Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 19, 1920, Page 4

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T ,?r’iia HOUSEWIFE e o taned. SN : : TG’ bl G cyuine i s Pineapple s an aid to digestion. | straight I TR e 8 it s Dbest fo figsor cream efore ltsm"mm"““w“"‘ Make an oyertired child rest before| oAREVRE s whipping. WL, ol . it eats. Y 5 Onion skins boiled ip stock will ada |, ho% Barty children's wear, georsetts s g 4 with those made of fine cotton veile Macaroni should be cooked in boil- ing salted water. or of organdy in white or shades. Self-fabric in contr In planting a garden be sure tojcolors, used as piping, is mueh used choose lilacs first. as wtrimming for the organdy frack. | Seereidlainuonl e LOUNGING JACKETS. in the United States. : Lounging jackets or tea coats are in| What does Supt. Graham know or care A freshly whitewashed cellar Willlpigh favor from a fashion-standpont,] about the needs of a district when his give butter a strong taste. as well as for the comfort they give.| visits to the schools are few and far be- If fiesh is very thick cook it partly| Deshabille is the name t best de- | tween? It would be easier for him if all in oven before boiling. scribes some French creations in these]the districts were condensed into smali- To improve bacon pour boiling water | outdoordress novelties t are inf :r‘ur::e. w:‘r t;;a.r:no: al::l\::‘ el'\fl!gho:'nutx:z over it before frying. e clothing more than huge squares “h oL o “ - d SR dent . | with round, square or V-shaped open- | school system from the superintenden Do not place meat directly on ice, | s {PURLe STURR OF Fom e OM o] down through the city government. but jon izt nver S T square to he slipped on over the head.| Would the teachers have the nerve to In damp weather, when iid gloves| But the charm and beauty of these|tell a womean taxpayer on 1 committee are apt to spot and mold, place them | gimple sacques lies in the materials|that they cannot live on their present in a glass jar tightly closed and they |ysed; lace and net, georgette and hand bu.h.rles as meflyf qnuntl their mlr’eyt l.o!‘im_r will keep in perfect copdition. embroidery or fringe, or .bo;‘h,m B e g e A piece of absorbent cotton in the |girdles of colorful ribbon er of - e = palm of your glove will take up the |made silk flowers. poRcmates how Wbirdks gre golng [p build moisture and prevent the gloves from Domés in the tows whf {hé aver mount- i taxes? We were anxious to join the staining. : LAUNDRY MTEs‘k b\x‘lh‘llng association, but my husband Holes in kid gloyes can be mended | Soak chocolate stains in keroseme i o8 SEOCEo N 0 T e o by first buttonholing around the hele |and wash in cold water. baby on less than twenty dollars a week. and then filling in with buttonhole | Table linen needs very little bIuing|{One week it was only eight dollars. It stitch. Thread matching the glove|in the wash water. couldn’t be done and he has' been forced should be used. Ammonia poured on jodine spots | t8 leave town to get enough to live de- will remove them immediately. cently and pay our bills. This is the CARE OF JARS. Use millk waem water to wash | PUERt of a great many families in town. Fruit jars should be washed immedi- | chamols gloves and rinse thoroughly.| Ve ity peonle cspoclally should turn i ately they are emptied, dried thorough- | When they hegin to dry blow into each | Jit iR force, rent payers and taxpa Sy, Hayen for, rage ll-'* na thres tmes the businoss i New Ha- | ven. Many people are awake to theso dis- crepancies even though they are not | | high school graduates. We help foot the | ‘bills.” Supt. Graham was willing to save fifteen hundred by closing Long Society school but was anxious to place his pet |} schieme of a junior high on the taxpay- eI} ers' shoulders to the tune of two hun- 4dred and fifty thousand. Consolidation in our town is a sample of what the ad- vocaites of the Smith-Towner bill in con- gress are trying to put over on people It needs to be settled just how the dif- freent provisions are going to be en- forced, and nothing bas illustrated the necessity of such an understanding more than the situation that developed as the result of the German army being sent in- to the Ruhr district, which France in- terpreted as a violation of the treaty and sufficient reason for it to take control of German cities as provided in the treaty. This action prompted a protest by Germany and it failed to get the sanc- tion of Great Britain and threatened a disruption of the unity that has prevailed among the allied nations. In view of the situation, which might of course rise again, it is quite important that there should be early steps taken to forestall such'a possibility and such should