Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 6, 1920, Page 4

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them take care on too of the eastern farms, and as the that line of pro- ought to be done here supplying. of the markets in of the country or even con- tributing to the export trade suffers. The western apple raisers are not to blame for conditiong here, If there was manifested in New England the enterprise that backs the western or- chardists apple culture would be a far different proposition than it is. MORE CARS, LESS SAFETY. The number of~automobiles in the country is constantly increasing but that does not constitute a satisfac- tory reagon for the steady increase in the number of automobile accidents and fatalities. With gredter numbers there ought to be greater care, and while there appears to be evidence of greater regard for the danger of rail- voaq crossings in New York and New Jersey indicated by the fact that there wers less fatalities at such points during the past year, such was not true regarding highway fatali- ties. Because of recklessness and in- competénce the death rate from auto aceidents wis Doosted, but why shonldn't it continue upward when in cuch a state as New York there was the revoation of but 141 drivers' M- censes when much smaller states re- voked them by the thousands for the wvery reasons that lead up to acci- Qente., That this is ofie of the means by which the states must create respect for the laws and the rights of other users of the highways, as'de from the prosecution of those responsible for the accidents or death,'is being real- ized in those states where little or no eitention is being paid to it. And yet New York and ®¥ew Jersey are not the states ‘where deaths from auto cuts are on the gain. Hven in the litie state of Rhode Island a con- crease is noted, and it can g be expected that there will be greater numbers each year unless adequafe steps arc taken to overcome careless | operation of cars, to discourage the speedsters and see that each and ev-] ery driver agsumes the responsibility that he ghould in the use of the high- ways. : The greater number of cars makes . | greater protecticn necessary but it does not appear that as much is being done in the way of safety provisions with tie steadily increasing number of cars tha: there was with the smaller number. Certainly & careful dry has no arsurance these da; §I L hie will not be smashed up by the 1llow. 'un-ahnm- WEEK ENDING JAN. 8, 1919 PROHIBITION DECISIONS. Gradually is the United States su- preme court disposing of the cases before it having to do with prohibi- tion. A number of questions have been raised and the constitutionaliy of the acts of congress has been attacked but as yet in no instance has the found that congress acteq with- it authority or that it exceeded its Heretofore the court has maintain- t the war time prohibition act the decision given that the sections prohibiting the 2 g i i H gt 4 it 72 per eent. beer he other find- that not only of the war- dealing in it A BAD MESS. Whichever way the decision goes the happiest man in the country when | the naval uwards are cleared up ought to Ve the secretary of the navy. The decisioh may not be in his favor, the| of hi§ acts may be upheld but| ould nevertheless he tickled | when the matter is disposed of. Secretary. Daniels isn’t cxaclly a of particular im- — this time in connection with the war-time prohibition act and constitutional prohibition which will De effective next week Friday. There Temblas. ""!mn?:l'k:“fl:‘f;n:“ the| snining lizht tn connection with thei volving the constitutionality of the f, ST D honbi S el amendment. The oppohents he wuy i Which some of the decora- B e et proved themaelyes|IONS Have been awarded there ap-| o f g enters romtive to | Pears o be excellont ground for the! s Byl and the ams fo 1] Claim that they have been pinned | B expectsd relative to constitutional | o, "y, o Ut O favoritism, | pronibition. No armistice 1n i be|"NUIC there are those who by their expected but each decision is gradual- | oo Iy clearing the situation. e With deserving ®eases passed by, the | latest instance of awafdinz a deco really deserve them but! ved no favorable consider- KEEP THEM GOING. None {00 soon have the federal au- thorities gotten busy in a determined effort to rid the country of the reds. No greater menace has been present- ed in a long period of time than was launched by these radicals in all sec- tons of the country. The overthrow of the government was what they|a naval cross, although he must be were working for. There are plenty|given credit for urging that he should Of the leaders who are too willing to|be given no decoration for war ser- &dmit it and it is high time that they|vice. Just why he should be given a | were banished and the country freed|medal no justification is that of Grayson, the personal Admiral physic of 2 naval cross. Strange as it m: ceem he was recommended for a d tirguished sérvice medal but received 5 g when those who actually took of such conspirators. part in the war