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IMMIGRANT EXAMINATIONS ABROAD. When E. J. Henning, assistant secrs- tary of labor, declares that the govern- ‘ment expeets soon to conduct the exam- ination of would-be immigrants on the other side of the water it will be recog= nized as & response to a need which has long existed and-a change that will be of great benefit to the immigration sta- tions as well as to those Who are 'seck- = g ing admission to the country, Tt sy Gy ' e year cxeept Sundas As it is now when a person wants to Subectpticn price 13 & weeki 60 & menth: $8.00 | enter this country he disposes of his . s property a‘t home, heads for a seaport Esteet st O Postoffice ¢t Norwich. Cems. % |ang embarks for the United States in P expectation that he can meet the immi- PTEE ag A gration Jaw requirements. In too many = Bulisia Bditeeial Rooms 15-2. instances he comes whether he can or Buleia Job Becm B5L |not, and aftsr undergoing examination Chgrsh St Teleohoot | here, which he fails to pass, is obliged to return to the other side and take such chances as exist of reestablishing himsel at home. That is of course his lookout but the idea of making two. [nsts or RESS. || trips across the ocean unnecessarily, The Awcait Prew 8 exciuiely etitid || when it could be determined before do- e, o pieaion o e Sma % || parture that there was no chance of get- & lccal wews publisted || ting in here, is sufficient reason for be- lieving the congestion at the immigr: tion stations and preventing the hard- ships to which euth people are subject- = by CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING MAY 11,599 REPUBLICAN CITY TICKET. NORWICH BULLE. and Courier Wiimaate Office. 31 e Nerwich, Friday, June 2, 1922. THE ASSICIATES o mpubiication of @eclal . Examination at the source-for those seeking to enter this country has long! been advocated. Under the present re- strictive Jaw it will ‘prevent the practice to a considerable extent of exceeding the quotas admissable from the respec- tive countries, while thers would also be the opportunity to discourage thoss who are planning to depart for this country with no intention of becoming citizens and there would also be a much 1922 2, ¥ I certainly am mot going fo| Goldine Remedies are sold in Nor- @ For Mayor, “Slam Ormonda!” gasped the girl|look a sight in a silly pink or something i - CHARLES H. RICKETTS ter chance of eulling out the unde-|wim the pretty hands reproschtully. |like thatt” msisted the girl with the dis- i e hug ee e OF NOVEL DESIGN D the crest of smartness ables, such as 08e 0 are crimi- - R O it inclined and those Who are suffer- EDMU W. PERKINS. ing from disease. ~ $i Soas | Imigration regulations are import- or o-.:u::[-lvc%” |ant for the future welfare of the coun- WORTHINGTON try and those that will best serve the LATHROP, purpose are,what is desired. . COPP. ¥or Councilman te Fill Vacaney, E. LARUE BLIVEN, Feor City Treasurer, STEPHEN H. REEVES. For City Sheriffs THE BONUS REPORT. From the favorable action taken by the finance committee the senate is soon to receive the bonus bill. The commit- tee has wrestled with it, carried the ORMONDA’S WEDDING - “He's crazy about Ormonda,” de- clared the girl who wore her bobbed hair daringly straight. “He sent her a box of candy that cost at Jeast §10. 1 think he is marvelous.” “Yes, he is crasy all right agreed the girl who almost had cross-eyes and, was extremely sensible, “But mot about Ormonda, He's crasy about himself ana reputation for spending his “He must want to marry her” put in the. girl who always managed to show her beautiful hands before you got away. “A man won't squander money like that unless he is serious. Do you suppose she will take him?" “Of course she will take him,” the girl with bobbed hair asserted, “Or- monda is 27. Do you suppose we Will be among the bridesmaids? It is certain to be a gorgeous wedding and he will have a lot of college men from out of town in the party and her people will grab the chance to give Ormonda a wonderful sendoff, because she is the last of Rer crowd to marry and every- body has sort of hinted that she never would, what with her poor complexion and