Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 18, 1919, Page 4

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P~ “diorwieh Bulletn 1 and Qenfier = 123 YEARS OLD E m rice 129 & werk} Boe & mesth: 35.00 -—a-nr‘ln-lnm"u - ‘wevnd-class matter: e g OB s Buletis . unl.. Jon Offire 35-2. ®itimantie Office 23 Chusen “t Telephons 105 WEMBER OF ml GCIATED PRESZ, he 1s exclusively ’nl-\u;:' use. _thllu of all news Cespaten- = redited 1o, e ot stberwise credited in o this papet also the local Lews publisied Sereln. Al of republication of arecla) despatch- o renerved. 18, 1919 CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING DEC. 13, 1919 m,m DON'T HANDICAP IT. Lr'he lower heuse of congress has “¢hown that it sees the need of contin- uing the control over sugar under the same arrangements as prevailed dur- ing this year. In this it differs with the senate, which ‘though believing that the sugar board should be contin- ued favored taking away certain of its -authority.~That the house has been influenced by the statement of the su- 8dr board to the effect that it would be able to accomplish littln under the authority given it as proposea in the senate s probable, and certainly the : board ik in a position to kiow wh of it speaks. Likewise the lower; house doeg well to give consideration | to its statement for it cannot fail to tealize that had the president been Asilling to have gccepted its advice along last summer and g them the aythority to “acquire sugar for next vear,. when it could have been done at a much lower figure than it can now, the outiook would be decidedly different tod: Both ‘heuses of congreas have ver, Indicated that the life of th “sugar board sheuld be continmed. It is .-believed that the protection that e - be given to the pensumers should he =provided and in taking sucn a view s-it cannot fail to he apprecisted (hat he. board should be given such au- therty as to make its wok effective _rother than partially so. The position of the two honses _congress will vequire g conf>rence np- -on the matter . and _the. importan - that rests thereon in taking care of | 7the Interesis of the -copsumer cannot, ==pe overipoked. Some degrec of au- thorily may :be. better. than nothing, zand ‘mav prevent -prices from fhe limit But what is worth doing is “worth doing well: With ement on the necessity of continuir the hew- uf P zoing he situation that is not be made to work with one hand _Ztied - and be expected to accomplish | desired, DISPOSING OF FIUME. lt should Even - though the ngements e Whirh have been made by the i government and D'Annunzio ve | to Flume do hey not s relieve the si and _give v, will’ the ‘operation » bas been ged in be = but that a complete adjustn whele. matter -in the Adriatic ng; The rep roblem thie that or time idication not the nt of the is pend- 3 | { | | entatives of the allied na- fions have not t heen able to "each an agreement what course | should be pursye Flume. Ad : by D’Annunazio in wn coast placed lwly in an embarras: tion with the other allied powers and the conscquence before it - 20uld press for the clearing up of the tuation -in the “Adriatic by the su- preme council it was necessary to lear up its ewn tangled affair. From uch reports as are received *“from abroad it would appear that this| has been - undertaken through the ....agreement whereby D'Annunzio relin- quishes control of Fiume to Italian treops” apparently under the realiza- tion that through such a course is the most | y to be speedily = Certdinly because he had ? did not mean that powers must sanction the acti:n . agree that it shoull henceforth be Laan _broperty. fial claim te Fium the part that it played in the There was no war agreement such an extension of Italian houndar lines should take place for Fiume was not mentiorded in such a document. If,i however, the ditcuity in adj = this trouble has been due the op- tion of the American delegates the have left FEurope may to the gettlement that has heen too long delayed, but when the settlement comes due considera- tion must be given to the rights of the Jugoslavs. 