be the outcome of the conference of allied pre- miers which is to be held tliis week at San Remo. There a Working agreement for carrying out the provisions of the treaty should be perfected, while there. aro other important matters which| should be disposed of at that time. There is no reason to believe that Germany can force a breach between Great Britain and France on the en- WEEK ENDING APRIL 17th, 1920 10,615 NEARING THE END. That the railroad brotherhoods have seen the need and advisability of work- ink® with the railroad managers in get- , P ; <5 G % p NN 5 S U ] forcement proposition. If a treaty’s pro-{ly and lid replaced tight. This keeps|s; 5| and make 2’ firm stand against this ex: 3 w railroad back to E y and lid rep ig finger to stretch it into shape. Rul RET o = ‘\‘n‘lr")‘:h:ull;-‘m't:‘fllers(:(‘l ¥ the steps] Visions amount to anything at all they|out all dirt and dust as well as keep- | ort hefore putting on the hands. travagance. Let the teachers resign if | he! - should be enforced. b It there are those Drovisions which cannot be carried out it is well to have an understanding as to ‘what they are and not let the inference De carried that because certain ones are not being lived up to others need not be. 1t will be determined by this confer- ence whether Great Britain, France, Ttaly and Belgium are going to stand to- gether as they did in the war or whether trains ean be run even if those who left dhey are galng to tske d¥fersnt views| them are not in charge. There has been relative to treaty enforcement a.nfl‘ .lel o eamerness on the part of those who | GSTMany get the benefit of the division. by - <-4y g o % 1o dg| Thelr experiences have been sufficient to they want to and let us get along as | ‘best we can until times are normal. The | children won't be out very much if some never went back. The league may find itself in the same boat with the trolley strikers. With three big suits against the city and other expenses due to wea- ther conditions, we doubly taxed emall taxpayers will be going to the poorhouse while the teachers and the politicians go Joy riding with the profiteers. If we had a few more men like ex- Mayor Allyn Brown, who were not afraid to preach and practice economy ‘with public mone there would be more people ready to join the “boosters” for a ing jars and lids together, and when wanted for canning all that needs washing is the outside of the jar be- fore sterilizing. TO BLACKEN A STOVE. It is quick, clean and easy to plack the store if you mix the store polish with shavings of paraffin instead of water. Shave a little of each on a cloth or over the stove and with one rubbing the stove is blacked and pol- ished. Use the same cloth to rub off the stove each day and it will always' look as though it had just been black- that have been taken and the results al- ready secured. There has been a de- cided improvement in the transportation ation in the past two days, but with railroads booking new men to per- manently replace those who have left their jobs, even as they gaye notice that they would, it is to be expected that the situhtion will continue to improve. It has been shown, however, that the When washing blouses, handker- chiefs or other fine pieces of linen put | a little orris root into the rinalng_ water. This imparts to the clothes the odor of violets and it lasts longer than the ordinary scent sachets. When ironing, the hand often be- comes sore from the heat and an un- suitable iron holder. If this is covered| with a pieces of old, soft silk, the hand will be found to keep soft and cqol and free from the hot, sore feeling one s0 often experiences after ironing day. TEACHING ORDERLINESS. FOR THOSE STUNNING SPORT SKIRTS Striking, Fancy Plaid Worsteds They are sometHing to see—and something to remember—and they’re somsthing which you, madam, will surely appreciate. They are strikingly handsoms. Some expert in de- ; 5 v { bigger and better Norwich. sign and color had an inspiration, and translated his inspiration into e i “or even thoush it is temporary, that|C3uSe them to soe the wisdom of united ed: Little ones dress and undress them- e e n s b b gn n, inspiral marvelous plaids, raliroad service ma; i not be interrupted. This same disposition is being manifest- ed in other strikes where the purpose weems 1o be to gain the demands,through | the inconveniencing and injuring of the public, and the result is that public sen- timent is not only plainly opposed but it s so outraged by the unjustified action that it will put forth the necessary effort selves with very little assistance and enjoy doing so if they are taught to fold their clothes carefully and put. them in the same place every night, so they may find them in the same place in the morning. Then alsa have small coat hangers for their ooats, which they may hang on low hooks in the closet. Their orderliness wiil] HEALTH AND BEAUTY. To prevent a bruise from turning purple, rub fresh lard upon it. ‘When hands have become soft and shrunken, by using soda and hot wat- er, rub them with common sait and it help to make them smooth. Bushy eyebrows may be prevented Norwich, April ‘1 To vote on school matters, women, the same as men, must be legal voters. 