Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 24, 1921, Page 4

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anl Gonéied 125 YEARS OLD %2 a month; $69 Subscription price 13 & s rear, Enterec at the Posioffics »t Norwi®, Comm, s second-clasm matter. Telenhena Calls, Duletn’ Business Ofice. 450, Bulletln Liilorial Nooms, 35-3. Bullettn Job OFick, 35-2. Wilitmantte Offtce 27 Ghurch St Telrphions 105, Norwich, Thursday, Feb, 24, 1931, : - e MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Assoclaud Press 1y exclusirely entltied 16 the ase for republication of ail uews despaich-. e credited to 1 or uot olteiwise crediied to pe0er and wiso s iocal news pubilsised = Al righs of republication of speclal des satees rein ave also reserved, CULATION (.h WEEK ENDING FEB, 18th, 1921 11,664 CLEANING THE SIDEWALKS. There is no way in which cooperative' effort can-be put to better use and accom- plish more satisfactory respits than by| having each one live up to the require- ments of the city ordinances and see that sidewalte are cieaned after a snow storm h sand or ashes when they This is only. what should e to neighbors and other | 1t is part of .one's duty| ag a member of (he com ity as well as a legal rs\ e fact of the matter is dha aldn’t be any ore dinances » matter if every- one lived onsibilities. It is ho do not, and | o it except that they such laws are made ose h interest that it is , the street com- of police have held rding the cleaning of v notice has gone forth respect for the ordinances governing the requirement will be jnsisted upon. IThere is no good reason why cne person ould :make determined efforts to clear ¢ and ice, or ‘to safe- v sanding it when slippery, not the slightest atten- it :while others pa “tion to such re It is because the tentios given to the ‘ordinancas that peor 4he shoveling of snow. There have been | times when there might just as well have been mo ordinances so far as getting ‘walks cleared by the slackers was con-!| cerned. The injustice of the non enforce- ‘ment of the ordinantes is mot only ap- parent but it is emnhasizel by the num- Ber of injurics and suits, for damages as the resuit of falls. | Thus the notice to the effect that side- wwalks must be cleared of snow, or made “safe for travel will be learned with much satisfaction and it is to be shoped that it ' response on that enforee- n the hands of | eh reeommition of the 11 do their part ned COLLISION. wreck at Shelton a thorough in- Efforts must of course be Inade to determine why it was two cars * The horril for and estigation, e trolle: | bel bving that James J. Duvi the.. roads may much as the interstate commerce commis- sion is ready to approve at once. There is indicated a recognition of the import- ance of the - transportation need of the government doing ifs part in relieving the burden which has fallen upen them following the return (o private ownership and the slump in business. If President Wilson arplies his veto to the bill it will be ancther case for congress to pass it regurdless of sych actien. THE CABINET SLATE. The slate which has been given out for the ‘Hardinig cablnet cannot fail to im- press the country as being mads up of larly fitted for the carrvingon of -the du- ties of the departments of which they will be the heads. As has een previously choice of .fr. state wag an stated the ughes for secretary of irable onme. and with | equally good judgment has Mr. Harding | acted in picking A. W. Mellon of Pitts- burgh as secretary of the treasury. It is 2n important post.and a man of la ge affairs and thoroughly posged in finayce has been chosen. For secretary of-the mavy Ex-Senator Weeks of Massachusetts will add strengta to the cabinet. He is g man of ability and good judgment and who, like Bdwin Denby who has been nz ned for secretary of the navy, has served in the natinnal legislature. The selection of Mr. Denby is one of the surprises in he list for those who indulged in the guessing con- test as to whom would fa'l cabinet posi- tions failed to pick him. Yet he is a man of cabinét caliber, one who has had naval exverience, a marine \eteran of the world war and a successful lawyer. For the head of the department of interior Mr, Harding hags taken a mem- ber of the present senate Albert B. Fall and there can be no question but what he is weil equinped to direst the affairs o fthat department, while Henry C, Wal- lace for the agriculinural depattment is a specialist in that direction. That. Herbert C. Hoover is the man Jor the department