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Be overlsoked ‘made w) tecting the overcoming of the inclination cover up and hide conditions which dlerwich Bulletin and Qoufied 125 YEARS OLD eases {8 greventable. Throtgh a What progress has in the fight against tubercu- advancement is being shown the people against com- -Washingtt municable diseases, what help s being |filled with all kinds of auxiliary move- obtalned in the fighting of disease by|ments to glve the limitatioh of irma- tévealea in timé Wwomld pérmit of & cure ahd how a gréat a percentage of dls- special week devoted to the direction of the attéfiton of the generdl|limitation of armament? Well, if 1 were 'WASHINGTON AFFARRS | (Special to' The Bulletin.) ‘Washington, Deo. 5.—Washington is to|ment a jog In the right direction. Somie :flof them are - concerns, others very aib side-lights. council for the lifm~ ,naflfin of armament, which 18 primarily under the guidance of the Soeiety of Friends, is one of the genuine”going con- cerns. * And what is the couneil for the pliblic t6 steh faets still gréater bens-|to describs it as it impresses me today fits should be Telepbone Calle, Bulirtn Boduess Offico. & Bullstis Editorisi Ruoms, - Bulletts Job ¢Toe 3S:3 Tiiwantlc Ofiea 2 Churck e Telepbons 190 Norwich, Tuesday, Dec. 6, ual a greater sense of responsibility connection with personal hyglene. 1921, expanded five years sines 1900, VEMBER OF TKE AUSOCIAVED PRKSS, will keep extending it. 'Theére it ENFORCING fljfln‘. LAW. cases of the baseball players of CRRCULATION WEEK ENDING DEC. 3, 1921 11,671 CONGRESS AGAIN, The opening of the second session of tha 67th congress brings the national lesislators back to tjjeir duties at Wash- Ington for a sesJ that will probably through a half year or mWoPe, wing which time there will be much wutiness of an important nature to individual and organized baSeball stellar attractions. ist mean’ what the¥ Say. tend ransact. Tiecause it could be without dofng any harm, after the témporary tariff bill va4 ocntinued in force until a substi- ald he enacted, action upon the A#% bill was put over until this session. t has permitted additional ¢ma for the varlous provisions suggested and to take n just what a bearing ernational conditions should have legislation. will also be the budget as pre- nder the new arrangement to upon, and under that there to beegaved over two biflion ars for the year ending {n June 1923, reduction w for it, to anything. Certalnly it players. There can be no playing law and that b will be highly wel ; tomed by the country, There also re- defmlhea. St . hising the matter of the lagislation gor. ho situation in these cases was al i with the refunding of the forelgn Panama canal tolls, the New- 4a other bills Which cafme fast on while there other matters which will n congress well oceupled. action congréss will be to take in régard to the mament conference is of aln at the present time. of the conference 1s not haped that afy idéea.cafi be that it seems probable vill be the curtallment in construetion. will center today in the which President Harding will to congress and in which he atténtlo t5 ecertain actlon ought to get early consideration, It seems probable, as Intimated, that ion of the !law which they were about k tion. thelr way and did so. cept themselves.. By the decision spect it is entitled to. THE CHRISTMAS TREES. Airect whish Christmas. he will deal with the tariff apd the [can be better told after the holiday has merchant marifie and aboug them he [pasSed. It wi'l indeéed be unfortunate sertainly should have something Inter-|if there has been a wholesale cutting of ng to say, while the advocacy of sar'y handling of the bill regarding the war loans to forelgn countries would sertainly in keeping with the needs of the situation, be €O NECTICUT DOCTORS, According to the figures presented by the state commissioner of health and the relary of the Connecticut Medical 8o- there are 1600 physiclans in this as might be expected they are not equally distributed as to towns, ahd y are not all engaged fih general practice as 503 of them are speclalists. There are towns which are well pro- vided for but there are 46 which have 20 doctorat all and it is because of the war and the fact thag many who returh- #d therefrom desired to become special- ists t the lack Of general practition: #rs is attributed. The day of the country dvetor Had ot passed but it may seem t6 some of he communitles which are having a dif- fieult time endeavoring to interest one to e in their midst that it was pasé There are towns in other states which have considered the idea of sub= sidizing a physielan order to have the sick of the town given proper atten- It was regarded as