Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 1, 1922, Page 8

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o Wt v T oo _—— THE WEATHER Preasure continues high over the east- haif of the country and the Canadian ‘while the disturbance that was wentral over Nevada Monday night has imoved rapidly eastward and its S¥ter was jover southeast Nebraska Tuesday night. The temperature has risen in the lake the great central vallay and plain and it has fallen in the plateau re- wion. Low temperature continues in the inorth mountain region and the Canadian The western disturbance will frapidiy mortheastward attended by almos: ‘general precipitation most in the form of raln in the states east of the Mississtppl river within the next two days. {generally fair weatier will continwe Wed- nesday in the middle Atlantic and north Atlantic states. Winds off the Atlantie: North of Sapdy Hook and Sandy Hook Varisble bacome moderate south; fair weather Wednesday, For Southern SWednesday Rtemperature. Observations in Norwich ! observations w England: Thursday rain, Tollowing changes in temperatiirs baromefric chances Tuesday: Highest 36, lowast 20, Comparisons Predictions for Tuesday Tuesday's waather: Fair and moderat. 300N AND TIDES. high water it lowed by flood tide, TAFTVILLE W. T. Delaney is in Westfleld, Ma 1 which has been came to a close n attendance. Out of twen- their diploma, he | their weekly ng was Arthur ve a short ad- the coming of the w » waged betwsen the Mohegans and consisted of arrow heads. 1 comprised a speaker. and gave Aeal of information mes which inhabited this REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS MADE AND RECORDED nsfers of real estate ecorded at the office Holbrook in The following ot Town Cle Moore to Charles to Ellen E. David F. Hen- Elizabeth Hjort, Perkins to Edith nerchor Club to Karl and lots, Highland street, Callahan to Lilllan J. Callahan, Sarah E. Moran 6 Oak street. n to Polish Natl. Catholic Thames street. gmes Gordon to Anna B. Skindzler, $ Boswell avenue. 21, Maennerchor club to Anna M. 1ot at Taftville, lots at Taftville. ‘ mes McNally to Andrew and abeth Karczewski, Clinton avenue, Maennercliior club to Gustave Hedler, 25, Agnes Gordon &8 Gustave E. Lambect, land, Prospect park, H. Prothero to Mary R, Rlley, Estate of John Staplston o Glovanni Colonna, land, Baltic street. . 26, John Henry Harrls to Fanny 436-436 1-2 Maln street, 28, Maennerchor gand Freda Heinrich, 3 | Maennerchor club to Adam J. and EN- 2 lots. Taftville. Dominleo Quarto to Leon and Plilaga 49 North street. 30, Peter and Margarstha Ver |Steeg to Georgs and Annie Scott, 57 La- jfavatte street. Anmls L. and Edward G. Rawson to Vlsaae Geifand, 58 Fairmount street. S. and Leonz S Bowers {Mayballe Z, Guild, 157 Cedar strest, |zabeth Heinric] |Olenkiewiaz, New Haven on behalf of Blanche A. longing to the company. The suit is February. The claim is made that Miss Fontaine March 5, 1321, and was in the exercise of due care, when she Was struek b the sugar company's machine, Which was ARt BUSR Sult for $4,000 damages against the :rgdm‘e;“hhmwfi"ia I:: alsfig- n on her an ace, r Contiiental' Supar and Frogucts Co. of| T 10,0 N ised and her. nervons system suffered Dermanent Injury. It is Fontalne, 15, of Norwich, because of In-|claimed that Tierney was operating the jurles received by Miss Fontaine when |car with great speed, force, violence and she was struck by an automobils be- | negligence. Jewish Agricultural and Indus- brought through her father, Alfred Fon-|trial Aid Socfety of New York sues for taine, as her next friend and natural|foreclosure of a two mortgages given guardian and is returnable before the|by Harry Levine of Lebanon .on superior court on the first Tuesday in|tracts of land in Lebanon. gage Is for $1,075.85, dated Dec. 21, 1916, and the other for $500, dated July was crossing the highway at Ocbum on |14, 1917. ‘Adelbert ' 3. Neeaham of Stafford sues for foreclosurs of a mortgage against Wm. H. Seegar of Lebanon on a tract driven by John R, Tierney. She was|of land In that town. The mortgage Is thrown