of commerce will not be éenied. He Is admirably qualified to direct the duties of that important de- partment and there are gond reasons for . a former steel worker, aad a hanker will be a val- uable man as secretary of labor. For the rosition of postmaster geeral the chair- man of the republican netional committee, Will H. Hays,,is the choize and he has demonstrated the ability to direct the rostal service in a way that will be a credit to th® country and in a way to #ive the neople the service they pay for. Some criticism Jasybeen indulged in con- cerning H. M. Daugherty, the man for attorney geaeral, but?Mr. Harding fully understands that he must be held re- sponsible for his cabinet and he vouches | for the man of his choice and the eoun- try ill be glsposed to accord him a fair Individually and as a whole the cabi- ret cannof fafl to impress.. They gre well known, experienced and suceessful men and they will be alfve to the opportumity which has been given them to render their hest service to their country. DANGEROUS PRACTICES. Many the cases which have direct- ed attention to the praclice fesorted to children of jumping on behind moving vehjcles to “catch a ride” Many even he instances When the drivers of es have been almost black- it use they attempted to and §id drive the chiliren away when they fwere “simply having some fun and do- ing no harm.” The practice always was ome that in- volved e or less danger and such “méan: as developed from the driver was only for the purpose of protecting the children amainst injury. The dan- rer was bad enough when there were only horse drawn vehicles involved but with thould attemnt to“pass on a single track, or why one of them had not waited for| the other at the switch which had been | passed but a short distange but_quite as! much attention nceds to be directed to| the.report that there was a five gallon| tsn of gasoline on the front platform | af one of the cars_the explosion of which | ttarted or increaséd the fire which swept| the cars with such destructive effect to| the humanity which was unable to escape. It cannot be believed that the practice of car: ammable ma- terial a lley car is sanc- Honed done in the past would scem to be indicated by the elaim made in this case, and that it may have been one of those forbidden practices which had been winked at will be the con- clusion if the fact that gasoline was be- fhg transported is established. And yet ® o that the c: of gaso- line on a trolley car is against the rules| there’ has been fur zood and suffi- | clent reasons for including that restric- tlon among the regulations. That such a delivery might have heen | made without any trouble in nine out of | trips is probable, but there is n theless a hazard connacted Wwith the carrying of gasoline where o many lives are involved that needs to be carefully inst. Conveyancgs for the nected to include such a menace and even though no harm might. have resulted had the collision been avoided there are nev- ertheless many ways in which it might he exploded through carelessness or un- intentionally. Safety t measures apparently need on that line in more ways Just what thise are will be ¥ disclosed by thd investigation and the presentation of the fasts/sur- rounding the,wreck and the fire will in- dfeate the course that should be prompt- | v followed. THE PARTIAL PAYMENT BILL. With the pdssize in the senate of the Winslow-Townsend hill in the senate un- shanged from the way i§ was favorabl ated upon in the louse, the mea new goes to the president for his ac By this bill the secrelary of the treas- ury is directed to of the money due e partial payments the railroads of the itee provisions.of ct when certified to by the interstate commerce commission. | There is due to the railroads the sum| of $340,000,000 under the government promises and the railroads are seeking to get such parts of it as the inter: commerce commi; s prepared to say | should be pald for the purpose of getting fynds with which to do business and to e1 meet the creditors of the roads who are | seeking an adjustment of their debts. While there is no getting away from the provision of the transportation act that there is this sum due to the rail- roads the point is made that the full payments cannot be made ur been a careful eurvey of the s the expendliures that it ma deter- mined just wWhat cvpht to Le paid the | r0ads to make Bp the Yo the governmert ore Nevertheie 1s roads are e to certain amounts without guestion. That has already been established, and