1920, which, when used in the pleated, or the plain Sport Skirt or 1820 model have taken everyone by storm. We have a very charming showing of them now on view in our Woolen Dress Gocds Department, and wg know most surely that you cannot see it without being tempted to buy. You will get your money’s worth of wear and satisfaction, for there is a subtle THEODORE N. VAIL. Many of the great inventors and or- ganizers have gone through the experi- ence of having their ideas and plans laughed at when first presented only to see them develop into great successes be-( " cause they appeal and meet the needs of Soviet School Mr. Editor: failure? System. Is our school It looks so. Has the stem a rincipal no control over these belligerent teach- achi si it in | become a habit. 0] ’ the people. One of these was Theodore|D¥ the teaching of a simple habit in o et sr ers? If not, then the board should get “ . . . . . . o meet. the situstion in some degree W | 1i* VUi'Ce colugrapn fame. eianing| Childhood. When 4 child first learns CONCEBHINE BOME. one who has. No ome knows who is|{ satisfaction in wearing something which is absolutely correct. til the crisis is past i to wash his own face he should be o running the school system. Not so in - Not only is the public, the brother-| 1% career as a humble telegraph opera-| i,y he to wash one side of the face| At the end of 1917 Germany had|ine days of district We We need h general super- # tor he not only saw the great opportu- he il ds d ized labor} . Jie SRS, Sac ST S| ni%y of the telephone but he understood how to maks the most out of it, how to management. need district management. district management wi hoods in general against the strike but the fed- more than 83,000 women metal work- ers. at a time, always washing away from the nose. This allows the eyebrows Dark Plaids Plaids of Better Grade Stunning Block Plaids eral authorities have taken legal steps| to grow correctly and gives them a| In Mongolia the purchase price of | vision. Our present system is extrav: Heavy-weight, and all-wool, They are of finer quality, and The last word in plaids, and . end it and how to make it - | well cared for look. a wife varies from 5 to 30 camels. |gant, wasteful and incompetent. Our 3 @ 5 < to punish those Who are responsible. | eXtend more pop 3 = in more varied designs and Tiin this sreas of opposition has mot | War and largely to his great efforts is| If baby has a cold and cannot breathe| In Japan practically mo women ex- | $chool taxes have gone from 3 mills to | they will make the most ser when used for pleated skirts succeeded in breaking the determination|the telephone what it is today. Whe: of certain of the outlaws, but with others| ' entered the field long distance tele- aking their places, with the raflway la-| PNORINg Was not much beyond the dis- por board anmouncing that the strlkflrs'i“““"’" stage. Today it is possible to demands will get special attention | t2lk anywhere in the country. and the absence of any backing the end| Mr: Vail was onc who was able to o¢ the holdup s not far off although it | 100k Wwell ahead. He was an organizer of will: require some little time to clear up| ©Xceptional ability and he was equally 10 and probably 12 miils. T tating teachers who seem to b the more incompetent of the teachers have taken matters into their own hands. Why talk about R: ? We have got Russia at home. These fur- eoated automobile owning dividuals are mever satisficd. The poor rent pay- er has to pay for these We | colorings than the first one we spoke of. There arc some striking color combinations, some showing the orange and orchid shades. Width 54 inches. $8.75 and $9.75 a Yard through its nose, place a drop of warm petroleum oil in each nostril with a medicine dropper of a fountain pen filler. Petroleum oil when warm runs like water, and will quickly clean the nasal passages. A all bit of cotton, wet and rolled, may be used to finish clearing the nostrils. Many persons who cept a few uniformed girl wear shoes. France now has 13 regularly censed women air pilots. Every family in ¥France that main- tains a servant is taxed 40 francs for each one. ‘Women in the same social circles in students eable sport skirts — the kind you