down, caught and dragged forlfor $2,000, dated Jan. 1V, 1913. body | vall was as fokows: . V. F. W. STATE MEETING OPPOSES RUTTEWORTH'S SALARY A meeting of the Gepartment officers, and the commanders and adjutants of the local ‘posts of the Dspartment of Connecticut, Veterans of Forelgn Wars of the . S, was held in Wallingford, Sun- day afternoon. It was the largest and most sucoess- ful meeting from the standpoint of bus- s completed, ever held by the de- partment with the exception of the an- nual encampment held last June at Hart- ford. Thers were about meventy-five members of the Veterans of Forelgn Wars present from all over the state of Connecticut. The session lasting over four solld hours, was presided oved by Depart- ment Commander John H. Williamsgof Pridgeport. He stated that the purfbse of the meeting was to give the mewly elecied officers of the various —posts throughout the state an opportunity to zet acqualnted with eacll other and with the lepartment officers; to endeavor to bring about a much closer co-operation between The local posts and also. for an exchange of opinions, on various mat- ters of decided Importance to the ex- service men of the state. A resolution was adopted endorsing the action of James D. McKenna, New Rritain, and Charles F. Lockart, New Haven, in Instituting legal proceeding: to restrain Frank S. Butterworth, treas urer of the American Legion of Con- necticut, from withholding $300a month from the state aid fund,.as a salary for himself for the disbursement of said fund to needy ex-service men of the state. The meeting further reiterated the stand of the Department of -Con- necticut, V. F. W, agafnst-the payment v salary. from the state aid fund, thera are no proviclons in the the fand, for the payment salary auestion of the sale by many e men of yarlous- articles of ible value, such as pasters, small pictures and. pamphiets, arose. The meeting went on record by the adoption of a. resolution to the ef- fect that they were opposed to the acts of any ex-service man In lending his aid or gervices in connection with any of these selling schemes, hecause it puts the ex-service men in a bad nlight with the general nublle. The resolution pro- vided for the notification of this stand to the general public, threugh the news- papers of the state. 4 to make fna invi rv, reiative to the merite of anv vendinz or soliciting pro- position makinz use of the ex-serrice men. from local posts of the Veserans of Foreign Wars or the Department of | Connecticut of the same nrganization. The meeting endorsed the work of. the Connecticut state lewisla committ of the Veterans of Forcian Wars and. e3 tended to them a vote of thanks for their effarte in hehalf of legislation. dur- inz the last vear effecting the ex-ser- vice men of the state of Connecticut It was bronght ont that thers are many ramors of ex-service men heing ly detaifed at the state ineane 1 at Middletown, and that they heing treated in a_vroner manner 4 institution oseph Kolinsky nosinted = committee to conditions at the asvim with to renort to the department rters of the Veterans of For n Wars in Brigzenort, as quickly as <ible on their findines. It was acreed to hold the mext meet- ing of the department in Middletown, on the lact Sunday in April June 2 24 and 25 were Aeelded upon s the dates for the next annual state mpment. to.be held in Bridgeport. The meeting heartflv_approved of the depar s actlon in endorsing the campa Foundation, Y-INDUS CLUB ORGANIZED B BY EMPLOYED BOYS The employed hovs' svmnasium class at the Young Men's Christian Associa- tion has organized the Y-Indus club. Th club is composed of older em- loyed boys who -are - desirous of im- proving tnemselves educationally. The following officers have been elected! Humphrey Brennan, president; Josep! O'Neil, viee president: Harvéy LaComb. secretary and treasurer. This group will meet regularly on the second and fourth Mondays of each month. SUPERIOR COURT SESSION, JUDGE AVERY TO PRESIDE The first short calendar of - the Feb- ruary session of' the superior court which opens in New London next