it is the purpose of uwl Pl to authorize the secretary of the fered from the lines. | on of recognized that the ival of by motor cars so numreous and attractive to the voungste there is_greater reason not only for -keening off {hose trying te “hook a ride” but for impressing upon the children the danger involved and the need of using safety first measures for their own ¥ood. It is not always the vehicle onto Which they jump tha. offers the real danger, but others in front of which they dodge vhen catching on or running away. An stance of this kind occurred in a Mass- achusetts town this week when a boy tied his sled onto the back of a trolley car. E & was going well until the car-ztopred suddenly to avoid some- thing in front and the boy was crushed Dbetween the car and an auto following which cond not avoid bumping the ear. It was one Gf those necdless deaths which makes the sorrow all the more great. There is a lesson in every such fatality trat ousht mot to be lost by thoge Who heedless indulge in similar stonts, Tt cannot he disregarded that what seems like simply fun frequently involves grave r. Tt is far better to be safe than crushed to death, or even sorry. EDITORIAL” NOTES. The man on the corn 2 There is no da ing asked today. r of the question be- who's Hoover? Even though it may not be bursting forth spring is certainly budding: S / “Toledo Postal Cler Held Up,” reads a headline, but from-all fccounts it ap- pears they were made to lie down, Even if the added snowstorms didn’t come on fime no one is disposed to reg- ister a kick except the youngsters. Now that the labor unions have turned against Lenine he isn't cutting as much ice s he thinks he is over in Russia. Knee deep in Februaty means as much in the tag end of a mild winter as knee deep in June Will in the beautiful epring. Selecting an Angell to preside over Yale may not prove the best idea after all, even though it may represent a new policy. Knowing wha€ it has before it and how much time there is to do it in congress should stick fajthfully at the job until it is done. The fear is expressed that Popocata- petl ig getting ready to erupt. Just as it 't got cnough to worry about & During this.month Lincoln and Wash- ington are much quoted, but could well be more - of displayed woolen ong bid f.r the revi- d the confiaence of the A . prices one- tuyer is b lished fact that twe ct % on a track, but there a se Who occasion. ally try to make them. treasufy to make. -e;dgmqnt nhm‘-lt rather than by a lump sum in order that, Ve the benefit of as| men of ability and integrity, and part] 41! lie™ T agked. — Uncle Bob and Betty took little Eliza- Weth and motored into Indiana a little over a ‘Week ago to visit several friends | The day after left home, 1 telephon- | ed Mollle, the maid, snd asked how she getting on all alene. iOn: preity well, Miss Liuclle she re- a. ‘But aren’t you lofesome, Mollie?” “Yes'm, it's kind of quiet Witheut the family,” After our litle ‘ehat T -teld ‘mother that T had deeided to go out’to Hetty's to stay during her absence. - . I found Mollie getting ready to.put up strawberrles. “Why don't you make more jami, Mol- uli Wi clie, {'Why, you can use eorn syrup just s owell, and then you can make all the jem you lfke." % "“Buf will it be geed that way? “Certainly™ I told her. is using it for pregerves. Do try it Meollie, “THl help wyou"” I said, and 1 did order more berries for her am@=rinsed some \mason jars, but as I think it feol- haven't sugar enough, Miss Lu- in the preparstion-of the frui Mollle was tired and I must sy a little cross when the jammaking was finally ac- complished, 30 I tolf her inst to p a ‘'simple dinner fer me. She 4id it rather ungraciously and she shewed no gratitude whatever for my. having eome to stay withe her, she was po dumpish all firet few dsys that 1 was there that I went downtown and wrist watoh. something to cheer her. “Mollle,” I said the -evening after, I had given her the wateh, “will you coox one ;!l yc;nr delicious l(@-m"hm a fow triends, of 3 “Yes, " she ‘anewersd, “but I can't eook and walt on table, too. I'm never asked to do that for cempany.” et in whomever you sre accustomad to have help you, 1 am sure my uncle would wish us te have all the assistance needed.” %3 - LEYTERS TO THE EDIT | Sunday Observamce : Mr. Editor: Tt gives me immeasursble pleasure to answer Mr, Troiand's sesend letter because‘he 7aises questions o easily answerable. To the first question 1 mske the seun- ter-attack that there is ne contrariety be- tween