can wear for real out door sports. The width is 42 inches, and the value is a most excellent one. $4.50 a Yard | the efiect is wonderful. Shown in combinations of brown and white, navy and whits, and black and white. A beauti- ful quality and 54 inches wide. $6.50 a Yard li- not Ve g 2 are obliged to |, vomen > Tl oir | have had one raise in rent the congestion that has been created u,_’"‘x“‘"“l - I”“‘ selection of aple assist-|ye"mych upon their feet suflorlgreat!v Mexico call ome another by their| JiC ¢, 000 RS0 I the result of the stoppage. Shich 1 ane @reat undertskings With|during the hot weather with swollen, | €% i e another raise in rent GOLD TONE VELOUR SUITINGS i The strikers have caused much trou-| ich he w connected, the American |tender feet. Relief will be found in a Women are playing an important|of worry but the town can Telephone and Telegraph company and ble and caused hardships for many but hot foot bath contai jpart in e ing a ‘tablesnaon ng the anti-profiteering i ey ie JOFD The very desirable Velour weave, in a weight intended for Suits, in NAVY BLUE SERGE L " ¢ | the \Western Union in this country and|each of bora f 3 and | act in Engiand. Wwo! bout. th r 1t bl lori o F 0 i lhey have lost a most unwise fight.) U y and | each borax; spirits of ammonia and 3 rry about the town. Why all the seasonable colorings. One of the season’s most attractive Whatever penalty they are made to pay|!0® tramway and telephone systems in|alcohol, a teaspoonful each of witch SERVING JELLY. who are not satisfied resien all tozeth- i} noveltics. Width 54 inches. These Are All Pure Wool $111 be Tully deseived. Buenos Aires, Argentina, he has been|Dhazel and camphor. Keep the feet in 0 3 = 4 er? The cifizens will take care of the ! A - 5 eminently successful. And this must of|the Water about 10 minutes. In the| Just before taking jelly the glass They are getting money now | The Price Is $7.50 a Yard 36-INCH .$2.00 A YARD 8 g e s a2 good preparation on the feet and wear | Water, e plat expenses are much higher. When | = The expressions (o the effect that the I:"“f“_ ':fm‘:‘[’;‘; "‘f“‘{"é 1;‘;:1;- "“?“"‘f‘;’ Bigh shoes which have broad soles|Which it is to be served. | this panhandling agitation cease! . | TRICOTINES IN MEDIUM WEIGHT ::Ng: "gMA VA:: ships owned by this government, and|’"” 5 f his guid-lang low heels. = What is the meaning of this T -IN -$350 A YA ips Y 5 ance which Incfeased thelr usefulness to tigels TWINE HOLDER. biE Yo piled up to meet war requirements, must e %o handled as to see that the Amer- iean merchant marine is firmly estai- lished reeflct more than the sentiment of Every thread is pure wool, and the weave of modern design. We show it hagen, th: most desirable celorings. meeting? It means that some ¢ have panhandled some cit into tending the meeting te pass solution | favorable to raising their pay. It has| one of the best for Suits brown, taupe, navy and Copen- Width 50 inches. the people, and which brought the people s in closer touch therewith. Energetic and alert to the opportuni- | of jties, he was ever pointing THE BABY. The skin of a baby is, or should be, beautiful de acy and finen 54-INCH. ... 54-INCH. 54-INCH. ....$430 A YARD v0ee.-$550 A YARD ...$650 A YARD Instead of putting the ball of string or twine in the kitchen drawer, where it becomes all tangled up with knives ens S T Ao W Up sttt of out. mew | She is a lucky girl babs if (hic he not|and forks, try putting it in a kitchen |no binding effect whatever. ; The Price Is $5.00 a Yard ® try 1 b in| Paths and presenting their advantages at | °stroved by careless treatment whiie | funnel and bang in some convenient board pald any attention to P tatire country for we have 1ong been In) e most fitting time. he has mot afld| S i5 Vet too young to benefit from |Place. The siring may always bedrawn | of this meeting in raising their pay a | need of and long been clamoring for st fitting time, he has not f. the charm of 4 ‘g0od complexion. In|out unsnaricd as necded restraining_injunction can be placed up- | more ships fiying our flag and taking on them. color, after the first few days, a baby st few days, a baby St b should be a delicate pink all over, rath- Taxpayer in store Tent payers see for you if this rare. of our busines: on the high seas SAVE PRESSING. | any ways and it . per- is only natural that Having secured the ships it is of the 3 er than with the color concentrated in| Hang your waists up by the bottom ] formance continues. 