Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 12, 1920, Page 4

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Gierwich Bulleti and @eufied 124 YEARS OLD Subscription pricé 1% 4 wiek: 5te a mhonth; $4.00 + e Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Comn., as . second-cias maiter. Telephone Cally, Bullettn Business Offlce, 480, Bulieun Ediforial Reoms, 35-3. Wlisintie Offles. 23 Church ’gr.,h. M"J xfi‘ Norwich, Tuesddy, Oct. 12, 1920, MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, ¢ The Assodiud Préw s exclishvély éntifted r- % ase for republication of all néws dy flhv 4 o it or not otherwise_eredit This Daper 4nd Ao the lecal hews Sublisbid rights of - repul blicition of peclal des: paschen berein ut0 D10 FREIED. e ———— CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING OCT. 8th, 1920 ———diei e NATIONALISM BEFORE INTERNA- TIONALISM. In the présent campaikn the peopld of e going to givé consider- féeds to be done for thé of this country. They v what the policies of the W tration brought forth, know what tremendous waste there resis have has been, they understand what futile have been made to Keep the and what a strong tendency o intérnationalism rathér than natiops cannot fall to be appreciated that contifluance 8f the democratic admin- istragion will mean a continuance of the policles. Having had experience with theth there ot be overlooked the ecesgity of about a complete on of a republican presiden a republican congress for the correction 6f the conditions, and when it comes to 4 leagus of nations nothing appeals tmore strongly to the cople than the fact that if we are going attempt a plan for avoiding war in the future we ought to avoid ‘the dangers which have been pointed out in connec- tion with thé covenant as brought from Patis, not pwt our head in the fooss from which we have steered clear for v vears ahd place ourselves as a ting forea on land and sea at the| a call of Euronean nations where | the rule rather than the iekud As it r wa shall 8 shaned now te g0 into thé so-called league, the league which he in- 1 that the democratic senators d s 1 by. Governor Cox declares he is for going in. Senater Hard-!| g dves not favor that particular league déclares that hs will never submit Vilson ie to the senate with cle ten in and that he is opposed the obligations undér the provisions of the leagne that Would be dangerous intry, rding doesn’t believe in go- ing i With our eyes shut. We have seovered many reasons why wa ghould not undertake the obligations that would b impesed and the tima to avoid them| before rather than after getting in, NEW rnkk TO RUN TROLLEYS. Many are people in different cit-{ v ho have seen the trolley serviea talled becatise of the inability of the mpaniés to get eufficient income to maks meet In others there s feen an entife loes of such vice. Trou- he of various kinds has contributed to the réeiations concerning the depend- ence that is placed upon street cars, Also re has been a general increase in trol ley fares with the view to getting a fair return for tha investment and serviee ufficient reliéf ha® been obtained in stances but not in of 3 at reason there cannot interest manifested which is to be New York in agrébment which has the receivers tail to in the ex- made by the carryifig out thé been entered into | of the Staten Isl- ecity whereby the lines and charge be much parimént city of e iween anies and the operate the v a five eent fare. cause it was impossible to get a or the trolley companies gave Tha buses that attempted np raté husiness. fo fill in proved a. failure and there seems doubt but what the people ce at the chanee to get back rvice at such an incréase in s would make them pay. Instead of that it bids fair to bs & case of paying a five cant fare and then making up the differenceé by taxation The city in taking over the lines will lay out $300000 on new equipment and ®ill attempt to demonstrate that a five dent faré is anengh to pav fof the esr- tice and meet the sxpenditurss that the e be eallsq upon for. That the #itv san run the ears for a nicksl or for mothing is perfectly evidént Ae long e thers is tha city to fall back on then- sver more mon: required, which fact Alona of the réasons for =0 much spposition to municipal control of ‘such utilities ew of the fact that