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'&-_:n—--wm'on.u WORWICH BULLETIN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1919 Telepbzan Calie. ‘Buliata 10s Ot 382 WiMisantic Offies 3 Chumh 81 Teleobone 105. THE JENKINS CASE. In view of all the assertions tHat had been made regarding the kidnap- ping of American Consul W. O.,Jen- kins in Mexico, and the subsequent in- vestigation by a Mexican judge who after learning all the facts in the case declared that there had been nb collu- sion between the ransomed represen-| tative of the United States and the bandit gang, it is survrising that the Cafranza government at this date should cause the arrest of Jenkins for the very thing that he had been found not guilty of. Pcrhaps Carranza, however, has been encouraged by the attitude taken by the state department of this gov- ernment in maintaining that every- thing possible was done by Mexico to prevent the kidnapiin< of Jenkins and 1o bring about his release so that this government would not demand that, even though he was a representative of this government, the ransom money that he was forced to pay be made good to him by Mexico. In view of that stand if Mexico can by any man- ner of means show that Jenkins was inwilved In the kidnapping it will in- deed be an important disclosure, but in the meantime what fs going to be the attitvde of this government to the arrest The Jenkins case has had many pe- uliar features but hone more so than that revealed by the state department in respect inz with this case,! that revealed by the state department respec to dealing with this case.| nce the impression has heen gained the statement by Secreta co can do about a act h without ! it or} burse | d hisj relative to de: Tic him er: ans, ex nonsi uired to o But f complice | b : o lopment | hich this countrs ept un-! il more substantial e is pre-| sented START THEM ON THEIR WAY. If we cq but st he effor n rely the reports slow made in| 5 Jut the deporta- ma Goldman and Alexander | tion of E Berkman. They arc leaders and nave been for ye 3 can isted among the or nd u desirable. Fmm Ing had a ce it would seem from on the assassin of President McKin- ley. Both have overating here for a long time and whenever oppor- tunity presented spreading their anar- chistic doctrines for the overthrow of government and even though convicted and made to serve sentences in prison they are still in the country ready to continue their operations just as soon ®s ziven a chance. cven ha nt of influence, | . | is statement, up-| heen It was some months ago that steps were taken 10 see that they wefe re- turned to Ri whence they came, They have, however. through appeals wnd the slow moving authorities pre- vented the sendoff from taking place and the former has even been quoted s bragging about the fact that she sould never be driven from the coun- try where she is a citizen Basing her citizenship upon the fact that she married a naturalized Amer- ian the government report is now to the effect that investigation shows Ihat the husband secured his naturali- sation by fraud and that they were aever legally married. Such being the tase the weakness of the claim to cit- Benship is plain. It is a case of at- Jempting to evade deportation by a de- fective veliance on the laws of a gov- srnment which 18 decried. 1f we are really awake to our dan- gers wé need to get rid of just such undesirables as these. Berkman is pot a citizen of this country and with the federal investigating showing that Geldman is not both should be started on their way to Russia as evidence that the government is determined to clean out the leaders as well as the smaller fry. SUBSTITUTING OIL. While there are sections of the country that are feeling the effects of the coal shortage the introduction of wubstitutes for that fuel in most parts of the country has not been sarted. Wood is of course at first thought of, but that would be as difficait for some localitios to get and to depend upon as the coal. When the coal supply is in- terfered with the users thereof are placed in a trying position since nec- sesity has not forced them to have quick and satisfactory substitutes on hand. In driving locomotives in some cases, in firing boilers on steamships and in other instances it has been found that oll is highly satisfactory. 