a move for the good of the town to have medical sistanes obtainable when required 1uite the same a5 school facilities are an attraction to possible residents, ut even though there are 46 towns in the state which have no resident phy- leians it is a question if they are mot quile as well looked after today as they ever were If not better. Inasmueh.as it is now possible to eover lomg dis tances by telephone, to make quick re- sponse by automobile and in a lafge number of instances to have theé alg ot good roads the doctor ftoday, evef thongh he may live at 4 greatér ditance Is actually nearer to the patlent than he was in the days when it was neces- sery to hitch up a team and drive for the doctor and earry him to the ~siek The physielan today with all the modern eonveniences is brought in teuch with the patient quicker and easier than formerly -might have been the ease when & doctor llved in the town, though it ean be appreclated that the Hown that can get fts own physicidn 18 most ewtain to do so. 4 thém to sell. they Wefe cut. ‘Word comes from market thls year but that they will that the price will be higher. age without what with thgusands upon their hands, complete loss and a decided waste g60d matertal. practices of previous years will not repeated. EDITORIAL NOTES. to normal. day bleyele Tace. e e e L ting what is desired. = ths catkle is just the same. place their catds on thée table face ing proposition. and the starving in Russia there is lack of opportunities Christrias glving. HEALTH WEEK. The National Heaith Couficl] is an or- yanization which stands as the repre- #entative of a numbér of other ofgail: zations that afe working fof the better- ment of the publie health. While essh one s individually working alofig bpe- “al lines the council s interested if the general question of better health. Through the effort of this counefl there has been opened this week s na- tional campalgn for the advancement of It# object and week has neted as Health week, It #ame time as Edueation feed nof confiict with the 8 edncation that 18 béing Mhstances and the welfare Ithat is afmed at. Foth as to edueation ‘and heaith bound to see them. P . filled to its capacity of 1800. I i ! if i i ] L than is ¢ it ot Sriced animal” to zs-|es of its kind that hag doosn't | 1D America. in refusing The claim has just been made that duration of human life in this country has been|of the vehicles of war. Judge Landis regards the §sue in the the championship New York team, who in- sisted on going on a barnstorming tout|!he American delegates. although they knéw that it was in vio- | Fefér to is made up of orzanizations and lation of the rules, as that between the|has = can be disregar§ed with impunity by those players who have dévéloped into|organizeq assoclations and might be de- favorites when it cofmes to upholding the is the only view which Judge Landis, could reasonably take un- the more aggravated by the faet that the players had been warned of the provis- break, an dthelr course was in deliberate disregard of the existence of the restric- They were determined to have The penalties inflidted are the result and fi they stép to do a bit of reflecting they must re- alize that thére is fo one to blame ex- Judge Landls baseball 1aw means some- thing and should henceforth get the re- It Will only be a few days now before theré will be nut on sale the trees for Whether or_not there has been the effort made to bring about a conservation of these treés this" season the savins and the pines for the pur- pose of serving the trade and the mim- ber so far in excess of the demand, that catloads have to be carted to the dumps and burned in order to dispose of them. Heretofore there doesn't seem to have been any shortage in the large center it Wwé are to judge by the renorts of the number thrown away by those hodling Their valie is of course gone aftér Christmas arrives and there femains nothing for the dealers to do but t6 throw them on the dumps, With- out having served the puirpose for which New York to the €ffect that holly wreaths will be In the of a poores quality and becausé of the scareity 1t seems likely to be the case Tt was because of the radieal advance in the price of the Christmas trees a few years the public believed was a justified reason that the dealers in such holiday decorations were left With all the efforts be Ing put forth to sate trees and increase the lumber supnly it is to be hoped that With congress with us again there 18 something to amuse and entertain us. Times must certainly be getting back New York has another six By starting your Christmas snopping early plenty of time is allowed for get- The maf on the corner says: tiggs are getting {o be worth a fortumé again