Tues- day morning will be held at the court house there Friday morning. = Judge Christopher L. Avery of Groton = will preside, It is thought that the session which will sit through February and March will be entirely a jury session. THIS WILL INTEREST STOMACH SUFFERERS / Says Indigestion comes from an ex- cess of hydrochloric acid. A well-known authority states that stomach trouble and indigestion are nearly always due to,acidity — acid stomash—and not, as most folRs. be- lieve, from a lack of digestive juices. He- states that an excess of hyfiro- chioric acid in the stomach retards digestion and starts food fermentation, then our meals like garbage in a can, forming acrid fluids and gases which inflate the stomach like a toy balloon. We then get that heayy, lumpy feeling in the chest, we eructate gour food, beich gas, or ¥ave heartburn, fAatulence, water-brash, or nausea, He tells us to lay aside all digestive alds and instead, get from any phar- macy four ounces of Jad Salts and take o tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast while It 15 ef- fervescing, and furthermore, to ‘con- tinue, this for one week. Whils. reliet follows the first dose, it is important to neutralize the acidity, remove the gas-making mass,. start the liver, stimulate the kidneys and thus pro- mote a free_flow of pure digestive] ” i Juices, BAPTIST PASTOR SPEAKS AT RADIATOR CO. SHOP The weekly meeting at the Richmond Radiator plant was held under the aus- pices of the Y. M. C. A, Tuesday noon at 12.30, with a large number of employes present. The address was made by Dr. D. A. Pitt of the Central Bap- tist church and proved very interesting to the men gathered. “Heaven's Estimate of the Man,” and the speaker safd in part: There is quite a marked contrast in the way we value men and God's valuation We value men aceobding to and according to and according to The topic was their bank account, their birth; not so with God. He does not take birth, bank account or social position [nto account at all. men according to the way they livetheir according to character. At the time of the great war, especlal- Jy, men were looked upon as so much fodder for canmon, and in many places children and women are treatéd in fac- tories rather harshly. life too cheaply while God's estimate of We hold human God sald to m: creation for your own gqod. wonderful how God has provided for us on the earth; you can tell the extent of the intersst He hag in us by the kind of a universe He has given to us;: tell me how well a man prov! family, according to hi an_tell you what kind of a man he is. s of Jesus found fault for doing good on the Sahbath sald to them, Qitch on the Sabbath, wonld you not take him out?” How much than a sheep! if a sheen fa The supreme value that God places on man js shown in the giv- | for His salvatl ng of the mob, and final- o cross unon Him and made Him carry it to Calvarv. He fell under the weight of was_necessary atood the huffeti for anather to help Him carry it and they nailed Him to it and and let it drop into He hung there on then lifted the cros the hole made for the cross and shed Hig cause He valued Some of the human_life so high! ading physiclans are con- vinced that Jesus did not die from the but from a broken 2 higher valuation r prevent or {on human life, nd tha public Was | hinder another in any wa ESSAY PRIZE WON BY GROSVENORDALE GIRL nddsall of North Grosvanor- dale was winver of the first prize, Dorathy Carpenter of Conterbury third in the es- hich prizes were offered subject “Why ssaye written upon Boys and G counts and & for boys and Money.” The contest s of 15 years cld o; < books of $5, $2. ven to Polly Benton of Norwich, Daniel and Reverend P. 1k Dolan, both of Mid- | Grieco of Norwich, and Ethel Hokand of Judges, Miss Amy Com: n and Emory Sla aE woellak this terriiory those from towns in the contest revealed many clever writers: friend of the coming generation who. offer- ed the prizes as an incentive to the young people to glve some thought in ihéir Fouth to the subject of thrift. First Prize Paper The first prize paper of Hannah