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e Sorwich Bulletin " and’ g.‘..eiee 125 YEARS OLD Sumdtpien peree 1 o week; 506 & month; $8.04 . reas, _flu“fl.mm- Bustnss Ofies. &85, Balletts BAlierial i Offcd. 3 CHureh MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATES PRESS, The Amecisted Prem o exclusively entitied » e toh- for republiestiea of ail sews otha CICULATON WEEK ENDING NOV. 19th, 1821 11,652 PREMIER BRIAND'S ADDRESS, With deep interest has been awaited the address which Premier Briand of France was scheduled to make to the tofiferéhce on the limitation of arma- mént. Particular attention has been di- rected to what he would hive to 8ay be- cAtse of the bearing it would have upon the armies. Frande has ween regarded as maintaining a large army and the apin- lon has prevailed that it would insist upon doing so, not with the militaristic vitw that gulded Gérmany but for the burpose of protecting Itself against whatever mové might be made by Ger- many for, having as the premier point- ed out been invaded three times in a century by the forces of Géfmany and been ablized to suffer the losses and fevastation, France takes the view that has a right to be suspicious. Premier Briand's purpose was to ple- ire the gituation as it Is, the conditions that have had to be met and to et the world know that it is not by choles that it ls maintalning a large army while others ,are reducing, but simply to insuré a protection which 1t belleves it can get In no other way unless thers s some pledge of security. When the premier pointed ofit that re- ductions had begun in what he referred to as “continental” troops, that the mil- \tary term of serviee has been reduced from threa to two years and that it Is lanned to emt It soon 10 a year and a half, and that Franes plans to reduce By half its present regular army, doesn't mean that France is ready to do what this eountry a!d In ecutting its army of over four million 160,000 but France shows its readiness to make a substantia and it was fur: t ndicated that it was wiling to do more could it ba glven the aseirance wonld he sunported in case of fhire dangers that might dévelon. And vét Franee does nét take the position of Asking for such help. It s ready and wiiing protect iteelt and bellevas that 1t ean 4b i, even inder the pro- gramme which It Bas Indlcated, but i 1s when askéd t4 do mote If the way of reduced land armament that It ralsesths question of gwarantess for 1§ security. to cut that it PORTO RICO'S DIFFICULTIES, There must ng position to the situation which has devel- n Porto Rico and which asizéd by the alleged » any prejudge has been ing fire to which was bringing Governor Reily of Porto Rico to Néw Y . There opposit There those on the Island who do net like way he has expressed himself re- garding the efforts of certain onés who endeavoring to make the island an ependent rapublic. srmation {s given out to the effect the element in the dependence 1s deckedly By a largs majority proval of the i part ton to Governor Rely at slards seeking small and there is ap- ition of the island as a of the United States and of the administration o Goverhor Refly. That can he substantiated and more will prob- ab’y be heard of it in the future. Gov- ernor Reily has come to Washington for the piirppse of making a réport coROAFA- Ing his administration and affairs In the tsland for tha Informatlon of the ad- ministration and for the purpose of maling recommendations for leglslation which he belleves the island js en ed that repert it is to be expect- 84 that a better idea can he gotten from the conditfona that have developel #mong the Porto Risank, w er the pafly of the Inde. Pendents is large or small, whether Gov- érior Relly 18 approved in the way he has administared tha government of the islands there éan Bé n6 justification for the acts of sétting fire to a vessal which #ndangered Ruman life and valuabe Property. acts are not golng to #ain any sympathy for thoss who com- imitted them or-for ths cause they un- dertake to represent. If that is the ex- pression of thelr pollcids nothing could Be done that would give their causs & black eye auicker than that very thing. Whatever may be the majority or the Winority view In the island there is no justification for lawless acts amainst the governor