1t is preferred to coal in some in- stances bat it is interesting to note that“the board of standards in New York has adopted rules whereby it will be possible to substitute it for coal in furnaces in that city. This marks a but not such a radical one in view of the similar uses to which ol is put as fuel. It is to be remem- ‘bered that there are many ofl heaters T ply and the cost coming in for con- sideration. There would be many features in connection with ojl ing- furnaces that would-.appeal a_householder and if fuel keeps mounting in price there may yet be more attention given 1o it than is now done as an emergeh- cy idea. But the price of oil is as much subject to change as coal and certainly any considerable amount re- quired for running furnaces would have its effect in that direction. The idea and rules are apparently put forth for the purpose of meeting an emergency and such being the case the matter of cost would not be an insur- mountable handicap if it was a case of avoiding freezing to death. BLOCKING STAMP SCALPERS. No hesitation is manifested on the part of those who plan and intend to get their living through the losses of others. The swindler is well known in every direction. The greater the opportunities placed before him the greater his delight. It makes no dif- ference how much sacrificing was done on the part of the other persons to acquire their holdings, or what story is put forth to separate them from their property the unmscrupulous are always ready to do what is neces- sary to meet the situation and help themselves. This is strikingly brought to light in connection with war savings stamps which the treasury department found were being redeemed in large numbers. An investigation showed that there are those who make a practice of getting the stamps from the purchasers for cash but at less than what the owners could secure for them under the pre- scribed method of redemption. They are then turned into the government by the new owners and this accounts for the large number the government is receiving. Perhaps it is unjust to place such operators in the class with swindlers for it ls realized that there are many who have turned in their Liberty bonds for fizures much lower than they could get by carrying them to the banks, but when there are in- stances where war savings stamps, or any other securities, are solifeted and where not only the desire of the gov- ernment that they be held to matur- ity is disregarded but the owners are inveigled into parting with them for less than they are worth there is no wonder that the overnment has got- n busy rounding up such operators. It is of course another case of tak- ing advangage of the gullibility of the people but they are nevertheless en- titled to the protection which the gov- ernment can give. At the same time| there is o duty on the nart of the peo- le to get ndvice before parting with securitice. THE DYE EMBARGO. In the plan to orotect the dyemak- s {n this country by mak- imposcible to bring foreign, and 1y German, made dyes into the except in the case of those re not produced here a step is n in the right direction and ri should be made to see carried out at this session ciated that there -is t all the efforts and n exnended in ‘emaking industry in| War we low th wsted if we were to al imuortation of such gomh" i tection of this new industry, one that we could I e had long ago and would there been the proper and encouragement [ ation it. 10ws what it can do in this Germany will be ready to t the Yiemands nd once the country is flooded Le foreign product it will be im- possible for the domestic zoods to] compete therewith inasmuch as pro-| ducers here cannot meet the conditions | under which the same goods are pro-| duced in Germany. | We were caught unprepared as to dye production. We '‘demonstrated| at we could meet the emergency. We | conside e | Qires | -{ have gotten to the point where we are| i, rot entirely independent of foreign! production in the way of dyes and chemicals, but nearly so. Unless we want to undo all that has been done wo should zuard the domestic industry and make ourselves entirely independ- ent in times of peace as weil as dur- ing war. EDITORIAL NOTES. You still notice the motorists who will not resist the temptation to pass a standing street car. Though the American Legion is to keep out of politics the reds needn't think it can divorce it from patriot- ism. =t The man on the corner says: It wishing would have done it the mil- lennfum would have been here long ago. With