disposition. They'll be so triumph- ant and tickled that her father will just sign biank checks and hand them over and T shouldn't wopdgp, it Ormond presents to her maids would be some- thing wonderful. She'll want to outdo Corabelle Button's wedding. The maids at that got diamond barpins. “Oh, T hope she asks me!” cried the girl with the almost cross-eyes, “I've always been wild for a handsome bar- pin and I'm sure I've entertained her enough and if she doesn’t include me I certainly shall think it is awfully strange! I've always been fond of Or- monda and defended her when the rest of you girls were slamming her,” “Why, she's one of my very best friends and I've always admired her intensely! TI'm certain to be one of the bridesmaids and I'll manage to put in a good word for you when she talks to me—" “Well, how are you so certain you'll be asked first?” demanded the bobbed- hair girl coldly. “I guess.I am just as close a friend of Ormonda’s as you are, and 1 shouldn't be at all surprised if I were chosen maid of honor. T hope he has somebody wonderful for best man, because the maid of honor always sees so much of the best man, and\ I've Khown at least six weddings that have ; 23 come. through such affairs. Not that 1|t 18 JUSt o human message 000 am thinking about that so much as s o about making dear Ormonda’s wedding | YO8 "."'.(l kfixfl%:! 13 m B a beautiful affair” living. | Giving up by doctors—but, if S ‘course you are” agreed. the g | oo Y iro i o may be with the pretty hands with dangerous | I Fqo ™ for e’ naver know what sweetness, “Ormonda always has mads |0 e on? o I B8 TOVEE G a confidant of me, and if it were not for | ity gav where they wero adyertis- betraying confidences 1 could have told | iny'Goldine Tonic and Nervine,” Mrs. you lots about this affair & long time| g yane, Waterbury, Conn., writes, ago—of course, I don't mesn that sheu:iq'my mother was quite sick at the announced her engagement in actual|time = "The-doctors said there was mo words, but then it was easy to tell how | nope for her whatever. 'They gave things were going. I shouldn't be sur-|her up. So we decided to try & bot- prised if she selected wonderful patterns| tle. That is three years ago this last for our bridesmaid dresses, and 1 am|fa]l. We have kept it on hand ever going to tell her that if she wants 2|since and today she does all her own’ group of colors I must have the orchid.| work. She says that Goldine has built Raphael Chrome, the celebrated artist, | her up wonderfully. We have told who -dined with us last winter, told me | number of different people about it I always should wear it. ¢ = |and no doubt they will try it. She had catarrh of the stomach, dizziness and a general breakdown of the whole system. Now that is about all gone and she is most 70 years old. The doc- tor said one day mot long ago that mother looked fine and wanted to know what she was doing. We told him about Goldine and, aithough he had never heard about it, he said it was better for her than what he was giving.” Goldine Tonic and Nervine, the great tropical tonic, contains among 14 herbs the precious Yong-Gona Root from the Fijian Islands, used by the natives to withstand the depressing effects of the intense summer heat. The most wonderful tonic known for the nerves, stomach and heart, it builds up the entire body to former strength. No better indorsement is needed to convince you to get your bottle and try this world-famed rem- edy today. “Always,” cried the almost cross-eved girl. “I have had orchid color dresses and it seems to me that when the color is so well known as being mine and ev- erybody associates it with me = there should be no question about who should be the orchid mald in Ormonda’s proces- sion! I know that she would want me to have it an “I was talking with Ormonda some time ago,” interrupted the girl with bobd- bed hair, “and she practically said that whenever she was married she was go- ing to choose me and of course that meant that 1 was to have my choice of colors, so——" “Notr at all!” snapped the girl with pretty hands indignantly. = “Colors should be given to those who can wear them most becomingly, and I have an affinity for lavender