Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 2, 1921, Page 8

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CLOUDY TODAY; CLEARING . COLDER TOMORROW MARCH 2, 3 ®% FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS DESPATCHES w THE WEATHER. Conditions. last 24 hours there were northern states from tes from j cific | Misg Lina T. Harding of Lyme, who claims that the late Charles. E. Peck {of Blackhall had promised to marry her but did not because of his iliness, was 1 the principal witness in the superior court at New London Tuesday in the trial |of her suit against Mr: Peck's estate for e S5 1s2.000. Stie asks (his ‘amount as .com- 1 e | pensation for her-services as his house- 3 | keever and nurse. | \ved-|. The case is being tried before Judge | Mver [John W. Banks and a jury. ehanes| Mr. Peck died intestate. Counsel: for hr Wi Neg | defendant” presented a counter claim of 'y i §1 all d to be d from plaintiff, who alleged to hdve taken $100 in; rate va- | 801 from Mr. Peck's home and alsol ind | profited by the sale of produce from the tay. (farm. i The testimony of Miss Harding afforded {considerable amusement, - partieularly when counsel for the defense asked the | withess rezarding her anxiety to “marry a Mr. Lee” and also a Mr. Warren. Wit- denied that she cver had intentions rying Mr. Lee, “for,” she said, “he my~ brother-in-law.” “I went to Mr. Peck’s home expecting ; [to marry him, but he became paralyzed, [aBa then gave up the idea of marriage. He told her that as they couldn’t be mar- | ried Lie would make a will and ‘allow her 1530 a weuk for her services as housekeep- Tarding. sement was made, the wit-1 August, 1918, before she Peck's home, Which was fin 1918, and it was further| g£reed that she was to have the farm and |about §3,000 and that he agreed to will it {to her in case they did not macry. | Her mother was more than 90 years| _lowd. “hut ehe was less care than Mr. L Pec 2id the witness, She said that | her mother slept in the parlor, Mr. Peck room off the kitchen and sne on the dining room and that “it was hard.” None ot my people care enough ahcut to have me around. Lina. if you will me and take care of me, I'll glve you farm and $5,000 1 have in the bank. shall remember is my sis- Saral iss Harding said Mr. Peck | ) 2 T35 cold ner. i | in Mr. Miss Harding was wearing in court + diamond engagement ring =nd . plain d ring. b She said that Mr. Peck &m‘ her a zold band ring in an envelyve before she went there tc live and she fully expected {0 m ding |aress just before Mr. Peck becams ill. nied that the stome in the ia- @ A rinz came a stick pin owned Sish oot e, | Mrs. Elizabeth R. Norton, Mrs. T. 8, Un- Peck. She sa zot the stone | Johnson, John F. Craddoc! 'Jf’“‘:'., 1ese- | dorwood, Miss Alice C. Dyer, Mra, Z T b New London jewelry store. bro, Ebenezer Morgan, Hugh “Marshall, s, Mrs. Ella Tucker, a friend, i iz testied tha she mever|Warrn C . Stonin W"l' \ Mrs, R, W.—( Mrs. H. W.-Gallup, Mrs. from the sale of any farmJ. Holdridze, Alba Ciinass L. G. Lane, Mrs. Emma L. Hilton, Frank . » except for a few dozen Jars of [Ezra lemnstead. Waterford, and Patmer, Mrs. J. A, Parker, Mrs. W. H.{ i & Ny she put un for a neighbor. * | Havens, Bast Lyme. | a friend, Mrs. J. C. Morgan, Mrs. ITer dities consisiel of ajl housework.! Miss Itarding’s is-C. Curte Fintore, Mrs. Aifred Bliven, Miss s il taling . cara “of ciieloss, cowa ang el = Davs ane Mec G. Aiken R. H. Montgomery, a| zorden ,and nursiig Mr. Peck wnen heKeefe are attorreys foi on R, e e S i e |{is, administrator of Mr. Peck’s estate. | (iend, S. C. eebe, Mrs. George D. Colt. SUES ESTATE OF MAN SHE SHE HAD EXPECTED TO MARRY !Mr. Peck haa his first-shock, six wecks table work and had been Teceiving 30| All business being“comciuded, a social cents an hour. hour was enjoved. Mrs, Archibaid “When Miss Addie” Benson was there| Mitchell, Jr, ‘and Mrs. Z R. Robbins |she fold m aid; “that if I wes| presiding at ‘the t table.. - “The- next jand speciators and, was fourteen bays, which increased in mem- bership to (weiy-two. . The boys hold weekly meetings, witn an average &t tendance of seventeen, and when we re- alize that some of these youngsters have to walk six illes to attend a meeting; it shows the amount of interest they take, The boys meet on Friday