1s hecau W A LAST DITCH FIGHT. Following the decision of the Unite ed States su-eme court to the effect that the wa time prohibition act is constitutional and remains . effective until peace is established and the pregident issues atement to the effeet that demobilization has taken place, less interest is being manifest- ed in the other cases before the court and the opposition to prohibition is “directing its attention now to the at- tack on the constitutiogality of the 18th amendment. The effort to repeal the war time prohibition act met death in commit- tee ang with a billion dollags worth of liquor in the country held in bond it means a wild scramble on the part of Those owning it to realize thereon be- fore it is too late. The one outlet is exportation for with no lifting of the ban and constitutional prohibition coming into effect January 16 it can- not be expected that any of this liquor will be releaged except for export which is permitted up to the time the constitutional amendment becomes. ef- fective. The loss that is thus faced will_depend to a large extent upon What disposition can be made of the “ liquor abroad, whether it will he pos- \_ sible_to send it to Cuba and distrih- ute it from there as conditions per- mit and how much of a tax will be impueed unom it in other countr: With less' tham & month in which to I make toe ha but resch a decision and to aet thave cen be no delays, though one feat :;N that is in favor of= &LW goods is that a a, ” of lt has been assembled at New York in an- ticipation of tle court finding the law unconstititional ‘and available “shipment abroad. The only hopé of the anti prohibi- tionists today is that the highest court in the land will find the amendment unconstitutional: an of the recent “unanimous. finding, less engouraging: than it Was a fort night age. It promises, however, to be a, fight to the last ditch. CALLING FOR HELP. Once again ‘the attornéy generalhas come out with the-declaration that the high cost of living' shéuld ™ be fought and pledges the full power of the de- t door sat down ¢ evening,” she Ber - a-m'qi , who had just been -in th middlo of a most ex- citing romance. - “And I've brought my own reading. It's simply impossible|exag; for me to 'spend one single eun.lv at home in peace ' Mind if I stay”™ “Of course net,’murmured her neighbor. “What's the *ma.ntf’ “Has your family been quar—" “Oh, nothing’s- the matter except that they’re such a frightful tozy fam- ‘| ily group that they won’t give you one single minute to yourself. There they {are, Aunt Jane on one .side of the table lamp and Uncle Jim on the other, and Cousin Lou ih hér corner y chair. They're all reading. Just partment of justice in. prosecuting the hoarders and. p s. That is much different from - previous an- when I am in the middle of a para- graph I don’t want to miss, Atint Jane remarks, ‘I sée théy're having a sale of blouses at Smith's tomorrow, Anne; nouncements, from .Mr, Palmer since taking office, but this time he makes a plea for the assistance of s evéry man and womah in the country. It was not so long ago -that the country was told that: the govern- ment was going to tackle this /prob- lem of - high prices, that those who were found breaking the law were go- | ing to get the full penalty and that prices mustcome down. The people hive been waiting and wat-hing with great expectancy ever sin:e but the teruency is still upward, and it is quite natural that. the.res: "t should b> ¢isappointing, Tlat there is a widespcord viumm\d for lowering the living costd without saying. The people have a riglit to look to ‘the government agencies to do their utmost to bring relief and yet they should be found willing to do whatever they can. to improve the situation, Thus there is reason to believe that there will be a certain respense at least to the at- torney general's plan of having - the many communities in- the country or- zanize falr price committees, agree to buy only necessaries, hold conserva- tion and economy meetings, bring in- fluence to bear to prevent industrial disturbances and revive the four-min- ute men