luxury imports showing an in- crease of 125 per cent., it is easy to see what is helping to keep up the cost of living. If the I. W. W. believes that the American Legion is a foe to their ac- tivities there's no question but what they are right. Yes, the mine workers' officials have shown themselves Americans by call- ing off the strike, but it weuldn't have been necessary to call attention to it if they had done so without being made to. There seems to be & warm rivalty between the federal judges regarding the constitutionality of the prohibition legislation. About as many consider it invalid as there are who hold it valid, When a New York judge intimates that he will send to jail two sugar dealers “who have beenr selling for 22 1-2 that they bought for 9 3-4 cents a pound, he understands what is nec- essary to stop profiteering. The selection of Charles E. Hughes to act as the public representative in investigating the question as to whether the transit companies in New York are entitled to higher fares means that they will be well repre- sented. Though shoe Workers in Lynn have a no strike agreement effective until and there are appliances for fitting up Xitchen ranges as oil burners so that it is entirely within the range of pos- sibility that the same could be done with mxflh the matter of sup- . next September they are now asking for a 35 per cent. inrease in wages and in place of the strike the ciaim is made that they are decreasing pro- WASHINGTON AFFAIRS (Special to The Bulletin.) share of shire and Brandegee of Connecticut} gation. New England representation. Burroughs of New Hampshire ing and currency has Senator! Connecticut: chusetts; while banking and currency, priations and others of rank are thoroughly states. lieev to eb the best interests measures. out completely and adequate protection of States in both national tional matters. the the ex it to congress. sight. tected and which the president would force down their throat, shall least be swallowed with as little di ficulty as possible, by the most offensive edses. est team. America Washington, Nov. 17.~New England ‘has been in the foregrou special session now closing and for whatever good comes out of its work New England will deserve the lion's credit. Senator Lodge of Massachusetts is floor leader of the senate and chairman of the foreign re- lations committee,- which also counts in its membership Moses of New Hamp- during the Gillett of Massachusetts is speaker of the house, and the chairmanships, of both branches of congress fall larflely to members of the New England dele- Moreover, every important or so-called major committee has strong Rogers of Massachusetts is acting chairman of the house committee on foreign df- fairs; Greene of Massachusetts, chair- man of merchant marine and fisheries, on which are also White of Maine and ; bank- MeLean of Connecticut chairman. with Walsh of Massachusetts a member; interstate commerce, with the great labor and railroad problems before it. has Win- slow of Massachusetts and Merritt of the ways and means, counted the first in rank, has Tilson of Connecticut and Treadway of Massa- rivers and harbors, postoffices, appro- the highest sprinkled ~ with representatives from the New England And these men have worked hard and fearlessly for what they be- of the country in the way of reconstruction Sometimes they have won sometimes they have been forced to make concessions, but they have invariably stood firm for United and interna- The president is still determined the league shall not be adopted unless in ct form in which he presented The senate has already made radical changes, and more are in It is determined that if ratified the United States shall be amply pro- | botentates: that the treaty of peace. with its league of nations attachment, announced he smoothing off It's a game of tug of war, and it looks at this mo- ment as if the senate had the strong- For should the president re- fuse to accept the treaty after the s ate has acted advise and the responsibi rejec senate, not onl. full re membership, but with a number o democrats foilowing the same trail, has adopted s ions 0. ,protec ,7and far more than “I am in despair,” said the lady fiom upstairs to the occupant of the flat just beneath her. “Either something is de- cidedly wrong with me or with the rest of the world. I have averize.intcli- gence, but, believe me, this trying to keep up with the heipful