but Sapari | cannot expéét the others to and it be allowed to engage in a trad- With the Red Cross Christmas seals t do a Iittle The memibers of the glass trust who have been indieted ought to have been|adjourned tili Monday, March 31. able to see themseives as oOthers are The collapse of that new Brooklyn theatre was bad encugh but it was for- tunate that it happened before it was It is mervy of courss for Betgdoll ts|Tett could not see in the ight of the demand the feturn of $76,000 to fim be- | Jurors, but considering the humiliation of caude he is an Amerlcan citizen, but what eise could be expected of him? It was evident from the report that|mer some of the Filipinos would not approve | tlon in the city prison for a perled of it, but lke the little boy they want morg | tW0 months and a fine of $500.” good for them and/ don't seem to Chiéagé's 10d expert says three men |ty jail and & fine of § e B o b n?l;!lspued to be 1énient foakiig 00 . The | 1o 6 €0 lénien = :‘.;w:t:?cm ming up he made a . tingling The purpose is|I should say it was a great melting pot to develop an Increased interest in the(fcr big national organizations, whose possibilities, to {mpres upon the individ-|©riginal purposes may have been far in | aPart, but which are now stringly united the common cause of spreading broa@i- cast in this country and abroad, the de- sire permanent peace through a reduction The 'council E The | wants permanent peace—it believes the idea of Health week {8 to bring about[peoyiles of all nations want it, and that an interest in important eonditions that|Oh® Sure means of attaining it is to 't any- thing more preciofis thaf ‘good health. make it a eommon cause among the peo- B8 of the United States and the nations berosa the sea. ‘The éouriell must not be confused with @ advisory council of the conference. That I8 an officlal organization made up of iidividuals appointed by President Hafdire to aet as an advisory body to The council T oftielal status with the conference, 1t |8ithough it has the warm sympathy of dany of the delegates and of officers of the war and navy departments. Its makeup includes organizations whose miembership runs up to about seven mil- 1loa pegsons. It includes thirty or more Scribed ag a sort of federation of or- The fines and suspeni&ions make it evi- | &nizations ali seeking reduction of arm- dent that the baseball riiles as they ex- |ament The conten- tion has been and Still may bo that the|lB the fact that not only do the incom- rule which prevents those wWho Have participated in the world’s series from entering a barnstoriiing tour 1s unjust, that as soon as the Season is over they | President ana Mrs. Colidge ensconced in ought to be privileged to 8o as they|the identiical apartment at the Willard Dlease off or on thé baseball dlamond,|that Vice President and Mrs. Marshall put the fact remains nevertheless tMat o u at the present time it is-against the law|OMic'al life here; ye in baseball, and a8 long as it is forbid- den there should be mothing but respect That is the only ground that can be taken and have baseball law amount would be grossly unjust for the law to be en- forced in regard to a ‘few and not en- forced relat!v€ 0 others just because they happened to be some of the best Tliefe's another curious happenstance ifg presldent succeed the president who Steps dowhn and out, as as occupant of the White House, but the Incoming of the Hatding administration found Vice had occupled during their eight years of and there's one mire to be moted. en Mr. Tumulty, WP had served as secretary to Pre: dent Wilson, went out with the Wilson administration, the "secretary to Pre dent Harding, George B, Christian, step- ped right into the house then vacated by M: Tumulty. In personality and gen- eral make-up Mr. Christian and Mr. Tu- multy are as wide apart as the poles. But folks who know, say there is.one feature of their earlier secrétarial life to which they both unconsciously eling. Mr. Wilson was governor of New Jersey teforé becomihg president. Mr. Tumulty was his private secretary at that time. Mr. Harding was lientenant governor of Ohio and Mr. Christian was his secre- tary. And today, although Mr. President i3 tle proper manner in which to accost the rresident of the United States, “Gov. ernct” is the title- used by both those secretaries in the seclusion of office and da‘'ly routine. £ The convenelng of cengress at mnoon today and the president; fow will bring the first sign of life to the big capitol Wnilding th:# it has known since the recess begun ten days ago. Scarcely a senator or, member of cergress remained in town atter the cur- tain rung down on the last session. A winter of hard work. with no let up con- fronts congress