tha| companies stoppéd operations because ther were going deeper into debt, it will e uteresting to note whether the city | Il admit the necessity for higher rate & reaily disclosed, or whether it a ease of putting it over onto e shoulders of the taxpayers soma of whom ride and some don't. EXERCISE DUE CAUTION, With the idea of preventing accidents ®hich it is reaiized are liable to happén but can be prevented exercise of proper care, an apy made in certain cities to the drivers of auto- mobiles and wagons by the troll Panies to end thé careless ha ting in ahead of cars at seazon 8f the year when leaves on the track thake it much mote difficult to chack the ears as quickls as on a good rail and; thereby increases the chances for acei- dents. In the use 6f the highways there #hotild be a dieposition not ohly to look | 6ut for self but to contribute to the #afety of others. While it may not be #xpected that antos or wagons shouid flot use the ear tracks quitc as much as Bther parts of a street, it is to be appre- eiated that there reason back of the Pequést which calls for the sudden turn- ihg into the course of an oncoming trol- léy which cannot dodge to one side but @ust depend upon its brakes to keep it from striking what may be in the way. Leaves are a source of gréat annoy- tnce to the motorman ~whetheér thefe is Mny traffic to guard against or not. In Mo intersst of safety there is every rea- #n why these who must cross tracks expacted st ! tions pour in to those to whom they are either in getting to the other side or in going ahead of other vehicles should do so with proper caution, having in mind | the protection of his own outfit as well &s any car and its passengers. But quite as important i$ it that those Who + | cross tracks at intersecting streets shoult take the trouble to have the machine under such control that all the respon- sibility for avoiding collisions will not fall on the motofman. Thérs is a part Which evéryone can play in bringing about a greater degree of safety. The advice so conspicuously displayed at railroad crossings can well be kept in mind at many other points. It requires mighty ittle effort but it | Would be thé medfis of prevénting What are nod recognizéd 4s many avoidable dccidents. KENTOENT 18 nm‘unuc;v. Straw votes do not take the place of an election. They nevertheléss indicate what the sentiment of the people is on | important questions even though only tie enthiisiastic pdrticipate for there is flo rhoriopoly on éhthusiasm. In connéction with the straw vote! which is being taken by a drug concern‘ in its stofés {hroughodt the count i to be noted that up to last Fridas the count showed that over 600,000 pes- | Dle in the, 48 states had displayed their | piar, interest and inflicated their choice i tarter and turning the choke. “You president. ', & th : o - ures to | Want to léavé the choka on ‘cold fi its Harding s isclesed by the fizures to | WEEL 8 SEETE U8 TOORE OF ol ba the leadér by a substantial m: ity With a totd) voté of over 371 votés to over 242,000 for Cox show that the lead which he had in previo weeka was still men ag well as men aré participating in all but thrég southern States with the ratio running about three to one, but whether the votes of the women or the being maintained. Vro-! always remember to have your clutch out men are considered there is di before shifting, or youwll strip the g much stronger demand for. Har All right. put her over th's way intd for Cox with the women manifesting | now let yovr foot come back. that inclination a bit more stfongly than| .1U'S Movinz! Oh. what shall I do?” 3 ~ o } “Of course it's moving. Just let it go i | and note, wheré you're @oinz. Donm't lat As might be expected, the south sy get over to-the mffidle of the strest safely derhocratic although Tennessee! ijia¢ shows a largé vote for Harding. LI wiss Kentucky, Oklahoma and Missou: appear to be democratic states though in uori the voting is decidedly close, pears to be on the republican side by a small margin. Otherwise even states in which democratic hopes have been bol- stered up aré showing the effects of the strong running republican tide. Thé country i¢ voting for a change. Tt has had experience cnough of the kind which it knows will be continued of a deimocrat is clected, and the .electoral coliege vote