fect, if any, the coal strike is going to have upon anthracite. When the Tilinois Agricultural asso- ciation condemns present strike meth- ods, the demands for shorter hours which reduce production and increase living coste, and call for a basic ten hour day for all industry it doesn't look as if the farmers were in any mood to be stampeded. Werner Horn in his trial for dyna- miting the Canadian bridge declared that he was acting under orders from his government. He will take orders from Canada for some time to come. What a bystling there would be if everyone was as anxious to work as some are fo strike! It should be remembered in connec- tion with Americanization that aliens are not inclined to perform that ser- vice for themselves. Some fellows like to tell about bhav- ing so much in their cellars that they couldn’t have put in their winter's coal even if they could have gotten it. The daily bulletins about the presis dent have been stapped but it hasn't| been told a8 yet what the matter is with him, » Regard ess of his politi=:, from the way in which Gavernor Co:lide. of Massachusetts stood for law and er- der and the interests of his state he Jowed to go-possibly to 18,20, 25 or 26 | cents a pound, the latter ‘figure said it the|save my helpless DOING HIS BEST “To be sure, Rosetta is a mere child as yet,” said Rosetta’s mother, consid- eringiy, “but it is time for her to begin preserving her complexion- from this soot and dust.” S0 & “Now, this is :fl'pm!m! l‘tlepl in ueg 7+ interject Rosetta's father. “I o fo with this idea of larding the face and expecting to grow roses. Moreover, all these years there has lingered in my| mind the awful story of Ideala Pol-, Toy—" S pertectly well nobody by | af “You know that name ever existed! “Ideala,” pursued - Rosetta's father, firmly, “lived in my town and was cursed with a mother Who went on the theory that if you wanted a. thing enough you were surt to get it and she| decided she. wanted her daughter to| grow into a marvelously ~beautiful woman. Any girlé argued Mrs, Polloy, can be beautiful if she is willing to take a little: pains and doens't break her nose of get fat. And little Ideala was pliable in her hands, listening eagerly to. what her mother ‘told her would be the results if she. followed her advice. - “Ideala had pale blue eyes and gkin-~ ny blond hair and prominent features, sl ar to and a little later the Smiths’ cousin from the city gave Ideala a-bottle of | soothing, treamy lotion {0 use after the astringent to keep the skin soft brows still remained - nothing of - her eyes, T liquid dye for her lassi her brows darker, bru: .fn] | fully each day. cured and, in gertips in hot olive oil for five minutes every ‘other day to keep the nails . healthy. said she looked for results very soon— that, of course, Ideala was at the awk- ward, hobble-de-hoy age, but ail these years of preparation would bear fruit when she began really to be grown up. She was still sort of all one color and her mother began to touch her cheeks taintly with a little soon Ideala bo#ght.a lipstick on the cumbed to 2 blegching rinse warranted not there, and was so thrilled she kept up the practice with the usual results. Her hair was very thin now, what with l‘5p 1919 e — ™ Corh | "BEST MEDIGE *ls Dungrows | TOR WOMEN" “Thousands Hava It and nu-;'e | What Lydia E. n“khn": ‘Vegetable Compound Did Know It” 8ays Physician. Fre- o For Ohio Woman, ter the mild acid. € “Ad she arew older xn? ¢ ‘hair and, light, to say'| deala uséd a and penciled ‘them care- Of course, she mani- itior, dipped her fin- uently Mistaken for Indigestl: P Y ow to Resopmizewamt Fiost: o “Thousands of people suffer mare of less constantly 'from . furred, coated tengue, bad breath, sour, burping stomach, frequent vomiting, rumhling in stomach. bitter eructations, gas. Wind and stomach acldity and ‘eall it | indigestion, when in reality their trou- ble is due to gastric catarrh of the] stomach,” writed a¢New York pivai-| clan. . Catarri-of the stomach is aangsrous | because the mucous membrane lining | of the stomach is thickened and a eoat- | ing of phlegm covers the surface 0! that the digestive fluids cannpt mix with the fopd and digest them. This | fl condition soun breeds deadly disease in ' the fermented, ungsgimilated food, The!l blood is pollufed and garries the infec- tion throughout the body. Gastric. K ulcers are apt to form and frequently an ulcer is the first sign of a deadly “When Ideala was 15 her Portsmogth, Ohio.