hints the magazines are full of these financially short days has reduced my brain to a sort of pulp. I might just as well have my head filled with lemon jelly for all the good it does me.” “Mercy me, Mrs. Pinrack!” gasped her hostess/interestedly. “What has happeried ?” “Nothing in particular and every thing in general,” confided her calle: “I thought 1 certainly had hit on some- thing when I read about those million- aires having all their discarded suits turned inside out by a tailor and made into perfectly grand new suits, be- cause my husband had just been wail ing that his tailor had ‘run up simple little business suits to $100. I was so extited I called Will on the telephone —and vou should have heard him! 1 expect a bill" collector had just been in and ruffied him. He informed me that if his discarded suits were turned wrongside out there would still be as many holes on the wrong side as there were on the right, 5o he failed to see .| what any tailor not a practicing magi- cian could do to Tevive them. ang it would be more to the point for me to patch them up. That's the thanks you get for trying to help a man save money. “Then take hats! Every fall hat 1 liked at my milliner's had evidently b longed to a crown princess or some: thing, such was the price. The milliner | explained sweetly just how this cloth turban was $15 a yard, or how that| glycerined ostrich feather hdd been | pursued for 506 miles by relentless and exhausted hunters ordered to pro- cure exactly that particular shade, so. of course, $50 for a_feather was mnof exorbit Tt seemed that to get even a simple wire frame a milliner had to crawl clear to New York on her hands and knees and sob at the feet of cruel if she wanted rihbon she n e diamonds, and a re- velv@ just naturally made ors curl up and die. So 1 made a mental note of a_tur- an and went home and emptied out me piece bag and for two days I twist- ed that stuff. The hat I was copying VAIN EFFORTS * | from-memory was go extremely simpl¢ | that a child of 3 might have {ossed it | off, but somehow 1 could not get the! hang of the twisted drape around it.| At the end of forty-eizht hours I had plaited velvet hanging from every light fixture in the house, the cat had near- | Iy choked to death on three yards of it twisted around its neck and 1 was swathed like an Egyptian mummy. The bat frame remained blithely uncovered. It absolutely retused to be covered, though 1 laid that velvet on in 9.000 original ways. And for years 1 have been reading Liome millinery directions with pictures showing just where to put every stitch and beat the milliner. But_look what good it did me! .Ana A Great, Wi Nature, Gari Spri With Speed past three days. I cannot wear a paper bag over my head, so I.had to pay her price. It will take me a vear to save up the sum. “Then, instead of getting a new din-' ing room rug at three times what rugs formerly cost, 1 decided to crochet one from silk and wool,rags. A magazine article’ said it was merely,a_gentle recreation, so 1 started in 1 have torn up everything in the house, the dining room looks like a rag picker's | alley and up to date I have an oval one foot long and six inches across ac- complished—and my husband threat- In the S The Mi - —TODAY— CHAS. RAY In the 5 Part Paramount Picture “BILL HENRY” kled With Pep, and Served Has Everything.” Constance Talmadge yieh, reeling with despoir, T siunk In the 6 Part Comedy A to e milliner's, she said prices . had gone un 10 per cent. during the | g ‘A Temperamental Wife” A Peppy Play About Wives and CHARLES MURRAY “Up In Alf’s Place” COMING—Billie Burke AV THE: rm Slice of Human ished, With Smiles, By the “Star Who Stenogs 2 Part Comedy sleading Widow ens to divorce me if I keep it up. Anyhow, by the time T get it finished we'd both be so old we couldn't see whether there was a rug .ot not, so maybe 1t is foolish. “The camouflaged meat loat made from carrots, sawdust and glue— something like that, 1 had any head for re rank failure in my i dislike extremely to reveat the words with which my husband greeted its appearance. He took one bite and de- parted for the club. From there he telephoned with malignant joy that he had just ordered a porterhouse steak and it was going to cost him $2.50 and | he hoped T was enjoying my sash do; and blind factory souffle. Now I'm just about dome. I'm due to zo out and spend money recklessly and bank- rupt the family! “Tut!” said Mrs. Bungle do that without exerting varticle."