00l taxes up to SRR parterde " shat me shouMl not a persopality should hold a p the cheeks in the manner which is the |2nd you won’t have to press them | 17 mills before we get throuzh and dispase of them without scelng that the | UI0% Of much influence fn the estimation|ideal of the uninstructed. For rosy|every time you wear them. They will | Faised and everyone knows they : country ls adequately protected in the|°f DS fellowmen. Mr. Vail cannot fail|cheeks may mean merely that the reg- | Wear much® longer, because pressing | SnOUSt now. These agitating teachers iransaction. 1t is generally accepted|'® D¢ rated among the great business|ulation of the flow of the blogd by |them burns them. ‘Dom't fold them up | Witk (heir dlscontent and unrest are ol 5 st privaie operation of tho vessels now| 7% OF bl 41y ho lived fo seo suo-| [N perve centers ls detective the| MG &Y B & Tmer beskuse V] young neople, Tney are not in the prm . & owued by the Sovernment, i preferabl| 1% CIOWD the elforts which has so con-| BAPY 5 unable fo cove with some of | wrinkle right up asain. por frame of mind to inetll the rien and therefore is working off. as it were, by forcing the blood fo the uncovered parts of the body, in a position where it can be to government operation. that there should not competition against the 1t is desirable be government private capital CLEAN WHITE SHOES. If the buckskin uppers of your hoes are soiled you can clean them neatly We are i of unre —— EDITORIAL NOTES. Everything now polnts to the fact that ideas into their pupils. to overcome the spiri content while the on ¥ s to help overcome th 7 Invested in ships. It is therefore neces-] o ers it g cooled by the outer air. To be i and cheaply with sandpaper. Buy a i i F -~ BRI, [ R sary'in disposing of the government vestl i:;*:”z:*c:;::”*!_ 50ing to be popular | condition of Inability o resuiate {he |shéct of the finest grade, coSting a few R e Do Sl ey Bl bt LBy g Pt |l K e 5 ey sels that they should be kept under the SORDE PRIper. ‘Ll};:rlof(t;’;' agen ygdy is a bad one, and L};nl fl:ntndufx)xlloff]arhtsle Skmn '\{\’{&H element® i the feotories, for long- | ination for president and with n stood by his guns against fias of thia gountry and that the sov-| Wi e froops Feieing from| LCLeIO"S Consideration should be given |thiz ub the leather gendy until o . ach harder worl est prize in the lotiery of politics Acneple el io v R ¢ Tvesire falr mitupn forf the Bubr disirict there g :go0d teastn | Ve testing o 1 e Bois ] e e umber of Scasina s the support of || Poik, himself, had no more than mod- |eratic convention under the @i the proverty A Wiy Pikce Motiia Vool o on | over-feeding— £ both, o E : 3 . estly suggesied that he wowld like 10 |pleasure of the southern slave holders Wi order to encourage private capital i satisfied. which is prabflb& doing the mischief. RECIPES. 2 ANOTHER TAXPAYER. be vice |n:>s|a‘m. So far as known, 0o |and the alarm of vorthern dough-faces. to gwing the big proposition of paying| Even those In the coal business must ARTISTIC TOUCHES. Crab Msat Salad—Crab meat salad | , MT: Fditor: In the statem i el Bt B B il presdengy il EHMID T I s s e for dhese ships. and enter into competi-) have difficulty explaining 21l the non un-| Bedspreads of one color and bolsters |is delightful when offered in boats| e, school board it is st TRt s . sy | [ Sous ar s N =0 o | gy Ll B ton with ships of other countries which | derstandable situations that exist. of another are seen on heds. Some- | fzshioned from cucumbers, peeled, hol- | Scote Erant for 10201921 is lost unless | 77 2 Martin Van Buren, vindica- | under the indignation of the abolitien- are being onerated under much more fa-| —_— times the spread is fiowered while the | lowed out and chilled; particularly | *°0® POV (Nt E 0 don Five Minutes a Day tion for his again Jists ,wh led enough votes for thelr vorable laws for those who must carry | e, Ma% O the comer says: One Who| holster is piain and sometimes two|when the mayonnaise, with which it |, [{ A% on account of s WALk O Providenty Rl fomiae % Acuin [aie who nfled sapuk wites on the business and assume the responsi-| '% *¢14°M At Work on time never misscs| tones of the same color are used to |is served, has been tinted pale green | oo T RS [oF eabect of the L ur Eresidemis } ¢ ballot he received a clear majority | Polk lost Tennessee at the polis, and bilies, a1 treaiment in e way . of| &6 oTe {0 supper right on time. | drcas them. e witi, vettable coloring. "This should | " Chicered et of a teachor . Lt {and he remained the oniy majority cas- s the oply man. with the sole exsepr viioe 30d : 4 —_— n ‘“extension tablecloth” f e decorated with hard boiled eggs ¢ Dart ach ary date who failed of pominath ot e - l"‘:r‘l!