Linde- Boys and girls shoud learn to save thelr money when they are young so they will form the habit of saving it and put- ting it in the bank. They should not save avery red cerit like a miser does but should save it for something useful, Candy and sweets are destructive to our teeth and by saving our money and decositing 1t In-a bank we will gain heafth, interest and at the same time ac- quire capital, = As we grow older we will naturally think of our future education. By saving our ‘money and depositing it in the bank the temptation of spending it will be less and when we are through with hig) school work we will have the money for our college feea, all earned, plus the inte- rest waltimg_for ‘us in the bamk. , Did you every realize that ome cent could grow into a millon dollars? A copper cent is the start. The big Wool- wirth bullding in New York was bullt with the many nickels and dimes that we spent_day afier day i the Woolworth & and 10 cent stores. This teaches us to consider the value of small things. As fast as some children get a couple of cents they run down to the stores and spend it,. and if some sensible persen should advise them to saive it they would just holler, “What's the uee,” but It they Would only save them and pretending, to be Sflas Marmer they could stack up the coppers Instead of gold and when they had stored up a Httle they could deposit it in a bank and In the fong run those eop- pers would become to them as good as gold. From ‘the little word “Now” we: can gaim a foothold in life. If we keep ‘hinking “Now is the time” we will, get somewhere, climbing one step higher each day on the “ladder of success.” If you are gong to start a_bank account, start it now. LIRS 1f the newspaper concern couldn't ‘start the day they did, they wouldn't he con- sidered so much as they are now. They climber higher and higher supported by |the penny that many people contributed and are contributing each day. the generosity of a great bellever and|ter. P. Dunham in a speech delivered a e clals to be the object of z great amount ; ¢ In New Haven given by reve-| oo iticism when epidemics spread in a Qn the melting enow, E right in nonor of Colletor Robert 0. Ea-| TIONCT, T the Das mallyes, was on orth Haven. As st re- R sl mmfil The op|ItieS: AL the present time, the fatalities erating expenses of the department were $10,000 ABTOMOBILE SUIT ' SETTLED WITHOUT TRIAL The $10,000 suit of Andrew Chadwick of Waterford against Ernest Barrett and ‘Walter Barrett of Watecford, which was on the trial list in the superfor cdurt here Tuesday morning, before Judge Allyn L. Brown was settled without trial. : The plaintift claimed that while he was walking on the Lyme Cannonball park on the morning of De- cember 1, 1917, he was automobiie owned by the défendant and his collar bone broken. the machine had no lights. ‘When the cases of the Adams Steel Products Coep., against M. J. McCarthy of New London and Hoffman-Peyy Iron & Stpel Corp. against the same defend- , Attorney Arthur Keefe for the plaintiffs said that an im- portant witness was unalbe to be pres- employes of the district Saturday The Connecticut administration ex-| viduals who pense was 42 cents less on each $100 an the average for the country. There|sas City has had over 120 d due are 126 emploves under Collsctor Eaton's | to. smalipox, abprosimately. 35 13 pos | 1y 016, Strects abound direction, 82 in the office ll!fl 46 in the|cent. of the cases dyin, Colorado, has had a similar conditlon, | but the fatality is apparently greater in struck by an Chief Field Deputy W. Ellery Allyn of Waterford was one of the speakers of | Denver than K: of Wseton nver than Karsas City. —— FOR U. 8. DISTRICT COURT ON LIQUOR VIOLATION CHARGE Stanley Ciesla of 79 Main reet, Willi- The bureau of preventable diseases, | mantic, who arrested last Friday by Federal Prohibition Agent Congdon and He claimed that SMALLPOX IN STATE I8 WELL UNDER CONTROL ant were cailed, state department of heaith, has issued a special report concerning the recent|Police Chief Killourey of Willimantic | was presented before