evenings, and Frank Palmer, of the Palmer Mills. who F4s done £0 much to help the work along; has never missed on session. At the meetings conducted by the bovs in propér parlimentary fashion, they are given an ODpOTturity {0 express themseives . in many ways, learning lessons which will help them in later life acti les. Mr. Maples personally teaches the class | In 3ible study in which -the boys are| much interested. As 50 per cent. of them zre Jewish, the lessons are usyaily drawn SAYS i Attorney Keefe on crss examinaticn brought out that Mr. Pek was able on one or two occasions to valk a wile'or &0, although this was_ after he had beeome il The witness sald he walked to tiae rail- rodd stution one day in th> summer. Wit- ness said that Marion Davis calld her on the telephone the day that Mr.-Peck died and told her to get someoue to clean 4D | from the'Old Testament. Foilowing their the house for the funeral,_adding: busitieas, seaslone) and. BUISLEtMZ AT “You needn't do jt. Uncle Chavles|:s always an interssting programme of wouldn't want you to.* [ Rames Inepared; educational talks and Referring to milking the.cows the Wit-| stareopticon - lectures, . and ‘aometimes th ek ness said’ that Mr. Peck iried to milkjspirited debates are also_ enjoyed. Not |of them “but he didn’t get but % 1eACUD[to be behind the larzer organizatios, full® She admitted that he could walk| Ritchville also had a Fathers -and Sons about though w:th, lifficalty up to weeks before his death. The plaintiff said that the doctor made two or three visits daily for a time and was paid at the time of each visil When Wo| banquet. attenced by 18 -boys and 10 men, with a_delitious supper provided by one of the members. / . " The hoys are brizht and manierly, and the spirit of the Boy Scouts. of doing one kind aclion-a_day, is being successfully developel in them. Sometimes, there are fam{ly. gatherings for. stereépticon lec- tures” ard interesting programmes, to which the ‘whole village is invited, and the grown-ups turn oul to emjoy the meetings ‘with the boys. The -results-as time zoes on, will be even farther reachs after she reached there, the doctor told her that she was to be Mr. Peck's nurse as well 2s housekeeper. from that time on, The witness alleged that the Peck farm was a large one and that Mr. Peck kept o hired min regularly. She said that i he piace e 1she all the work around and many a boy in this small mill and that Mr. Peck told her she was as| is beginning now, through .he |!o! £ood as a man and a woman both. s of the County X, M. C. A.. to She said that she never received any|catch a vision of bizzer thilngs and "a | busier life. llowing Mr. Maple's talk. there was ¢, Mendelssohn’s, Ronde Ca- compensation all the time she was there} from October, 1918, until December 30, 1919, when he died. “I supposed. that Mr. Peck had made s played by, Josef Hoftman,| .Providiig for a state tax cf onme cent|members of a parthership or a personal a will” she- said,.“but 1 find that he Staceato Caprice, as originally (4 gallon on’ all gasoiine scld in Connce- [service corpcration may tale eredit in Qi@ not. Just before he died he told me ;i performed by Lolandé Mo-o. In an almost | ticut. their individial returns for t to take his purse and pay the nurse who had been there about a week, and I did; s turning over the balance i the purse —about §$75 to §$30—to Mr. Chapman, a relative.” . Miss Harding said that before soing to Mr. Peck’s home she was empioved at uncanny fashion th two beautiful seiections, each rum and thrill and siaceato touch as perfectly giv- en "as if theé two famous pial we. present. The effect is- very woaderful ard in the day of Cofton Mather, wouid cly have savored of witcherafs. Wzlte played these STATE COMMERCE CHAMBER'S Voleq this week at”a meeting in New | Haven 10 accept a recorimendation from its” commiltee’ on- general which Walter Camp of New Haven is chai chamber. go on. record. as opposed 15 day light saving by local option in tae Vifi ous communities of - \ire -state. state option on gaylight saving un.ess all New kngland, New_ York state, and New Jersey should favor daylight saving. record as favoring daylight saving for the Atlantic time zone.. approved x report from the €mmittee on highways and motor vehi- cles regarding' the ‘bill for