—*1 suffored from frtegularities, pains in my cide and vas '8 woakagtime T Replets with' ”.n‘ other in rouge. Pretty: y and once she went to the hair- résser’s on her own hook and suc- bring out the gold tints whick were love efements " intredused a tale which is similar to the life story of every human being. ALBERT RAY =WITH=— LOVE IS LOVE A 'happy comedy which wan: 3 roundabeut path (hu‘m THE BIG ARTCRAFT SPECIAL | strong human inter: A5 Part —~IN— “The Dark Star” “BY ROSERT W, CHAMBERS An Amazing Picture of Crime, * ue and Daring. Tingle With Warm Romance; Throb ~ With Devil-May-Care “ROSE 0" THE RIVER” turizati of Kate Dougles Wiggin's F:::Qlu N;v [ DAINTY. DAMSELS AN Mystery, but Mrs. Polloy pointed out that most | raging, tearing beauties were really ugly as children. - So Ideala wore chiffon veils nine months-of the. year to save her face. Every night before going to bed she faithfully- rubbed ccld cream into her face and meck and then rubbed- it out. She massaged her head five minutes with her- fingertips to produce .a.good circulation, which would mean.a heayy head of hair. Then she brushed her hair fifty times on each side.and spent ten minutes more faithfully doing bending and get- ting up exercises. Mrs. Polloy said there was no more sense in women's letting themselves grow weighty and stiff than for & cat to have two tails— all they needed was the proper exer- cise. sh a th th ju fa uj 11 this took considerable time, so |h: Idealt always had. to leave whatever was going on out-of doors in the early summer evenings to start her beauti~ fying work in time. Mrs. Polloy's sis- ter, who visited there that summer, ap- proved of the tem and added a few | touches. She id that after so much | cold cream Ideala should put. on an astringent lotion to tighten the s}:in~ ple cor restorers, dandruff cures, massage lo- tions and curling irons, and her ears cheekbones—I think she creamed right down to them. She had downy beard, all countenance, and h petually weak from so.much lash dye. Polloy at a dance were commenting on denl; see anyone so horribly painted and made up—but you can't blame the poor thing, she's so dead hopelessly And day—' don't believe one word about Ideala Polloy."—Chicago News. cancer. In catarrh of the stomach a good and safe treatment is to take before meals a teaspaonful of pure Bisurated Mag- | nesia in half a glass of hot water as Bot as you can comfortably drink It The hot water washes the mucqus:from the stomach walls and draws the blood to the stomach while the bisurated magnesia is an excellent solvent for mucous and increases the efficicney of the hot water treatment. Moreaver, the Bisurated Magnesia will serve as a powerful but hapmless antaé yhich will meutralize any excets I rochloric acis at ‘may be in your ’) stomach and sweeten its food eontents. | )t‘f;}’ rermedy. B&l han's Ve Easy, natural digestion without dis-, table pound, & trial. tress of any kind should seon follow | advice in regard to such ailment to Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Bisurated Magnesia is not a laxative, is harmless, pleasant and easy to take The result of Its forty ience your ¢ medicine for woman saw.”’—Mrs, Portsmouth, Ohio, . Mrs. Shaw the merit of thi ‘medicine and wroumfihil letter in o1 that other suffering women may velief as she did. 4 ~sighs. owed worse than ever. So did her had cold- good many pimples, too, and quite a er her outraged eyes were per- 'l HE 881 B8 “Some strangers sitting back of Mrs. nothi in the: Even e young people and one of them sud- cried; ‘Good heavens! Look at at dreadful girl—she dances like a mping jack and is so bony she may 11 to pieces any minute—did you ever !lvinfydtjh;: ml burden. - Ma that this timi & 12 EEE covery. OTHER and’ can be obtained from any local druggist. Don't confuse Bisurated Magnesia with other forms of magne- w, ly and homely- s whiskers!” -why, she actually T seT— v : sia, milks, citrates, ete., but gey it in B ‘They said it was measles killed| the pure bisurated form - (powder or | that the wrecks do not constitute any rs. Polloy, but we all knew better. | tablets), especially prepared for this|serious restriction, and in the absence| ple who spit eala is an old maid to this|Purpos ’ of ather considerations, the authori- ties are not recommeding further sal- vage operations.—London Chroniele. STORIES OF THE WAR Belgium Recevering. Nevertheless,” said Rosetta’s moth- Rosetta is going to look after her mplexion like any;other girl—and I prizes, What a good thing it would i® Rosandie could be kept in England to enrich our times and to inspire our craftsmen! - Dr. Serg Voronoff, the eminent surs sicians added to it would be ve nice, PATRON. ot Norwich, Nov, 4, 1919 Gleaned irom For;:ign Ex.