for delnermg wnrk and save addresses. Apparently- it is a na.ae where the people have got to get - busy them- selve if they . expéct = that resuits which tliey desire are going to-be.ac- complished, .. Certainly all that has been done by the administration forces h not-accomplished the desired ob- cets. - In_fact failure to follow rec- ommendations promiscs- still higher costs. The call to. the people may not be an epen admission of inability to mect the situation but it is.evident that help is ‘needed. THE EDGE BILL. Aftér. a delay which has been con- <idered unjusi the Edge bill in the form -that came from the confercpee| ™ committee has been adopted and oni: the president’s shinz make ¥ & liy: This is legisiifion” made necessary | as the resilt of the war-and aimed at the developrient of our export trade through -granting permission for thc formation of corporations ‘to- handle foreign finance. Heretofore, while ine i vernment had been the Money with @which Hy In view other ‘countries wa of the fact t necess dled through private cifcles] aid the Jaws ‘that.- hds 0 Wi “requi paid for. heen a4 6rder fo give the financial Taehinery that is need- | ed for nangting this big task. ropean countries, and ecially that were involved in the war, 2 in meed of our goods. Owing t0 the present--rate - of :ex hun"e fford o Duy wh with "¢ they ‘ean is “necessary in J\l!hu zed ity to deal in foreign secur id, thev would naturally be of order, and issi deb msl them to the Ameri ¢ fill the r:urupom orders, v ould not be held ‘o hare 5 as is now the casa. £ ve this country net enjy th 'Wl rtanity te-retain ite larse port trade but to increase it at a time when the big nations are doing their utmost to regain their fermer posi- tions. w over we cannot afford to let chances pass to make .oyr pe: time export business as large sible. EDITORIAL NOTES, There is nothing more unpopular in colors these- days-than bolshevik red. The man on th(‘ corner says: Even a tall man seems-to-be overdoing 1t in these days of shortages. Those who have been pleading for some real winter weather are now having their longings satisfied. Some Tlinois miners balk at the strike settlement But there are always those who insist upon having the end seat, Tt is well that no more than 300,000 is asked for the standing army. It is enough. If we need more we know they can be obtained. B o B e S SR Alabama. Georgia and Mississippi are suffering greatly from floods. The wonder is that a Jot of Negroes haven't been lynched for it. = * Strange as it may seem a Chicago judge after sentencing.a hoy. of 19 to refraifi from smoking clgaréttes for a year didn’t Suspend- sentence. ‘When it is declared that there are many “red” newspapers advoeating the overthrow of the government, one way of saving paper quickly comes to mind, s The senate sees the need of giving Protection to the public against exor- bitant sugar prices by keeping the sugar beard. It is late action but it is wise. Senator Watson says he will not be 2 candidate for the presidential nomi- nation.. There is-plenty of time for many booms to rise-and efid bafore the convention date rolls nround With His -$25.000 ‘gone, Pat, Crowe, who kidnapped yotung Cudahy is now working in a . Salvation Army hut. Trying to prove probably that there is some good in the worst of us. Major Gener: O’Rvan doesn’t be- lieve ‘the dead’ in France brought home- and ggests leaving the decigion - to -their’ comrades. It is the parents and relatives who should have the gay, not the living soldiers. ve-is awmled o}, conditions | And certainly just because thel you'd better go down.” ‘I listen politely, even though Aunt Jane knows perfectly well that I have enough blouses to last- me . for two yvears to come nad wouldnt take another as a gift. Then just as I have found my place again, Cousin Lou pipes up—Listen to this!