pérsonally, or agalnst him In #6h A MARRAr A to threaten the Mves or the property of others in no ¥ay concerned. A party that approves #uch acts onght to forfelt all recognl- tion I 4 civiMaed eountry, Sfuch FEEOSLAVIA AND ALBANIA, As lofig as It ssemed necessary to do #o King Aletandar of Jugosiavia has threugh his intarviews effectively set at fest fhe rumor to the effect that he was #oing to resign. Jumping at éonelu- #lons s frequently indulged in and such it wotild seetn wak the éase In regani 16 the réport concérning abaleation. His fallure to hasen to Balgrade at the #arllest possible moment &ems to have ®Marteq some peaple to thinking and the téngues to wagging, but to no purpose éxcépt to Araw forth from the king the @ésertion that the rumors are Without foundation. King Alexander will not leave the post and he will not dodge the duties that go wi'h it. Perhaps what is of comosrn at the prekent {lime I8 the deciaratfon by Alexander that the moMization of its army on the Al Banian.front was not an act of hostility 15 Albania but for the purpose of de- #8nding its territory against Albanian Bandite. THS might stem t6 be & rather strenuous method of dealing with bandit wbttuitles, In view of the depredations Wiich:the Jugoslave are alleged to have Swated n Albanis, but it the agreement it | between the nelghbors, recently reached, to stop quarrelling, live peacefully and abide by the \council of the allied am- bassadors regarding the boundary line, amounts to anything an improvement in conditions shguid be expected. What the future may bring forth m that new country of Jugoslavia, or be- tweén it and Albania no/one can teli. feached might mean more between some othérs than it does in that quarter of the globe. Yet there 15 no pwmse wiwis adhererics to an understanding 1§ more needed. ~ It doésn't require much for the display of hostflity there to quick 1y develop into serious trouble. Fire- brands in a powder factory are not like- 1y to be productive of worse resuis. ¥ur that feason it is going o ca'l for cars ful regdrd for the rights of others -if thers is golng to be that avoidance of frictlon which s so much to he desircd. May King Alexander be the means of accomplishing the unusual, CUTTING TROLLEY FARES. It is not surprising in view of action of the public utilities commi: in granting a five cent trolley fare Norwalk and Bridgeport that other see- tions of the state should be scek ductions. The fact that those communi- ties are selected for a test doesr any difference to others who feel t they ought not to be obliged to pay te cents for service which others are ge ting ‘for five. From the indications at the present time, although they have not b on the five-cent basis in Dridgeport Jong enough to give any definite i plan is going to work out 1s little to encourage the fivecent fare will produce credsed patronage the re will give the company an adequ turn on its investment. Norw: result of its first under duced fare shows a loss in nearly §700 over the when a ten-cent fare was < City officials of New H terbury have a proposition for cent fare provided the com unwilling to grant them a ni and through some such reduction rates it is belleved that trolle ean be reduced with justice to rons and company. It is thi » ho unde: énue weel cess. There tue crutting was done gra ually and when it v réduced fare had resulted patronage to the extent that the r nue warranted a further reduction was made, the ldea b g 1o so the fare that the company would g proper return for tho service rende and the patron. would not 4 be charged. Whether the drop Seven from ten cents would be the proner one is uncertain but better to make soveral rather than to drop to t was Inadequate and be it again. If the report is true of President Harding to endeavor to of gas as a cessful the ¢ it certainiy and at one to its use. with ga: been that such in been given to it that af warfere is bound to % o gas uas been pe where it is po great duantities an the destruction forces but ties and ial | part of | rasort to | fight & bring not to wi cause_ hen can e can likewiss don and_in the present conditions t dus attention given to th it can haraly orie nation will unde; | without knowirg th ing to do be preparation ikew How may be opvosed to it-and a sh it it is certain