and lts mombers havé evidently made the most of the little breathing spell fhey took between ses- slons. There i customary ten' day recess at Christmas but_nothing definite is likely to come of it. of to of Famous Trials FLACK CONSPIRATORS. Delving back into history, one finds many curious charges for which people have been iried and imprisoned, but one | which has never had a sequel was that| of former Sheriff Flack. his son, and a lawyer named. Meeks. They were exam- ined in New York on March 4, 1890, and it was alleged that Fiack was guilty of a conspiracy whereby he had gained a divorce from his wife under false pre- teises. H Flack hed started life as a poor book- ! binder and married a girl of 1% years. From a poor bookbindér he rose o the past of grand sachem of Tammany Hall. As he advanced further in political work he began to neglect his family more and imore. District Attorney George W. Goff had charge of the case for the prosecution. At the beginning he mergilessly flayed the character of the defenflant and showed that he had led a double life. It was| then charged that in order to live win his affinity he had given some papers -to his-son. When all papers were drawn up and ready, William, the son, spoke to his mother about separation. “She,” he said, “would get the Fifty-seventh street houss and $25 a week.”, Mr. Goff then stated that the following conversation took place: “Now, WIill,” said the mother to her son, “I don’t see what is the use of my gine all these papers!” “Oh, they are alPright,” was his reply. “Are you sure they are all right, Will?’ asked the mother, to which he answered, “Why, of course; can’t you trust your own/ flesh and blood ?” Then, It was alleged, Meeks, tfo law- ver, had visited the home With & paper he said was pertainipg to the house in Fifty- seventh strest. This really was a paper Wwhich contained supposed evidence in a mock ‘trial which they made Mrs. Flack belleve had occurred, and in which Mecks was supposed to be the referee_ All these papers; ihstead of being, as the mother thought, for a Separation, were in reality papers which would prove that Flack was divorced. Flack’s affinity and her sisters were persuaded to slgn the documents as Wwitnesses. So utterly repelling was the case that Coff sald to younsg Flack: “You betrayed" the mother that hore you. You were to protect her in the proeeedings, but instead, you left her imi the position that, if your father had pleased whep ks had gone across the line to some other state, he could have cast her off without oné penny, and sHe would have had nothing to appeal to In the law. You were faith- less to your mother. The ¢asé Was then be a of be up | no talk of eutting down the s “Thers certainly ought to be ~sqme way for people to live without paying rent or taxes,” complained the ihigenious man. “I'm in fayor of tent life—ho roof repaifs, no or electricity, with ih- Spectors ringing the bell just as you get inte the bathtub, and no one to answer thg dcor—no stair carpets wearing out and fo work to do except sweep the ank floors! Why hasn't Someone Started the movement?” “What are you going to stand your tent on?” objected the systematic man with interest. “They'il soak you for the land in the first place and besides taxes on that they'll be laying brick pave- ments and concrete walks, sewers, mains and other embroideries out in front and there'll be special assessments, so Where do you get off?” ‘“Well, I guess I could build 2 platform out in a creek somewhere, couldn’t I?” irritably demanded the ingeious man, “And set up my tent on that! I could make the shore in two jumps— “Creeks always belong to farmers, explained the systematic man firm'y. “Never in your Mfe have you ever met a creek wandering about ~unattached. And farmers post signs all over thelr property and hide deputy sheriffs with large tin stars behind every bush. Your creek idea is a flivver!” something new, K 2 Something, We, T grimly, is dead Wrong about the affalr and we can’t tell what it is, and that makes us ‘mad. And the easlest pérson 6 take olr mmmmumenergtmw which: doean't théve. _ “So.we buy a yard or 86 bf red tape, compelling him fo move on whether it Is the nature of his residenes te moeve or fot—and u&! akes fi!lnf- weul'y un- | settled for the houseboat family! Just as ° they get thelr letter paper stampéd “Second Wave, Fifth Rinble from Shord, at the foot of Pearlut avende, they wake up to find they afe lviig in the miadl of a ¢circilar pond just abatt Butterine court—and worry and unrest are so bad for the arterie: g - H “You are oddly discouraging” the in-| génious man admitted, “But I know there i§ a way if only T eould think of ft! Man was not meant to be so har- assed—I think I