Mr. Coates' statement that Sundsy laws are religious—and my atatement. Sunday laws are as un-Aaaum un-Chris The meaning of irveligious is net found in my article as Mr, Troland states it is. Mr. Coates is eight to laws are religious laws, “There is a log- ical distinction between a religious law and a moral law. form of worship and moral " is meoral but mot religious” may be an ligion. word with irreligious for Christ which is 2 form of worship, There are many’ false forms. of worship but the moral law is necessary for the human reve as the ligion bear fryitage in true religion er worship. Su:dl! laws are unchristian becsuse pot founded on -the moral law which reads Lord thy God.” the first day of the week. Sunday laws are religious laws because deal with forms of religious forms to be enforoed. Divinely given rights of cf the confiscation of goods and life, ’ The second question Mr. Troland rals- es refers to the Kingdom of God as men- tioned in our Lopd's example of prayer recorded by Saint Luke in his Gespel 11th chapter and Kingdom come * ¢ dom in this earth is to come by preach- ing, persuasior Spirit and not of earthly ernments. Mr. admonishes me to pray in sincerity ¢ above-mentioped getition of St. Luke's Gespel. I certainiy de for that is what I am advecating in both my letters that as the angels ju Heaven obey God's com- mands not from force but by cheice, love and persuasion, we may do the same and not- sanction abemigpable, earth-born Sunday legislation. I am giad the Con- Troland informs us om senters from Sunday I ent legally and allowed to render that wership mest consistent with the dictates consciences.” iz peint. Dis- are at pres- MRS, G. H. STROUSE Norwich, Feb, 23, 1921, : e ODD INETDENTS IN AMERISAX misTeny , THE PICKETT CNARGE AT GRYTTS- BURs. which can in any way eompare With the famous charge of Gen, Picket: at ti battle of Gettysburgh, It was sne of the most daring episedes of any war, and stamps Pickett as gne of the brav- est and most determined men Whe ever drew a swerd. Gen. Edward Pickett commanded 2 vision of the Army of Nerthern Vicgie: at Gettysburg. "The daring charge was made on the afterneen of July 3, 1063, up Cemetery Ridgé. By pl federal eentre he Roped te turn The hids of. battle in faver of the (mfederats arms, * This charge Das been ihe theme a host of .writers, who Jeemed it an the torn and shatiered eolumms whichghad atiended and fajled t> complieh. the . OF thase stood in the lines of blue by charge wWas repelied. P The second ds¥ of the great Gatt ‘fight had closell, with neither side @ ing any great sdvantage, excepiing that force in*point of RUMBES. 3 As the mofniog ef Iuly 3 da General Warren, acting for Meade, “estadlished i of his position en the rigit, Jae, failed in his atiack both on Mepde’ and right, he was in a qaandary 58 *5 whether he would have 1> give up ihe fight and retreat or make ansther prd last attempt. As he hal‘basn rein- forced by Btuart's «avalry B division under Pickett Was A e he determined to pierce the lefi santer of the Union army. To this end he diractad Lonsmstrest tc s less tablet, & SMEIe| form a strong polumn of atiack, to be|record for quick, prs. Yoiart | lief. O was to altack ‘the Umign ferces from he! momey-back guarantes. composed of Pickett'’s 3 “Everybody | terrible opslaught coyld not be continued asmert Bumday |y.q right and wrong as determingd By QUtY. |peen killed, wounded er captyred, and \\"gebeter defines a2 moralist 23 “one WhO | qyery brigade $o there | omoer gave one foll AL | the order: irrespective of | Now is your chanes!” And forward they morality. Bunday 1aws ac# UR-AMETiean | went In the light of many Kistorians it because of federal Censtitution forbids |nag hesn considsred to have been an aet Sunday [of fosihardiness for Plckett to have at- laws are criminal because they invade ghe { tempted e thers—even 0 | had charge won™ Bravery; even perls cha p down into history in the same class with verse, ‘ThY iths noble Six Hundred at Balkat i, for * as in Heavem, |the Engiish in this famous charge snowed so in earth.,” The pith of my first lotter | no greater bra in this controversy is that Ged's Xing- jcause for which they were fighting t the men who whiked “into the jaws Ty ihe power of the Holy | death” up Cemetsry Ridge at Getty: force nor ensciments | burg. Trdland |’ mecticut Constitution grants liberty ef {getting up one morning recently conscience in this matter and that Mr, jthis guestion at immune -frem persecution | menians,” said the mother. “Well, why