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dlarwich Bnlletin and g.—?ic! Bubecription price 13 & week; I & momth ® ez, um.mr—‘-‘—mu B wecond-class matter. 2 Telepaons Calls, | Barcun Bostnees Offtes, 430, & Balletin Edilorial Rooms, 383 Bulletin Job OTies, 35-3 Office. 23 Church St Telapbone 105 Wilimantte those Who appareatly failed to look be- yond their nose. . That he made a bold attempt will have to be admitted. Had he succeeded he woudd have been hailed as a great leader. That of course was part of his dream. As a matter of fact he has failed and failed miserably. Two hun- dred lives have been sacrificed and many Ptundred have been wounded because of his undertaking and now he faces not only the awakening but seems certain that he will be obliged to renounce for himself and his son succession to the throne of Hungary. He should have known that the re- thra of the Hapsburgs would not be permitted, but better still he shouid have realized that if there ever woud 3800 Norwich, Thursday, Oct. 27, 1921, MEMBER OF THE ASSACIATED PRESS, entitled to the ase for republication of all news dmatch: The Assoclatd Pres jo exclusively « crodited to & orimet Zcedited otberwise s paper end also ibe loeal riws Dublished be a chance for his return it did not exist at this tine. He seems not to have figured that there are those who still remember the late war and beyond and cannot be ‘expected to forget in so short” a time. Because he undertook' to carry out his dream Charles has had a rude awakening. Now he is out for good. to CIRCULAHON 11, 659 WEEK ENDING OCT. 22nd, 1921 _ THE AMERICAN RED CROSS. Many jmportant activities will be launched on Armistice day, this vyear, and without undertaking to eclipse.any- thing else it is none too early to give consideration to the fact that it will mark the opening of the American Red Cross annual roli call 4nd make your em——————— | Dlans accordingly. - TOO MUCH SPEED, wellv directed efforts are about a reduction in existence long emough so that there ought not to be any need of expatiating upon its merits. It is an organization in which everyone can and should be be- | er of automobile accidents and i oy ‘Fmi“g those who |!terested and in the maintenance of ears and those who use |7hich everyone can and should help. It to be those cases wh ew the s could be controlled, ns between the it there oided were time, ach Headwaly blind is no such thing iding striking in be encountered. . r hi ng concerned, her times when such is r people. in Mas: exercise greater care, important part s to do with most of such them same as between and dangerous an excel’ent” chance that nquestionably contaglois e times on straight stretch- hways that are broad t use when danger involves only those but there d when participation in fast 1 regards the presence this kind have recently chusetts causing three is an organization for dealing with emrggency conditions to a large degrec and how admirably it responds in such instanees is an old story. Let there be a famine, 2 tornado, a cyclone, a flood or a disaster of any kind and there it will be found to be guickly and efficient- Iy administering to the rellef of the stricken ones. Is there any wonder that the people of the country should want to be closely associated Wwith such ad- mirable service? 5 Not solely as a body for dealing with war conditions, but for evervday devel- opments is the Red Crosy prepared. What this means is perhaps the best il- lustrated by the work dome during the past year of the organization. There were disasters to the numper of 43 that it responded ¢, disasters'in which 850 persons were killed, 2500 injured and 65,000 rendered homeless. There Were 67 communities where the American Red Cross found reason to render its assistance and what that help was.can be imagined without waiting for those assisted to tell. hich or but in- as one not. el one driver In un-| "y 4ngse giving doubly who give to aveold colision drove hiS| ..y tne Red Cross renders immeas- nst a party of women about|,..p;.crest gervice by being ready to steo onto the sidewalk resulting In|respong when emergency calls. The of ome. At Jamalea Plain 2|gwork it does, or that it stands ready imousine were = trying 10145 go cannot fail to make such an im- same corner, admittedly a bad ing for a t t the 1sing their deaths. at a sy that stop avoided, and highways control is ed to been: hem = be dene before the BANDITRY IN NEW YORK. & it is unreasonab'e te expect v York can be once or that they should clever