should oW young again could I fird a sheltering &pot where wall paper ectased to erack and ecl and plastering stayed put: whers iving was reduced to its simolest form and there were no mundane things to Interfere with your sofil expanding! The furnace always nedds shaking just as 1 gt some dqlm!e idea to dévelop and the water bipés usally burst wWhen I am happiest and thost eomfortabls. T know what—ballobfis! Lafge, two-room balloons with Japanese walls to siide open and shut and in-the&vall beds ana everything hting up on hooks and ropes: They haven't got the air distrleted and taxed-yet and I don't ses why- “But yow!l have to hire a spot to an- chor vour balloon,” the destroyer of en- thuslasm broke in. “You cant just float around " “Oh, heek!", the ingenious man &nap- ped, “I won't! T get a boy to Hang onto the rons and sort of walk afoitnd: | Still. T supose the boy would expect to be pald—I guess they 2ot us somehow, comihe or going, on this eafth!”_Chi- cago News. 2 Sold by all Grocers Sealed Packets Oniy NOTICE! Commencing January 1, 1922, to apply on bills rendered ¢bmmencing February 1, 1922, the price of gas furnished by this Department will be as follows : First 5,000 cu. ft. per month, 13Y; cts. per 100 cu. ft. Next 10,000 cu. ft. per month, 121/, cts. per 100 cu. ft. All over 15,000 cu. ft. per month, 113/ cts. per 100 cu. ft. Consumer charge 90 cts. per month. “Oh, there must be a useless old creek lying around -somewhere,” - insisted the ingenious man, ‘“However, if a tent presents so many impossibilitles, a houseboat might do. You don’t have to ask odds of anybody if You own a house- boat and if you don't like the nelghbors you can change them for those on the next block. You can haul up the draw- bridge when you see collectors approach- ing or callers who are tiresome and they can yell themselves hoarse but never cangprove that you were right on the boat all the time, if you claim vou weren't. You never have to buy 2 lawn mower or a reel of hose and your Fri- ‘day dinner is always waiting at , the front steps to be hooked up from the depths—" “But somebody is always gettlhg out Injunctions and writs and ordering a houseboat to move on,” insisted the sys- tematic man. defy you to pick un a daily _paper and not find an item about the trouble John Troutstring's e! Consumers using in excess of 1,000,000 cu. ,ft.:mr month will be billed at 117 cts. per hundred cu. ft, for all gas consumed, plus the consumer charge. A charge of two dollars (2.00) will be mads for the remov- ing and resetting of meters which have been installed for less than one year. o | s-isfo . gone-tt, and then some. But it tant too |J| 11 abOVE rates are effective in‘accordance with Sec. 1987 B es note are Just a5 .many ovvor- [} of the Revised General Statutes of the State of Connecti- cut, Revision of 1202. ago, maybe more; and, believe me, I'm CiTY OF NORWICH GAS AND ELECTRICAL DEBT. READ YOUR CHARACTER By Digby Phillips, Copyrighted 1921 going to gét in while the getting is good. | Up in Lansing, Michigan,, right riow they ' have nine inehes 6f &now, &nd down here T see the roses in bloom aRd hear the birds singing glory halielujah. T'm jealous of vou fellows who live in this Heavy Writing This is a type of handwriting that is by no means rare. It is also an esception- ally good sign of character, vet it is |heavenly eilihate and you are making @oubtful if many people ever give it a sec- |good. You deserve it, and more, too, ond thought from this ang: “hecause you had ghé good gense to move 5 down lere to God's country. When 1|€d a national army with a fighting|trams, hotels, or get back home I ame going to buy o irenstd ef 600. g i ] harp and take leBSons, and sing thegges MN3CI®® 1914 Albania was the new-| praises of Florida.” oouttfry of the Old World, and it Heavy writing is ukuaily doné with @ stub pen, the heavy writer naturally pre- ferring it, but even when he vses a fine vointed pen his hand is characie: isli cafes do not exist in Albapian towns and would seem lly out of place. Water is drawn { ¥ oy oLt Rgbiiadt, from the wells as it was 4,000 vears because he bears upon * the pen lavily is.peopled by the most ancient race|ago or maybe from some nearby It denotes a vizoroi nature, of the | of suut_he}st Europe. Edward Gibbon|siream. Inns are representéd by the type which is not very s ve to fine | cdlled it ‘a couniry within sight of|yhan a stone building, hal? house, shades of difference, has raher iess than Stories That Recall Others Italy, which is less known than the|ynair stable, whelle faravan$ and pack the mormal sympath and interior of America’ And more than| trains stop to rest. Ibania_belongs to a ilme as far back as tie annals of the world can reach and is