(:;lp;::l\:n;;m;ewdl bel The nearest to being definite about the | dining fable when extended s meroe |and capers. For a lunch this saad that the Renchers' Leaguo omitted it in [ Copyright 1920—By. James Mprgap J1 S1080s Who (slied of bicvmsiis Woll)lom 5F Miwom In 1016 whe M5 bew e i €0 se-| summer residence of the president is|one of the elaborate Jace and linem |is especially suitable. e when Champ Clark lost to Woodrow | scveral days the naplonal electio lous If there were ways of meeting the| that it promi & 2 Incidentally let it be remarked t “ : Fi < S . S i o SUBEREY ‘ najlonal election wee competition from foreign ships operating| promises to be in New England. |affairs of filet or Roman cut work or| Stuffed Prune Salad.—Cook prunes|the state grant, despite the exprees| YXMI—THE FIRST DARK HORSE nother Baltimore cous {in doulbt, with the result hanging on & e gt N gl ke oy A Italian embroidery with ends joined |until soft and remove stones without | Wishes of the state, has heer consideeed | 1 . 2, James Knox Polk, ballots bad b {compleie count in New York. At last it Focern thote ot his et oWl WWord mow comes that Foster s writ-|on Vers decoratively with lace nser- | poiling the Shape of the fralt. Seuff| by the local board ta hemr & part of | bora in Mecklenburg County, | was found that Polk had carried the s >, Siohins & tosk) 2hls aert un fon. Of course, it is oblong in shape. e et ais . = eiand pas Gt : obt in for the pur-| state BB et LT Mt N hen there g pe. |the prunes with a filing made of | the teachers' salaries and has, du « o o 5 the business and we need the ships but is good use for all paper than can be ob- Pretty pattern tablecloths of linen cream cheese and chopped walnuts. the current year, been made subj hanks to the Liberty ot 1806—Jioved to Tennessee. pose of hate their plot in the ty, which had drawn. away more tained. for the round table have a fruit bas-|Add cream to make cheese the right { deduction in cases of absence due to ill- | ..1818—Graduated from University of In those da hen the St were - that number of votss from *Whe :z :s m"xmr':tly a much bigger job that get design upon them. consistency. Serve with cream dress- | Ness and other causes. North Carolina. ed in their gecgraphical ord v comproise ienry Clay had s faced. in keeping our merchant marine| What bothers the thin man the, ing on lettuce Unfortunately, teachers' salaries are —3dmitted to the Bar. Hampshire scd his last_chance for the up where it belongs, than just offering | is to find out that his el Bizedszofi::;: DICTATES OF FASHION. == determined to a great extent by the embers Teuncssee Legis the deles ; the ships for sale to America=s and hav- ing a «nle rush to take them out of government hands. cost just as much as the fellow's with a big neck. Cape back suits are all the rage. Colored laces are very fashionable. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR size and the wealth of a community de- spite the fact that other forms of by 1824—Marricd Sarah Childress. iness activities and profe state was craft name of Polk. Then came th An Inglorious Vietor, 2 = > onal P ber of Congress. liar gonvention maneuver is e e nent ha g The three plece suit is much worn.|Should Make Firm Stand Against Ex-| 7103 BCICIES A70 profossional callings s b called a stampede, with delegates wildly ey f you are not planning to occupy your| Silk sweaters are growing in favor. Sraydgant (Domenge of Negeters population. The price of meat, clothing, | 1839-41—Governor of Tenessee. ng the bandwagon. Stories That Recali Qthers -] > SUCCESS. mansioh for the next several months it| Tricotines lead for street costumes,| Mr. Editor: Will you please tell me if | and other essentials as well a5 the wazes| 1841—Defeated for re-election. in the first year R A Those who are leading the fight in the|MiEht get consideration as the summer| Side panels aré ruffied and pleated, | @ OMah must be a registered voter in|of mill operatives, mechanics, doctors,| 1813 —Aguin defeatgd. nd when the name of Clay was| How Could She? . Mexican state of Sonora are losing ng| Whito house. bR e .| order to vote on school matters? lawyers, etc., would be in a sorry state| j8ii—Nominated for President by off as the nominee of the “"‘““ One day father was trying hard to ex- opportunities. They are taking sdven. e re the most fashion- 1 know many Women taxpayers who|of fluctuation if subject to the ruling the democrats and elected. convention at Baltimore those wise-| .. eonirhing to his little daughter tage of the situation as they find it and| FOT the past several years baseball has| - . : i | e T e e o™iy and | that cbiaing n relation to teachers’ sal-| jgmes Knox Polk’was the first dagk |acres of Washinglon who still regarded | Dorouyy. Gitting thers fn & st of ses are making It evident that their inten.