have failed to have ‘When it is realized that it was the|thc services they performed recog- nized is hard to understand except | that it is on the ground of favoritism| and this does not iniimate that he has not done faithfully the wo Which be Was named. Yet it was noj more deserving of o wa plan of that element to so back the sieel and coal strikes that there would be a general strike throughout the country it shows what advantage was taken of labor organizations to Pt their echeme into effect. The ad- Yocacy of violepcs among the work-|that ef thousands and thousands of | efs, the influence that served to re- | others e navy, an it will be as| strain many from returning to work snd the spirit of disorder can be at- tributed in a large measure to the ac. tivities of those who were using those lawless acts as a means of striking &t the government. to explain 2s the reason for him an admiral when selected to icok after the president’s health. | a¢ more we head about the naval enviable is the posi- - ¥ Secretary Daniels. He seems ‘With the uncovering of this nation- overlooked the president’s| wide revolutionary piot together with ehaufteur. the extensive counterfeiting plans and 4 e the efforts 10 create panics here and TES ia Burope it must be realized that bl Both the leaders and the followers in such astivitles have been allowed to| . 20 00 far. They have been favored with oo zreat a degree of tolera- Instead of being given yope enough to hang themeelves they were planning to use it to overthrow the country. It is therefore time that we should get busy. It has taken a long time of us to get awakened but knowing situation that exists ang the dan- 0 the country that is threatened quicker such radicals are sent out. the country or put under proper the better it will be for the r will be 'a bad one for the profiteers oniy to the degree that the consumers encourage it. W. J. Bryan thinks tho democtats need It is too late for that,| ihut if it wagn't, is he the one to gi it? e And yet there are those who took considerable pride some time ago in telling us that we were going to have 2 milg winter! RERE g With democrats coming out in sup- port of republican candidates it can bardly be regarded as an endorsement of the administration, ER The From the way in which the author-| i sty & ities have shown New England to be G ah Bt are spotted with reds it is suffering from o spgectunty tor more than the measles. and of e tion g ] The man on the corner says: Claim- l i | ing. that prices will drop in a few months is simply the kind of demo- cratic talk that has been heard for| he past eight years. §° 1 l 1 | i j That sonthern man who was sent to prison for four years for stealing I six cents would probably have been :‘“’. - acquitted if he had killed someone or o et gotten away with a million BTeat] grembers of the semate who have w-‘."-i-:‘ 2Dpies Sent|peen responding to the enap of the e e b @emocratic whip sre beginning to re- Dative apples and ; 2lise that the treaty must be passed even with thelr approval of the reser- vations. Semeone wants to know what is go- ing to take the place of the saloon. ‘Well, from the way values aré jump- ing ang property is changing hands it is possible it will be improved bus- iness places. 11 gel A former New, Jersey senator de- elares that for Wilson to attempt to #un for a-third term would kill the demtocratic party. He should know that it is impossible to kill what is dead. {to anything he believes wrong or un- | just a high privat ration for which there appears to be | & President Wilson, who has been given | for | Warren—who is medal than | | abou WASHINGTON AFFAIRS Special to The Bulletin.) Washington, D, C, Jan, 5—Congress starts out on itsumld-wlnter .em;-; with a constructive amme. great size on its hands, Tho fact that it is g presidential election year may speed ‘up the work and an adjourn- ment by ‘early summer be made pos- sible, but even then, it is by no means certain that congress would take ad- vantage of it. Unless the health of the president is far better than at present it is quite doubtful if con- gress would feel it wise to adjoura Jeaving the country without possible action from the legislative branch for a period covering a number of months. Congress’ can_adjourn on its own in- jative but cannot assemblé without a formal cummons by the president ex- cept on the date fixed by the Con- stitution which is the first Monday in December of each year. ~Onte in two years that session ends automaticglly on March 4th; the other year the Ses- sion continues until congress, through its vote, orders an adjournment. The present session is the indeterminate one and until reconstruction meas- ures are passed and the country is on a safe basis it is more than likely congress will sit tight and so keep & strong hold on its law making power. During a session any bill passed by congress becomes z law within ten| days unless vetoed by the president o emergencies can be quickly met; moreover @ two thirds vote passes & bill over the president's veto. And things are likely