of 333 for Harding to 178 for Cox indicates that by the straw vote Harding has a substantial lead. Tt is a lead which not only meeds to be maintained but sight must not be lost of the importance that is attached to see- ing that the semate and house are also afely republican, BASEBALL CONTROL. Perhaps it was natural, Tt 3 v the 3 E . following the | and it is mot an unknown thing to have| emdeta, and modern sclencd founa a| Friday, Oct 1—In the United States: disclosures which have been made in|a child die suddenly from kidney new dajger greatly exaggerated for a|Missouri (Missourl day). connection with the throwing of the|ease afier it was thousht he had entirely | oW (RECH, £€ Monday, Oct. 4—Barbados, Basutoland, world's seriéd of last vear, that there|Tecovefed ffom an attack of scarlet fev-| should be those who urged thé adoption j dinia, in increasinz numbers, pronounce|South Wales, Palestine, South African of legiglation deaiing with such condi- P"”l }r'g:rar!;;)!:mh’a::"tth;h?:ig;ns:;gf:?fi the island quaint and charming. Upon Ll’;on. {l‘urkofi_v; Wesl:«-m'Aug‘;l:];a o5 i 3 : arae b sy - 'uesday, Oct. 5—Azores, s - tions. Uniess we are mistaken there iS|suide you throuehh the pit-falls of this|2PProach, the frasramce of Wild shtubs sufficient law for dealing with the cases as the prosecutioris ‘in. Chicago ed without be anyody ng the wiser it] let’'s gee-—your right fodt celorator unisss you néed it on its neigh- bor, the brake, 50 thé farthest pedal is i ride the elutch, | fergetten how you said td start it. for! jout the ignition button, stepping on the 20 ! claimed tite young womard, with her feef 'flat on the floce board, hér hands on the s | v | wh plained the youns fan With beauiful pa- tienece, B while Maryland for the time being ap- I or three d: exposed to gusceptible person vou will hear her com- plain of sore throat. accompany the sore throat, to 36 hours later a bright red rash will appear on spreads rapidly over the whole body, With the exception of the face which usually escape you ket fe Plications and after-effects of this ease may should attempt to hande a case Deafness may régult from Scarlet fever, er. should | t “Want to take the Wheél now?” askéd the young man as hs tufned into the south drjve of the Midivay. “Oh,” demurred the young women, “Pm afraid T might Lreak something.” “The idea!” coniradcted. the young man., “You can’t break anything when I'm right here télling you what to do. Tl draw up to thé curb so you can slidé over into iy seat while I run around td'b‘c your side. Vow remember,” he continued aftér they had exchangsd piaces, when you shift gears ‘reverss’ is opposite from first’; ‘second’ is cver that way, an@ ‘third’ is back here.” “I remember, nly I'm not suré whith is thé clufch and which it the brake. “I drive so automatieally I can’t téll which is whick withont mental strain— réfts on the ab- the clutch. You must never let your fobt all the way out, “That’s the craziest thing— the way a clutch is ‘out’ when you are really push- ing it ‘in pbndered _thé young woman. “Like this,” demonstrated the young tetting the g4§ and spark, pulling “More of those awful paradoxes!” ex- heel, her eves on the pu hood. “The engine's zoing and I'm jizgling the 1. Why doesn’t it start mov ng?” ou haven‘t throwf it in gear.” ex- il thrown 6ut your clutch— way. Keep on the right. Now! vé ot enough speed to shift to ‘s Thro® out your (gitch. Il s B e = THE GROWING CHILD By the U. §. Pwplic Héalth Service Scarlet Fever. Within 2 weck—sometimes Within two ys—after your child has been scarlet féver, if she is a Vomiting and fever and from 12 her neck and chest. This By t ha s time vou will be pretty sure a well developed case of scar- r on your hands, and the com- dis- be so serious that no mother alone. ease. He will tell you that it is con- g until all throat. _ mmmxmm convi and herbs complements the eve of a ‘geological But these cases are just|man empire, implements whi ot you. Now give her & liftle Al right; riow- we'll piit: hér fl&”é hg*‘fl,' Throw out your elutch. “Iént this Fondertil &d the young women. ‘‘We'ré going ffteen, six- teen, gmeen_ Better nat wateh thé dpeedormeter.” crutioned the young man. “You need coriceritidte o the foAd. Sorie d: )oul it 16 lobk around at thé sten: i.n nud to friénds passing by and £3iks on the