U. S. Commissioner The report indicates that|Earl Mathewson Tuesday morning. Cles-| Ja was charged with having in his pos- session a guantity of moonshine and oth- ent and Judge Brown allowed the case to be continued until Tuesday, Feb. 14. outbreak of smallpox in various Conneo The court allowed the defendant to tax expenses of railroad fare of Witnesses from New York and hotel biils. The case of Mary E. Cook vs. Brid- get Cook and others went off the list. The case of Samuel Shernis ve. Mever E. Antokol also went off the list. This was an action for malicious prosecution. The court went out for the day and will come in on today (Wednesday) for the trial of the case of Morrig Goldberg vs. Rosie Goldberg. & during January there werb 94 cases of the disease reported to the department r as follows: Bridgeport 82, New London|er liquor with intent to sell, He was Milford 1. Norwalk 1, Stratford 3,|represented by P. J. Danfhy of Willi Wallingford 6, Windsor 1. i Concerning the sources of the various | district court under bonds of $500. Cies- la conducted a soft drink place under the Polish club in Willimantic and when the “From a study of the cases made by |Officers visited his place they found a local health officers in the above|QUart of moonshine and some clder con- commaunities, smallpox in Norwalk, Milford, Stratford and Wallingford was directly conpected witk the Bridgeport outbreak. The case 3 Cuticura Soap outbreaks the department han issued the following statement: SUES MAN AND WIFE FOR $5,000 FOR SLANDER Michnel Topasz of East brought suit against Isadore Tytla and husband and wife, of the same town, for $5,000 damages for slan- The plaintiff claims that on Nov. 9, 1921, the defendants made the remark in the presence of Stanley Cheika and ke Topasz stole my let- and that the femark was The suit is return- reported from Windsor was Infected in where the patient went on‘a trip. The New London case was infect — SHAVES ———— ed while in South Carolina. At the pres- ent time the situation seems to he well e e o o 53| (Without Mug tioned above. i munities -near these | ces are warned Jennie Tytla, ter and $2 tos false and malicious. Start a bank account today. The soon- er you get on the “road to riches” the bet- able before the superior court the first Tuesday in February. (Spectal to The Bulletin) New London, Jan. 31.—Aided by sev- eral members of the local police depart- ment, .Prohibition Enforcement Officers Machol and Brown this afternoon visited several stores alleged to be laces where intoxicating liquors are offered for sale. At the conciusion of the raid the agerits announted the arrests of Felix Niedecuki, 109 Bfadley street, and Mike Schwyts, 23 Bradley street. An inventory of the liquor seized at both places includes five gatlons of wine, one quart of whiskey and a gallon of liguor which the police ay is a mixture of alcohol and tea, a tombination deseribed as “hooch.” In the cleanun and closing of these two places Agents Machol and Brown say they have checked a large part of fllegal liquor traffic in New London. Other parts of the city, the prohibition officers say. are as dry as the Sahara desert, but (hey say they do not nropose o let up on vigiiance. Local nolice officers “assisting in the raid were Sergt. Samuel’ Hick, Patroimen Sheehan, J. Cavanaugh, D. Cavanaugh, J. Sullivan and M. Corcoran. The possibilit? of a reduction in the price of lce to the consumer next summer was discussed by two of the big dealers here today, but at the conglusion of the conference it Was stafed no agreement had been reached. Officers of the New London Ice comnany s'hte they have completed their harvest for this vear. Two hig houses at the Waterford ponds have been' filled with about 20,000 tons, and more than 1.000 tons have been stacked in the open. Another day, it is stated, will complete the filling of the er supply than has been stored for many upon the toric. The contest was made possibie through |estimated at 30 cents per ton. Sirloin, Round, Porterhouse STEAK, Ib. .. Choice Cuts Steer Beef, Ib. Shoulder Cuts Lean Beef, Ib. For Potting or the Woodrow Wilson | Freshly Ground Hamburger STEAK, Ib. . Beef Liver, Ib. . 