than those of oth- lce of n thwarting bandit= heless there cannot iny to which police tions and failed building A third any of these cases wou'd these Safety demands rise manifested that in have been subjected pression upon and appeal to the people of this country that interest and mem- until too late. TheY|perghin in it ghall be at the topnotch al- cach other bBut|wave The coming roil call must not dewalk where be disregarded. rol- THE NEW REGULATIONS. The issuance of regulations concern- ing the manufacture and sale of beer of the alcoholic content that prevailed be- fore prohibitio ndriects new attention to this much discussed question. Just before Attorney General Palmer left office he declared that it was le to make and sell beer for medic ’ purposes and that the internal revenuc bureau had no right to withho'd perin for such. It came as a decided sur- prise. Then came the change in admin- Istration and the beginning of a fight to enact anti-beer legislation so that there will be gncluded thereunder a provision against the manufacture and use of beer for medicinal as well as bev- erage purposes. In view of the efforts put forth and In order not to complicate the sitnation and are no ae- in op- fail ac- : cinal beer recognized as lezal under the e 110w have not been provided. - Theretore ' & holdup of the United|none has been made as.such. ‘Instead the heart of that city. Re-]op waiting until foreed to da_so by le- r the loot amount-|ga) measures. Secretary Mellon has now > there. seems that they what they many chances tainly week doesn’t reaet f the New York authorities, 1 empHasize the n - fferent conditions, 1 of arming the hand! ilted in a -lessening wagon drivers and son for.the feeling on the part the affair which 1il matter stolen is evi- to sur- deprive chance to use thelr weapons fssued the Tegulations. It has been op- posed by saloon keepers becagse they €3N gee where it Will hurt thelr ‘bhusiness, d:r- and it has been opposed by prohibition- to be simply a subterfuge and becauss it has no value as a medicine. The issuance of the regulations means of course the direction of greater atten- tlon and pressure on the anti-beer leg- islation. It can be exnected that early steps will be taken to get it off the side- track. 0 eed lers of EDITORIAL NOTES. ¢ onstrated. It is also en. The Bluenose miy b: the !?rmer, !:ut for those on the inside}it 18 the.red nose these days that tgnd when the magt |3rOUSeS envy. . ing “and what they * coted at nathral meh different precautions ortation of mall, ng the W litions san a with reason be larze community, of carrying the mail from Future | revelations may different situation but at the ir doesn't help of the discredit that ered Charles of Hungary r throne. good one. He could ut when he attempted to go from ticipat! different sitnation. Charles wasn't alone in his ambition was to-reeain the throne. His famfly ain to direct such a hold- re so that such bandits could any time or any corner for the postal service but some- of nrotection against Tt was ance upon such that the usual city to another was em- “unon the New York police e was obliged to leave.it in the mind of for- would sme day go back (o As long as he kept from the country that dream was entertain him- making all sorts of plans, to realization he encountered 2™*| How the German gir's will miss the American troops when they are recalled from the Rhine. - As the armament conference nearg we hear less .about the agenda. May it 11| cuffer a total eclinse. The present amount of unemployment permits of plenty of time to discuss the threatened strike on the raflroads. ex- °7% Hungary may be having its troubles |'but some relief would be affcrded if the ":‘5; former emperor could be kept away. he 9} The man on the corner says: With us has this week is Jack Frost; come to stay for the wintcr Whether wWelcome or not. ‘With the ordering of the coal miners back to work in Kansas conditions ought to improve there as long as Howat is in jafl. . . e Tt doesn’t take ‘much to get a fire go- ing In the woods, but there is invariably quite a struggle and much loss before it is checked. the With Babe Ruth golng to Chicago to see Commissioner Landis It Is pretty good evidencd that he reaizes he: cir- cletl the bases on a foul ball. an- It is well enough to advise people to The American Red Cross. has been in; it ajte any more ®regulations concerning medi- | ists because medicinal beer is believed} equally desirous of such an outcome and thers were those in