and orchid shades and I have a wonderful idea for the way they should be made.” “Well, Baltic by Geo, Thompson; Colchester by A. T. Van Cleve; Groton by C. 8. Davis; Jewett City by J. P. Gorman; Noank by W. H. Hill, ville by Geo. Thompson. _— LETTERS TO THE EDITOR A Problem Mr. Editor: Here is a problem for some of the high school pupils to solve. I am a farmer and I have a square lot containing one acre. I want to plow turbed eyes. “Why, it would completely spoil dear Ormonda’s wedding ift—" “My goodness!” screamed the bobbed hair girl who had opened the evening paper just Jeft at the door, “here it say —listen! He's going to be married nex week to an absolutely different girl and it isn't Ormonda at all. 1 expect ho just sent her the candy to pay back the dinner parties at her house.” “Well” said the others, “we knew Or- monda never would get married—she's so utterly unattractivé and snippy! We knew it all the time!"—Exchange. u u u I U 5 = ui Vit R A TG GO W T ST BN NN TAY TN (i (e T U CTY TH T QAT ER D TR 4 i SPORT SKIRTS AND OF UNUSUAL CHARM— Embroidered Eponge Roshanara Crepe, pleated or plain—Canton Crepe— Baronet Satin, and White NI | O T T A O ) L) LT LA BTGPV T 222 NSO R WA N VN AL USNV VLR DT s n EREOR A E sport costume peaks ’ this summer! It is the : fashion of fashions — favered : by all women. In our collec tion of sports attire you will find models that have nothing TR T g e o, e i Flamnel g the | BCOMIGH with the common- = i = matter before the president, considered —_— leave a square half acre in the center, annel are CHARLES H. RAY v sbamts and fnally oome to the ow wide s Sirip mist 1 biow o 1hs Sl place except ther priced i jon that it favors a bill muchl|| - our side most attractive— For Water Commissioner. o g ) H A FARMER. L Kagh geyecoar O aiong ths 1is of Wikt adoptadin thy Great Men’s Love Letters Today’s Birthdays ———y DOUBLE DUTY BEFORE NOEWICH VOTERS, A @ouble duty of much 1t is not a bill that is in accord with the wishes expressed by President Hard- ing upon a previous occasion. It still fails to carry with it the means of pro- {mportance | viding the money with which to pay the NATHANIEL HAWTHORNE TO SOPHIE PEABODY. Nathaniel Hawthorne Surely, yay neither insincere nor thinking of pos- | Norwich, May 31, 1922. Thomas Hardy, one of the greatest liv- ing novelists, born in England, 82 years ago today. Mrs. William Howard Taft, IN THE DAY’S NEWS wife of the Chief Justice of the United Sgates, i Tests upon the voters of Norwich next|bonus. When the president gave ex-|terity when he flnish;d one of his 1ove {jern in Cincinnati, 61 years ago today. The Hague. - Monday, election day. pression to his views some months ago|letters with this poetic conceit, express- iward Penfield, the noted artist who| . Whers s S'Gravenhage? Give up? boviouwrry Savce Those who have the interests of the|he declared that congress should pro-|€d in his best prose style: : ip. | oriEinated the poster in America, born in | Perhaps you know it as Den Haag, No? city &t heart are desirous that our mu=|vide the money to pay the bonus and| ‘When We shall be endowed with spir- % New York city, 56 years ago today. vi E Well, it is only our old friend The o con 3 nicipal go 0uld be of the best|unless this was done by the levying of a[!tUal bodies, T think they Wil be 80 CUC) Lulu Glaser, ‘celebrated singer and ac- | Haguo dressed in its native costume. but it canot fail to be realised that|tax, such as a sales tax, ho was opposed | S50''5e i Y oliince in no time| (TeS born at Allegheny City, Pa, 46| This uniquely labeled town, which Is such & goal is not going to be attained[to the enactment of such legislation at v e unless those who believe dorse %t get out at the polia it and en- and lend their support s are mot won by 1 home. Good gov- assured by those who de- remaining away from the poll- this time, because the national treasury is in no condition to meet such require- ments, 5 Efforts to gat the president to express himself as to what he would do in case the senate supported the house bill or one similar to it has failed to disclose his attitude, He hasn't sald that he mand s H. Ricketts as candidate at all, and transfuse