ta be re as the others can be ex employ it. Thus it would ap rmament confe; to secure whereby could be ru 1s a demand that t #0, but the plea of the w for protection thro: long gh such v the demand for them for co: tndicate 1little prospect of connection with gas there sufficient reason why each tion should desire to see and by concerted a n it can b EDITORIAL NOTE The man on th Ing i3 a great exerc users of the highy corner sa e by Having arrlved at Madeira be expected that Charles and henceforth tend strictly to thet or needlework. “Diaz now an Indfan” sa: line. That of course is simply ing what a lot of those Who oppos In war thought a long time ago. Officers of the navy do %ee the naval holiday go i Théy are thinking of th their jobs rather than the taxpayers, not want British steamship companies are do- Ing their best to meet immigration re strictions In this-country, a cause whi it carefuly followed will avoid much trouble for all, A New York alderman is urging a dc vice to prevent trucks from specding b scaling the throttles, Many there that will say Amen to that both w the idea of checking speed and noise. Those junk dealers who buy in the battleships to be scrapped, if they outbid Henry Ford, ought to have some inter- esting propositions to offer to the B éxpect to be at peace. — e e Sixty per cent. of the government workers in the District of Columbia are thefficlent and incompetent to perform their duties aceording to Mr. Dawes. More Toom for . housecleaning and a chance to prevent waste, The United States and Japan have launched powerful new warships at the #ame time. Sending them, as planned, to the serap heap will be a waste money but scrapping now will involve many - millions less than a year from now or twenty years lence, The fact that &n agreement has been| which was adopted, in Lynn with sue-| Xans of thos3 other nations that never.| Yimen I saw our meighbor, Mrs. Ridge- wise, in a stunning Batik blouse, which she had made herself, I asked her to Help maie one. But I found it a fussy and icult jcb for an inexperienced person. After struggling with the hot wax on-the Georgette crepe, under her supervision, I at last gave up ih despaif. “Dear Mrs. Ridgewise, if you'll only do this for rhe, you are so wonderfully clever, I'll be Qelizhted to do somethifg for you any time I can,” I begged. | “Thank you,” she replied. “As I have {10 maid, 'l be charmed to park Danny with you tomorrow afternoon.” rile I thought it was inconsiderats of her to ask me to take care of her 3-year old son for four or five hours, of course I could not refuse, particuldrly a8 I was de 2 of having her finish the Batik pattern on my blouse. She brought him to me yesterday, just as Tilly was going for her afternoon out. ‘We played for a time and then I sald I'd ta im to see my little cousin, Eliz- Little Elizabeth herself opened the door wigen we arrived, and I noticed a shidé of disappoinfment pass over her face as let us in. I asked for Betty. “Oh, mother has gone out,” said she, { “so that I can have the house for my club. ! Mother says she can trust us perfectly to-] be little ladies, and we are going to have an initiation this afterncon, Couin ow ‘very interssting’ and exciting, beth” T told Mr. “I suppose you 1 need me then? Molly is home, olly is going to serve the its after the initiation,” Kliza- replied with dignity. “It's a real Cousin Lucile, with *by-laws, re- nents and a- president and every- | “How very nice, dear. I hope your ini- ion Will go off beautifully. I have tc an errand near here, dearie, and I'd like to leave Danny with you, just for a | ow be a good boy, ~~ you some too. Eliz- for your club.” “ousin Lueile!” said 1 down the steps. T hur- > street toward Generva Chamberlain's hotss. “uwell, Liticlle,” Générva dxelaimed, how jolly that you droppéed it just néw. My Brother has juft tél&phond tRAt He bringing his new Caf Hoe And He Wishea mé to take 2 &pin in it. New you éan 0 along ; BT ot thow whether 1 showd, you &ee” 1 béghm “Why, of c-w:se ot 84h,” Gendrva in- . “Héré comés Dud now. He'll be delighited to Havé you With ts.” it &eemd such & pléasdnt chifice 16 &6t better acquaintéd with Dudley Cham- bériain that 1 &im AT FBE resi8t what 1 supposed would be mérdly & ewi whirl througa e an L developéd that Dudley Wished to &5 out t6 LoAg- wood and Bevérly Hills, dnd, of courde, T couldn’t be a spoil-&port 4hd Insist 6n being taken back {6 Bétty's. Good gracious, Lucile, where havé you been?” askéd mother crossly when I gbt home laté for dinnér. “Mrs. Ridgewise has just about been frantié over Dinny.” “Oh, yés, Danny !'