b fe Skt and “seaniasy & Hairgin, but at first—' “Heré comes a cat—it's going 6 cfoss cut nath—what idxau 1 do?" “You have the right of way—go on. Keep right ahead till we hit Jackson park; then take the drive around by the status 6f the reptiblic to the bathing béack 2nd thén setth.” “But _there’s the Stony Island caf track, objected the young woman. “What shall I do if 2 car is coming’ ; “You have th& right 6f way, &0 g0 AHeid. THAt'S fife, the way you cufved to go under the viaduct. Honk your korn “I've forgotten whefe thé horn fs.” “Héreé jt is in the center of thé steer- ifiz whesl,” said the young man, reach- ing over and préssing the blaek knob of the hoatér. *“You must give'em a littlé korn when people start crossing in front of yeu. If you should Hit any oné you knew how you'd féel “Fake this wheel, Waiter * commandéd the youne womel. “Téll mé how to ston! I'm Afraid Tl hit somébody. T nevef could slceép another wink if I hurt any- body. Oh, T don't know which thing you o to t6p." “Hold cut your arm for signal—pull over te the extremé right—throw oat your ciuteh—shift into ‘neutral’—put on X ske—press off the ignition. There! that?" QUIT TOBACCO breathed the young wn- man as the machine came to a silent halt “Do you know why I bought this car, The younz man seemed sud- ed by the young( green fol age cf the park. ~ So easy to drop Cigarette, Cigar, or Chewing habit “Because T thought it would be lots | better than a silly e string of pear’s —tha usual gift of—of the grodm, vou T _want you to be a corking good driver. You are everything else aiready.” —Exckange. No-To-Bac has helped thousands to reak the costly, nerve-shattering to- bacco habit. Whenever you have a longing for a smoke or chew, just place 2 harmléss No-To-Bac tablet in your | mouth instead. All desire stops. Short- ly the habit is commpletely broken, and you are better off mentally, physically, fihancially. It's €0 easy, so simiplé. Get a box of No-To.Bac and if it doesn't rélease you from all craving for to- bacco in any form, youf dr | refund your money without question, No-To-Bac is made by the owneéré of Cascarets; therefore is thoroughly re- liable. of a people Who have a epeclal interest for students of racial history. Sardin- ians are small of stature. Even their soldiers have an average height a frae- tion under fivé feet, four inches. One theory is that they are thé purest ré- maining descehdants of the so-called Mediterranean race; another that they descended from eertain African pavmy peoples, a speculation of peculiar inter- est in view of the présent discussion over the reported finding of a race of pygmies in the Bélgian Kongo by Dr. Leonard J. Vanderbergh, an American jonary. Lady Stahléy ha8 asserted that her hueband, Heénry M. Stanley, re- fers to the same little péople ih his book In Darkest Africa. “Other factors than its geography contributed to Sardinia’s isolation. Once it was the Sibéria of the Roman Empire, ths graves were kept Waiting for some Later it was afflicted by the thedieval type of thé Kentucky féud, Bonifacio. In shapé it has been ccm-! pareéd to a human footprint.” Holidays in October. The following calendar of™ bank and public holidays which will be celebrated {in October in the states and countries and on the dates enumerated below is furnished by the Guaranty Trust company of New York: ravelers who find their way to Sar-)Bechuanaland, FEgyot, Honduras, New Islands, Portugal, Portuguese East Portuguese West Africa. appeal to the order that s ar- New Lines For Fall and Winter PROVERB—Afflédmlh!flfirket better thaa money in the chest. Knit Underwear FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN Are just now complete and we advise an early selection if you want to secure the style and size you most desire. We particularly feature MUNSINGWEAR UNDERWEAR FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN Munsingwear Children’s Ribbed Pants and Union sizes 3 to 18 years, perfect fitting garments that are sure to give satisfactory vice—Price range 7 $3.25, according to size and qunhty. Vests, Suits, ser- 5¢c to extra large sizes — ity. Munsingwear Women’s Munsingwear, Vests, Pants and Union Suits, in light, medium and heavy weight, _regular and Price range $1.50 to $4.50, ac- cording to size and qual- OTHER GOOD MAKES OF KNIT UNDERWEAR