them warm and fresh into the consclousness of those we love. Oh, what happiness it would be at tnis moment if I could be con- scious of some purer feeling, some more lclicate sentiment, some lovelier fan- ¢ than, could I be aware that you thinking through my mind and feeling through my heart! Perhaps you possess this power aiready.” the only city of importance before whose name, we place “the” in English, is still more oddly named when its Dutch ap- pellation is translated, according to a bulletin from the Washington, D. C., headquarters of the National Geographic Society, The bulletin, which follows, is issued in connection with the approach- ing conference at The Hague which will take up the unfinished work of the Johhny Weismuller of Chicago, the fasterest swimmer that ever lived, born in Vienna, Austria, 18 years ago today. Today’s Anniversaries The Bostan Storcy ‘PRICED FROM $5.98 TO §17. 50 Genoa conference: “§'Gravenhage, which is the proper name of the Dutch capital we call ‘The Hague,” says the bulletin, “means losed space Thi sterm wis probably This is true epistolary love-making— the sublimated essence of complimen tary gallantry, addressed to Sophia Peabody, who later became Mrs. Na- thanie] Hawthorne. Hawthorne had at- tained some literary distinction when he would sign it and he hasn't said he would veto It. The president has, however, declared that the country was in no condition to bear such a burden and his suggestion 1773—John Randolph, of Roanoke, for many years the most striking fig- ure in American political life, born at Cawsons, Va. Died in Phila- ~delphia, June 24, 1833. 1774—British parliament passed an act coast, only three miles away. The ter- minus of this road is Scheveningen, Hol- land’s Atlantic City, a feature which adds materially to The Hague's popular- ity as a conference place. The broad hard beach of this seaside resort is dot- the city has been the center of Buro- pean diplomacy. It might be known as ‘the City of Treaties’ From 1688 on- ward The Hague has been the scene of dozens of conferences and treaty-mak- ings, many of them of world-wide im- presents to the voters a list of citizens of high standing in the com- ability and accomplieh- of them have the add- exy ce in the of- someth'ng iike ‘the ardga-e of the Count Tommy, age five, has just started to E really descriptive in tho early part of|ted with hundreds of queer, hooded,|portance, It was this background of 3 they Baimed. —From | e IR R e e s Ropiayhe gt o extending the boundaxies of Quebec | the thirteenth century when t was ap- | toadstool-like beach chairs, and at tho|world diplomacy that led many to be-[ 5%y And S parents run iheif house foot of the list they| oneY 48 B0 wm’:!;:e::e 'op}:affi::-: et o g it CHen to include the territory now em- |plied to a rural hunting lodge, but it|water's edge are drawn up scores of the|lieve that The Hague would be chosen dget nd give assuran N & braced in the States of Ohio, In- diana and Michigan. 1780—Beginning of the Gordon riots in London, in which more than 200 persons were killed and much prop- at her home in Salem. She was a friend of the sister, but had zever met the au- thor and was anxious to kuow what character of man was the writer of The Gentle Boy, the reading of which had hardly fits the present-day city, almost as large as Minneapolls, from which are governed seven million Netherlanders and their colonial empire of nearly fifty million souls. On many Dutch maps the mother paid 50 cents to have his um- brella fixed, and that night when fath- er was marking up the budget he said T really don't know under what hea ing to put this 50 cents.” throughout the country congress seems disposed to get the political benefit of spending four billion of the taxpayers' money. Congress may be reaping some- thing more than a veto by the presi- ‘bathing machines’ without which European beach would be complete. “It was not by chance that The Hague was chosen as the situation for the peace palace which Andrew Carnegie 10 |as the seat of the league of nations.” dable der of mu- Mayor Leroy will People are always regretting today the things they did yesterday. There fore the lazy man has