the' increasing tons and, over. whica would result in the practical elimination of these trucks from our state highways. réctors went on record as believing that while fees for the registration of trucks mittee, ‘disapproving: the' following pend- ing legislative measure: mobile mechanics. limit_of persons alloweq cle be coliected: by fhe siate at the t of registration, und turned over to the town. * The commitiee also reported that the powers cf inspectors of ficle . departitient should be exercised only for crimes com- Bennett was present and = explained detail the reasons by whicli the increa ed schedul of rgeistration fee for truck and molor vehicles were decided uson. The directors went on reccrd as fav- oring the support of national legisiation now urged by the-chamber_of commeree of the United, Stats providing for larg- er appropriations for the bureau of foreign domestiz commree. |- ‘The dirébtors voted, after- considerable dscussion, ‘to take a referendum vote of in STAND ON DAYLIGHT SAVING Mempers o the board of direciors of e Connecticut chamber of commerce welfaie of an. - A recsmmendation that the Clear Baby’s Skin With Cuticura Soap and Talcum Soay OHMI.’:‘mmm 2capuea: Ceticara Labor the 750 members of the chamber on the question “of the further continuance of toll line bridges’ in- this state. The chamber also recommended that e chiamber go on record as ‘opposed to READY TO AID' IN MAKING TAX RETURNS With cnly from zow to ghe 1sth of March feft in which to file income tax | returns, deputy coileciors of the internal revenue department will continue 1o be inf| tnls city to assist those who need' heip in | making out their returns. The dpucies, | H. S. Dorsey..and. J. J. - Hennon, will keep thelr offices in the Shannon buiiging at room 9. where they have been for some_time past anq will.bs glad o aid any who need help. They advise per-, sons who intend to see them t> do 50 now It§ us 2lso voted that tie committes go cn i The board of directors accepted and chamber’s ers, ts the registration fees for trucks.of five not ganization of the kind described may be The board of di- tri exemptionS under the law, one of them ! said Tuesday: “Centributions to " religious, chariiable, scientific, or educational - orgasizations constitute a considerable ftem in the res turns of ‘many’ taxpayers. - Such contribu- tions ‘made within the taxable year 1 11 limited to a.certzin class or orgun‘za tions, may-he dediicted by an -iadividus to an amoun: not In excess cf 15 per cant of his net-income as computed without the benefit of. this deducti “Deduction. allowed corper: ommendations cf motor vehicle com- pens; Providing for the-licensing of - auto- Providing for thk reduction of the age operate au- mobiles from 18 to 16 ybur: Providing that” " flat town tax of 25 ills on the vajue of each motor vehi- e 1 fo= contrivutions®are not ions or partnersaips. T r proper- ton of such gifis, provided the pro r part when addeq ty th> individual eon- tribixion” does not efeeed 15 per cent. of the taxpayer’s net income. *“The law provides ‘hat contribu‘ions in order to be deduc:®le sball be limited the. motor ve- regerding arrests itted in their presence. o Highway Commissioner Charles - J. | meeting of the auxiliary will take piace a tthe home of Mrs, William Alien, Hunt- ington place, on April sth e getting $30 2 week I was not getting any too much for taking care of an oid man, and 1 saw her yesterday at the depot and I asked her if she remembered s that and she said she did. 1 asked GIFTS TO CITY MISSION ing her then to come to court toduy and tes- s MCEmon e LA ity to that andEhe said that she Woull| my. ity Mission has recsived contris not because Mavion Davis is interested | Lutions of food, elothing, books amt mag-, nes and furniture from the following bersons to Whom hearty”thanigyare ren: deved for their February gifts Mrs. H. C. Lane, a friend, Mrs. Fred- erie G. Jackson. Mrs. A T.