* T said, suddenly #é- membering m¥ little éharge. “Yeés, Danny ! répeatéd mother sevets- ly. “I had no idéa whére you wete dr anything about Danfly, until Bétty eall- ed up and asked to have some one.sent at once for him. She said little EMpa- abeth was hAving somé kind of & meeting of her little friende, and that Dafiny was so naughty and troublésomé that he apéil- the whole affair and tHat whén Betty came home from AowfiteWn she found Elizabeth really Sick With disappointment and nervousnéss.” “NoWw, mother, you always repreach me, whatever happens,” I protestéd. “I didn’t intend to leave him theré moré than & few minutes. My being gone so long was entirely accidéntal, and 1 think it re¥- fectly absurd for Betty to be upset. as you say, by such a small conterstemps. Her lack of self-control is a very bad example to little Elisabeth. No wondér the poor child 18 nérvous.” “Lucile, you are thé most etasperating person!” exclaimed mother; £o unkindly that it brought the tears to my &yes, and I went right to my foom. Cousin Farny brought my dlfinér up to me, and when she found what a bad headache I had she promised to make up the Batik blouse for me as €oon a8 Mrs. Ridgewise bFings it homeé,—Chicago News. Whistler was that of John Ruskin, the the plaintiff alleged had libeled him in & pictures exhibited lery entitled “A Noc- and Gold.” The follow- bicctionable passage which ler's sake, no less than of the purchaser, ght not to have ad- ks into the gdllery in which cated conceit of the artist so d the aspetc of wilful I have seen and heard much e before now, but to 1 a coxcomb ask flinging a pot of paint n was that the sed as being bona fide m of the painting in mined by the attorney dmitted that he had Royal < academy ited. Also that ha the esperience of ‘Arrangement ht view of That is It was at 200 guineas. likely a stiffis Jso admitted d days. ot the for of a lifetime.” then propgsed ) to court, but this and instead e jurists 0 venor ery and viewed Tttt he artist. brou to wheéth, wer nskin Lad This letf the . for half decided other. If 4 person odern school the picture worth the diseussed price; s was a believer in the then Whistler was on the 1 £ ayas ublie, r too ill to at- word “‘coxcomb”™ What was a “cox- eneral hag om_the old idea of who wore a cap and comb in it, and went s for the amusement of s ‘Whistler,” buld not comp! if this " mo of his ures were 24 afforded much amuse- th, R. A, was then the works produced in the They were cer- a beautiful , indeed, a qualities, but He also testi- ot partial to Whis- orite of Ruskin, ne_picture criticized. ” had Deen described s and whitewash.” of Turner's latest works, up, Baron Huddleston said the jury to decide whether 1. fide or the result had been hour they asked the ¢ the meaning of the mposture:” Onee mors re- The learned judge then ve judement for the plaintift one farthing -(half a cent) READ YOUR CHARACTER By Digby Phillips, Copyrighted 1921 FINGERS OF DETAIL. If you didn't know anythihg about the science or character reading and had to solely upoh vation there would only be one way in which you could decide whether r not a person W nd of detail, and good enough ‘at de @ ‘jobs to be ins | trusted with them. t ould be by { obs ng them at work and noticing the work they turned cut, as well 4s their customis and habits. The science of character réading pre- sents another method, far quicker and moro convenient. You just look at a person’s fingers, If they're short you know that they ong to a person who ha§ no natural stitude for detail work. If they're long, clender and tapering, as deséribed in a previous article, youw'll knoWw he's a dreame: But i o 1 kipd o be ) they're long, but hot tapering cou know that you're look- on. who, v work may hanpen to be by :umstapces, is capable of taking real ‘delight in the handlihg of found | oy | instifict and untrained no matter what |- [poor animal suffered. detafls, who It slow and exaet, beth In mental processes and mmanual tasks. it it's ‘a lecturer You're