the fewest re- road minded citi- . b Tommy piped up and said: “Well, I L g lg oyt g given her so much pleasure. ; erty destroyed. unwieldy nsme his been shortensd foldonated in 1913 For hundreds of ears| rets. ik Tt woald e tendke Milbee: o ox) ™| dent, but under the existing conditions| When the Hawthornes called, Eliza-|1783—Washington furloughed the sol-|Den Haag' whic ighiion 5 one who has given ; R et disca:of the Rovalution, changed to ‘The Hague’ As we use it, there are good and suffcient reasons|beth was delighted with Nathaniel, an Revolution. e At e e Al B a city matters and Who| o} o the president should decline to |tried to prevail upon her sister, Sophia.(1866—Nine Canadian volunteers were 2, o A e elied upon to discharge the re- - Sign such & bill and put the responsi.|Who was an invalid, to come down and killed and many wounded in a con- |{Ring after its = metamorphosis—tho s of the office, & g o hedge’ or ‘the hedge enclosure.’ it elected, in| . meet him. Sophia laughed, buf refused flict with Fenian invaders at Lime- i r that will servs the needs of|®\tY entirely up to coneress. the invitation, Hawthorne was 8o stone Briage. GoTanEreih s o & mical Duth the many and not those of the few and pleased with his visit that he promised|1886—The wedding of President Grov- f EXPENSIVE PRIMARIES, The instances do not grow less but seem to increase which go to show that a poor man stands a small chance when it comes to entering the primary with to furnish Norwi ecanomical admin h & businessiike and ation of its affair For the counc’ and city offices the candidates are llkewise well known and highly competent to shoulder or continue to repeat it soon. He did so and this time “Sophia came down and sat on the sofa in a white wrapper.” Hawthorne was charmed with her, and especially with her low, sweet voice. Whenever, after this Mr, Haw- and industry of larger Amsterdam and Rotterdam nor the distinctive Dutch quality of the smaller towns. It is cos- mopolitan, and may be compared to ‘Washington in that its chief business is governing, and that it {s well built, has er Cleveland and Miss Folsom took place in the House. 1908—General Sed Redvers Buller, fam- ous British soldier, died in Devon- Frances White the duties that election would imposs|the expectation of securing & party nom- |ihorns called at the house he generally e o thite, Dece }’:"‘,’,:::; g :umr:u::do'ls % upon them. It is the duty of the veters|ination. saw Sophia, and a year after they met| ooy 7.4 E h of Norwich to ses that such a ticket ts| There have been plenty of instances|he wrote: “Sophia is a flower to be worn rish women burned a British|strictly Dutch atmosphere. Numerous elacted. Thers s another duty which ehould Dot be negiected and that is the support of the proposed new charter. With no flag in front of the U. S. Treasury, ‘Washington. in the past that the primary is an ex- pensive proposition. There have been charges of corrupt use of money in con- nection with efforts to obtain a nomina- in no man's bosom, but was lent from heaven, to show the possibility of the human’ soul.” Hawthorne was evidently much in love from the start, but it was not un- canals cross the city's thorckghfares and in the center of the town ls a siza- ble lake called the Vyver—the fish pond —a_survival of the hunting lodge days of 700 years ago. Gleaming white man- sdvantages lost and so many to be ob-|ton. but it doesu't necessarlly mean |\ Ty thirty-nith year that e necamsi| IN THE PUBLIC EYE Mpmssang S Eouenant . Seldingy sere tained by the © the voters should |that because a large sum ls spent that|engaged, about two years after their | Aootped [dbout shisl pond whichimer, size the opportunity to do something|lt hasm't been legitimately used. It does|first acquaintance. They were not mar- i i R e e el for the lasting good of the community.[Show quite conclusively, however, that|ried until 1842, three or nearly four| Sir Edward Elgar, who celebrates his | ipne tague's shops and cafes are ex- It should be remembered, however,|the fellow who hasn't the money to|vears after his engagement. | sixty-fifth birthday today, is one of the | cellent. u‘:ga poot::. is the city’s Fifth that the party lever on the voting ma.