as primitive as if it were in central China, aimest ‘as difficult to penctrate as Tibet itself. It is a land unfamiliar to the traveler and . { shunned by the tourist of today. { “If the three or four centers of pop- ulation in southern Albaniz are a lit- tile disappointing as cities, this is not true of the country oy of the pictur- esque villages whichi ‘gather like gray ipon the graver hill rather more than the normal amount of | self-interest . People who write this sort of hand are not bashful. Théy have assurance, and often are aggressive to the point of being pugnacious and in gxtréme cases, of being bullies. These are the signs of character which heavy writing betrays in men. In women the story is pretty much the same, though the mental tendencizs show themselves in the desire to dominate and be exacting of others. a century after that characterization, before the war helped introduce the Balkans to America, a letter addressed ‘Albania’ was sént'from Ehgland to the United States, and was returned from Albany, N. Y., with the notation 'Not for Albany, try Europe.’ Few travelers visit Albania and in- formation about the present day pects of the country is meager.” The bulletin' they quotes -the’ first hand impressions “of Brig. Gen. George P. Scriven, U. 8. A., who was in Al- bgnia during the war, and wrote to Two by Twe. It was Suhday morning, and the car | was crowded with pérsons on their way to church. At one stop an elderly man with a | beard got on. A thtee year old piped up | shrilly and pointed to him exeitedly. The father's face flushed but he succeeded in quieting his young daughter. A few mo- ments later another man, wearing & beard, got on. This time all the passen- gers around caught the Words: “Oh, look, | daddy, there's another man with a tafl Tomorrow—Low Brows | on nis face.” S A T 3 oiidadd S Pt y appear to have nestled since the ES‘TO T EDITOR Diplomacy. :gfiog:_uonal Geographic Society as beginning of time. Rough stone huts Down in Florida. v stone roofs. For purposes of defense they are usually situated half way up the lower and the .ho. and out-buildings often surrounded by strong stone walls, The valleys are rich’ 4nfl well cul- yedr old son fordling a stray kitten in a secluded corner, “Weil, the very idea she “Where did you get that cat?" Bobby tried to assume a matter of fact few ‘and through strange to say pie- turesque in appearance, are in real poor in comfort. Of cities there are none. Koritza. with some 20,000 people is the largest place, but it is far from being a city. However, if the towns are somewhat mean and squalid, thevfi Mr. Editor: Seeing this in our local Lake County Weekly paper, I thought you good people up in Connecticut ought to kiow what you are missing in not starting for the sinny south land. It | tone as he feplied that he found it in the isn't a bit exaggerated either, such a |back yard, wonderful day @ it was Thanksgiving | “well” replied the mother, “take it day here! Not a cloud in the :&ue s;k!; right back this minute and put it where and it Is So very blue) and neither hot | vou found it ] ] oy t(mr c:;xd. all doors and windows open | This was a severe blow and Bobby ' Arjirokastro, so old, at - | Seen amidst all ertisge - ‘df and everyofie was\sitting out' Coors om | tried to avert it by pointing out various | péarance, that its origin falls backs!Creps cannot :? :‘Ulf‘"--" l:;: it the porches all day long. zood angles in the sitwation. It wae alinto the mists of tir tjwould think of destro ‘:bd them, and The New Bngland club of which we ! wonderful cat. It was already learning |village of Premati, lying in a fertile|SC they are left unguarded. are memberS to the number of thirty- to play, It:wak a pure Maltese except | valley along the river Viosa; Koritza, eight, all took dinner together at Rosanna | for a spot of white on it8 nose. Many |held by the French; Valona, clean hotel, and in the evening we had a grand | persons would be tickied to death to get|and thriving under the Italian army. reunion of ' these who are here and |such a fine cat. But 2l to no avail. The| “They ara all pleasant places to still coming efery day. We remember- | cat must go, was the edict, P R e e S i ed it was the tercentennial of the first| Bobby began to cry and with wails and | tains, in the valleys, and by the sea, Thankegiving day and had a paper pre- | tears he made a final plea as he hugged | with their old gray walls and roofs of pared by the president of the club on | the Iitten close. (ly, mother, think | stone dotted with Storks: but thes po- that subject. An old fashioned spell-|how I'love the kitty. How would you feel | ssess none of the comforts or conven- ing match was enjoyed as its two sides | i somebody would throw me out In the | jences of modern life. were spelled down and deliclous grape- { back yard?”’ el miatterob Tact fruit and orange punch and home-mede | The cat stayed. cakes conciuded ~ a very pleasant e Thanksgiving day, away from the sleg and tox soms of New Engiand. | IN THE DAY’S NEWS Eustis, Fla., Dec. 2. 