looking at, yom can make up your mind that a ver¥ &reat number of peoplé will eonsidér him tiresome. He'll be %6 slow and éxact In the detafls of his dlscourse. Men with long fingers fidke good Watchmakers, accountants and engravs ers, for these are oceiipations éallink for the physica’ and méntal charastéristies With which théy are Wherally sndewad. But the lotig-fingered oned alss Hace 2 tendency to worry ovar triflas, becauss trifies usually’ are details. Tomrorow—"Extravagant Writing” LETTERS TO THE EDITOR The Leébanon Cas Mr. Editor: Thréugh yoéur paper 1 wish the people to fully understand how othérs in Norwich feél about the ine human treatmént 6! 4 hotsé up in Leba~ nof, If any oné misséd the artlels in Thtrs- day’s paper T'd like thém tb look it @@ or bettér still také a tep up té Lebanen to see for themdélves how tHe anitmal must have sufferéd as the place showd Whers he was tied {fi the Woods and ieft to starve to death. Thé p6or horse must have died by inches, He Was old, hav- ing given his bést life to his master -and never refuséd to do his share of work which was often too miuch for 6né hoFse. What iz the idea of haviig la%s and then not enféorcing thém. My business calls me to many of otr eastern citiés and néver do I rémembét such abusivé treatmént bélfig taksn #0 ightly. Thers is nothing too bad for that man and he shouldl be madé to feél n6w the Justict 18 what New Wwa want. S What citizen in our Rése of England does not féel that way?, Truly yours, A. R. BRUNELL. 18, 1821 GLEANED FROM FOREIGN EXCHANGES It is no use blinking the fact that our alliance with Japan is imtense'y UADOPU- lar “All our endeavors tb show that it has no point against America seern quits unavailing. Certalhly thé British course will be diffieult to Steer. If, at Afmeri- cw’s dictation, we Should thréatsh o break with ouf ally, and after all the conference should fa¥, we should be left fn a most invidlous position towards Ja- pan, and should have lost the only held we had unon her. 1If, on thé other hand, we do not easily yleld to American sen- timent in- this mattéer and the confer- ence fails, we shall be in th8 WoFst pos- sible position towards America and pos- Canada, too, Wherée thérd i§ alréady ntment at being denied An indepénd- ent Cafadlan delegation. Teléphone Extensions—Télephons 2x- tensions and additions are being pro- ceeded with at top spééd. In Lohdon severa! new exchanges have already heen completed. Othéfs aré nearing tha final stage, and thé County couneil oné i working. In thé medntimé the la¥ing of underground trunk linés ail 6vér the céuntry is béing pushed férward as fast as posstble, Already somé of the nérth- ern lines, connéctifiz largé towns, have been comipleted. In all ever 800 miles of cables have to Be pacéd underground it the telephone s¥stem is to be safe from intérruption by noWwstorms and hich winds. Already elght milllons have been authofized to be ralésd By the da- partment for the work, ahd tan mititens s a suggested total for the Whela pro- gramme. In the efty it Wwaa foufd that it cost more than £3 a f6dt t8 l&y 1,068 teat, Cheapér Bread—C. H. Tomkmns. of Gleba Farm, Wilby, one of th8 bikgast farmers in Northamptonshire, HAs giv- én his emploves notiee of a Purthér re- duction of 6s. a_ wéek, bringing thelr Waged down to 308 At the samé time he has offered them fléur it 2s. a stons, ana bread at 8d. for a 4ib. loaf. With the Minérf,—A large nmumber of Warwickshire minérd havé ‘ately shown a disinclination t6 pay Into their trade union. If thérd i3 a big defection the consequénces-will ba Serious for the unfon. becati®s duting the X strike, food vouchérs worth £35.000 wers issued upon shopkeepers. A largs pér- tion of thlz sum ls &tifl owing by the men, Including those tvho threatén te Break away. The executives have glven notice that thése Whéo A6 st pAy thalr share of the debt will be summoned. Union men have also passed a ré¥sld- tlon refusing to work with those #he ore employed durifig the strike, And Nor®ich, Nov [ealling upen thé executlvé to maks & stand agalnst the non-uhioh ‘aber. A bl éut In the wages of Forast st Dean miners has béen declded on by the joint district board. ThE PAY Will fiow be 7s. 5d. a day, as comparsd With 134, 9d. at the beginning 6f thé yedr. A drop of 10s. a ton Is recorded i the price of household coal at Folkéatofie, The actual pric~ announced for seabsfns chal at Folke'gd e Harbor Is fixed at £2 13s. a tBR. acainst £3 4. no%w Being charged.