|eDend. or who doesn't use the funds of| Hawthorne's love letters to Sophia|most famous living composers, consider- | svesne aad Moy senvery s chines has mothing to do with the vote|his friends stands a rather poor chance|2T® &0 full of fine sentiment, that in- ing which fact it is a somewhat remark- able circumstance that he has never had a lesson in composition in his life. A great deal of his success as a musician is probablé due to heredity, for his fath- er was an excellent musician, and he commenced life in a home where music was loved. One of his first appointments was bandmaster of an English lunatic asylum, where he used to conduct an or- chestra composed of the attendants. In those days he thought nothing of writing the whole score of a piece for the nrinca- 1y sum of a dollar or two. Nowadays his income runs into many thousands of dol~ lars a year. He first attracted attention with his “Froissart” in 1890, and ten years later his position as one of the most remarkable British composers was made secure with the presentation of his oratorio, “The Dream of Gerontius.” there of a late afternoon and evening, the crowd of promenaders seems out of all proportion to even a population of 360,000 Strolling of an evening is wuch a favorite pastime of the Dutch aity- dweller, though, that onme traveler has dubbed it ‘Holland’s national sport.' “To the east of the city is a magnifi- cent wood—'the Bosch'—which is a rem- nant’ of the heavy forest that once cov- ered all this portion of the coast of the Netherlands. Roads and walks extend into this beautiful natural park; and deep in its interior, beside small lakes, is a royal villa, portions of which were erected hundveds of years ago. It was in this villa that was held in 1899 the first Hague corference called by the lats tsar of Russia. “To the rorth of the city is a smaller fragment of forest, and through it ex- tends a beautiful avenue leading to stead of printing one, only extracts will on the charer. be given from several of them in para- graphs: “I have received an invitation to a party, I will not go. I intend to pass that evening with you—that is, in mus- ing and dreaming of you. It seems strange that your protection should have become absolutely necessary to such a great, rough, burly, broad-shouldered personage s 1! I need your support as much as you need mine.” “What a létter! Never was so much beauty poured out of my heart before; and to read itiover and over is like bath. ing my brow in a fresh fountain and drinking draughts that renew the life within me. How can you say that 1 have ever written anything beautiful, be- ing yourself so potent to produce what- ever is/lovellest?" “But what a letter you wrote me! It The vote on that is reg- istered by turning up the poimters at yes or no, at the top of the machine over the party tickets For those who are not familiar with the vote on such a special question the registrars are today explaining the operation in the corridor of the city Ball and any desiring it shoul make tho most of the oppertunity to become in- strocted, of getting nominated, and this even though he may have the support of the political machine, This seems to be well emphasized by the filing of the expense accounts of the candidates for the republican nomina- tion for governor in Pennsylvania. Pin- chot, who opposed the machine, won, and there lsn't anyone saying that he used corrupt methods or used his money in an improper way but the expend:- ture in his behalf for the nomination was over $117,000 of which he person- ally spent more than $83,000, His op- ponent spent but $1131 and lost by only a small margin, hut it is easy to see what a small chance a.poor man would ha had either as an opponent of Pin- chot or in Pinchot's place. PIXING THE COAL PRICE. When the coal strike started it was FURNISH YOUR HOME AT A SAVING! s In addition you may furnish your complets home on Every young couple about to furnish their new home sdls part of the bituminous coal needed. will find such an abundance of good furniture here the most equitable, the most convenient method Likewise 1t was appreciated that there —————— is