den’t they send ib back? of their | Dign't the ducks kill all the Armeni- ans?” came back Janet. She had heard about the Turkish out- evidently ». bpecies of youthful Tages thought the Turks were barnyard fowl, which in her mind easily became eonfused with the duck. lighitened her. toucy of fore 'Christ the Irishmen of today: orging tne| wepithy community under Rome honer te. have shazid the fortumes of | says a pulletin jssued by the §T8Y | Georgraphie Seciety, “where l{; Kemel 'su:: has set up ‘the Angora gov- arnmen Which “hat| gevernment s & serdom of tre try tar and batteries whicn drove Joansen :v'g to seitls around ollie certainly did hersel ‘we were just having whem, to my astonishment, Uncle Bob, Betty and beth appeared. I hada't 5 them for days yet. \ I wonder whaether I shall ever be able to forgive the way Betty greeted me and my guests. It was such frigid politeness that 2 damper was immedjately thrown over what had been exceptionally gay little party. She did not appear to eare whether she embarrassed me or not. When I suggested crowding tham in at the ta- ble she said: “Oh, no, we are too travel stained. We shall just eat a bite in the lack of econsideration most painful to my guests. However, summoned all the iact T have and sim- ply made the affair pass off pleasantly, if ne longer Rilariously, ¥ g Aunt Ratchel Pennystone drove over from the side hotel, where they have been sines their return from Califor- ty end I ran out to the car. e -in, Aunt Rachel,” urged “No, thank you; Peary and I won't in- tarrupt your party.” she said stiffly, mo- tioning to the chauffeur to drive on. “But, Aunt 1" bagan Bettd. 2t was ne use. . The car was goue. ~ —_ 1 didn’t ‘bava time to dlscuss the matter, and I haven't since, for 1've bee exceedingly busy at home. I bave to de yote many hours to Writing te many of the offfcers and men with whom I serveq ia the A. B, F. None of my family real- izes what an important duty that is.— “Mother interruped me at my desk this morning to tell me that Uncle Bob was here last svening while I was at the theatre with John Prestop. She said that he wighed me to explain to Aunt Rachel about the party, and mother also said that he was vexed at the way I had the strawberry jam made. It was ruined, he insisted, just because he doesn’t happen to like the flavor of corn syrup. How umr men are about their food! They thin] afl? of their own tos, “Mother,” I inguired, “did “Uncle Bon say anything appreciative about my kind- ness in going te stay with Moilie . “Well, scarcely,” she replied. 80 hurt by her 4one and manner that I sgid no more, but patiently resumed my writing.—Chicago News. rear, but his attempt was unsuecersful. ‘Thereupon Pickett formed his mreat col- umn of attaek ané came forward as scon as the firg from the’ Umion butteries haa d. ackenes % ‘Whitelaw Reid, the git‘ed war cor- respondent, described the Pickeit charge as “the great, desperale -and fina] The Confeleratss seem to have gathered up all their strength and desperation for one flerce, -convui- mive effert that should sweep over and all resistance, In sJme literally lifted yp aud back: the Union lines, brr that sacrifice with which it Pickett was finally Ris credit, he was able to withdraw Religious ““I“"" men in ;deonur. 4 Of Piekett's command two-thirds had commander and every field these who made it or those that with- ately came to preach the moral law em- {4504 jt, % bodied in the Ten Coramapdments and | Frem the Union side of the charge, as only relatively thereto proclaimed =T~ |ihy commanders noticed what Pickett was about to do, they commanded: not s shot was fired ates had advanced so near that the ex- Fetir et is to incwcate the basic prineifle of that | ™ Then the men knew the time had come law which-js love to God and leve 10 3nd could be held back mo longer. man in the hearts of men; that it maY |ing low, they opened a deadly cencen- trated fire upon the moving mass at the (o™ Fickects divison: whkh came witnin '8 diyi . which eame within “the Seventh Day.is the Sabbath of thethe gone of this terridle, close musketry Synday is admittedly |fire, appearsd to melt and drift away. ! Don’tefire!” and until the Confeder- At this juncture General Hancock gave “Forwird, men! Forward! to take Cemetery Ridge, but he ‘betn ordered to do so, and with and Property | Pickett it was always do or di¢, and the Aim a glorious name for he was compelled to ex- the bitterness of failure. Th e of Pickett and. his n\n can g ry nor devotion to th (Tomerrow: When