—and she reads some .perfectly silly old chestnut from the funny page of her woman's magazine. We all feign merriment, and before the -end of the next five minutes its Uncle Jim's turn. ‘Whats become of the last number of my Nobody's magazine, “We all have to stop and hunt for Uncle Jim's magagine, and at the end of ten minutes somebody discovers that Uncle Jim is sitting on it. After we get quieted down again, Aunt Jane discovers a new recipe for apple dump- lings in the household column of the evening paper, and has to read and dis- cuss that. ‘How much flour do you use, Lou? Are you sure? Seems to me my mother used to make them with less; and so on for ten mniuts, “Of course, dear Uncle Mm feels it his duty to comment at length on the tleading aritcles of his magazife, and just about the time he's un-ough Aunt Lou asks me to come over and look at a perfectly sweet dress design and.tell her whether I don’t think she could make over her old blue serge that -way. . Really, it may "sound geration, but 1 get as much as.a g‘!fl an hour read in my book, What? u have to answer 'em, or theyll feet h\wt. No, I ¢an’'t go to my room, they'd 1 was ill or else “very moody and unsociable. 1'd hear about it for a week, This evening I really did want to read, so 1 just iold thefn I was going t0 run over here for a little visit with you. You don’'t mind do you? And you wont mind at all if 1 just settle down and read? I kflgw you ar¢ anxious to read your- self, too.” Pine use ey U “Not at all!” the neighbor agreed cordially. “Just make yourself per- fectly at home. I'm .glad you came. Anything I can do for you?” “No, thanks.” The girl from next doer settled down and read—for five minutes. Then she began to chuckle, audibly. Her friend looked up inq\urmgly “Just.listen to this!” exclaimed the girl from next door. And she read a paragraph or two. Her hostess laugh- ed politely and went back to her book. Presently the girl froml next .door found something else that was funny. She read that-aloud. The hostess h.u hed politely again and again wi to her book. This lasted with sugm variations for the next hour and | a half, After the girl from next door' had gone home the hostess settled herself with a long sigh. | “Well!” she mused. ar eold forma tao, or_sny prompt Be druggi else. faction “I don't wonder ‘The reason is that ceuliar clements that - able effect in soothipg and_hea membranes of the thront and is tamous for this purpose. of pmenmfil i _usually pla Ay y e ‘the hest pine ucm h remcd] moncy ean bny, a9 °x. in @ _pint betile. cith hieme.made sugar syrup. mstead of su “"YV you make a can by ready-made for thne times the mene! and very pleasant—children take it eagerly. - You ¢an feel this ieke hold of ‘s eonghi ap means busipess. The cough may be dry, hoarse and tighty or may be persistently logse from the snme—mfl.\med Pinex and Syrup eomhm rt~upfunllv in 24 hours or ot nex is a re of directions, uunnm:gd to 3 abaut have a ng ih cotigh syrups are cvmm“qntmn THD. he © sug ar i nvfi fl rvn lhe tha; clarified molasses, honey, o :finr tyrugl pint—more 1t is pure, good in a way tha phlegm, T mem ¢ Sk ] t‘! branes—and ronchial ast| hm ordinary throat ailment. effect upon cou subst'tutes. _Ask b4 for “2Y, ounces of Pinex” wit and don't aecent anything or_money. rel Co,, ¥t. Wayne, mn gl)‘(ll r : hoarsemess, ighly concentrated com- polmd of genuine Norway pine extract, and is famous -the world over for ith f:v absolute ntll- The Pinex You know that pine is wsad in “nearly “2il preseriptions and remedics for conghs, ine contains several 'emark “I have used P&m-na for years in cases of colds and catarrh, Theresultshave been good, in fact, more than you claimed. Have also taken - Lacupia-and can easily say it is one of the best blood puri- fiers I have ever uged.” . Mc.J, F, Arendt T n ! For caianh. and Catarrial Conditions ‘The evidence of one man like Mr. Arendt is more convincing proof to you of tbe nmu ei Pe-ru-na than any written words of ours. For fifty years -na has been the staadby of the American damily for dxsase:du catarrhal inflammation of the mucous membrancs unisz the organs of the body. Thousands, like Mr. Arcndt, have proved fz?lvcneu of Pe-ru-na for coughs, colds, pasal catarrh, stomach, bowel ver.disorders or any disease cheracterized by a cetarrhal condition. 