to be pretty well ad- justed, or congress will not adjourn early, Dut will content itself with the So-called gentlemans agreement not to transact business, but hold brief gessions every three days, under Con- 3}:"&3‘::;‘5“ merpendies arise,’ yet | 1ady, bridiing. “Much you Lnow about leaves members and senators free u;!lt- I couud tell e e s T et Euesy has me | Sl 1 'don't (hink one's mother has routine business will be transacted | after early summer, and that the Na- tional conventions will sweep Wash- ington clean. “The coast guard performed a great| work for the country and there is no| reason they should no¥ be put on al par th the officers and men of the! OB 4 A navy’ said Senator Nelson of Minne- | polled jand . aly S H | and after Dave Osterman | sota, in urging equal pay for the|calied on her three times Tom just | guard, The senator spoke Wit forte | naturally pitched into him and knock- and emphasis as he giared across od out three teeth. It was awfully aisle at Senator King, democrat, ofij. q on Dave afier he grew to be an | Utah, who was bltterly opposing he | alderman and made speeches, because | g:g??flg‘?::; ;u;;_g“ 8 °Hm the dentist never was able to make Knute Nelson, senior senator from Minnesota is a splendid type of an Americanized Norseman. Borp in No way back in 1843, he came to"the Un d States while just a little | fellow: went west and grew up with the country. When the civil war broke out Nelson enlisted as a_private and was with the Butler expedition at New | eans in '62. He was wounded and | at the close of the war studied law and “farmed it” out in Minnesots. With grey hair brushed back from a strong face: Wwith keen eyes twink- ng from behind spectacles, Nelson faces the senate in deflant opposition “8o this is Allie Cummins'. daugh- ter,” cried the nice little old lody, twinkling her eyes at the pretty girl she was holding by both hands. “My, my!I ean't beheve it.” “Ol, did you know my mother when she liveq here”’ asked the pretty girl, who was visiting in town. I ghouud say I did” declared the nice Lttle old lady. “Didn’t I give Ad~ die Cummins cookies when she would crawl through the broken pickets in the,fence. She had the prettiest yel- low curls.” “What—mother?”? the pretty giyl stammered bewildered. ‘W'hy, her hair is dark brown and she has (o have it marcelled.” “You don't say, the nice old lady commented. “Tch! ‘Tch! That's to bad. Why, when she was a young' waoman _grown the boys were all crazy about her hair—she was a perfect blond.” =i “Boyg crazy about her biond hafr!” echoed the girl still more Lewliidered. - The nice old lady noddeq vigorous- y. *1 should say,” she asserted. “Why Addie Cummins had beaus clear into the next county and the way their rigs lined up before her home on Sun- days was a caution. I guess she could ‘a’ had mest any young man around here, they were 5o daffy over her. I'll never forget the excitement whin Arthur Ferguson left town betause Gene White cut him out with her one summer.” “I never heard anything so roman- tic about mother, said the pretty girl. “I supposed no man but father had ever existed so far as she was con- cerned.” 4iumph!T chortied the nice old was a belle. —didn’t any of them ever fight?" T1l bet she's told vou!” said the| nice 0'q lady. suspiciously. “She was- n't more than 18, and Tom Switt was together with three other “English boys” brothers and cousins, had serv- ed on the Mexican border in 191§ in the -Connecticut regiment, of which Col. Tilden was at that time in com- mang, ‘as Lieut, Colonel. Tilden is im- mensely interested in the case and with Captain Kertz, "will do all pos- sible to have navy cross awarded young English. Hero is a prediction regarding the military programme as it will be adopted by congress: a standing arm of 260,000, This will be agreed on by both large army and small army men, as a suitable size to meet possible emergency conditions arising out of | iapor and other domestic or border | troubles; There will he no universal military training clause in the bill as passeq this session, that question be- ing ona which wiil get considerable discussfon through the campaign and wise. He lays down the lJaw in a way that puts trmmers to shame, for he stands his ground and pepvers his ad- i th facts tinged with eh- thusiasm or sarcasm as the case may be, and can be counted on as a last ditcher vthing he undertakes. And moreover Senator Nelson' always knows what he is talking about, or | the legislatures prefer to wait and see he doesn't talk. Coming over to this|which way the wind blows from the country as a kid of five or six years | different sections of the country, be- old. Nelson has made a wonderful yec- ord. “What civil war? fore taking decsive steps o frame nk did vou held in the|a military training policy. All pre- | was asked him today. “Oh |dictions are subject to “change with- answered the sen- | Out notice” but at this moment that ator with a sm'le and as much pride | appears to be a safe che, if he had won a general's stars.