Hungary who were desirons of the return of the Hapsburgs, Thore working for such an end were able to:convince him that in addition to supporters there'were:loyal soldiers who would fight for +him. Standing on the. cutside locking in.there-were paint- ed for him swch glowing pictures of the easy manmer in whichshe coud accom- plish the coup detatsthat hoe was unable to resist. He had had one ridiculous ex- perfence but that was thrown:into:the Siscard. Over. and:above:ail:thesobjec- tions that'were known to'exist and. all the ovposition that, he.could éxpect to scounter he was OUbsessed ¢ Viith fhe' mm‘wmwm!nl “ ho write as they feel when trying to qual- ify as scenario writers but it ought to be hinted that writing during a bilious attack ~should be avolded. i It there is to be a tax on medicinal whiskey~ which cannot be shown to be used :for other’than beverage pumposes, the opportunity to-tax‘medicinal beer in the same way ought not to be overlook- ed. i Chist»Stohe of*the engineers.brother- hoed - thinks *the men will go through with ithe : strike . regardless of what in- structlons they get. He and other lead- ere- might}clear nishing a‘fttle ‘fln -advice neverthe- thelr own skirts by fur-| reading character, study ears. “But you can’t come over Friday eve- ning, Ettinger,” protested Ettinger's lovely flancee. “You see, Dorodena is having a shower party for me at her house and I've got to go to that!” > “All right, Tl go with you,” announc- ed Ettinger with vast relief. “Oh, no,” explained the lovely, finan- cee, “you see you arem’t invited, mor ex- Dected. It's just the girls.” “I don’t call that much of a 'pa.rty grouched the young man in disdain. “What fun are you going to have with just-a bunch of girls What is a shower party, anyhow—this isn’t April.” “It's a kitchen shower,” his future wife explained kindly to him. “Every- body brings me some article that can be used in the Kkitchen you know, and it's perfectly lovely and lots of fun unwrap- ping ‘em ! “I don’t see why I can't go,” protested the young man “I'm going to eat what comes out of the kitchen things just as, much as you are, and anyhow. I guess' we can afford to buy our own ironware, if it comes to that.” “M:' goodness!” moaned the bride- elect. . “They haven't used ironware in kitchens since the stone age. Aluminum and glassware cost millions and we're lucky to have them thrust upon us. Can't you play around with some of-the boys that evening? You shouldn’t desert your old friends utterly, you know"” “You want to get rid of me,” insisted the young man in hurt tones ‘“You're glad to go, T always thought Dorodena was friendly toward me, but it is easily seen that she is determined to undermine our happiness. Why couldn't she have given airegular party and asked the men? It's ridiculous.” ¢ “I never knew you to act so, Ettinger,” said the voung woman, With raised eye- brows. “You ou@gt to be glad my friends think cnnugh of me to do such nice things—" “I don’t consider-it nice in the' least,” said the young. “Separating us like this! Here I shall spend a long, gloomy, lonesome evening, wh'e you are out in the gay lights having the fud of your life, without me, and, in fact, you won't even think of me #1 évening I shan’t count in the least. It's unbearable!” “Of course I'll think of you, Ettinger,” | the bride-elect promised him. “When? How gloomy young man. “My goodness I elect. often?” insisted = the exclaimed the bride- “How can I say? I can look at} my wrma wamh every five minutes, if you like, and stop. the game of bridge while I devote fifteen seconds to thinking of you. Nobody'll mlnd. The girls "1 enjoy it!” | - ‘That‘s right,” sajd the young man bit- terly “Make a joke of it! I tell you'it's a serious situation. When you are mar- ried to a person you should hoth enjoy the same things and a unity of thought and—er—all that sort of thing. be impossible for ane to have a really good time without the other and it is a blow to me, Algeria, to dlscover ‘how airily you can throw me aside!” “But I'm not married to you Bttinger,” lovely finnacee pointed out- carcfully. h5“1 I don’t mind saying that I think you are hehaving quite foolishly about this simple little party.” “It isn’t.the party I am objecting to,” the young man told her “It is the heart- lessness with which you welcome the op- portunity. You haven't shown a particle of regret over our wasted -evening; in fact, you seemd quite overjoyed at the idea of going to Dorodena’s Of course, I always want you to enjoy yourself, but