—Chicago News. “You can yourself a magnificent congressional library, whose marbles and murai paintinss are unequalled elsewhere in this coun- Hidden by waving palms and ks of rare flowers, the Ma- . ed throughout the even- t|ing. A ,uffet supper was served to all the cuests, but in the gorgeous private t | reading room reserved for senators the diplomatic corps was served a special onening of the! " as soon as they are loophcle must be left unguarded. Per- haps no better instance of possible daneer under the league is found than in the published suggestion of Sir An- rt to the after a disnute more 0. That woild stretch of to through which L hat this could be e 15 of sectlon 1 is Andrew, and goes ‘o a_tremendous ad- sh controiled | B on if the matt for action American vote should he the league. | would be re was great ruction over fthe|great fraud. For an example I will from (he sime sources they were re- & BT ohile 1t e un for dia | state bere, in the = of the dis- {ccived proviousiy., Nothing is more| How to frame a bill that|tance hetween the sun and the earth reeded in this direction than the pro- | w neet the needs of the railroads | Lacalle it 1s' 76.000.000 miles and little that will.be affected by | ¥ s tough nut for the inters committee to crack. And after the had worked night and day for man: s over the problem thelr bill was | la In raflroad are thrown to private con- expected to be approx t. nce of Wales had a “jolly here during his three days’ ved to be an exceedingly ung feliow who made friends fast imong both young and old, | and at the same time kept an eye out for the pretty girls who crossed his 1 path. The- prince is about 24 vears old and the‘society women here with attractive “buds” on their hands| lost no time in bringing them out for | receptions, teas and dances. It needed e of nations to insure good The prince punctilliously made formal morninz calls; he gravely shook hands and lunched with the dip- lomatic corps, the cabinet and con- gress, but whenever there was 2 spare minute he chatted gayly with the girls he met, danced till the wee small hours and had a thoroughly good time generally. And those girls are care fully laying away in lavender the gloves they worc when the - young the time the road is it P) ¢ of that hody believe if the|supper. with the nrince at the head of ates is to be able to hold its| the table, r the official recention own against a mass of foreign coun-|Wwas at an end shortly after midnight. tries involved in the transaction, no dous spurt of speed si rule was adopted. and if it would be cleared from the slate this week and in the hands drew McPhail that under authority of | president. Should he pigeonhole it. as nda shall set aside ex-|has heen rumored might be done, then eaties and take over to itself|congress is 1 to adont a resolution the northern nart of the state | de < that a state of war no longer eariy in the game to more than allude the possi of December like ful discovery w He pummeled by the house and|The following as to the age of the inges made. Much nersonal eerth. Professor Ramsey made it develaped in the debates 10,000 million years, Professor tried to protect the inte: de it about 35 miliion ve: particular section o ord Kelvin made it 24 million ye: Prof. Tait placed it a like the v, means war to the rs. Another slight difference of knife. and will probably result fn con-|9.900 milllon vears, and not a contra- that won't exactly e any- | diction is offered from anyone. Of course some neople have become ac- customed to swallow everything that know, M scripture prophecy we are on the edge of the world now. lieve it read the Bible, Daniel, and Revelation. monds among stones. journing there-is no reason to suppose all the talk out of it system: nobody knows when that will be—Philadelphia may invented in England. The treaty has taken on a tremen- ce the cloture t now looks as of the with Germany. But it is too lit ETTERS TO THE EDITOR Regarding the End of the World. Mr. Editor: In regard to the 17th 1919, as reported in The n a week age. I would v that every little while geologist makes a wonder- h develops into a such se of action as among . oston Ameri to e gre; umbolt s < it is 82.000.000 m! derson savs it is 90000090 m! er save it is 104.000,000 miles. Only light difference of twenty-eight illion miles. A very little, fsn't it? on nost 10 mil put before