1f your suffering is the result ofa mmrhal duotdc. try Pervna. It -that Anne doesn't evenings at home; it certainly is w ing. One of the worst i apout a family is that you catch their bad hab- its without realizing it. It nray sound iike an exaggeration, but I think T've read as much as a whole page in the last hour. But never mind; at least, Anne had a nice quiet eyening for reading."—Chicago News. ant to spend her fluenz: LETTERS TOV THE EDITOR The Sheltering Arms. Mr. Editor: For nearly half a cen- tury there has been beford the public a branch of the United Workers stat- ed in their constitution to be a “hos- pital for worthy sick and poor.” It was ovened on the West Side with accommodations for- four patients, Soon a building which could take care of six ‘was dongted to this good work and the institution was moved Norwich Town.. The applications. for rooms constantly increased, various | additions were made to the huilding, | until it was like the hoy's jack. knife, | “a new blade and a new handle,” and could aceommodate twenty or thirty more, and now many more have to he refused admission for lack of ropm. On eccount of technicali in the medical vrofession the name "hnk‘M— tal” conld not be retpined, and “The was chosen as an appropriate expression of its purpos- es Many h\"’llls have heen cheered ose who haye hod this werk in charge is due to tha generons public for all these vears of support. but blade - and the arged jack knife are » worn out, and if this institution | to @0 on with its noble work we ust have heln t a new build- g and funds to fake ge of the first opportunity when | wise to put it up. seems,tn be an impreseion ithe community that ine Shelteriv ms has plenty of moner to meet s needs. but, with *the advanced Driees. and the -constant ? juired to keon t tm in | Hn- Reoi b position o nid the heigh the ineome of west for hard but we w: 'mt | = o | | when we cons the Shel- | ing Arms would he- miesed if it drcpped out of . If you do not want to try that eéxneriment, just roll up the investment sider bequ areat help they eping wide open the doors to those who need the comfort and ‘care of such a home. We | want the funds to be acenmu ‘nzl in readiness when the w comes for the brick and morta M\d in con- et h'ml A 1919. STORIES OF THE WAR Bread in Petrograd. (Corresponden of The Associated Press.)—The only bread the majority of the residents of Petrograd have been able to obtain for months has been the so-calied “duranda’ made from flax- seed skins from which the oil has been | pressed, M. Saponen, a Petrograd art | dealer who recently succeeded in es- caping from bolshe¥ist Russia to Ii land, who discloses this situation sa: the bread ‘is highly irritating and causes stomach trouble. g M. Saponen expressed the opinten that, if the Allied biockdde continued, the worst months for bolshevist Russia would be March and Avpril. He stated | that, though unemployment was gen- in Petrograd, it was difficult to e workmen owing to their weak- ened condition and apathy. The prop- ertied class, who are not allowed food FACE DISFGURED WITH PINIPLES Would Wake With Burning and ltching, Cuti cura eals. “FR jtwo hrge empfiom nround my me b and iy covered with' mplau Tha eruptions were in a scaly form. My face was very much disfigured lnd 1 would wake up in the nightwiththe burning and ithing. ‘I saw an advertisement for Cuti- cura and I sent for a free sample. 1 bought a cake of Soap and a box of Ointmentand Iwas healed.” (Signed Miss Amelia White, Box 671, Litch- field, Conn., June 4, 1918. Make Cuticura Soap, Ointmentand Talcum your every-day toilet prepa- rations. Contrast the purity, comfort and convenience of these | Super- aeamy emollients with “beauty fads”” so tiresome and expensive. A bath with Cuticura Soap and hot ‘water thoreughly cleanses and stim- Norwich, Dec. 18, i | shops and oth a-{p It is Just | opq | Students rations, get nothing except what thoy manage to buy surreptitiously by ing their furniture and ether posses; sions. “Bartering is extensively in Petrograd and Mogcow the country,” con[inued “No one may 5,000 rubles. ing more with which the they must join