| charges Dr. Serge Voronoff, director of the Laboratory of Physiology at the Col- lege de France, made OCt. 9 to the gical congress held at Paris a communication, which, may, be the soli ists of all ages, viz, to. prolong Jife by restoring youth to the-aged. He claims that by grafiing glands on old he n m ar D has made them g lamb: 41 He se no. re: the interstiti: n old man, his vigor should not . Voronoff has a bep cessful in grafting organs of monkeys | off to human beings, and he expresses great confidence in his new discovery. —Reuter. From Berlin the “Matin” learns that the council of workers charged with the eastward emigration, whose head- quarters is at Leipaig, otiating with the gévernment a w for | the sending of 800,000 German unem- | ployed to' Soviet Ri | | unemployed, who ege of acquiring Zus- ig’ the "beginning of | |4 tien of Russia by Ger- many.—Exchange. The Home -office intends to keep a permanent roll of volunteers for the Citizens Guard for emergency service. The Citizen Guard is t0 go on, and a scheme of enrollment will ‘be- placed before the municipal authorities. This is not the only department of preserve. ‘The government have had numerozs proposals made for the cre- ation of a-ciyil register of those who turned out to- undertake all sorts of tasks during the strike, and it has! been pointed out that an emergency of the kind may arise from other causes than strikes. If these names were re- corded for' future reference andt use, much valpable time would be saved in the hour of national crisis. Thirty million pairs of standard boots and shoes are to be produced by THOUSANDS: HAVE KIDNEY TROUBLE AND NEVER SUSPECT [F ' Applicants for. Instrance Often Rejected. Judgirig from reports from druggists who are constantly ‘in direct touch with the public, there is°one preparation that has been very successful in over- coming these - conditions. The mild and healing influence of Dr. Kijmer's Swamp-Root Is soon realized. It stauds the highest for its’remarkable record of success, B > An examining_physician_for one o the prominent Life Insurance 'Com- paies, in an interview of the. subjeet, made the astonishing ‘statement -that one reagon why o many applicants for insurance are rejected is because kid- ney trouble is so common to the Am- erican_people, and the largé majority of those whose 4pplications are de- clined do not-even suspect that they have the disease. It is on ale at alf drug stores in -bottles of two sizes, medium and large. However, if you -wish first fo test this great preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co,, Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample. hottle, When writing ought to be reelected today by an averwheiming majority. | be sure and mention the Nerwich Daily Balletin, 2 R Wood carving is almost a lost art in erh an *Iie and g {ing tity our churches and city halls with emergency service that it is desired to |f £ Snap into it now ! Here’s a bargain with geon, dipedtor of the physiological (By The Associated Press.) of human life LETTERS TO THE EDITOR | British manufacturers and offered to | laboratory at the College de France,| Al Belgium is returning to' work !the public at considerably less than|Who has been telling a congress of sur- and the country is recovering rapidly Suggests Larger ‘Orchestra. the present trade prices. geons in Paris that life can be pro-|from the war. Mr. Editor: T would like to write a| 0 these days of ever-increasing | longed indefinitely by transplanting| In Brussels factories which were few lines in your columns in regard to| Charges for footwear, often of a very| vital organg from anlmals to human|damaged during the German occupa- | Eloiholic arinks the bV d vaudeville. If the'pa-iDP00F quality, the public will hear with | beinss. has made many fl9|°§ f;\:n: ol | tion are being fitted with machinery, trons of the Davis theatre are not go-|Satisfaction that plans to succeed the | this nature at his surgical laboratory |.and some of them already are turning ing to have any more vaudeville, why|{ War time boot scheme have been sat | 8t Nice. hough described by & | UL theiF ~aceustomed preducts _to ot have the latest thing out and|E°ing by the leading British firms, and | Dr. Voronoff, thoush described by 8| within a few per cent. of the pre-war ve music pictures with plenty of|that they will now be able to buy good, | cOntemporary is a ¥rench acientlst, i, | capacity. : Ko BiesARThis music with them the same as they|Serviceable articles at lower prices. |28 his name wou S“Ff?s 'H“ “';‘ad Production of sugar exceeds the pre- | a1onan — Briageport |have in the latest picture houses in| I¥vept- those who want high-class | Who has studied in ";}'- (e worked | war tonnage. Glass factories are re-|goit” New York city? fancy goods, every section of the|!OF several years in kh";fi' i edeb opening. In the iron and steel. mills Music and piétures blend into’ one|community is to be catered for. NTae, BucEEOn 19 the khedive, and be- | many plants have resumed operations, | #d to-do the capturing. harmonious whole and the taste inf came a disciple of the famous Dr.