| The frst big measur a Nelson characteristic. Helup will be the railroad bill; the water ngs for what they mean to the |power bill; the army and havy bills and not what they mean to and the Berger case. It Is expected He came to conzress in 1884 Berger will be refused a Seat without been here ever since, in the delay. as the conditions are the same! except those as when the house voted him down | a out a few weeks o be taken vears sota for a couple of terms. ware over. the gts mptly sent him back to Washing. senator. Tre a curious hanpen- that two of the three senators ial congres: the fiscal be 1st covering 21. hefore Julvy ar of 19: seniarite rank were born | = nd and to of them are | T R T LR o NEW BOOKS Nt AbhAhE e o EauT | A Golden Age of AUfhors. By William Sted. . Next 14 PP 2 W. Elsworth of ew Hartford, Noluoi of Wit & onn, Cioth, illustrated, 305 pages Wyomins with_index. ' Published hy Hough- entering the renate in 1895, Fnth are| (o7 Mifflin Co, Boston. Price $3.7 veterans. o Thi; the c ar. father-in- —was born at Hinsdale | entisted in the 16th in. ¢ state, and later moved to Wyoming. Senator Nelson Is great- Iy i sted in New Tngland having | 2Cauaintanc the Butler expedition at |2 Publishe New ‘Orleans in '62. Newspaper men | 2PPealing who made the recent neross-the-con- | Aerican tinent trip with the president sald on | their return, that when they were Minnesota, they asked anybady what they thought about National ques. tions, the Invarizble reply was “Oh you had better ask Senator Nelson that. He'll know, and whatever he does will be right Congressman Tilson &f the - 3rd Connecticut district and Capt. T. R.|r Kertz, United States Navy have place ed before the secretaty of the navy an urgent appeal that Ensign Hunt- ington English of New Haven shall be awarded 2 decoration for the indiv- idual bravery he showed when the Finland was torpedoed-in 1817, They have asked the secretary of the navy {0 logk into ghe case and award Eng- lish o navy ®ross. Kertz took up the matter some time ago but the board failed to present the name of Bnglish for such an honor, . Huntington English was oh the Wa« kiva which was engaged in picking up survivors of the Finland which had just been torpedoed by a German sub- marine when a man was sighted fioat- ing on the water apparently uncon-|be made that could be guided upon a scious. It wasin the Bay of Biscay and | level with side vans, or a screw, tak- the water was cold and rough. Young | ing power from an electric engine were Bnglish didn't hesitate a minute when | his chief points, and in tho complet- he saw the man, but jumped over-|ed airship he believed just as he be- board and swam fo him. He was un- | lieved ‘the north pole could he reach- able to get the man back, 50 swam to | ed or the Isthmus of = Darien cut the ship got a rope, then swam back | through if the first order of profes- to {agfiunconsciows man, secured the | Sional talent were commanded to une line tothim and towed him back tg the|dertake the job, and equipped with Ship, WHers both wers Dulled aboard | SveEy. resource’ And this great \des The: captain. refers to it as a great | Was concsived by Stedman, then feat which a man of less power than | YOURg fellow only a few y English could not have performed. He adds the submarine was nearby and “hi¢ act was comparable with that of @ man who leaves a trench fo rescue a wounded comrade in No Man's land. It was over and above the call of duty, and I should have forbldden his going, if I had known he intended doing s0.” Capt. Kertz in Writing the navy department referred to English's act ag “as brave an indi- vidual act with very few as came to my attention during the seventeen months in France ~and Irench waters. He cites young Eng- lish as an example of the sort of man an as having performed the sort of @ct which merit recognition. Capt. Kertz goes a step -further, QUests Secretary Daniels to cancel the award of a cross made to him, and that Ensign English be awarded one in his place, should it be feund that the department is not in a posi- tion to add to the awards ang enly one can be avallable In this case, ad- ding “he is more of the type for which decorations should be awarded, than to the duties performed by, me.” In commenting on the matter today Col. Tilson sald Huntingten English Toreover | w oof i . Pershing: bt Stockton, John Hay, besides a long | | He_makes reference { Sigourney, aid G. Mitcheil LEdmund which were only ne, but which we | ave seen come true, notably Edward Clarence Stedman’s remarkable p ‘Aeria] Navigation® printed in 1579 with plans and diag: Stedman had drawn ars before. There are lllustration of dirigibles which might also have been amateur (he said in the article ‘We are all {amateurs of something), hut if at the itime his suggestions could have been | acted upon, that government with uns limited capital should have really con- {cerned themselves with bringing about ithe possibilities which he saw_ se clearly, dirigibles might have been flying years ago. That a fish was true model, that a strueture could a ars out of Five million people use it to KILL COLDS WHEN