-Utley, Mrs 4] William Young, Mrs. Harriitte'P. Wilcox, in the case and he toldme he woull thiat 1 got more to not come and te fy. " Thig remark convalsed judge, jury} the conclusion of the forenoon, sessicn. jury on the case is Henry C. Briz- wop, Groten; George D. | :Inf:0N GRANGER'S PORTRAIT HUNG IN WASHINGTON interest shown by tne Y ss postoffices nting of Gi- icct man who liee of the postmaster general 2 Washington. Gideou : was one whose painting had not a rough a suggestior ffice department in th the prstmasters- of the the state zot together photazraph of Mr. 5 a painting was made the well known Lyme ating was on. exnit for some time in Hartford where it was | very favorably commented upon by de- < {sendents of Mr. Granger. It was aft- t ken to Washington and huni ter general's offic ing was in tfe neighbor- Postmaster John P. Mur- ty co-onerated with the | the other first class of- | ite in securing the paint- The, TERS INVITED FOR SOCIAL AY Y. M. C. The Carpenters’ ers of the Y. a1 CARPEN A union and the senior C. A. will -be the ion tnis (Wed- al session for attractive vrozram has een | There will be two reels of | victures shown, one Seeinz New | With Returned War Heroes and the | The Story of a Stick. The last | lumber story and one that eal to the men of the carpen- Following the pictures. there stunts in the gymnasium' carried cal Director Fritz. M. C. A. in<the aftenoon e will be @ four reel motion picture i for schoolboy: A noon there will be a shop talk at the West Side silk mill® and steropticon elides will be ® The 14 of the stercopticon lecture will be Wrat Tncle Sam Has Under His Hat. of the is a The great m: facto; of employes in the es are women. WOMEN WHO OVERWORK “Man may work from sun to sun, but an’s work i never done.” keen the home neat and attractive, | e children well dressed and tidy, women | continually .overdo and suffer in silence, drifting along from bhad to worse, know- ing full well that they need help to over- the pains and aches which daily ke life a burden. Vezetable Comvound cific value wl to the worst forms ef “~male complaints. as this pdper will prove. School Children are Sickly | and take cold easily, are feverish and constipated, have headaches, stomach or bowel trouble, [MOTHER GRAY’S | SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN Used by [Hothers for over 30 years ale and a certain relief. They tend to break act on the Stomach, Liver and Bowels testinal disorders znd destroy worms. he following from mothers and friends Originals are on file in our offices : WEET POW- 4o have used MOTHER GRAT'S SWEET graud. They | POWDEKS FOR CHILDREN at different el times for past mine vears, and always found them 8 perfect children's medicine and very satisfactory in every case.” a package from your druggist for use when needed. Do Not Accept Any Substitute for MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS, ., In order ! Lydia E. Pinkham’s | is a medicine with | " overcomes many of | {the letters constan % being published in | Guest of Her Drother Miss Dora R. Portelance is registered e Pennsylvania hotel, New York ty. the guest cf her brother. Osmond >, Porticance of Washington, D. C. Y. M. C. A. AUXILIARY HEARS OF WORK IN COUNTY Tha March mestinz of the Y. M. C. A Auxiliary was held on Tugsday aficrnosn at the home of Mrs. Arcdibald Mitchell Washington street, with Mrs, A. N, H. Vaughn pre: Secretary Edwin Hill led the resula devoticnal exercises, after which ren: were hearil report showed the aux ing in numbers, the total membership be- inz 352, with fifteen honorary members | Mrs. Vaughn referred to the Festival of Days. to to be heid pext month. pro- ceads from which will be usad to pay off le on the money ry to the mew Y. = P Cane Sugars The sugar shortage H brought sugars from 50 different countries. Many of these sugars were found on arrival to be coarse, dark and unfit for household or canning use. he quality of Domino Cane Sugars has never been lowered—always the best! American Sugar Refining Company Granulated, Tablet, Powdered, Confectioners, Brown, Golden Syrup. as larze a sum as pledged by AL CT A building. most _enjoyahle musical v M red on_her vi aceompaniment of the Welte-Mignon ano piayer, Handel's Largo of Southern Plantation Soi ccord bet Pi- the two fine | and the! s and keys very delight- the speaker of the il v Lon "+was orcnized in 1919, by representa- tives from the various Connecticut towns. Presidenit Benjamin Marshal of Connec college, rman. county secretary, ts has been much good. Throu ation of the Palmer Mi started in| Fitchville w JAeelfe o INFANTS & INVALIDS Horlick's Ihv:‘ Originl. l cat out-lying distr} o did ana conducted the. ctive co-o; a branch w ,_;fiorfick's; ; Imitations and Substitutes. | ForInfants, Invalics andGrowingChildren | Rich Milk, Malted Grain Extract in Powder The Original Food-Drink For AllAges | No Nourishing—Digestible = & Give Our ‘Candy to Your Children Our prices, *al- ways ths lower level for desir- able goods. ON PRICES We take the pleasure to announce thsse further - reductions on the following list. of goods : Broken Candy, Ib.". ... 