| particularly in_ the Liege district Alexis Carrel. the pioneer of the new, pictures improves under the stimulus| " Joat £ where some of the mills were com- | years in state af good muisé until the drishial moviel i ecs 8 Seslihied . o migery, | pletely demolished and others to bud- | age automobile stealing. 1t is n form fan becomes a confirmed 1otion, Pic-| Req Cross society, 9, Ennismore gar-| Only those vessels which were|ly damageq that entire blast furnaces | of lawless aotivity that needs squeleh- ture patron. For some of the very| gens, e in Mr. Toma |beached when the Germans endeavored had to.be rebuilt. Within a year, it|ing. The punishment is adequate. but latest picture houses they have' as | Rosandie’s . work hoyw - discinguished | to_seuttle the whole of the fleet in- ['s believed, the most important of | there are defects in the forees expect- many as 50 trained musiclans in the| tatues carved in wood can be, and how | (erned at Scapa have haeen salved. | these plants will be operating to ca- S It might have been expected that. theatre. Of course. we ‘are not to eX-| apuronriate for the decoration of & fine | TheY comprise the -battleship Baden | pacity. Jeneral Pershing 2s our bighest pect any thing like that here in' our| rgom, B (28,000 tons), three light criisers—| The cotton trade of Ghent also has| professional soldier would have city but it would be nice to see al " Apn Rosandie 2 Seriban sculptor, | EMden, Nurnberg and Frankfurt— resumed, and steamers loaded with lntogtni (efi‘a larger expansion of Amer- few more music! n the orchestri! part of whose life work, some 50 picces, | and 18 destroyers. = American cotton are arriving almost | i0oa’s xzn itary forces than the aver- s long as they to cut outl\was ruthlessly destroyed at Belgrade,| .This Work was carried out in a peri- | daily. = During the German occypation | Age oaen !tnizllt %’hin; necessary. But vaudeville. W ne orchestri) Some of his works were brought from | 04 Of 1ess than four weeks hy the ad- | all copper fittings were removed from | on the contrary he has shown that the theatre has, a few more mu miralty, fthe only civilian emploved he- ing Commander Kay of the Liverpool Salvage association, who hefere he was | demobilized had accomplished, among many smart feats of salvage the re- floating within ten days of a convoy of two destroyers and three' merchant- nen which went aground in a fog off | the machines in the spinning factories, d some of these have not yet heen replaced. The linen industry also has taken on e . and additional workers are being employed every week. The ex- port trade in linén is growing just as rapid] the“Tactories can turn out during the war, and those, with that he has executed in France ngland, are being shown. a wonderful craftsman and a 1 artist. His P a lifesize group wood of a father and child, is noble | has that still effect that most " pression_that judgment, T hiful, reveals, s works,” the reverent nd of the arti Some of the most desirable are small arce in ebony and pallisander wood; nd there are many relief panels. Forace Walnole discovered the itch artist Grinling Gibbons work- Deptford, and the result of the be is uncertan, in the absence of any decision by the Paris counpil, With regard to the other vessels that are submerged, the “Dajly Chron- icle” understands that, so far as the admiralty are concerned, they will not be_raised, Some of them have turned turile, best. In the vast garden’ ecountry which stretches from Brussels to the a saarcely a’ square foot of ground ! is left uncuitivated, so nnxious are the people to produce their own food, and they are working from early morn un- til late at night to attain that end. Apparently thers is no scarelty of and sincere Some of the have issued a wholesome a .v-nity—hughl—-uun PRIZMA A Masterpi Pha Youll Say S0 Whin Veu S5 tels, and in every housa there is no longer the fear of starvation { which for so many vears made life a country very well on, the way to re- ‘We blame too severely the peo- prohibition, and there js none to dis- pute this fact. It is a startling to consider Scotland as “dry. ages the Scotch have been drinkers ¥ood hard whiskey and other highly spite of it that little country has pro» duced strong men and virtuous women iof a breed unequalled in modern times. What will the Seot be like if after 1920 yesterday of from five to twenty-five he approaches the subject conserva tively and he strengthens the ¥m. the war department will medify it programme In aceordance with suggestions and if we must come to a larger standing ‘army and | unives medified by General Pershing eongress| will do the wise thing, Don't be afraid that women will mot disagree in nolities as in all things.