in this case I don’t see how you can do e . “I stmply can't stay home from it,” ex- ‘postulated thé bride-elect. “becauss it is given for me—and, anvhow, how should you like having me send my regrets with the excuse that you didr’t want me to.go? The girls would '.hmk you were perfectly dreadful, Ettinger, ahd—" “The fact remains that you care more for the girls than for me, but g0 on,” said Ettinger with heroic calm. “I sup- pose I expected too much. Like many others, T'll simply have to endure what is handed out to me—" “Isn’t there anything you'd enjoy do- ing Friday evening?” inquired his lovely flancee, wrinkling her brow thoughtfully. “Why—er—I don’t know,” said the young man. “Can’t you call up Tully?” she suggest- ed. ‘The young man coughed. “To tell the truth,” he said, “Tully has a little party at his rooms tdnight and he says it's in my honor, and I've simply got to come, It isn't that I want to go at all, and T'd much rather be with you, but, “Well, I wondered what ailed you, and | said the lovely financee in “You needn't have gone to all relief. that trouble—for mercy’s sake, go on to your dd party. The idea!—Bxchange. e e AT T R ODD iINCIDENTS IN AMEEICAN HISTORY SEPTEMBER GALE OF 1815. Since the, scttlement of America this country has begn visited by a _great many severe storms, but none has reached the extent of the great Septem- ber gale of 1815. It was a most re- markable hurricang, and especially in its various phenomena of suddenness. severity and power. It took place on September 23, sv) prevailed throughout ali New Englant. It was ushered in by a severe rain storm which lasted twenty-four hours. Early on the morning .of the 23d the wind shift to the east, and began to hu,w in gus It continued to toward the south and to changy rease in vi c ile ‘the ra abated. Between 9 and 10 o'clock in the-morning it began to exci n. Chimneys and trees we . erg blown ov D he storm the alr had a pecu- It w: considerably by the exce: ve agitation and d with the leaves of traes and ances, which were raised nht, and whirled about in i of belng direcily for- ard as in a common storm. The rivers raged and foamed sea, i to the feet in the form of thin, w along in light su a eddies, Jike the orm, and the spray was raised ifted a snow in a violent snow storm. It ‘was imnossible for a to stand up—even the stoutest—in exposed to the full force of the The pressure was like that of a current of wat Pedestrians couM With great difficulty, hear each other speak &r the distance of two or three yards. *The most calamitor destruction be- 1l the trees—orchards and forests ex- b lation the like off fore .or mnce been seen to the same extent in this country. 1 the roads of o bractically impa with trees and othe A £ and beautl- ful t n Poston ma'l and in other publiec par some of which measured from eizht to twelve feet in circumfer- ence, were torn un by the roots and pros- trated. In the town of Dorchester, of only fivo thousand, inhabita teen houses were \u’\"oolbd neys blown down and about e demolished. Rhode Tsland felt the full force of tha remarkable gale. Providence suffered to the ,amount of millions of dollars, ac- companied with a fearful Joss of life, a§ in other places. The wind was so stronz in the harbor that ves: were actually driven over the wharves and through the streets. All w3s confusion and dismay through- England. Bvery v was render- ed futile by the violence of *he wind. the rapid tise of the streams and the falling of trees, and all such cnosidera- tion was soon forgotten in the more im- | Doftant one of selfynreservation. Am awful sceng Wes to be observed every- where, A’1 along the New as far sorh done to the ¢ Bneland coast and New York the damage ins was immense, hun- dreds of vessels with thelr cargoes be- Ing wrecked, and almost every seaport « well as inland tqwn suffered to some extent. mala Was also severely felt oft ras. in the Gulf Stream, off tha canes wf Delaware. at Sandy Hook, Nantucket Shoals and Cane Ann. A suf- focating current of alr, as from a hot bath, accompanied the middle stage of the tempest. Flocks of eulls from the far-off ocean were seen after the storm | hundreds of miles iniand throughout New | England, Tt fs universally admitted that there is mo account of a storm or gale In all respects so remarkabe In its phenom- found in the history of the United States. Other hurricanes there have been. laving waste whatever came in their way, bui they have been comparatively lim$te& in thelr extent and destryctlveness. The