the commun order to get work. Tha practiceq | 01 the met 1 aecount. \Vhen ]‘)(0 le have n()th- may n"xde me that time had enjovel leges. became the ohie tign. declared M. Sanonen ually increaged until June eigners, especiallv the Engii attacked wholesale. ten $16.000.00 is invested in bonds man revolutio mats were badly been little home lfe in Petrozrad si'\(‘P July 1. M. Saponen stated ;when narents W exte Owing to the numbers of v ‘\\m‘v(fl‘ h ieg ave etill n1 vedkn are still o} shevists actional @i nena wonld he Fiseal Year nt Yaln devoted about That $106,000 of its general tary s nu nav fet tramg ibe government” is one of | Roothe the many statements in the report ef | distess. the university treasurer for the fiscal vear ended JImP 20, 1919, Yale exnerded in 1 !“—1“1“ 4 over $275000 for ork Army Tr: Vn addition GLOVES For Gentlofolh stocks present a-real solution to gift gift value, ulates sluggish pores, the complexion a fresh, y glow. SRR Soap Zoe. omu—tlmm. 25 cents to $75.000, ceipts of th t on June 30, 1919, is ziven as §2 years ago. estate tion “both within the upiversity a repeated plea Naval Unit. and of more than $10,000 for emergency hospiials for members of ‘these organizations during the in- for which is has since been reimbursed by the government.” “Another fea epidemic last autumn, Over 6,000 contributed, . compared, with $10,561,830 and almost $3,000000 in r “ T afte esiate situai. LD incipally in New York s i e, e, e and New K The averzse yield liked, but a from cent., the ‘bet\n unable to make many new inyest- ts at the higher rates recently pre- ‘on_account of the necessity of ihroughout the greater pa: ually large baiances < ‘made b e five 000,000, financed on and » for over $630 000 : | oaiden ¥ Do honds. : e human nature to see the victim rise to| § complaints. For e B s dther statistics of general interest|the bait. { ver 60 years they ol bt contained in the roport show that in) ~All the preliminary stgns are known | f face m‘{zd on SRy e ot ctitn Dotrograd eno ion ven through felloxw- | to those in on the game. The first in- | jovs i given by ioR o aald 2 , ete. to over 370 |dication of that. fraif. inhefent in hu- | d continuel S ance- was rendered I'mans—to ret, somet i through the loan funds to over 1241id generally a movement. of zhe,«mtk' 2 rrowers during the year. Loans|to nrove the correctness of the® first ) % pRLE, from the teachers’ e surmise. indicated eith a signt ol | % spring the police fund since iis establi u the head niece or the feeling of a pro- | E“D SPRUCE GUM of wamen from have amounted to. ove 1 Tave heen 4, 3 istomer, continues faking or| @ strength and viwlity of age theyrealize ¢ the dropping of another coin | eerbif anis The report closes as it begins, with | a # handkerahief 5o g= to give a zood |- § more than ever before por an expression of the university's ap- |chance to eyplore withou suspieion. of the sacrifices made during the period of n in the war in order Yale might that be un- burden of a floating red to make the mos before it:” and wi éréi{chlal'i‘—roubles‘ the imitation end you relieve the So FothGuckly i Cieeiely MACPHERSCN S “FCR QUALITY” GLOVES FOR HIS CHRISTMAS GIFT Especially our Gloves — Washable Capeskin, splendidly ‘made, priced far below their prevailing value. Qur glove problems—such quali- ties as men prefer—right leathers, colors, finish, Lined or unlined, wool-lined or fur-lined — subject to exchange— $1.25 to $15.00. Handsomely boxed to enlnnce their J. C. MACPHERSON QUALITY CORNER Opposite Chelsea Savings Bank ire of the report is the urgent recommendatign that the Yale carporation face at the eariiest mcment ihe need of providing s0 adequate as to assure the hest pos- sible teaching for Yale students. On account of these expenses and loss in income, due to smaller enroll- ment there would have been a deficit vear’s operation of $304,294.08 had not the graduates through University Fund association s through their gifts to incume the mdhidual subsecriptions ranging from the total net re- alumni fund amounting possible “ alaries | HNUE 0. be the Of“Yale's funds