| mediate ratifichtion of the treaty of butter is being served persons are convinced next year will ses the VIEW POINTS - on the streets, nted out | it o7 ers.” follows in the wake of ought ior ot | low the Because of it or in|2nd wants o youth upon Adam's nle Standard-Tele~ At the public streets any better then |respond with a dem: they do their own homes.—Bridgeport| put ds 1'3“ Standard Telegram. t Snevitably, as we have before, the world must follow us. Not alene the efficiency but the betterment lown on reco some of our women true to the constitution of the United d the faith of the fath- is the way men have al- ways talked when they thought that the salvation of the republic 'on things going the way they wanted and that everlasting ruln would fo]- contrary decision. That is the way to feel if one is in earnes ers to follow. But den’t be a hypocrife about if. The nthn who finds fault with his neighborg’ religion little time repairing % PALUSKI HALL FRIDAY . EVENING o ] peace ‘and the coyenan of the league ‘We/ of nations. This brings out other wo- really shouldn’t expect them to treat! ment who thing Jifferently and they D BOGUS COUNTS 2 Reel Rainbow Comed JAZZ FERDINANDO ' BROTHERS MARINE DANCE ORCHESTRA d that they be to show “that sitizens stand lepended spend a own. s s 1ol ISE EYES WHEN he has made for sound t seems probable that|each tablet. his ‘The | Pain in general. packarge. wqmen of New Haven etition urging the im-|JarEer “Baver’ “Bayer Cross” means world-famous Aspirin, prescribed by physicians for over eighteen years. and - RUYING ASPR TAKE TABLETS WITHOUT FEAR, IF MARKED WITH THE SAFETY “BAYER CROSS.” To get genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin® 'y6u must look for the safety “Bayer Cross” on each package and on troe. . ks SRR . roved safe by millions for Colds, great Works of art possess. A beauti-|[yeland. Commander Kay directed the | th finished product. sal military training ‘most Americans {_’,,Mach,’ E”’,',,.he, "Foothache, Nay- ffl statue of a young girl, Conscious- | catving operations. It is in the country districts, how- | Will feel that in adopting the war|rgygia; Lumbago, Neuritis, ~nd ‘for , the surface of .“"d"c‘a ‘d‘ very Lde-f What the future of the vessels will| ever, where one sees the Belgjan at his | department’ récommendations ~ as indeed do most of Proper and safe di- packages. and the cost of salving and recond tioning in some cases would he any- thing from £250,000 to £300,000. The anchorage at Scapa is so extensive faod in:Belgium. It s costly in tewns and cities, but in the ceuntry the peo- ple haye now gathered their first har- vest since the war, and are in need of Sheets! Sheets! A SALE OF FULL-SIZE ceting was his employment to beaus . which are now so much A SALE OF U. S. ARMY BLANKETS SHEETS WEDNESDAY MORNING || WEDNESDAY MORNING 10075% Wool | Regular $3.00 Blankets Sheets ONLY $5,39 oncy $2.00 We cannot buy such Sheets nowadays, at -that price, direct from the manufacturers. Come in and examine them. If you do, you will surely go out with some of them under your arm. In the first place they are big—nine feet long — big enough for the biggest bed, with some exira to tuck in. The cotton is " fine—there is very little dressing in them — and they ar¢ heavy weight, which ‘means they will wear well. The fault, and a small one, is that they show a few soiled spots, If you want to save some money, here’s your chance. areal punch. The kind of a bargain which is kind to your pocketbook, and leaves no unpleasant taste for the morning after, These Blankets are 75% wool. They were made for the army—and they were: designed for full-sized men, the Blankets being 66 by 90 inches in size. They are dark grey in color, and each and every one of them is built to keep you warm on the cold .winter nights, - All serviceable and durable blankets for home, camp or in- stitution. Sale of Toilet Goods Now Going On ASK FOR ™ TRADING BTAMPS QUALITY ASK FOR TRADING STAMPS 42 FRANKLIN STREET " SAWS, AXES, HATCHETS AND OTHER TOOLS Don’t Fail to See Our Line of - REAMS AND SOCKET WRENCHES KEEN KUTTER POCKET KNIVES Pure Aluminum Ware Bulletin Building 74 Franklin Street Telephone 5314 THE HOUSEHOLD reetions are in-each unbroken “Bayer” Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cest but @ few cents. Druggists also sell Aspiria is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacturs of Monoaceticacidester of Salleylicacid, Electric Heaters WE HAVE FOUND THAT THESE HEATERS ARE VERY HARD TO GET. A CONSIGNMENT BOUGHT MONTHS AGO HAS JUST COME IN, Get Yours Today s THEY COST ONLY $11.00 AND CONSUME THE SAME AMOUNT OF ELECTRICITY AS A FLAT IRON. PHONE 674 AND WE WILL SEND 48 TODAY ‘The Norwich Electric Co.

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