Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 23, 1920, Page 10

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I Than E | m B | m [ “Clothing Prices Are Lower” DURING THIS SALE You Will See Them Again FOR SOME TIME TO COME Prices for Spring are 50 per cent. higher—and Fall 1920 prices still higher. the information along to you not to influence your buying now, but we feel that you should know conditions as we know them, and guide yourself a ccordingly. DESPITE THE CONDITIONS WE OFFER OUR ENTIRE STOCK OVERCOATS AND SUITS KUPPENHEIMER, CLOTHCRAFT AND OTHER WELL KNOWN MAKES At the Following Reductions $65.00, $60.00, $55.00 O'COATS AND sun"s.............................$44,50_ $50.00, $45.00, $40.00 O'COATS AND SUITS .............cccovven...... S 3450 $33.00, $35.00, $30.00 O’COATS ANDSUITS ..........ccccieeeennee.... S 2G50 Due to late deliveries many of the Suits and Overcoats offeredin this Sale have but just arrived ——ordmanly we would have cancelled orders on late deliveries but prices have advanced so much in the interim, we are glad to accept merchandise even at this late date. You get the benefit of brand new goods at great reductions. The assortment of fabrics and styles of both Overcoats and Suxts is so broad we can please every man, no matter what his preference may be—conservative, extreme or in between. BUY YOUR NEXT WINTER’S COAT NOW, OR THE SUIT YOU WILL NEED SOON— OR BOTH. YOU SAVE FULLY FROM $10.00 TO $25.00 ON EACH The Marhattan 121-125 MAIN STREET We know it and “The Kuppenheimer Store In Norvvich’; ' e e [ el e [ [ | | e e [ —— | e | — STEPS T0 STABILIZE FOREIGN EXCHANGES Jan —Bstablish- rons of the world of V ced budgets is the ‘uaL[ _of foreign | without addi- to balance its Tegu- of its solveney,” “Thre character of | uncture will decl(h and v depend com- | | i | | of countries will never Jne.r previbus exchange predicted. The again regain levels, Mr. W« abliity to produce and | to sa would determine | the ex they could f¥claim 3 their currency “But whatever the level they may be able to recover,” he continued, “ul- timately It will be to their vital in- terést once more to fasten it to a definite okld relation and to reestab- lish a stable exchange, fluctuating be- tween the maxima and minima of parities, wjthout which a coun- try’s trade and growth will remain subject to a fatal handicap. “Dhe more perfect the machinery of credit, however, the more insignificant becomes the necessity of .settling in actual gold. “We are Ii ng in an era where the production of money and credit has! wicreased and the production of goods decreased. In order to emerge we | must produce less credit and money and produce more goods.” Consumption taxes, that is taxes levied on spending and not on saving, were advocated by Mr. Warburg, who declared that “extravagance must not only be curbed on top, but just as much on the part of the masses re- ceiving the bulk of the national in- come, and, in the aggregate, doing the largest share of the country’s spend- ing.” “Our present form of taxation has proved a failure,” Mr. Warburg Baid, “in so far as in a rising market the equivalent of extreme income' and profit taxes is being added to the price the public pays for things, and in 8o far as it cripples the investment power of a country and thereby re- /2\ Indigestionl At oncel—*Pape’s Diapepsin’’ corrects your Sour, Gassy, Acid Stomach—Relief awaits you! You don’t w: your stomach is one—or a harmful one—your stomach | nt a slow remedy when | is too valuable; you mustn’t injure it |KNOW that indigestion and ;J:‘"de;e‘: e relief with drastic drugs. ‘When your meals don't fit and you feel uncomfortable, when you belch gases, acids or raise sour, undigested food. When you feel lumps of indi- gestion pain, heartburn or headache, w:, just eat a tablet of Pape’s ER———— S Millions of people know the magic of bad—or an uncertain | pape's Diapepsin as an antacid. They stomach are so needless. comes quickly, no disappointment! Pape's Diapepsin tastes like candy and a box of this world-famous indigestion ’s | Pape's Diapepsin helps neutrali:e the -\ oy hodn l n aoweu relief costs so little at drug stores. s S0 you can eat withoul tards its further development.” It is the duty of the United he said, either through private Ini- tiative, or, if need be, through direct | government action, to relieve those | ceuntries where “reconstruction is be- | yond the grasp of a people or where it is facing rvation or economicanni- hilation. Fe¢ predicted that the three | Americas would be “drawn together in a commercial and financial union ot lzrmung strength and intimacy” as al tes, old world will find so vast a field in work of reconstruction and coloni ‘»mn in ‘darkest Europe’. that not be able to devote itself asliberally.| to the development of the countries of this hemisphere as it did in the] past.” Mr. Warburg sulmmarized his views Tollows: “The debacle of foreign exdhanges is the logical consequence of the fin- ancial anarchy prevailing since “king | gold” was deposed. The discount of the foreign ex- changes of borrowing ocountries is not | the disease, but the symptom. expressed the differential between | various degrees of depreciation of | money ‘and credt between di: sinfar grades of | -ctivity, in dif- ferent countries. ‘When the equalizing power of gold, | interest rates, and government credit has Svent itself, e discount of for- eign exchanges acts as the only re- maining means of adjustment. “Foreign exchanges of 'the coun- tries affected cannot be stabilized un- til their importations and exyorta- tions more nearly balance one anu[her and until the process of dilution of currency and government credit is uniformly reduced, or arrested. “Rigidly balanced budgets are, therefore, required, because they re- store the public’ credit; because they, arrest further inflation; because they lead to curtailment of expenditures }and increased taxation, which, if properly devised, makes for decreased | consumption, increased production and lower prices.” And these in turn ar essential in that they stimulate expor- tations and discourage unessential im- portations, and thereby bring about the possibility of more nearly balanc- | ing the two. “For years to come the rehabilita- EURALGIA or Headache—— Rub the-forehead . and temples with as result of the fact that “capital in the | it wil | Ytlon of currency standards and for- | eign exchange levels of borrowing \counmes will depend primarily upon | the fiscal policy of tiieli” Bovernments; it will be the character of their budget ‘ (including, as it does, the question of bor and increased production) that, te than anything else, will chlde | thefr future economic worth and de- { velopment. “If we agreed on these premises it obvicus why it would be foolish to think that in times lke the present | foreign exchanges could or should | have been permanently ‘pegged.’ ” i PUTNAM | (Continued from Page Six) tative that Mrs. Ray was not fully conscious, but she not only recognized | him and greeted -him but also in‘uu-- | ed about other members of their fam- |ily, including her daughter, Elsie | Rose Kimber, of whose death she | does not know—believing, apparently | that Miss Kimber was uninjureg {longing to see her. ‘When Mr. Ray was about to leave wmg wife’s bedside just before noon l Thursday she put her arms around his neck and kissed him, and pleaded {with him not to go away. Mr. Ray regarded his wife’'s mind as remark- ably clear considering the terrible na- ture of her injuries and that it was the first occasion' upon which she has | talked since last Saturday. | It now seems likely that Mrs. Ray { will recover, although it will be a long | time before she is well enough to leave the hospital. Wilbour Lown, son of Agent A, D. Lown of the Manhasset Manufactur- |ing company and Mrs. Lown, will take *lhf‘ entrance examinations for West | Point next month. Mr. Lown, a_stu- \dent at Putnam High school, is 18 | years of age'and a splendid student. ‘llc has bvcn reccommended for ap- {pointment by Congressman Richard P. | Freemah of thig district. Charles” E. Maker, Pomfret, a graduate of Put- am High school and now a student |at Norwich university at Northeld, tV. will take the examinations also. | Friends of Adelbert Carpenter of | Putnam Heights are preparing to !show(fir him_ with postcards February 5, his T6th birthday, as has been the eustom on his natal day for the past few years. The boarg of directors of the First National bank of this city . adopted resolutions pertaining to the death of A. A. Haughton, for years a mgmber of the official board of the instifution. There were many expressions of regret hers Thursday over the death of Hon. Edgar M. Wheaton, a man who d'd muzh to Luild up this city. in which -he had-made-his home-and had bom such a prominent ugure for sv mc&&xquwmath I pastor of the Baptist church, was re-|Scott Harrison: circle, Ladies of the|floors, dye shop and stock houses, with ported Thursday as improving, after|G. A. R. uf this city, six ponds to draw water from. being very ill with pneumonia, Henry G, Burdick has purchased of| The state visiting nurse for schools Joseph Plessis, F. W. Seward and|Asa M. Ross a dwelling at 9 Bolles| was here Tuesday. In the' morning, . H. Smith, members of the board |street. as the thermometer: registered far be- of assessors for the town of Putnam, Another cold morning Thursday, | low zero, m: ay ot the pupils were ba- have given notice of the meetings they are to hold during February. The Family grcup of the Baptist church living 'on Suanyside gathered al the home of Samuel Rich for a meeting Thursday * evening. Newton 4. Ballard is leader of, this group. The Novwizh District Preachers’ meeting i5 to be held at the Method st church in this city February 9-10. The fourth quarterly conference at this church is -set for February 10. In a Quinebaug Valley league bas- ketball game played between Tourtel- lotte High and Killingly High school lteams at North Grosvenordale Wed- when the mercury stood at 2 below | zero at a number of points in this city. Miss Mary Nolan has returned to her home in Norwich after spending two weeks with her sister, Mrs. Jo- seph Landry, at Mechanicsville, = CLARK'S FALI.S Three business men have been in this village looking over the mill, denements and water privilege with the view, all hope, of starting some in- dustry bere. George Davison moved his machinery from the miil here to sent. Arghur Babcock of Westerly visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Eabcock. recenuy. USQUEPAUGH Mr. Cochrayne of Providence came as substitute for Mr. Gaistord to sup- ply the pulpit Sunday morning. Next Sunday will be Mr. Gaisford’s last service here. He expects to go to a larger church before long. He has the best wishes of his many friends. Sterry Cahoone of Slocum was a caller here Sunday afternoon. nesday evening, the Killingly ¢ tean | his new mill on Canal street, Wester- | Rev. C. H. P\?“,'I‘,f,’m"‘;';e“hea = Was overwhelmingly defeated, 65 to|ly. several nwonths azo, although his | Perryviiie SUcty mOPWEE, oo 0 o 5 lease was not out until this spring. m;‘{»';vée‘? 0 oo Dr. J. B. Kent will have the mem- | Several of the tenements are occupied hannock wae bers of the budget committee of the|by peopic working elsewhere; many| larence “‘g‘;,:gjy‘" e Baptist chuhch at his home for a|are empty, and other houses than |2 Caller here meeting' this (Friday) evening. Mrs. Lelia Babbit has been elected ang installed president of Carolina those owned by Alfred Clark would be available if needed by mill workers. This is a large mill, with three large The latest wrinkles are rough em any one. GINGER ALE Ideal Home Bzverage THE 'solution of “what to drink” in the home is found in this true ginasr product — aged and mellowed. Women are serving it regularly in the home and find that its distinctive anl delicious fl:vnr appeals to the entire family._\ Teil: your grocer”t> send you a case. Boverages of Other Nations aad Periods Tt Exbime: My His Draught ¥ ~Porpotse Ol HARVARD CO., LOWELL, MASS. NGMMMMWGWME. Moore, . 73-81

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