centre or tha lm- its of this great and memorable tempest scientific investigations were unable to determine. The sea had washed to such an extent inland fhat in multitudes of Instances the saltiness of the wells and watering vlaces continued unabated for six months, or until the end of the fol- lowing March. For fifty vears after its occurrence the great Sentember gale was always mentioned with. a shudder by the New Enganders. (Tomorrow—Our Two Black Fridays.) READ YOUR CHARACTER By Digby Phillips, Copyrighted 1521 Flat Ears If you want to become proficient at Intuitively we all approximate character reading from such features as the-eves and the _ chin. But we've never learned to look at ears in the rough and ready guess mthod. It remained for science to step forward with the real stories that ears tell. You have seen that the.outstanding ear indicates a certain amount of executive ability, a certain' lack of bashfulness, a natural inclination to step forward with opinions and upon cceasion to take charge of things instinctinctively. The opposite of “extension” ears that is to say, ears which lie flat against the head indicates exactly opposite traits. It makes no difference whether the ears are big or little (for the indications of size are a different matter.)s flat-eared persons being in the class of reticence. They are not as a rule talkers, though if they do talk a great deal you will be surprised upon remembering a Tecent con’ ation with them, to realize how ittie they have really told you of their own thoughts and opinions. They say girls can’t keep secrets, but you'll find that the ones whose ears lie close ti their heads can, particularly those secrets which concern themselves. It follows that such people are tactful. They do not blurt things out. They thinks before they talk. - Tomorrow—The Pot-hooked “b,” FORD’S ROADS AND THE UNIONS It was at first proclaimed something of a flourish by railroad union spok2smen, before their arder cooled considerably and defections in- creased, that their strike plan wa with all trackage within continental United States except one littiz railroad-—De- troit, Toledo & Irontyz. The men on Mr. Ford’s rafroad ars, of course, get- ting so much pay that there was no cceasion for their inc.usion in the| strike program. Detroit, Toleda & Iron- ton would s)ay an oasis in a railroad Sahara, But this, like the failure to inciude| Pennsylvania lines in the first strikei time schedule, is simply a ple: avoidance—or of impoteuace, Ford will have nothing unionism. Nor, for that ma men who work cn his line. call in such case would be a jest. There is, however, more than a nu-| merical significance. Mr. Ford's rail- roading case is exceptional in than the traffic-creating role and the rate division power: attaching t}‘?rn‘(o In operation heoutrages some of the| most cherished tenets of unionism. Mr. Ford has just made some fur- ther animadversions on the question that are rather typical. considers railroad dividends a “burden” on railroads and on their customers— but omits any reference to such bur- dens on Ford stockholders or Ford car owners. He pictures tixa ratio of freight train weight' to freight train load much beyond what general rail- road statistics suggest. He complains of elaborate accounting—but fails to not its main cause in an excess cf regulation. Very distinctly he fails “to include any of the issues as,to conditions or “agre- ments” which the railfoad union heads declare are the backbone of their case, As a matter of fact, Mr. Ford's own reported practice of operation” on-the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton is the very essence of negation 0f these agree- ments. Instead of rigorously splitting the labor force into segregated classes, none of which may do cretain minute- ly specified tasks allotted to some oth er class, he has apparently massed kLis labor force into one free and available total. Instead of a half-dozen men to install and repair a headlight, or the drafting of other 5, to tighten a nut or bolt for an engineer he actually uses brakemen and con- ductors for a host of simple tasks apart from their customary duties,—even to sweeping up. Thereby he saves much in time and money and in number of workers need- ful. The lesses number thus required he can well afford to rar almost balf again above the usuxl scase. ‘Were all other, especially the larg- er, railroads able to emulate the little Ford line in traffic creation and in- surance and in strategic control of rate .divisions—which latter ‘would resemble those Greenlanders who lived by taking in one another's washing— Mr Ford’s railroad doctrines might have more significance than they seem as yet to afford. But it is gnite possible he yet may be able to suggest Some ————.