them. About the end of the world no man not even the angels in heaven 24 According to history and If you dom't be- Matthew a ook like dia- It F. I W. 1919, In the Distant Future. With all the talg about congress ad- Willimantic, Nov. 1 will adjourn until the senate gets Tess, Nets for recovering golf balls that be_ driven into water have been = R A Deep Heart Gleaned from Foreign Ex. changes i The exhibition of homespuns, from the Stonehenge Village industry, at Lady Glenconner’s house in Queen| Anne’s-gate is calculated to conjure up pleasant recollections for those who know Wiltshire well. There is a na row, winding road, some eight miles in length, which connects Salisbury and Amesbury, but is net the high road On it are threaded, lke iewels, four or five lovely villages, and its way 1i in 2 tortuous valley, through which the Avon wanders. Ore of these villages is Lake, and it from Lake that Lovibond revived the Salisbury homéspon in. | === ustry some 22 years lady's ; father had then rohased, Lake | onoine, mint wo House—one of the most perfect Ja- cobean buildings In England—from the Dukes, who had lived there for many generations. The ljttle band of survivors of the Gorgeous Scen “MISS coinage. have a moment half has been what needy case they|ed to have the have been reduced. 1 This was a The designation of two of the units] 167 which galloped pell mell down the Bal- aclava valley has been altered since, for the 4th Light Dragons are now the N1 Hussars, and a similar change’ has 5 made in the title of the old 13th ight Lragoons. How man Flowers. It con one-fourth the postage stam Lut even this by the way. who | y ardizon, s that that kit derived its ardigan, whose connected wiih :ich contains We know of can compare the I reede: who , Queen of Sy £ the death of her father, Alfonso to the birth of the present king? I about 2 1-4 by we have o Altogether she reigned 169 days,| Do Bave seen ly the shortest relzn on record.} s jaather: Salic Law, which bars females out. vom the accession to a throne, doe: perate in Spain, and until the «e; of Alfonso XTL'S postumous ined the eldest of rters automatically the square. be 3u: were made in v ing to the fancy Round, s two succeaded be necessar: go. Tt is sug. | Antoinette, who se our token cof | that nickel or some other metal should he substituted. But why not reduce the size of the silver coin? No- bhody would obiect if the shilling w th& size of sixpence, which is more than the old value of a shilling. The transition period would be one of difficulty, but it could be surmount- by fixing o date after which the present silver coinage would not he legal tender. Normal people would return their oid coinage to the bank, evening at Ver shape would be taste. XVI. 785, enacti kerchiefs edges hen involving the TODAY AND TUESDAY 9 ° Fugene 0'Brien And An All Star Cast Including Robert Edeson and Lucille Lee Stewart SEALED HEARTS Yorl Society For Its Background— Display of Beautiful Gowns. VIRGINIA HAMMOND —IN— A Drama Tense 'With Thrills and Alive With Laughter PATHE NEWS I ——— profiteering if it made a very hand- some revenue from the reconstructed Next time you are in the city &nd have a look at the specimen of an old ted to the Guildhall Library. s these tiny volumes always exercised a fascination, and a Paris gentleman once collected Charge of the Light Brigade, which|miniature almanack took place 65 years ago today, is grad- | pres y dwindling. Of the regiments en-| To bibliophile: gaged in it only three now have re have resentatives living, and the appeal which has been issued on “their be- over 200 examples of them, and claim- Dutch book printed with the title of The Court of ed from omveable types, and is just hed some 21 ures only 9 1-2 by 6 millimetres. W though Schloss’s English Bijou the Stationers Company, which used | to bring one out every year about the | same time as the Bijou. Iy bound in different col- and engraved through- Ask your friends at breakfast or in ain_ why their handkerchiefs are as useful. irregularity displeased The result was sued in the early days g that all pocket-hand- The sensational rise in the price of silver is very largejy due to the war BOOK BY FRED JACKSON LYRICS BY ARTHUR JACKSON AND B. G. DE S§YLVA DIRECT FROM NEW YORK AND BOSTON RUNS A SQINTILLATING, EFFERVESCING, LAUGH-COMPELLING She’s a Mischievous Miss With the Notable Cast and the Handsomest, Smartest AT R “PEP”. ALL FARCICAL