| 184 to strugkle agatnst war. This year|nge o F "% PPEVIl IR the new lin- | B0 B O 1 derstand each of |- Dot since teachers’ sal Ihorse to win the presidential race, and | Morse as an impostor said hel the | jor, apnarentis ing able to com- tions are serious and that their plans are | It Will be in competition with the politi-| "y {fhe seventy-five teachers in- the’ league | ter ‘of the commmunity. sereed.. it opnt | 115, IFure, Temaine among the pale sha- | trick s eaey HICE S B O e, | Irehend, her y guttios all eut S ot merely on paper cal campaign. Tucks are used on taffeta dresses. |5 5[ ten voters (not taxpayers) o to be of Interest to the peoie o Wt |dows in the procession _of _presidents | suessed who the Whig rominee woud T | e With apparent unity in their own o N N Charming perfume bottles are of | go down Tuesday evening and help them | Wich to know that within the past few | “CT088 the pages of history. His person- Telor ot fhe captial spelled \out the| BSLlE, ®tate, where they have gained the sup-| 1OW funny the diary of the old fash- wedgwood. put this burden over on the people. days two communities, smaller than and | - .",“’,’3'"‘."“"; "’»E» “o&}i’p‘i )lhrrr:)nurgeh‘:lx\x!c:' name Polk as the democratic nominee, :m'y'{i ,,i it you kuow it al This an- sort of the Yaqui Indians whose fighting| 170 Workinsman, who used to work| BOX jackets are worn with the pleat- | If all these men, many of Whom are | adjacent o Norwich, have given | @ L0Rle Of the effices through whieh | NG R Sonasis were | convineed | swer came by qui and o the molat: abllity especially in their own territory| WOUld read in these days of big wages[ed skirts. boys of twenty-one and up, (Whose Idea | thelr teachers & maximum salary to be {5 P40 T it°he mostly a story of the |that he was a fraud. The scofted at|that eyen Pa laughed. is well known, they indicate a determ.| 209 Short hours. Organdie neckwear in pastel shades | °f 1ife is plenty ;f (Sasy momey, §0od | received next September, not in Septem-| T LN M o diinoes whose crea- |Such an absurdity and were not per-! e nation not to be satisfled with secession a gery sPALE 5;'.23‘3?;“3 a;hiwret::::k) Z:"’fh."'”,filfi be'rrh‘:xs'en 2o, Pipara b the. Jocal board. | SLT, e suaded of the truth until the arrival of | porary Case. Navy blue is the most popular color for spring suits. school teachers what chance have the London Willimantic, have fixed the mew mooo| The Pollocks, whose name, from be- N o Baititore | At the conclusion of an exciting bas- f axit] whose nz b The new felegraph also served to car- | Kétball game an enthusiast rushed t9 w women taxpayers for a voice in the mat-| mums at-$1400 and $1500 respectively | 18 promounced “Poll’k.” came finally 9 -ne THS . telephone 10 report the evening's vie- a thinly populated stato it is in a part ;-]::::1 z:om the way in which the| puller effects are seen in some new | ter? as compared to $1350, $1400 and $1450 |10 be spelled Polk, were among those|ry back from Washinston Tl..s Wri ‘il'"! ng's of Mexico whers the government s the | pre W‘W showed up ai the train-|afternoon frocks. It has been interesting to read the let- | Which the Norwich teachers will not re. |immigrants from Ireland—like the | declination of Y weakest, where it has never been able to Tiny puffs are as long as sleeves ters on this matter but no one seems to Jacksons—who took up in America the celve until the year 1923-24. 3 beon| Fither the excitement of the last game which that New senator : e i lor the anxiety over the mext was tee lay much stress on the main point. Can| PUBLICITY COMMITTER OF TEACH.|resistance to British rule. which they [nominated as a consolation for the Van | % G1e SR Grer :::‘)‘:9 :m&fi'&' e lo which it| Some figure the cost of enforcing pro- 5"]‘5]_‘;“:"_"’;’“5,‘5":“" ; W afford this increase? ERS' LEAGUE. CH-|had carried on unsuccessfully in their | Buren men. and the convention had to | [UC! Whte ool R fl: ransporting | hibition at five million a year and others ck silk jackets appear with print- | When they received the raise two| Norwich, April 18, 1920. native lsland. The president’s grand-|choose another nomince for vice presi- | puiif. W (RS operslor asked forces. at fifty. No one knows what it win|ed chiffon gowns. vears ago a prominent lawyer In town parents, both the Polks and Knoxes, | dent. Retball” 9958 The em AL P At the opening of this revolt the So-|cost but most everyome knows that it| Lace overskirts are used on the taf- | said we could not afford it as the town| Committes Deserves Public Support. |were Irish born and prominent In the| The whigs everywhere greeted thelgone, of humor overcome her business norans appear to be firmly united, even | lsn't being enforced. feta dancing frocks. was on the road to bankruptey. Mr. Editor: It seems that the pesyle |Tevolutionary struggle in North Carolina. | demacratic ~nominee with the derisive | {riyh, 0% “plior, SUSTITCR heb, bUSEeey to the extent of carrying on operations *Some of the new Wraps suggest the | If that statement was true then how |are now thoroughly enlightened on the| When he was vet a boy. the family|inquiry, “Who is Polk It stumped | peard, not the voice of the one exnected, vutside its own boundary. With a well| 'Vhatever the department of Jjustice|old Roman togas. much more so now with the great Mar- | school matters since the committee made |0f James K. moved to Tennessee. where | even loyal democrats. the steam- | byt some one shouting, *Insane Hosple eatrenched and solld government at Mex.