llke one angel Writing to another that it will be a simple matter for them to choose- ; : Was no reason for an increase In the EDITORIAL NOTES, angel. But, alas! the letter has mis- Db Bricesinss oo neianmhlie lower than in te oing of easy palymonu ever d::_vuld for those just starting price of coal unti]l the demand excesd-| The man on the corner sava: It is im- mfi“::fm;“;om” delivered to a 2B o cioea and our high standard of quality coupled Housskeeping. ~ Yeur °“";" ; an - sbiV 30 """‘" ¢4 the supply, unless there was a dis-|possible to blame the troubles of this| ™% Srial . with our extracrdinary values combine to make this make use of—no matter whether you wagt to furnish Py ot mecvousmess on the past of seme| worid on okt (BaD thote o It sister wan mons vessite, e, 2ot || SPECIAL VALUES FOR SATURDAYY ||} s one of reai holpfal service. theas, four; five or six Foomss ; — and magnanimous: such as no one but of & Besded supply by offering and pay-| The senate doesn't seem to give &{yoy could have written. If they d s Lo ing much higher prices. thought to eaving time while insiating |love you it musk Wa because shes howe —IN— 4-ROOM A ngh-Grade Hope Chest 3t i well known what developed from|op economy in many other directions. | where Henry Tyler of New London, a OUTFIT S 3 h = Sesh & Sondition Guring the $as of the were the case, I should not dispair of 9 ’ 9 Beautifully Trimmed With war when the price of coal was boosted| Instead of changing tail lights to yel-| your planting the seeds of hearts in their eén s oung ens and oVS .00 . Poli £ sky high Prices have mever gone back|iOW. it might be better if all car own-|bosom.” ] Highly %o mermal, either at the mine or to the|™s made certain that they were show-| The Hawthornes were ‘most devoted ing red. throughout their lives. Mr. Hawthorne died on the morning of May 19, 1864, and Mrs. Hawthorne survived him seven years, dying in London, February 26, Piles Can’t Be Cured From the Outside. External treatments seldonr- cure Piles. Nor do surgical operations. The cause is inside—bad circulation. % The blood js stagnant, the veins flab. . ‘The bowel walls are weak, the parts almost dead. To quickly and safely rid yourself of piles you must free the circulation— send a fresh current through the stag- nant pools. Internal treatment is the one safe method. — While improvement is reparted in many lines throughout the country it seems to have made a noticeabls ap- pearance in the weather. ©Of course the radio fans are polnting out that records do not have to be changed and it isn't recessary to crank it up after each number, WEDDING GIFT This Beautiful Hope Chest will be present- ed to the Bride, during this sale, Clothing and Furnishings Look Over Our Line Before Buying. Ply when he thinks conditions look bad. He forces others to do likewise and soon everyone must do it. Nothing will in- Creass prices any quicker, and it is' just that that Secretary Hoover desires to Inasmuch as the plelosaurus didn't materialize, the sea serpent can be ex- pected to try for lost honors this season out along the three mile limit. 500 pairs Men’s Khaki and Striped Pants (no seconds), 98¢ pair 500 pairs Khaki Knee Pants, 50c pair { By adhering to prices which are fixed for various grades and various reglons, From tha Jynchings In the south one would gather that they were afraid they would be behind on the quota in case the antl-lynching Jaw was adopted. Now that scientists are directing at- tention to Venus because of the belief| J. S Leonhar . D., that there is life on the blanet it will -amasyuu et SRk be & cne for Mars to get-jealous and in- [ Pile remedy. MHe succeeded, e named duige in fireworks, his prescription HEM-ROID, and tried it in 1000 cases before he was satisfied. Accorsng to reports the Germans| Now HEM-ROID s woid by ruggiats Bas war , but | SVErYW] - Itg easy, o B cntngp g much war material Dt | {5 take, and can always. be found ot d 41706 & Osgood’s, who will gla 8 ‘operators | submarine at manoeuvers shows it still ma"m vurch'iu:'nrmnuffi‘;’d:- fand satisfled customer, i The Norwich Bargain House 357 WATER ST., COR. WASHINGTON $Q. NORWICH, CONN. g Store with the little ** “TheBi