YOU WANT (0 Dut your but iness befors ine public, there is medium better than through the ad Ths Bulletin those three false teeth stay aisap) romantic. WLy, I met kis three daughter: other ever couid have liked him. try and had a canoe. “Your motier came near marrying him. You should- nt speak so disrespectfully of him. my dear, sweet as you are, you're not as pretty as your mother was at your ag: girl, blinking mother at tees and plays bridge and is awfully | ooniury that began in Ol Mystle in popular, but 3 another man’s an earth, except fath-| were not without adversity and they b dle if you put anything pink on her!” | | gasped lovely in taupe and dark blue and—" “She’ll never 100k prettier then she did in that piak taffeta artist visiting here that summer and he nearly broke his neck to paint her.” “I ust can't get it through my head,” the visitor insisted. “T very well acquainted with my own mother after all! I sheuld think she'd have told we all this!” any right concealing the fact that she | ha It seems so funny. To |“I'm all mixed up. I had no idea she think of mother having a lot of boys was like that. And there comes young floating around and fighting over her | Tom |looking as spoiled ang impatient as vs had his|¥ort of related —_——— and charming mannér, the result be- ing a volume to be prized. The Story of Connecticut Life. By Charles Q. Eldredge 8 Mystic, Conn. * Qloth, 12 mo, illustrated, 72 pages. Published by the Allen Book _and Printing company, Troy, N. Y. Price 81 Here Is an_autobigraphy that begins 2nd ends in New London county, Con- | necticut, but many of the years of the author's life were passed in worth- while and laborious undertakings in many other states where pluck and stick -to-itiveness were requited and provided in plenty. It is a most in- Teresting presentation that impresses with the ‘steadfast purpose displayed and it is penned in a bright and fas- cinating manner that holds the atten- . tion from start to finish. suppose not.” agreed the pretty| =i ‘Eidredge has seen all sides of a little. T ust can't place | yifo and has had greater variety of ex- 1—why, she is on commit- | joricnces, in his three quarters of a put, Tom Bwift grew up into a fat gentleman of the church with the waich chain and the double chin and the hem-haw fore he speaks.’ bc-'my gvodpn::- the pretty gir] said | tedly. “He didn’t look a bit son ahd I don’t see How “He weighed only 160 in those days, said the mice old lady, “and read poe- You've got Addie's eves, but even so, he just doeen’t KnOw | jgs5, fhan the average person. They “That's ome of the unesplainable ' were not without humor. There are the never to be For- mysteries of nature” the nice old |gotten schooldays, incidents of Civil lady admitted. “You onght to have |war times, the trials and successes in seen Addie Cummins in her pink ruf-|the western lumber camps, the expert fied taffete and the hat With the ros- | enees as a lumber trader on _the | Mississippi, as a business man in New York state and back at home in_ all of which tho determination that wins. The book deals with facts, not fiction, a record of achievement, and therefore lady. ,ai} the more interesting, It shows what can be done when there s a Will and when push and falr dealings are hitched up together. INCOME-TAX FACTS YOU SHOULD KNOW Twenty thousand persons last year: paig a fine of $5 each for faiiure to file an income-tax return for 1918, al- ‘Why, mother'd just curl up and the pretty girl. “She looks | “Pooh-" disagreed the old There was an | ess I'm not ‘She's probably forgotten all about it,” the nice old indy oXplained, “Wor. | though their income for that year was rying over you ang your beaus.” not taxable. “I never had a lot, as you say she| The revenue act provides an exemp. " sal irl ‘aggrievedly. ald the pretty’ girl aggrievealy. | tion of $L.0S0 for Sne familles, and an additional exemption of $200 for each person dependent up on the taxpayer, if such person is un der 18 years of age, or incapable of self-support, The _delinquents last year were persons whose income ex- actly equaled the amonnt of the un- necessary, therefore, Swift with my tennis racket, vou say his fat father used to be. My goodness! If my mother’ almost mar- ried his father doesn't that make us or—or something? Mayb> that's why he insisted it was | all right last night shen he wanted |and others whose income was nontax to kiss me—and I wouldn’t let him.” | able because of dependents, ana who “You go on!” chuckled the nice ol | Were under a sisilar mistaken impres- lady “You're gett fon. 3 Ty Addse Gusmims gmore and mor | “‘For example, a single man with a LS sister for whom he was allowed an ex- emption of $200, placing his income in the nontaxable list. For thig reason he did not file a return. When his de- linquency was discovered through a return filed by hi§ employer, who is required to report payments of $1,000 or more to each employee, he was fined $5. Must File a Return. To avoid penalty, every person whose income for the last year equal- ed or exceedeg $1,000, or $2,000, ~ace cording to their marital status or college (put out., too) while floating in a boat on Greenwood lake and i - ing down into the clear water. The year was 1859.” In similar véin does he deal with the works and acts of the many other leading writers and there are also fascinating _chapters on publishing, magazine making and short story writing. Mr. Fllsworth knows his subject and he deals with it in a most thorough distributing point to you, at $19.50 the for difference. bag or one case will be filled. CUT THIS COUPQN QUT P. M. LEAVITT CO., 113 State St., Boston, Mass. \ Enclosed please find penes e thbnky srder TOF Bouivions for 1 Box ($23.88) or 1 Bag ($19.53) granu- lated sugar to be forwarded to the following ad- Dept. 43 o R G GO SRR S M MYGRDCER Ship by Freight IS: (Check which m Nanee . . ceas you desire.) Your grocer’s name and address must be for- warded or the order will not be filled. tion of $1,000 for sngle persons, 2,000 and heads of | to file a return,| net income of $1,000 was supporting a ! Insure Your Home Against Sugar Shortage For a limited time we offer for delivery, beginning in January CANE GRANULATED SUGAR - Refined in the United States In 100-Ib. Bags, or 120-Ib. Cases in 2 or 5-Ib. packages, F. O. B. our nearest $23.88 the 120 Ib. .Case All Orders Will Be Numbered and Delivered in the Order in Which They Are Received If our costs will permit lower price at time of delivery, we will return check Fill out the coupon in the corner of this advertisement and mail to us with ‘ Post Office or Express money order or check. No order for more than one “panied by the coupon to the lefi. AUTOMOBILISTS SHOULD TAKD LG Relieves the throat after dusty driving and just the ounce of prevention need- ed. Wonderful for throat- dyness and irritation. Eminent physicians pro- nounce I, C. Cough Drops & parfeot remedy for 'throat irritations. gre enough still to leave the recip- ient dependent, dogs not preclude a claim for exemption. Such income, however, must be included in the re- turn of the head of the family. - Can Not Divide Exemption. The $1,000 additional exemption al- lowed the head of & family cannot be divided between two single mem- bers of a household. A division of responsibility excludes the parties from such claim. A single person who does not qualify as the head of a family may still claim an exemption of 3200 for each person dependent of of $200 for each person dependent up- on him for support, if such person is under 18 years of age or incapable of self-support. A son who bag left home but who sends to his mother more than half the sum required for her support is entitled to the $200 ex- emption, provided the mother camnot support herself. Otherwise the am- ount must be considered as a gift, and therefore, is not deductible. A son living at home and supporting bis mother may claim the $2,000 exemp- tion of $200 unless the mother is In- capable 0f self-support. their status as the head of the fami- 1y, must file a return. The law makes no exceptions, the penalty for failure eing a fine of not more than $1,000. Head of a Family. ‘Whether or not a person is the head of a family” and entitled to be determined largely by circumstances surrounding each individual ease. Thé fixing of his status decides, in many instances, whether his income is tax- able or nontaxable. A head of a family is defined by Treasury regulation as “a person who actually supports and ma.ntains one or more individuals who are closely connected with him by blood rela- tionship, relationship by marriage, OF by adoution, and whose right to exer- cise family control and provide for these dependents is based upon some moral or legal obligation” A single person is the head of a family if he is the sole support of relatives living in the same house wih him and if he exercises control of household affairs. The words “sole support” are used in the senso that there is mo other person to whom the dependents may ook for support. Income from other = E sources guch as. interest on bonds,| It's a good thifig to aveid people stock dividends, pensions, ete., if m-lwho think you are a good thing. MOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE | (All Goods Covered by Insurance During Transit) i NORWICH—PROVIDENCE—NEW LONDON—PUTNAM FALL RIVER—NEW BEDFORD | and Connecting Points | EQUIPMENT—NINTEEN PIERCE-ARROW TRUC'S | E. P. WINWARD & SON 135 WATER STREET 17 WILLIAM STREET NORWICH NEV/ BEDFORD Phone 1250 Phone 3337 492 SOUTH MAIN STREET 133-142 DURFEE STRIST PROVIDENCE ‘ALL RIVER Phone Union 3342 Phone 3819 100 lb. Bag We reserve the right to accept or re- ject any orders submitted. No order will be filled until accom- No order will be accepted without grocer’s name. We will protect ail independent grocers with the usual sugar profit on your order. All receipts of money will be held in trust by us at responsible Boston banks until deliveries are made. P. M. Leavitt Co. 113 Statc Street, Boston, Mass. Largest Distribul tors of Su'u in New En,ghnd. ; DEPARTMENT &

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