Forest Mills Carter’s Underwear These we show in Pants and Union Suits, cote ton and cotton and wool — Carter’s have every éssential of quality, fit and wear, de- manded by thcse who know the best underwear—Price range $1.65 to $3.00, ac- cording to style and quality. Forest Vests, styles, ity. Mills Underwear has an established reputa- tion for merit. We show this made in all weights, and Vests, Pants and Union Suits, regular and extra large sizes — Price range $1.65 to $5.00, ac- cording to style and qual- The Porteous & Miichell Co. h were in- . Oct. 17—Japan. I contageous as severs ones, and just|troduced by the- successive occupants, Oct. 13—Alaske. o ought to he dispelled by recent disclos apt to be followed by ear ;:41 1:“’,,. one Catalan town (Alghero) where there | Wednesday, Oct. 20—China, Dutch East | b ures. ney troubles. Unforfunately, too, a very|is no jarring note in the illusion of old | *ndies. . Organized baseball must travel the|severe case may be contracted from a|Spain. and dances of the classic Greek| Thursday, Oct. 21—Western Australia. |h straight and narrow path for some time| Very mild one, and the mother who [period at the mountain feste. R R {0 come If it is expecteq that public con-| S¢S her child to schosl With a sorc| *Only in Sardinia and Corsicw is the|gipe). Siam. . - i) O SRBRRR: i b sy ey hat| throat the risk of causing some|mufioni, predecessor of our sheep, to 5 Monday, Oct. 25—India, Méroceo, New. |p ’ restor: And in that| y.. child to suffer great harm and |found. Wild deer and wild boar ar "ealand. (h connection It cannot help being felt that| perhaps death. Keep vour child at home | plentiful in the mountain district. Tunny| Tuesda . 2 u the suggéstion which has been made| when he has a sore throat. , {fishing is 2 major industry. Wednesday, Oct. that control of professional ball be placed “In area Sardinia is comparable te| Thursday, —Czechoslovakia, in the hafds of capable but disinterested- Vermont, but has more than twice the [ Venezuela. e &d pafties cannot fail to w2 e 2 population of that state. -The island li Saturday. Oct. 30—Dutch East Indies. ol ennot IAlL t0 ke & Strome | storiss That Recall Othirs \ Sestly: soutnicr: Cariioa #2d ia: seve: Oct, 3i—Japan. In thé Tnited reins and keeping the sport tip to the rated therefrom by the narrow straits of : Nevada. andard much would be done to restore confidence, ITORIAL NOTES. It must seem a bit strange along the Polish front to havé hostilities "ended. Burbank has proddced a lemon as large as & grapéfruit and Governor Cox's order is already accepted. It is a pretty state of affairs when a porhibition enforeément official is in- dicted for operating a still. If the good resolutions of fire preven- tion day were observed every day in the year a great waste would be overcome. It is useless to try to cheer up the fellow who hasn't any coal but who is relying upon promisés and facing high prices. Those Argentina statesmen who gave up a duel for arbitration show what common sense Will do when given a chance, Conditiohis are bad enough Without theing to pile up another democratic ad- ministration on top of what we have been through, The man on the corner says: The: string you have afoufid your finger is to prevént you from forgetting to be mafié a voter. Distriet Attorney Gallagher is mak- g interesting revelations regarding food charges in Boston restaurants. Keep it up Gallagher. No éne héars much sympathy express- ed for the béleheviki while congratula- obliged to vield. This is the season 6f the vear when they firs at anything that moves in the brush in Maine, even human beings, and they fire to Kill. —cme i s With the observance of the Jenny Lind centenary those ought to be heard from who had the pleasure of hearing hér 70 years ago. i Bt it s From their actions theré are peopls in | England who are not ouly opposed to| prohibition but equally set against hlv-l ing anyone advocate it. was fluffy at all times, but when wet de- cidedly carly. ed | painter. threw the drawing of the hen in Alike. Mother was w g her hair, which Five year old John watch- the process with great concern. Mother,” Tie finally remarked, wisely, your hair is a lot like grandma’s face, n't it? When you wash it, it wrinkles up like everyth Making Tt Real, They were raising a fund and the leader