12¢ Salt Pork, Ib. . . FRESH - Pork Loins, lb.ZIC TO ROAST Pork Chops, Ib. 22¢ years. The cost of harvesting the ce is Newly Milled OATS. 5 Ibs. . 23¢ Delicious Hawaiian Pineapple, can23c Dinner Blend < COFFEE, Ib. . 29¢ Armour’s Bouillon CUBES, box...21¢ ~llifiil,fl‘?:iige.(:an.u‘(! MOHICAN BRAND Sweet Florida j Oranges, dozenzgc \ E ?II{EUGT}?S for. 25C Prunes, 21bs. . £0C LIQUOR RAIDS IN NEW LONDON BRING ARRESTS AT TWO PLACES, ew London boys attending school in Washington come in for praise from po- iice officials in that city because of effi- cient service rendered at the recent-thea- Among those who are spe- 1iy mentioned are John McGarry, Johin M. Mallon, Jr., Thomas Cassara and Ed- The four young men are students at the Catholic university’ and when the report came of the cave-in they volunteered tHeir services to the police. In line with his policy to keep New tre disaster. ward Murray. Officer Benjamin N. Pennell daily conference with his aesist- the health department and insists telenhone calls with physi- clans in the outlyinz distriets. attention is given to reports of cases of influenza” at present, said to have started in some of the near- Of diphtheria, seariet Dr. Pennell renorts there is mo sign of any alarming increase in All_children in the city may be vaceinated free of charge of ihe elinfe. Carroll T. Cummings, an employe of a and smalinox orwich dealer in auto- mobile supplies, was arrested by the local police on a charge of operating an auto- reckless manner. notified to be in police court Wednesday Thin Folks If you are weak, thin and nervous, let Lee & Osgood Co. supply you with It is guaranteed to increase weight and strength and re- store energy, viger and nerve forge, Perry company houses, and with a great-" Bitro-Phosphate. Fresh Creamery BUTTER Ib. Large Brown EGGS, dozen. . FINE DISPLAY OF FRESH FISH FOR THIS WEEK Ciscoes, Ib...... FRESH GENUINE Bluefish, Ib. . . FRESH ; Cod Cutl_ets, lbzoc SMELTS, Ib. . FRESH : s, vine. 45¢ ROUND : COLLECTION COST 31 ~ |to be on the lookout for cases as it fs ~ FOR $100 FEDERAYL TAX | Still possible ¢at persons who have been _over 31 cents to col- in Bridgeport may become {ll with small- slightly Teason of havin, $100 of federal taxes taken tn | 205 % TeA500 °f PATRE ben In contact |1 Tnited: States Internal Revemus bue | S\ Particularly during the incubation |H: us, it wi 'v‘{«lwut‘sd by figures made the Connecticut division of period. Smallpox is Increasing in the 1inited Deputy Collector HOW-|giares 1t i3 the rule for health ofi- aftermath of the disease in those indi- suffer from it. Recently, however, Kan are_so unfortunate o ere are very many days, There are very many = Ere we view the pretty flowers of spting are fewer because of the mildness of the !X disease, but disfigurement is_the usual!C: oW in favored Italy's clime omes the merry carnival time, |And St. Peter's bells di "T's a_quaint old time, S And the fools in th, With their o e little bells a-tingla = Per i To amuse the mins and Denver, | That 18 worenned There are very many way ere are very many wa: On the surface of the world so rousd. Now in Arctic lands at noon, mantic and was bound over to the T It was apparent that the|Cealed under the counter. Let the frozen streamleis flow, -| Winter months, good-hy, Though the time be nigh }\'I the pretty flowers of summep n the We will not fon Al oye we' For Februa: 2 For the February days. Health officers in the COM- { | Coucnra Soup et faverite forsfetyrasorshavine. FORERUNNERS OF SPRING _ NOVELTIES WHICH ARE NOW TO BE SEEN TWEED SPORT SKIRTS Tweeds and Homespuns are going to be “the thing” this year, and the attractive sport skirts which are now to be found in The Apparel Shop are examples of the latest mode. Plaids both large and small are very numerous, and some remarkably attrac- tive plain colors add to the variety. Pleated skirts are seen in greater numbers, but some of the most recent novelties are perfectly plain. * Prices $5.98 to $7.50 Handsome Pleated Skirts in fine