KALEIDOSCOPE A RAINBOW OF BEAUTY Gowned Chorus On the Stage. Don’t Miss Her PRICES—50c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00—War Tax Extra SEAT SALE TODAY AT 10A. M, Crama With New and a Wonderful CRUSOE” uld not be indicted for to spare you should The which ha war in India for been smallest in existence. in saw the Tnetal of tains 49 pages, print- e of an English pen- | U3ble., b beaten by a_ book vears ago in Padna, 200 pages, and meas- to_help them. no English book that States ith these two speci- 400,000,000 dollars replacing them by They average 1 3-8 inches (though ne even smaller), and the intrinsic value OTHER Organized labor - oval or oblong would At one time they eus shapes, accord- of the user, but this Queen Marie uggested one winter ailles that a uniform an indication of good a decree by this country than gains.—Bridgeport have right-angle ment.” nations of the east, NEWS WEEKLY where the demand for silver has| grown enormously. 2 manufacture of munitions paigns necessitated huge additions to the silver currency wherewith to pay the native munition workers and the troops operating there. : This, in turn, sent the price of sil- ver up, and the natives generally bi gan hoarging their rupees when they made becoming so exceptionally val- Working at full pressure, the world’s silver mines have been una- ble to meet the incessunt demands on them, and the Indian government re- cently appealed to the United States In response to this appeal the United government _withdrew fetching over 5s. an ounce,'as it has this week, against s before the war, silver in a rupee has appreciated from 9d. to 1s 10d.—London. Chronicle. diate steps to purge itself of false lead- ers like Walker, men who are doing more to harm the laboring classes of tion since unions were Organized labor owes it to itself to ex- pel men of the stamp of John Walker from its ranks as a radical. there will be a general “reaction” that will cost labor some of its hard<won The statement is made that “tpere will be no letup in liquor law enfc That ought we hope it is, but there enough all about Connecticut, includ- ing Bristol, that liquor is being sold. Cases of intoxication on the streets are STRAND TODAY AND TUESDAY Human Love In Six Parts PRISCILLA DEAN In THE WILD CATS OF PARIS In Five Parts ZIPPS AND ZEST A Big V Comedy of the Eastern cam- SOLOISTS Frederick Bacon, Banjo Albert Btrardi, Guitar which they were Y. M. C. A, Audi Frank Bradbury, Mandolin MONROE SALISBURY ‘The Mansfield of the Screen In a Wonderful Drama of LADIES’ ORCHESTRA CONCERT Bacon Players of New London Crescent Mandolin Club* of Norwich Bacon Banjo Quintet. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18th, 1919 Admission 50c, Plus Tax Tickets on sale at Y. M. C. A. —— some from circulation, currency notes, and of the 180 grains of thanks hte people of should take imme- increasing smoothness all the labor agita- 0 first formed. | fndtely Mut Otherwise Telegram. ce- to be true and is evidence|to go.” nal. 8. Storrs Connecticut trolley company, ing before the Rotary club Tuesday, ‘Waterbury by no means rare, and such intoxica- tion certainly implies a sale of intoxi- cants, for it takes a lot of imagination hold Almanack, published 100 years ago,|these coins were meited down and sent|yndor * guch circumstances to £ as only three-quarters of an|as silver bullion to India. But the na- | private stock” responsible—Bristol is it generally known, asks a corres- nch. The Guildhall| tives in the east continue to hoard}preg, spendent, that the King of Spain was published by | their silver coins. and with the metal| ™" p "o f of the speak- for the cooperation-that they have given in the trial of the zone fare o= system. The spirit that Connecticut VIEW POINTS people in general have shown indeed commendable ang the resuit of that spirit is to be seen In with which the new fare system is working. may be a trifle early vet to say de- it seems probable the zone system has come to_ stay, It has worked better than many hoped ang taking into consideration the in- creased efficlency that may be ex- pected with furtner use there seems to Dbe no reason why it shall nét become permanent.