—.—_— Try This for Indigestion Foley. Cathartic Tablets are just the thing for constipation. Their action is wholesome and thoroughly cleansing, without griping, nausea or inconvenience. They banish headache, biliousness, bioat. g gas, bad breath, coated tongue and ler !ymptom! of disordered digestion. rs. H. J. Marchard, 36 Lawrence St., Salem. Mass., writes: “l used Foley Cathartic Tablets for constipation Vnth gvod results, I keep them in the hmum o 'he Lee & Osgood Co. ness befers the pubfc, there is 10 ter than _the advertisius WHEN YOU WANT to put your busi- ‘medi- torough more | railroad i Hel Dee’ Seated TUrlc Acid ne.wt- Are iorea A :ne Rheumatic P Starts to Leave the System Withia ety fows Fotras Every druggist. in this county is au- thorized to say to every rheumatic It should | sufferer that if iwo bottles of Allenrhu, the sure conqueror of rheumatism, does not stop all agony, reduce swollen joints and do away Wwith even the sllfhtest twinge of rheumatic pain, he I gladly return your money with- out comment: Allenrhu has been tried and tested for years, and really marvelous resuits have been accomplished in the most severe cases where the suffering and agony was inlense and piteous and where the patient was helpless. Mr. James H. Allep, the discoverer of Allenrhu, whe Tor many wears suffered the -torments of acute rheumatisd, de- sifes.all sufferers to know that he does not want a cent of anyone’s money un- less Allenrhu decisively.conquers this worst of all @lseases_ dnd he has in- structed Lee & Osgood to guarantee it in every inmstance, Ladies Attention! Buy your fall and winter coat- ings and cloakings direct from the mill at mill prices. Fine Suede, Velours and Polo Cloth, GLEN WOOLEN MILLS Wightman’s Switch Noywich Town [ Nickel Plating UNITED METALS MFG. i . COMPANY, Ine. Nerwich, ., .. .. .. Conn. mechanical betterments,—as many many men have done before him. And perhaps he_is supplying an.ob- Ject lesson not without certain values in relation to the -labor issue. One thing is suré,—that the case of the Detroit, Toledo & Ironton is a petard- hoisting exemplar for the unions to cite—Boston News Bureau, IN THE DAY’S NEWS THE TRANSVAAL OF PERU. “While tear gas, bomhing plan long range guns now commonly in European war news, one outhreak finds its way into newspapers which probably Is marked by poisoned arrows, makes known as ‘head breakers' and a iform of ‘wireless telegraphy’ which an- tedates civilized aerial cdmmunication :if natives are taking part in it,” says bulletin of the National Geographic So- ciety's, Washington, D. C., headquar- ters concerning the reported revolution in Northern Peru. The revolt referred to is that at Yurl- maguas, Peru, a town lying southeast of Tquitos, Perm's great inland port. “Yurimaguas Iles in the Transvaal of South America—; aal which awalts a Cecil s ory a Daniel Boone to be its nioneer,” the bulletin continues. “Spa rds found gold ia the fastnesses of the Montana, as this re- gion is caled, but modern commerclal prospectors are more interested in the ‘black gold,’ inz the rubber, which abounds _in “Tha_Maranon, !(he Upper tana region. and gure as the Peruvians cail Amazon, pierces the Mon- and its tributaries fort a vast metwork of natural waterways {which already are beginning to bear treasure laden carriers. Yurimaguas {lies south of the M along one of this river's most {tributarfes, the Yufimaguas is whence cargoes stedmers which {continent for a a {from New York to Huallaga. 500 miles Remote from Tquitos, re transferred to ocean nst crawl across a stance equalling that rth Dakota before reaching salt water. To the west the ‘Andean neaks b: he waterway to the Pacific; but su have been made }for a trans Andean rai'road which whl gird Lorenzo, where the Huallaga emp- ties into the Maranon, to Paita, the Pa- cific port of Northern Peru. “Growlng appreclation of this land of | commercial promise is indicated on the i National Geographic Soclety’s new man of South America, wherein a vast terri- tory, laratr than our state of Montana, and bounded by the Maranon on the south, Ecnador on the west, and Colom- bia to the mnorth, now claimed. In parts, by all three po Tquitos, whera the revoutionary activities began in early summer, is