40c | Italian Creams, Ib. Peanut Britile, 1b..... 40c | Butter Creams, Ib. . Assorted Gum Drops, 1b40c | O1d Fashioned Nectar Gum Drops, 1b. 60c Chocolate, 1b...... 60¢ Fancy Hard Candies, 1b. 60c | Bitter Sweet Peach Blossoms, 1b. ... 60c Peppermints, 1b.... 60c These are not special sale prices, but they are to be regular prices until such time that further reduction would be made Fresh Fruit Strawberry Ice Cream, Toda; S.F. PETERSON, Inc. 130 MAIN STREET A Special Purchase Sale Of - All Wool Sweaters _ Begins Wednesday and Continues "~ Until Saturday You want to get the most for your money. We want you to. To make this posu%le we are running these little Special Purchase Sales whenevet we can find some special- ly good merchandise which we can sell at a little price. We located a maker of fine Sweaters who had a large stock and wish Boston Store’s Apparel Shop. BEGINS WEDNESDAY MORNING ing at prices. which you cannot afford to pass by. SMITH’S SEAMLESS AXMINSTER I RUGS We are oftering them during this sale at less than the present manufacturer’s price. All good patterns and attractive colorings 9 by 12, value $59.00— : . SALE PRICE $39.00 8-3 by 10-6, value $35.00— : SALE PRICE $39.00 FINE ASSORTMENT OF DESIGNS as $2.50 a square yard. HERE THEY ARE—DOWN TO PRE-WAR PRICES {the spec 1 re contribution to ings cf whicn inure to privafe stockhold- oulq rot be an allowable deds {to corpors ed and charitable, sc and to s cie Ity to czildren or animals, no part of the net earn benefit of any private stockholder/ also to fund authorized by the voca- made deducted, m Y Over 17 Million Jars Used Yearly n THE BOSTON STORE ‘ Quaury hovibuaurr Service The Styles Are Good— The Colors Attractive $5.00 All Wool Slip-On Sweaters ....... SALE PRICE $1.98 $7.50 All Wool Tuxedo Sweaters ....... SALE PRICE $3.98 deductible, deduction of funds for the payment of campaign ex- should be comsiderabiy increased they, |rather than wait until tne. last fow duva | | TTeAsury should not be made prohibitive. / Speaking of the matter of permissible | MVt « The board of dirsctors approved the s its funds among beneficiarics, organiz- reigious , of educgtional work, for the prevention of g% of which insures to the itation act. Fer example, & a hoepital the mct earn- :tion. to individuals are it made to an or- directly but n though® the orzanization individual regulations specifically pro- contributions 1o (COUGHS, Apply over throat and chest —swallow emall pieces of— TNO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION . slions=Ru b INT Jewett City. ed to convert it into cash. We accommodated him, and you will find the result ready for you in The Just Received — Twenty-Five All Wool Jersey Suits Much better Suits than those we showed you last week. We can truthfully say that they are all-wool, and likewise they were made by the biggest manufacturer of Jersey Suits in the country. They are actually worth $29.50, but while they “last .we are going to sell them for only $15.98. ACTUAL VALUE $29.50 SALE PRICE §15.98 A Special Purchase Sale of Fine Floor C Right at the beginning of the season, when thoughts of replenishing household sup- plies are in the mind of every woman, comes this chance to buy desirable Floor Cover- BUY THEM NOW AND SAVE MONEY TEXOLEUM, RINGWALT'S AND NEPONSET Some full rolls, and some short lengths of these famous Floor Coverings.. Noth- ing much better for kitchens, bathrooms, etc. We have been selling them for 83c a yard. All are two yards wide— SALE PRICE 43c A SQUARE YARD INLAID LINOLEUMS IN FULL PIECES We are going to astonish you. Do you remember the price you paid for these finest linoleums before the war ? If not, let us remind you that the price was $1.35 a yard. We want you to recall also that during th: war, and since that they have sold as high ICKS VAPORUB Reward if | tin Ofiice. overings \ ONLY $§1.35 —Adri; Now that all things.are mine That build my happiness ; The sun's impaseioned shin ,/ The autumn’s gaudy dress, And 1 may walk abroad Like the four winds, S free, ‘Where Nature spreads her hoard Of bioom and field and tree While all her sounds now set My heart with love afire, And in my soul beget The semblance of a choir, That flutt-r of.a winz Amid the w ngz e, ‘That rustling, furry thing, Secking the swampy sedge, The strange, hoarse, ho: Of crows above the i Where the tall pines defy Tae coming of w.nter's breathy Since 1 have drawn two days ¥rom that 5 ard troasurer, T seek for nothing more. T covet 50 man's now The merchant’s mones- Could not enhance my dower ,But in telicity, My heart zock forth t6 these Who sail a stormy sgen And share not my- renose. iose who by fate And are distru Wiose oy 1s Who_bear a 1 n Burr, Uis dispers in the En LONELINESS, When dusk ehuts ou I like to watch the Of 1amus that eh's the walls nd zlow, 1 love worm my heart 3 i 1 do not w e to feel the frasrant ¢ oge round mx shouiders pres: e the \wteherv of stars Thit eases my unrest At . when shadewe fall This is the heur 1 go, Antheal mx lonelinecs For folk 1 do no ary Barron Housekegpink. HUMOR OF THE DAY T ‘am thoroughly convineed that all women are the same.” Dont ¥ou helieve §t. Wven of same for any con- time."—Philadelphia siderahle Record. “What's In vour traveling bag?™ asked length the customs officer of the demure dams “O. nothing.” said the maid. “Ju week end wearing appar: ler—*"Was Santa Clans £ood to yom, Alzernon?” The Pampersd Pet (aged 6—"Naw! He brouz's me too many duplicate pres- ents."—Boston Transerips. “Is that eonsequentis tor sunported by hie wi “T don't know how a day if he isn't can. 'Are your Red-time Stories ooking star ac- on his tous? he feeds three times itimore Ameri- for the Somé editors re- fuse to min them. hecause in these days. they eay, the children come In after mother has retired.”—Boston Transeript. ‘Do _you think the world is growing better? “T don't know. T didn't live it was supposed to be wor: Free Press. “But your milk never seems to have any cream on It" “Ah. mum, the cream is so heavy it sinks to the bottom.” — Boston Tran- script. “Is there any real economy of time in eo-called davlight saving™ “T dunno’ ‘answered the man Whe was setting b watch. “Somotimes T think you lose a lol of time guessing what time is. Washington Star, T have implicit faith in my husband.” she. said. e never seen him try to flirt_with anyone.” * her comforting friend asked t he ever go anywhere unless you are with him?'—Chicago Herald and Ex- aminer. The Straphanger—T'm glad to ese man who has ome regard for publie heaith. 1 see you but your handkerchief to your mouth whenever you cough. The Seated Passenger—Public health® My, false teeth are loose and I'm afrald of couphin’ ‘em out.—Detroit News. Wite—I got such a fright the other evening. George came home rly and 1 idn't know it. ard then I heard someone moving upst T telt wore re was A man in the house. iettor—How relieved you must been to find B was nothing liks that —Judge, Jarz—(reading Kipling)—*And the burat fool's ‘ban bling to the fire." Razz (sorrowfu the Iike of me ip Jazz—And just Razz—I'm in envelope to my third wife—Pitt Pan- ged hand goes wab THE KALEIDOSCOPE Baboons have a remarkable tive power of being able Dpresence of water. In the west of Fingland it te 25 verv unlucky to bring birds' ezzs fntd the house. During the expeditionary cedonia, ingtine{ to deteet the world war the Canadian force gerved in France, Ma- Palestine and Russia. The average salary of women workers loyed by the United govern- 7 a vear. neisherger most invented used In The tral language of “the Kalmucks of Gen Asin_differs from true Mongotian in being more phonetic. » The term Nippon. often used for the largest island of the Japancse group, is really the name of the empire. Tt is estimated that every year forest fires in America destroy mers than £200,000.000 worth of standing timber. asthonomical researches led ing accused of heresy. and he was twice persecuted by the Inquisition. To those of delicate con- stitution, young or old, Scotts Emulsion tonic that builds up the whole body. Scott & Bowne, Bioomfield.N J. 20-18

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