3 KORITZA “Any other country would be non- plussed to awake some fine morning with two wars oh its hands; but such a predicament is but an eplsode in Albania’s brief but story history,” sa: S| a bulletin of the National Geographic, . Society concerning the skirmishes be- | g tween Albanians and Greeks in north- ern Epirus and the reported attack! of Serbians upon Albanian towns along the River Drin. * “The country was created in 1912 tg avert a, World War, and when World ‘War did come the treops of five coun- tries occupied various seetions of it. German, Austrians and Bulgarians were in control in the northern dis: tricts where Serbjans now are mn%jJA attacks, while France and Italy heid the south, including the area abeut Koritza, which now forms the bone of contention with Greeee. Durazzo, chief Albanian port, was geized by @’Annun- zio. “Perhaps history will recognize Kor- itza as the scene of the first definite step foward remaking the Map of Eu- rope. For there in December, 1916, was set up a government, generally referr- ed to as the Republic of Koritza. While most of Albanla was in Austrian hands this little republic, under n mili- cried. except in the daylight working Not a farmhouse nor Today’s Beauty Talk A New York woman says: ‘T have used Parisian sage two weeks, and my hair has wonderfully increased in beauty, seems much heavier, and is en- tirely free of dandruff.” We guarantee it. Lee & Osgood Ce. are things The cliping referred to follows: FLOBIDA LOOKS LIKE XMAS TREE TO A MICHIGANDER A gentleman from Lansing, Mich.,, who is visiting in Florida, says: “Florida looks like a Christmas tree to me. After having traveled through some of the other states whers business men have been handing out the sob stuff and looking as though they were at a funeral, it is a delight to "motdr into Florida and See business going on as usual, ‘with everybody happy. It's just like going from a graveyard to a wed- ding. I tell yofi, it's great. I'm going to tell the world what a big bunch of live wires you. arp down here, and if any men needs a nerve tonic, he can take a trip down to Florida this wititer and see hot-footing done right. “You are doing more building than two or three southern states put togeth- er. Everywhere I go in Florida the car- penters afe on the hop-skip-and-jump, and the building trades are velling for materfal. I like it. It makes me feel good all ovf. @ “The ‘last time 1 visited Florida was twelve years ago, and say, man, I can see five hundred places where I could have put down a little piece of money 4nd drawn out $100 for every $1 which | tary protectign, started to function ap 1 should have .put into this glorious { an Albani fepublic, issued paper JOIN NOW Prepare for Christmas, 1922 THE CHELSEA CHRISTMAS CLUB 2 Per Cent. Interest Paid on All Mal;berlhips Kept Up-to-Date Clubs, 25c¢, 50c, $1.00, $2.00, $5.00 WEEKLY PAYMENTS The Chelsea Savings Bank The case was again taken up on that day, and former Judge Russell, for the defense, spoke with such eloguencs and emotion that the former sheriff amd Meeks bent thelr gray heads over the ta- ble and the younger man wept. then brought in a verdict of gulity, add- ing to that of the elder Flack a recom. mendation for merey.” This Judgp B: Flack and the request of 1! 0 of the jurors to impose ohly a -fine, 48 he himself, guote “I trust that you will belleve that ‘the }j\mhhmenl that I now impose is clful. T sentenge vou ao incafeeras Meeks wes then called, but, as in the trial, he had taken all the blame and tried to clear the Flaeks, he recetveq the short sentence of oné month in the coun- 500, Justice Barrett was In sim- peéeh against the youngést conspirator: “You are sentenced to the penitentiary for four | months and are to pay a flne of $500.” So ended one of the most unique tas ever been heard Fiack, ot : A man may be prouder of the b {han ;nfl:flu’ he can accbmplish thi “After Sickness o What You Need is Vinol - -FRANKLIN SQUARE NORWICH, CONN. —M s, Conn.=~*The ‘Flu’ left me . 8] gfimn 'l,’mhem-nd ch, so I would often have sinking and Iy it i-tn_uokeep-mg:i‘mflom{ No mattet what , t {5: mmhffl. one day m;m [ g p gdhfly’i:éhm A!a!ttbett:l!;andithun“tme s that I ean truly say known. l“ ma_m AT A VERY ATTRACTIVE PRICE. ALSQ A FULL LINE OF ALL KINDS OF LUMBER. GET OUR PRICES. &t Slietu_ckét Coal & Lumber Co. it B LV i, s it has comtursd S - inol 00D LIVER PEPTONE AND IRON S