held by Peru, but lies on de ‘of the Mdranon, where Fenador's claims extend. “Reference frequently is made to this region as the ‘Land of the Incas’ The desiznation wou'd be more’ nearly cor- rect were it called an ‘outlying land of the Inc for the surprising c tion of vre-Pizzaro days had. its cen some €00 miles farther south, at Cuzco, near which the Pomneii of the western world, Machu Piochu, was unearthed by a National Geographic Society expedi- tion. “Long it was a question whether the people who built white granite mam- sions, temples, and staircase farms along the canvoms of the Urubamba, and probably' gave. to. the world the humble votato, a far greater gift than the gold which the Soaniards sought— whether these peop'e With a Roman CORNS Lift Off with Fingers ter Doesnc nurt a Drop a little Freezone on' an aching corn, instantly that corn stops hurting then shortly you life it right off with fingers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of Freezone for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the calluses, For Constxpated Bowels—Bflldas ‘Lwer : The nicest eathartic-laxative. to oletely by morning and M foel physic your bowels when you have. Headache Biliousness Colds Indigestion . Dizziness. Sour Stomach is candy-like Cascarets. One or two tonight will empty your bowels com- Coats, Suits Blouses ~ OUR LONG ESTABLISHED REPUTATION IN TAILORING o L GUARANTEE WE CAN SATISFY YOUR i READY TO WEAR NEEDS = HAGBERG 310 Main Street . Now Is the Time to Make Repairs Prices Are Lower. SHINGLES, NAILS—OAK, MAPLE AND PINE FLOORING—WALL BOARD, ETC. CALL H. F. and A. J. DAWLEY NORWICH, CONN. love of urban refinements penetrated the | versation carried on across the Mara- plateau wilderness in the region of the|Dnon, at that point nearly a thind of a Maranon and the Huallaga. mile wide.” “Here geographic explorers were the The world contains about 140 grams van guard of fortune seckers, for the i ] of prepared radium, of which more than Expeditions to morthern Peru rodght I back not_only Teport of tribes whichihad | I2f Was produced by a single Ameri ical cor any. recognized Inca rule at Cuzco, but full-|San chem Y er accounts of the rich timber treasures g development. Tribes now in- ng the Montana are thought to be cended from those which massa- sh adventurers and ouraged furt territory. “The munderous Chunchos; terror o" Montana trave'ers, are only one of many tribes to he found there: and the Death only a matter of short time, has fomnd a| Don’t wait until pains and aches the primi- live as they become incurable diseases. Avoid pamful consequences by taking customs of peoples wi before Colimbus set foot on tribes cover an the fcan soil. octava of eciv These ization ranging from Tnje inies, who have'but two words their spoken lanzuage, to se have the v devieo: reterred to above. “In’ each dwelling among these trib there is a hollov ho'es of various siz distances -from each residents had an 1ment scale of five notes which, howe not used to vproduce music, but to i nal their messages in code from house In view of the high and com- ation found at Machu Picchu urdrising to learn that sav- ised a way to gossip, and ver- haps to trade, before white h(cay' to use the telephome. When these in® with was Shea’s News Burean MAGAZINE SPECIALIST UNION SQUARE struments were placed in the onen long exchanged ; to rally the be als could and an importa tribal warriors when attack One observ The reason fdr the continued good health of some children is simple enough Especially when you know the inds, some of which are given here VERY_mother is proud of a healthy, strong youngster that radiates buoyant life and energy. She has reason to be proud, because the child’s good health proves her wisdom in the selection of the food she.gives her boy or girl - , All mothers should know that growing children require a balanced diet, a diet containing the food ele< - ments needed for building and energizing the little body. Grape-Nuts, the rich, nourishing food made from whole wheat flour and malted barley, served with milk best growth and development. Grape-Nuts helps make sound teeth, strong nerves andpureredbbod,mdfathepnhethuohm more wholesome or delicious. Go to your grocer today and get a package of strength-giving Grape-Nuts. 'Let the children have ail they want, with milk, cream or stewed fruit, or made into an appetizing pudding, Grape-Nuts isa food that will be relished by every memiber of the family. Grape-Nuts—the Body Builder “Thereullusou” "