—London CHrénlete. Farmington—Mr. and Mré. Hérbert Knox Smith of Farmingtoh have had ik their guests Mrs. Smiths parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles H, Dietri¢h, of Omaha, Ngl: e‘.‘m m‘?flwwul member ol a membe: :hn t9 Which the AHsband belonged. e Rusband, of cotirse, was of the inion that muumm.:n im ity the z st e wife, bent on Raving the abe Him. work, rétortéd Sarcastically : 2 ofé in that b1 the :o-unn of IGN"I i:‘ n‘augwi stopped 1608 éAougH or" when (hm"u 4 ll}l the afgument. Wi q:wnm évés he murMured, b Onr Plan The young mafriea couple Had just rétirned from A hofiévinoon and the Wweit to her next deor nelghbor. aourss I'm hoFrbly gréen.” She co: you'll ‘halp me, wom't you, First I want to know how to our finances; Do you budgst ours ¥ ,“.:wl vet” the older woman amied. “We're not that ‘ar”yét. We still be onig to the ‘stréteh it' rank 6f families” 51 7 IN THE DAY’S NEWS THE YUKON ‘“Thé élosing of the Yukon River to Ravigation Decausé 6f icé, noted in 2 press dispatch late in October, serves 'the dbuble purpose of brifiging aAffu- ally to the atténtion of stay-At-homie Attericans one of the greatest of thelr Fivers, which of the majority 18 proba- bly little mefe than a name, and of arning of the southward thrust of the fcy fingérs of wintér which will soon gfasp the shores and stralts of the Great Lakes,' savs & bulletin from the D. Ci headquarters of the Natidnal Gegfraphic Sociaty. “The Yukon, deéspite the genera) fallure to fecognize it as such, is one of the gréat rivers of the world," con- tinues thé Bulletin. “It is over 2,30C mileg long and is both the longést and the largest river flowing inte Pacific watérs In the wéstérn hemisphere, sur- passing by a considerable margin its nearest compeétitors, the Columbia and the Colorado, Among all the rivers of North AmericA thé Yukon is surpass- ed in length only by the Mississippi system and the Mackenzie. It is longe thdn the St. Lawrence As wéll as al the other rivers axcépt the Mississipp system which flow Into the Gulf of Mexico or the Atlantic, “Though the discharge of the Yukon has not been accurately measured it is its trerendous volumn of water ra- ther than its léngth that causes it tc be ranked as a great river. tI is of colitse far outdistanced by the vast Amazof, gréitést of rivers, and the Congo, which probably ranks sécond But the Yukon hag béen esiimatel tc have thréa-fourths of the volumn of dis charge of the Missisgippi, and if thi: 8alimate be dccuraté the strzath which it pours into the seéa & probably athong the half d#zen greatest in the world “To Alaska, haretofore having nc highway 6f steel into its interior, the Yuko6n has béet indispensable, Berause of the, shallow bare at its mouth odéan Stéameérs cannot entér the river but &t thé hatbor of St. Michasl, just AOFtA of thé fhouth, fréizht is trins- féfr8d to shallow-draugn, &tern whec river steamers which ascend the stream not only through the breadith of Alas- kA, but for séveral hundred miles into Canada. “The Yukon, flowing through Alas- ka roughly frém east to west, divide: theé territory into northern and south- ern halves. Large areas along the banks of thé river afid its tributaries as wol as at cénaiderable distances from the stréam can thus be sérved by freight boats. The prifncipal objectives of the Fiver Bteamers, however, are Daw- 86f, on the Yukon about 80 miles in Canada and moré than 1360 miles from the mouth, and Fairbanks, the ‘metro- Polis’ of intérior Amska&near the head 8t favigation on the Tanana, & tri- butary 6f thé Yukon. “The Yukon is an intérnational riv- er, rising nearly 500 miles within Ca- nadian téfritory, And sweeping in s gréat &re 0 the nofth and east. Al- though thé river 15 over 2000 mile: Impure Blood Drags on Nerves A Course In Gude’s Pepto-Mangan Makes Blood Rich and Red Wheén blood gets thin and watery, clogged with Waste matter, as it does WHeR over-éxertion and straining €Atge exhaustion, there is a drag on the nerves. The body becomes fechle BecAlisé theré are not enough réd h'ond célls carrving oxygen to all parts of the body. Th& power of endurance is low and the slightést