—Waterbury Republican that “Drunkenness as comedy will have “Well, we can still retain the selt- zer siphone,”—Loulsville Courier-Jour~ prince gallantly pressed their hands and will treasure them long after the heir to the British throne has become ruler. But the little prince of Belgium missed all this and was permitted to take part only in the grave and formal ceremonies given in honor of the king and queen. athgr and mother” didn’t come along with the Prince of Wales and naturally his titled attendants and suite could not hold so tight a rein. As a result the heir to the British throne had a peep ‘into the life of Washington's younger set. At the state receptions official Washington turned out in its best bib and tucker, which often consisted of daring Parisian cos- tumes apparently held in place only by the frail thread of a tiny -string of pearls or a slender chain of rosebuds carclessly thrown over the shoulder. There was much brillisncy in the court dress of the diplomatic corps, whose women were diamond bedecked, some witn small erowns of jewels top- ping _their elaborately dressed hair. The men wore great jeweled insignia of order and rank dangling from gay ribbons around their necks or pinned to the briliant sash which crossed their breast:- As a background was the b S GRAY'S SYRUP RED SPRUCE GUM Everybody buys the Large Si Montreal D. WATSON & CO., New York duct‘hm 50 per cemt =] =l E & o ousehold ens b ADVANCE. QUOTED ELSEWHERE. Kitchen Toweling, 27c-30c a KKK, Novelties for Xmas that will charm by their their practicability. KOIOIONONIO! N imballs Teztile Shoyp 342 WASHINGTON STREET Play Important Parts in Thanksgiving Preparations WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED' FROM BELFAST, IRELAND, AN INVOICE, OF LINENS ORDERED MANY MONTHS AGO AND AT PRICES WHICH PREVAILED BEFORE THE RECENT THESE LINENS HAVE COME AT AN ESPECIALLY OP- PORTUNE TIME AND THE PRICES ARE MUCH LESS THAN Here for instance are a few ‘items: Heavy Silver Bleach Table Damask, $3.25 a yard Damask Table Napkins, $7.90 a dozen. Madeira Hand-embroidered Tray Cloths; 50c and 75c each. Hemstitched Dovlies, $2.50 a dozen. Ted Napkins, $3.00, $6.50 and $8.00 a dozen. Twilled Linen Kitchen Towels, 75c each. Hemstitched Towels from $6.00 to $40.00 a dozen. Hemstitched Scarfs, 18x50 inch, $1.50 eac These Are as Usual, Pure Irish Linens There are a number of delightful gifts in our Shop Near Backus Hospital. n ! vard. OIS HEIKCIKOIONIKOIONC daintiness and please by [= | iononononc: those toxic poisons formis you must get rid of the Acid-Stomach; just as The famous scientist, Prof. Metchnikoff, de- clared that people generally become decrepit— feeble, aged—years and years before their time d—a‘:iu 8 person ought $o live well over & hun- ree which form in the intestines and cause auto- intoxication had more to do with shortening life than anything else. Clean out these p(':amu and there is no reason_why human beings should not live, hale, hearty, lfivng ous, a hundred years or more.. Buc! trine as taught by the noted Metchnikoff. years. He proved that the toxic poisons nd vigor- the doc- What causes those toxic poisons—where do they come from—how do they get into the in- testinal tract? Science one word—Acid-Stomac] Acid-Stomach causes food fermentation; and it is this mass of partially digested, sour, fermenting food passing through the intestines that creates toxic into the blood and carried into every part of the system, causing a long train of diseases and. l;naking millions of men and women feeble, b;zégm they should be strong, healthy, in the prime of life. poisons_that are absorbed ard and old looking before their time when Common sense tells us that in order to stop in the intestines, Acid-Stomach Makes Millions Old Before Their Time glvu us an anéwer in dentists tell us that we must rid of a month to keep the teeth from decaying. When acid forms in the mouth it eats right through the hard enamel of the teeth. Imagine, then, the ill effecta of Acid-Stomach to the entire system!| A modem way hllbr found of ing rid kly, natarally, easily, of Acid-Stemach so quick); that it seems almost unbelievable, This remedy is called EATONIC, a com- ErAuaMl tablet that you eat like a bit of candy, TONIC leaves the stomach sweet, cool and strong, aids di ion and assimilation and so belps yoa (ull strength out of mouth- gw eat. In cuses of i tion, heartburn, bloat," belching, gassy, sour stom- ach, food-re) 1o ating and that miserable pufied up feeling after eating, EATONIC affords al- ‘most instant relief. % Twenty-five thousand dru; seil and guarantee EATONIC. If it fails to please you your money will be cheerinlly refunded.