was con tulating them bn their zood work and exhorting them to greater | efforts in the futurd, He eald: | “To gain success in this enterprice, as t real and likelike, Something that people cin see is | worth while and vital and livi Why, we must do as good as the p: ér who drew a picture of a cat and it was so lifelike that ten minutes after he hung it on_the wall there were fleas on it.” Whereupon one of the party added: “Or we must do as well as the other painter who drew a picture of a_hen. This the waste basket but it was so lifélike it just lay there.” IN THE DAY’S NEWS . Sardinis. “A traveler of fine imagination sug- gests that travel involves a double jour- ney—'one forward throush space, the other backward through time’ Your steamboat ticket from Civitavecchia, the rort -of Rome, entitles you to an eight- hour voyage to Sardinia, but affords a premitim of several thousand years back- Yard to Europe’s earliest traceabls his- this mtrodnctmn the National Geographic Society issues the foliowing builetin on Cardinia which has a dou- ble interest-just now because of tha re- ported native demand for home rule, and beécause Americans have found trac:s containing Wolfram, highly prized as a source of tungsten. “The contact of Amerfca adds anoth- ér stratum to the civilizations that have left a deposit in Sardinia. For the Romans and the Carthagiriang operated minés there: and thére are traces that point to the presénce of Egyptians and Phoenicians. In addition Vandals, Sars- cehs, Pisans, Genoese, Spaniards and Ausfrians held sway there befote it fell to the House of Savoy and was attached to modern Italy, “Second only to Sieily ami g Mediter- THE STORY of Our STATE Xlll. RHODE ISLAND | RHODE ISLAND is not really the ndme of this state. | As can be seen from the state séal, the official narhe | is the “State of Rhode Island and Providence Plafita- | tions.” 1t originatéd from two_distinct setilements. | The first was made by Roger Williams in 1636. He | was the pastor of 4 church in Salem. As he advocat- | ed radical reforms, he Was ordered to réturn to Enz land, but fled to the \am\gansnt tribe bf Indian; From thém he obtained a tract of land and called the town which he established Providence, in token of God's mercy Which had so far provided for him. About the same time Mrs, Anne Hutchinson and her followers were expelled from Massachusetis on account of a theological dispute. She made her way to the island of Aquidneck, whicii she purchased from the Indians for forty fathoms of white wampum, twenty hoes, and ten coats. The name of this island wds changed to the Isle of Rhodes, probably after the famous Greek island in the Mediterranean. By | common usage it becime known as Rhode Island. In 1662 Charles II gave Rhode Island a very libéral charter and this remained in force until 1841, when a new siate constitution was adopted by mass conventions, and two years later another new constitution was legally voted. The change in constitutions caused what is known as Dorr's Rebellion. The entrance of Rhode Island into the Union in 1790 completed the list of the original thirteen states. Though Rhode Isiand is the smallest of all the states, with only 1,248 square miiles, it is very thickly populated and has five presidential electors, which is more than that of a number of states of much Kill That Cold With %‘“:'L:;S‘ CASCARA QUININE Colds, Coughs ‘?om\oo La &ri G rippe Neglected Colds are Dangerous Talke 1o chances. Keep this standard remédy handy for the first sneeze. Breaks vp a cold in 24 hours — Relieves Grippe in 3 days—Excellent for Headsche Quinineé in this foft does not affect the head—Cascata is best Tonic ranean Islands, Sardinia has en refer- red to as the lost isle of that sea. Geo- graphi*z=; it has béen $aid to turn its back, 21 Italy, for its east coast s mountainons. THiS isolation has a com- penisation in preserving the homogeneity Laxative—No Opiate in Hill’s. en a rankling ¢ dnstrial ills or s found lian cit ded stre “Lombardy ise the plain: e great Po I8, and the of a large on 3 resting, but not, like the unromantic| Wednesday, Oct. 6—India. how befofe the mattér is completéd, so| discharges from the s, throat da“dt Albs, tertific’ Saturday, Oct. 9—Fcuador. idea of passing more laws for :?::,'h%‘vf w(»:;;d' usunlly a period of| "6t only are the people under hor-| Sunday, Oct. 10—China, Cuba, South P I TR BT prevention of br weuld handle| “'21 T8 o or peeling, generally be-|Mal Size, but this diminutiveness extends | hustra AR e T > towd oF : the matter fio more efficientiy. Betting | gfng about the eighth day, but the flakes | '0 animals, according to some anthropol-| Monday, ] St e T oy ’*'” l”" e ind gambling are carrifd on foday in|and scales are . not now looked wpom as|OEIStS: a condition exactly the reverse|gipe), Hong Kong. / factor n seiz S = % ke e of that in New Zealand, which tends to| Tuesday, Oct.