Jerny Lind Visited Us.) vks snd Ducks Janet is a four ‘year old who her mother: “Where is my old swester, mother?” “Why, yeu sent It te tie ia the near east, but The Loopary Fpets On 2 crowded - car befere the bi; SReV & mether was sitempting to inte- rest her son. ‘The lad had a little wood- -':yh w& rd l’ln tm.' hands. At are The Civil war presents ne ineidents|yeur leopard, :nrlt";""ny:" ::k:l iyl savers, mamma,” he en- "They's 1if IN THE DAY’S NEWS . Angorn. than of / | Stories That Recall Others ‘ —— ed little Ar- . The First and Original Brom Quinine tablefs - Be sure you get TERRIBLE ECZENA “FOR 10 YEARS No Trace Of The Disease Since T%"Fmfl-t—lhu" ww Haursuizs, *Tn 1906, I began tobetroubled with Eczema. \ My arms and legs were bandaged most of the time; and sometimes I could squeezs the pus out of my hands, they were so bad. About 8 months’ ago, I chanced to & person cured of Weeping Eczema by these remedies. Afier using two bozes of ‘Fruit-a-tives and onc box of ‘Sooths-Selve’, I em entirely free of Eczems”, Dr,E.N, OLZENDAM, D,V. M, B0c. & box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢. At dealers or from FRUIT-A.TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG. N. Y. Galatia. There St. Paul is supposed te have founded a Christian chyreh to the congregation of which he a§dressed his ‘Epistie to the Galatians’ In the fonrts century the Celtic language was still_to be heard in Galatia, according to St. Ga- home. “The Celtic invaders were always in| the minority and were finally absorbed, 18! the Norman conquerors of England were absorbed by the Baxons. Many observ. ers profess to see the effects of Cul'ig blood in the people of Angora i>day, a describe them as lighter » complesion than the people’ of oth.r parrs of the Near East, and ‘the most genial of the Mohammedans of Agia Mior. ¢ “Ancyra dwindled' to a village unacr Celtic rule, but following t annexs . tion of Calatia to the Roman Emupire in 25 B. C. and during the hundred years in which it was maintained a4 the Jo- man frontier province, the city tosk on great importance. One of the most fa. mous of the ruins of Asia Minor is that of ‘ul marble temple in Angora dedi- o Rome and Augstin.” “During the Byxantine period Aneyra became even more important, its posi-| tion between Constantinople and Mesopo- tamia and Persia making Turks it the metropolis of interior Asia Minor. Tising power of the Turks was inflica:el b; the fall of Copstantinople. But Aneyri e | was. captured shortly afterwards by tie| 0 | Christian Crusad:rs during on= of treir| farthest sorties inland and was held by ! them for 13 years until 1369, when it| again fell into Turkish hande. t e| ‘Though marble reminders of its an- clent glory are scattered about in tns: Angora of today, it is predominantly dingy city of mud brick houses and na: row streets. A mosque is built against one of the marhle walls of the noble old Augustan temple. The walls and gates of the city are cbnstructed of fragments of demolished Greek and Reme buildings, colonnades and other structuras. “The city is 220 miles southeast o1 Constantinople. It has a population of + about 30,000, approximately a third of | them Armenians who speak Turkish. It} is perched on a rocky plateau to the north of which are fertile valleys and o the sonth of which stretch plains merging finally Into a great desert. On these southern plains are pastured large herds of sheep, and goats with long silky hair which have made the name, Angora, familiar. fo western ears. Large quanti- ties of wool and mohair are expected. “Cats, and to a less sxtent dogs and other animals in the neighborhpod of An- gora have unusually long siiky haly. It is believed that the climate and perhaps the soil of the region are regponsible for this ‘peculiar development.” e “Judge, your honor,” eried the prison- er at the har, “have I got to be tricd by a lady jury?’ “Be still,” whispered his atteriey. won't be still! Judge, T can't even fool my own wife, let alone twelve strang: women. I'm guilty."