over and ont fivetiienis is ayidviat as ures made by it for the i the total of notes outstand- on June 30, 1919, was but §2 by at Yale should con- is a true, tried medicine. X Sold Everywhere Tablets or Liguid RNinety-Seven per cent. of ths paopls have catan®: In sems form. a ieauer in the movement | have noted every move In the drama. for the payment of more adequate sa- | The hefocled person genperally takes laries to teachers of proved ability.” |the affair good naturedly and buys Elsewhere in the report it is explained | drinks to prove he is a real sport, at that “through the use of the first year's | the same 4gie vowing to have fun with income from the bequest of $300.000 :some of h¥ friends on the same trick. from Mrs. Charles W. Harkness the! The proprietor of the place says the university was enabled this last spring | nailinz of the bad money on the fioor lo announce an inerease in the scale |is a good advertisement for him. of salaries paid to the instructors and e assistant professors in the college and the Sheffield Scientific school, thus making at least a beginning of the work of revising teach salaries, the How Frogs Protect Eggs: Tn the manner of dispesing of thefr | eggs many speciesg of frog exhibit re- i - ! markable peculiarities. One of the p . need for which was emphpsized a year < o S ce of eV e e io over § 00 for the year, of which . el -y most curious, a tree fros, native of D e | amount §333,000 was added to the prin- | 28° 204 Is now even more urgent” | pjraguay, makes its mest in a bush country_where conditio bl of the sunfl. Coins on thé Barroom Floor. 3}5,hi\",’?:'§§r“ofl"f§:\}e§h it Last March, foreigners. who un to The total of the universiiy's endow- a S e When the saloops close for good the | pother and fixed in that position by habitues of an oasis neéar the - s : East!a number of empty egg capsules. The , = | river front in New York will be robbed eggs are also covered w a shield of “a source of innocent merriment” | of empty cansules to protect them that has lonz been a e line of en- tertainment for those who are far from the cabaret zone. Déspite the vigilance of the proprietor 0f the pla his bartenders are “stuck” w ous pieces of fe from the sun and air. Wien the eggs re hatched the plug ai the bottom appears to fall out ahd the tadpoles tumble into the water. a] American silver coin besides small change from| 138 Hidden Attractions. " almost every country on the globe. From the number in t : When this “phoney” money gets into { ficld, you'd e the cash register the owner of the wet goods emporium fishes it ont and nails the pieces to the foor near the foot vest at the front of the bar. There s sawdust on the floor, but with the shuffling about of the natrons it is sel- dom that several of the coihs are not peeping 1o excite the cupidity of rt to Every dog has his d the dog that knows t. d wise is en he is having ection under the shoe. Then follows a nonchalant look as| {¥ forpzompxruu‘hs. With the lowered b} of having Gray’s Syrup on hand for immediate use. [ and finally the tueeing at the firmly it of imitat ver. i As the harrgom fishe: n Jands his er hanl he is grected with a vol- ley of guffaws by the onlookers, wha ! They always buy the Large Size B Montreal D.WATSON&CO, New York at st | th| 8 | B | | MANUFACTURER'S SHGE STOCK SALE ' At 115 MAIN STREET Only 9 Days More Men’s Shoes Women's Shoes Boys’ Shoes and High Cut Storm Shoes Misses’ and Childrer’s Shoes Rubbers and Arctics People Who Think Shoes Are Very High Should Take Advantage of This Sacrifice Shoe Sale Stock Must Be Turned Into Cash! 115 MAIN STREET Next to The Manhattan MOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE (All acods Covered by Insurance During Transit) NORV‘“CH—PHOVIDENCE——NEW LDNDON—-"UTNAM FALL RIVER—NEW BEDFORD and Conngcting Points EQUIPMENT—NINTEEN PIERCE-ARROW TRUC s E. P. WINWARD & SON 135 WATHR STREBT 17 WILLIAM STREET . NORWICH NEV/ BEDFORD Phone 1250 Phong 3237 492 BDUTH MAIN STRI ‘138+142°DUPFEE STRIWP PROVIDENCE LL RIVER Phone Union 3842 Phenz 3619

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