Prunella $10.98 4 Sport Skirts for “Juniors” We don’t mean children’s skirts, nor do we mean skirts for small women, but skirts which are designed for the difficult ages between childhood and maturity. They are made of Tweed, and are pleated. Only $4.98 Tweed Suspender Dresses FOR THE LITTLE GIRLS Decidedly new and very clever are these little suspender dresses — made of wool tweeds in plaids and checks. The little kilted skirts are pleated and the bretelles are made of the same material as the skirt. Sizes 8 to 14. - Only $498 ° Yet the | me: Lightened by the silvery moon, Relndecrs skim the ice-lagoon} *Tis a_cold, dark nlace, p;" the S’Im'n brizht raye Give a pleasant hue of m fs To the =0 clear, e And it will in th Blow, ye March winds. briskly hlow, Loose the ice and meli 1he elds appear, Are a blessing to the joyous year. —Anon. IT IS IN WINTER THAT WE DREAM OF SPRING. It is in Winter that we dream of Spring; For all the barren bieakness and the £ fancy sees the frozen meld Decked with sweet blossoming. Thous 21 the hirds be silent—thoneh The fettered stream's soft yoies be wtill And on the leafless hough the snow Be rested. marblelike and ehill— will build. from these, transient but weil-pleasing_dream T Of leaf and bioom among the trees. And su t dancinz on the stream. Though. to the eye, the joyless landseape yields No faintest sign to which the hepe might cling— Amidst the pallid desert of the flelds— It i= in Winter that we dream of Spring. —Robert Burns Wilson. n Indianapolit News, HUMOR OF THE DAY Sunday School Teacher—Jimmy, ou count ten before you hit anethi o boy? Jimmy—Naw! De referee counts tes after I hits him From a stor; tament into his pocket before starte ing, he now took it out and read the Twenty-third _Psalm."—Boston Tran« csript. 5 “He wants to be a lawyer.” § “Why?" “Says it must be fine to have twelve men obiiged to stay in the room and lis- ten to him make a speech."—Exchange. “I understand your wife came from & fine old family. “Came” nothing! She brought them with her."—Boston Transcript. “What do you think of Henry Ferd's thetic cow?” Don't know anything about that breed. I think the Jerseys are the best milk givers,” replied the farmer.—Detroit/ Free Press. Orator—Do you get me, boys, ¢ you get me? Voice from Rear—Ni But walt wntl you'se leave d' platform.—Wayside Tales. “Have you broken off your engage- - es. The wretch told me he was & bookmaker, but I found out that he was nly an authors — Copenhagen Kieds Hans, 5 ) ‘In soms French rural districts 80 pes cent. of the inhabitants own their homes. More earthquakes occur in Ttaly andf Japan than in all other countries eem< bined. I mdfldmmm-u*: tant part of the diet of nmatives of AL ghanistan, The ordinary varieties of ferns are iw great use in China and Japan as artieles of food. The word garage was used originally in France to denote a place for keeping boats, rolling stock, ete. A plate from which a dog hes eaten will n The Ganges, Indla's most Importany river, is 1,557 miles Jong. and is naviga« ble for a distance of $50 miles from th¢ sea. Greenland was discoversd and mamed about the end of the tenth century by a Norseman who established a colony there. In some provinces and a number of towns in Germany the flag of the new republic has never flown, and is not even the new recognized. Mrs. O. L. Anderson, fudge of suvenile in Dublin, Ga, is belleved 1o bp e ke woman mngz:-u in thav state. The human body has been estimated to contain about 446 muscles. The ac- tions of all these muscles are fully under- stood and described, but there are prob- ably many other muscles which have not yot been tabulated. A Private, General Hospital with well equipped medical, surgical and ob- stetrical departments, offers a. thres years' graded course to young wemen desiring a nurse’s training. Write at once for circular of informa- tien. AFPLICATIONS FOR THE MARCH. GLASS, MUST BE RETURNED BE-| FORE FEBRUARY 20th, ADDRESS K.A.DOWD,R.N. ' SUPERINTENDENT OF THE | TRAINING SCHOOL. is now on sale, and a copr. am-».-.un

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