| ™Y do regarding Martens who repre-| Duyetyn handbags are both pretgy |1 ant closed and conditfons growing |thair statement, and it only remaink for (he was too frail for frontier farming |boat captain who faibfuly shouted. | gy sents Soviet Russia Assis Pretty | worse every day! Report also says that | the taxpayers, and all the voters Inter-|and was put to work behind the coun-|when told the new -al or— jco City there ought to be no difficulty ssia Assistant Secretary|and fashionable. Aft Vhat'd'ye’ say hi in suppressing this uprising, but Post of the department of labor can bo £ when the increase was given the teach-{ested to attend the town meeting Tues-|ter of a cross-roads store. er @ | What'd'ye' say his pame is ¥ %, but unfor-| 705 O the depart One piece dresses have bouffant hip | ers remarked it was only & beginning | day night. and demand a vote by hallot, | time in that excellent preparatory school | The obscurity of “Jim Polk” which| o 0 ) B & ":"“*’ :;" m """ condition does | “*PeC! Bopst it draperies. and they intended to try for more in an- | each voter (o get a Yes and No ticket |of life he returned to his natlve state|that smug. unsmiling, uninspired little- | he -(;N;_:“fni; :::xxru‘l;mu.x not preval it ‘act because of the| 5 SR e e Novelty weaves in tricolette are very | Other year or two. 80 as not to be embarrassed by spotters, |to enter college and he graduated from |man of respectable abilities had pre- FRETIN place contini lack of It and the Way in Which Mexican | tnelr pay Wil ha/ ey "“k‘:‘:""*g"‘:_“: o Mgt Y | °“The ‘truth of that report is evident by | and T am sure the voters wil stand back |the University of North Carolina, served even on the eminence of the | !0 be Germanic—indianipolis News. affairs have been conducted that Somora roac % the rapidity with which the teachers|of yhe committee. Recoming a country lawyer, he was er's chair, was deepened by thelr 3o = < is prompted to take the step that it has, | (eerrrc, " Of the hard-coal miners to hflem]“k green is one of the SPring | agked for another two hundred in addl- | The teachers will then be pald about|sent {o the Tennessee legislature: mar-|shining fame of Van Buren. whom he | oM%Y oy “_“""“:;‘" She N:G -‘llnl The capture by the Sonorans of the| " (0 Strike becauso greater speed|® agoe. tion to the two granted by the board. |§140 an hour and that is better than |ried Sarah Childress, daughter of a|had dispinesd n* e comvention. and of | {0 H0 5 6 Pt 1o salighten et &% 2 moleh i toward a wage adjustment isn't being| The newest jackets show bolero and | “Figures don’t lie” but someone must|most expert mechanics are making. Just | well-to-do man of business, and went to | Clay, against whom he was matched g naloa while Carranza is of S| mae. Bic ines. have figured curiously when the league | compare their pay to that of letter car- |congress for fourteen vears, in the|before the peog™ Ihose two states- whils Carr getting ready to Awning striped silk will be used|Submitted their payroll to “truthfully | riers and then compare the work and |course of which he became first the |men had taken it for granted that they 3 & ‘mave he is asking for per- The Enccomy Test. for gports hats. inform the public. hours per year, and you will see that |Jackson leader of the honse and finally [were to be the champions of their re- Ch]ld;-on Cr B migsion to go over United States terri-| v \oAdoo proposes 4 ¢ | Long gloves will be worn with short | ¢, D% It matter what our neighbor pays | they put the muil men in the shade. Also | speaker. Next he took his seat as gov- | speetive parties. History suspects {hat ‘4 3 v 3 3 000,000 3 3 . s ? es, and have | having been twice defeated In his effort closn - > izes Pasition of Hgt—Milwankee Journal, Some of the prettiest §pring coatings Why compare other towns and cities | only been teaching a few years. 1 mn.|ts abiain & maond. slation to tha sme teeather and anin were summuty ASDS TORI A £ - d ‘ ~ FY

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