disturbance ruf- flés the nervés., Bverything and every- body is trying, Nothing seems to be right. Everything and everybody is really right, but the trouble is with weak blosd. Oneé of the things people who take Pepto-Mangan notice—aftér a short €5iiFse, three times a day, stéadily tak- ing thé liquid or the tabléte—is the csftaln, if gradual, return to normal. Slaep refrashés and food restores the erigrfy. Days are calmer. That is nofmal, héalthy blood doing its work. Get Gud¥'s Pépto-Mangan at your druggist. Look for thée name “Gude's Pepto-Mangan” 6n the package. Ad- vértisement. “You Can Do No Beiter Than Buy Our Wurst,” No Saled Complete Without Thumm’s Home-Made Mayonnaise THUMM' DELICATESSEN STORE 40 Frahklin Street Ladies, Attention! BUY YOUR FALL AND WINTER COATINGS AND CLOAKINGS DIRECT FROM THE MILL AT MILL PRICES. FINE SUEDE, VELOURS AND POLO 6LOTH. GLEN WOOLEN MILLS WIGHTMAN’S SWITCH NORWICH, CONN. - THE DIME SAVING BANK OF NORWICH hé régular Bemi:Annual Dividend R4S bésn declared at the rats of 4 eént. & vear from the earnings of he Past Kix mohths, and will be pay- able 6n .ind after November 15, 1921. FRANK L. WOODARD, Treasurar. will be a nation of real bread- winners. Bread — you eat it every day. You depend upon it for nourishment, strength, health. But you cheat yourself in great measure of all three unless you bake into your daily bread all the wonderful food-value of the whole wheat, Whole wheat flour alone gives you 100% of the health and nourishment stored by Nature in the wheat grain —the vital mineral salts and vitamines. Start making delicious whole wheat bread today with At Your Grocer’s Recipes in Every Bag Ground Fresh Daily by H. BENNETT BISCUIT CO.,N.Y. Millers and Bakers of Wheatsworth Whole Wheat Products long, one of its sources a 11 lake nzie—a brother stream o is within twenty-five miles of the salt] s magnitude—whica is now water to which it makes such a round- | z ning to feel the throttlifig about journey. “The existence of such a large river ; grip of frost, flowed almost unnoticed through a litté-known wilderness unti as the Yukon in the far nc was | the discovery of oil along its banke long unsuspected. A Russian lieaten-| MFousht it into the lime light. And in aat Zagoskin, enteted its mouth by|the eastern hemisphere three rivers boat in 1842 ang traversed it for sey-|Worthy to be classed among the might- eral hundred mil The Hudson Bay iest sireams of the earth—the Ob, the Yenisei and the Lena—pour hundreds of thousands of gallons of water Intc the Arctic each second in a mighty but losing battle against the congeal- ing power of cold.” Company had discovered its headwat ers in Canada: but the two bits of in formation were. not pieced The existence of the river as a stream of. great magnitude and length first became really known through the dar- ing and romantic proje installing | land telegraph wires' between America | ani Europe acro laska, Behring Straits and the wastes of . Reo-| bert Kennicott, in connec W this enterprise, blased the Yukon trai Of course, ve thy neighbor as my- rel but if he an amateur corne! player it can't be did. by descending the river in 1885. The| AS first trading steamer ascended the| LACOC TILE stream in 1869. The Yukon really came | gold in the Klondike in 1896, A PURE OLIVE OIL SOAP _“The Yukon is not alone in being a Imported from great river which has remained in com- parative obscurity because of its far Spain fbrfionestCastileiu LACO The Secret of Good Health When Nature requires assistance, she will not be slow in conveying to you an intimation of the fact. Decline of energy, inability to sleep well, head- ache, biliousness, constipation, a gens eralsluggishness of mind and bodyand any sign of digestive ‘‘unrest” should impel you to seek the aid of a reliable medicine without delay. There is no better—no surer—no safer—than this proven remedy. Beecham's Assist Nature back to normal action Take S“I'}'. e = 10c—12 P‘”’:u. 7 25¢c—40 pi ! in boxes l s 50c—90 pills SHINGLES AT A VERY ATTRACTIVE PRICE. ALSO A FULL LINE OF ALL KINDS OF LUMEER. GET OUR PRICES. Shetucket Coal & Lumber Co. Telephone 1257 REUBEN B. S. WASHBURN, Manager. eople’s Coal Co. We have just received a fresh " shipment of our famous coal. Let us solve your “Grate” Problem. Phone 542 74 Thames Strest