-12 (Columbus day)—Ar- led by violation of law ana to adspt 1sgislation \UKEW fo b6 contasous ~TH patient| oL Ahab o Hew Beaand, WUk (6048 o1 NIl L G iombid; Cokta Rica, | of 1 |dealing with such matters would un-|himself, and anything (clothing, toys, up- ) e inie ublle, Ecuadof, Giis e p ARG bl i i . ete). Hich hive beea eimtam.|than nbrmal. SIS Dominican Rgpvubhc, Ecuador, Guatemala, { and 2 b : e iEhar=es froni ik Tucibis But the most conspicuous curiosities | Honduras, Nicaragua, Panama, Para-|lying the way of eaforcement as the prohibi 7 et L & . |of Sardinia are its nuraghi, great|guay, Peru, Salvador, Uruguay. In the |west T membranes are the chief infécting agents. : 3 finitea Statés: Alabi A catl- | fraport tion amendment. Fence. the importance of Kesping the pa.|round towers, relics of the brofize age, |Vnited States: Alabama, Arizoma, C import. Great reliance must ha placed unon | (lnt and ansihing. hich he has uied|Which served as fortifled dwellings for¢ornia, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, | the scizures an the players and upon {he maragers 10| from coming in contact With oiher ehil.|Some prehistoric people. There are 5.- ldaho, Iilincis, Indiana, Kansds, Ken. |In those res » movement | nosty Kedy (g Game dbin 4 o0 i deir | - 400 or more of thess towérs, some G0 *icky, Louisiana, Marsland, Massachu- |has been mos 1 about | th levél. | dren. 3 | ually about 30 feet in dia- |vetts, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, urin, the p Lét it he understood that a rule, scarlet féver keeps i chila|feet high, usually about 30 feet in dia : Sk o v Bivhot 7 flavir who lh fDont six avéeke Bt (hie |meter at the base made of stome blocks | braska, Neeiis New Hii o the Det 2 a pla : e A0 or asAl RINERIET oh-Hha. HE New Mesich, New York, North | metropolis plans to throw a game B T s 160 b e enkimers and Ohio, Orégon, Penndylvania, | R Catarthal Deafness May there will Bé a marked iminfovement inlcy 200 ant slands which imay have | platforms, Rhode Island, Texas, Vermont, Washing- |rolled into one. B O the game, and What is expected of the|yroken down in the course of the dis.|. “Interesting as are thess relics of un-|ton and West Virginia; also in the Terri- | “The eme: e Uvercome players must likewise be made to in-|ence. inown inhabitants, even more fascinat-|*ory of Porto Rico. : 16t ‘ot _the Et oo clude the managers. Much depends up- frequent means of spreadimg scar-|ing are tiie traces of ancient civilizations| Thursday, Oct. 14—Don Republic, Mau- | that _sinc: it B b oasthak 1F Hiayiee 5t Hke bl wver afe the mild cases.ihoss ohil.|to be found in the daily lifs of Sardin- |Titlus, North Russia, South Russia, Sibe- | unre {Héfh, have zottéh the ldes info their| who do not feel feally ill, and |ians of todzy. One may-find oxen plow-}ria. Ukrainia. In the Unitéd States: |Milanese. heads that the game can be made crook-| ps complain of nothing but 4 mild|ing as they did in the days of the Ro- ’ e ses, hard unce deafness g5 to of nd add OPENING ANNOUNCEMENT We desire to anncance the opening of our FLOWER SHOP, at 46 Franklin Strest, Norwich, Conn., where you will find at all times everything of the best quality in the Florist Market. Hoping to be favored with a call from you, either in “Cut Flowers,” “D=si livery ssrvice, we i ns or “Interior Decorating,” main—truly yours, HAWKINS, The Florist WE HAVE A LIMITED AMOUNT OF - " EGG COAL FOR PROMPT DELIVERY HAVE YOU A SUPPLY OF OUR BUCKWHEAT TO HELP MAKE THAT FURNACE COAL LAST LONGER ? i, e it O - e e e O WE SHALL BE PLEASED TO QUOTE ON ANTHRACITE SCREENINGS FOR STEAM PURPOSES THE EDWARD CHAPPELL €0 CENTRAL WHARF Telephone 24 ¢ NORWICI], with de- comm

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