—Country Gentle- s “A ity founded by Midas of the and its peat Ty, gold: overrun twe eenturies be- by far-wandering cousing of & great and and m&«»—u‘ in spite of its checkered known to it gemarations in the west only be- Pesen cf] eause of o long-haired goat! “Such is Angora in eentral Asia Minor,~ ly surreunded ‘:: in issuing defiant messages “Whe, unabi to- try thelr Dr. Leophardt, a_western the Ot;l les to Lee & physician, be internal National Mustapha. to ihe remot kinsmen the Irish the federnl army was fghting ep its l;u-,r‘:’in, the Bistory ol.:n:h;n ‘oum own ground and with & mueh SUPSFIOr| nes the bulietin, “were 20.800 to push inte wned 4 luck peross Geneial| the Hellespent. After harrying the esyn- hslf & cemtury they were foroed Angers, then known ax w‘l:g Anpyrs. ‘Their country became knewn as A Gr_ut Discovery Roid, 2 harm- aimost unbelievable safé and lasting re- sgood Co. pells it with TERE @ 5o uvm'uua dium s Eu:sterp Copnecticut equal & B ters hat ulie- —to have 2 voice o share —to have their #, il . unscrupulous, buy it must pay the of men THE BIG CROWD THE RANK AND FILE OF PEOPLE— To the number of several thousand—have already become owners ef the common stock of this enterprise and they are safished, because they know the money they have paid into the treasury has been wisely buying a site for a fa ~—now nearly equipment for the !actory. Manufacturing of the pro- duct—a world-wide necessity — Will begin very soon with orders in hand to keep going for several months. THE MEN DIRECTING THIS ENTERPRISE ARE THEMSELVES OF THE BIG CROWD THE RANK AND FILE OF PEOPLE— .. Who have put into it their time and money—and to show you that they are playinf fair with their associate stockholders they joiatly own le authorized issue of common stock. They expect, how- ever, to be retained by the stockholders to manage the business because they are practical, experienced men and understand every angle of it, but they appreciate that they must make good, otherwise they know it is power of the present stockholders (let alone within the number of addition: them daily) to displace them—They will stand shoulder to shoulder with alt stockholders and conduct the busi- ness as they are sure they ably, honestly, THE together with of esting and valuab) of the pr a capacity for 500 ment of 500 paid, plus. facts : s BREEE. i 00w e ba State........ ling” mm THE BIG CROWD THE RANK AND FILE OF PEOPLE— Have a chance now to become business in which there is but one kind of stock offéred to anybody—and that,is common -stock—and all who same price for it—and or will be to ewn control. Con- ol will slways remain in the haade of the renk and fle. THESE MEN OF BIG CROWD THE RANK AND FILE OF PEOPLE— Told you in this newspaper last week, over their own signatures, what they have accomplished thus far and wflt their plans are for the develo Maybe you did not see, or if you n take the time to read what they said. If you would like a copy of their announcement it will be mailed to you, r data-which will give you full, inter- information. about this enterprise, but please fill out the coupon at the bottom of this space, writing your name and address pldinly. THE BUSINESS 1S THE MANUFACTURE OF TIRES FOR AUTOMOBILES Which, as you know, is oné of the prime necessities nt and. will be all through time. *The busi- ness is not an experiment, FOR THE TIRES TO BE MANUFACTURED AND SOLD ARE ALREADY ESTABLISHED AND THERE IS A DEMAND FOR THEM EXCEEDING THE SUPPLY. They are good tires, and because they are good and reliable they will always sell—ijust as there is always demand for a good, proven article in any line. ' The factory, now nearing completion in West Haven, Conn. (really 2 part of New Haven although 2 separate and distinct community), has es ¢ day, necessitating the employ- people. This production is puctmll?' as- sured, which means that 2 substan will be besides seiting aside a substantial sum for a sur- The stock may be had on the basis of $10 the share, and since it is issued as of no par value, there is no reason why its vatue should not ¢ ! the business fhrives, which }t is bound to do because it is devoted to making and seling 2. necessity. You will find out how to make your money make more money for you in terprise if you will fill 3 will bring you by mail some very convincing Martin Tire and Rubber Comipany, New Haven, Conn. Name. . .ccovavsvoones ORIV TOWR, oo s dalsyolio Vs’ s Tassidpasons igiven them to become part ¥y ! : in s mhanagement; —to be able to buy stock-at the beginn price as everybody else;. . . equally. in the profits; stock protected against the 4 out” 30 often engineered by —in the building of a factory ing at the same ‘part owners of a nt in nd in securing up-to-date ss than one-tenth of the stockholders who are joining wish it to be conducted, viz: nt of the business. d, maybe you did not tantial dividend b up steadily as al : en- out this coupop, , which Sassssas wasssaren P R S g NORWICH BULLETIN.

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