Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 17, 1917, Page 4

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@nm iel Bulletin and Coufied ; e S 121 YEARS OLD Butocription price 120 & week: 500 & month: 36.00 a year. Eutered at the Postoffice =t Norwich, Conn. as second-class matien Telephone Callst Bulletin Business Office 480. Bulletin Editorial Room:*35-3, Bulletin Jo Telephone 210-=. Norwich, Saturday, Nov. 17, 1917 CIRCULATION . 4412 1905, average ..............5,920 November 10, 1917.... 9,457 1901, average .. Oiice 35-2. Willimantlc Office, 623 iia'p Street PRESS The Associated Press is exclusive- Iy entitled to the use for republica- tion of all news despaiches credit- ed %o it or not otherwise credit- ed in this paper and also the local news published nerein All rights of republication of special despatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED ~ CORN IN CONNECTICUT.” This part of the state has reason ecord_made Wood- § stock in the, ralsing of corn. He has Gemonstrated by his average produc- tion of 112 bushels to the acre that Connecticut farms can be made to #uccessfully compete with those of lthe middle west, that by giving the i proper attention to it corn can be | Srown In this part of Connecticut at | & handsome profit when he can clear $$127.73 an acre and that the solution of the problem of getting the srain and other produce which Connecticut may require lles in the hands of ‘those ! to be proud of the recent { by Merril Healey of North ‘Who are tilling its soil. The idea that Connecticut land for farming purposes has -run out is kpocked Sky high by such a demon- stration in Windham county. The _ contrary has been shown most effec- tively and what is true of corn s ! equally true of other gs. This of * eourse -cannot be.done without tack ling blem with 2 detcrmination N8 Gelowrdl, Dut whether it in the Brar \duetion Of corn, vegetables, sheepd Bogs or cattle the task can be solved equally well if the proper methods are applied. sBulletin has contended for a Jlong je that @his part of the state, ar Connecticut for that matter, could ! Jiroduce all the corn that it requires. +Corn is largely required on the farm. “Less than 15 per cent. of the produc- tlon is used elsewhére. ir. Healey has proceeded to demonstrate what can be done where there is the will and it is to be hoped that his exampile will be an inspiration for others to zo and do likewise. It is bound to mean ,much to the acricultural interests of < the Nutmes state. THE Y. M. C. A. FUND. + N0 better proof of the excellent ser- vice that is beng rendered to the sol: diers and sailors throuzh the Y. M. C. A, is furnished than that which comes from the boys who have ex- perfenced these benefits. They know what it means to have a place to £o to for recreation, entertainment or mingling with their fellowmen under proper conditicns. They appreciate what it means to have some stuch or- ganization take an interest in their welfare an@l comfort and to make con- ditions either in the cantonments or at the front as near homelike as pos- sible. This is all reflected in the let- ters which are written home by those who are so far awar that it s impos- sible to get back during their brief furloughs, and by the expressions of those who are able to return for short visits with relatives and frie: It is fully understood what the aims of the organ n are in this respect. 3t is known what effor's are being put forth to accomplish them and there can be no better evidence as to the results that are-beinz attained than that which is furnished by the very ones for whom the efforts are being made. Bach and evervone is interested In the welfare of those who have zone to fight for their country on land or sea. They are rendering a service ta the nation and thercfore to every indi- vidual of incalculable value. It i thus important that evervene shouid appreciate the opportunity which s offered to do his part in providing these helps which the fund now being ralsed by the Y. M. C. A. will assure. It s a fund which descrves to be heavlly oversubseribed. ~ LICENSING BAKERS. Following the efforts which have been made Jo increase and to conserve the wheat =upply of this country, and the campaign which has been carried on with_more or less favorable results n to educate the people in the use of substitutes, the government has reached the decision that the bread- smaking industry of the country needs fto be regulated out of fairness to the bakers and to tho consumers. Ac- cordingly on the tenth of mext month _ the bakers arc to be licensed and un- lations without trouble Is to be ex- pected. They will have time in the next three wegks to make the neces- sary readjustments and to study what is required of themeand it ought not to require longer for them to figure out the matter of costs and profits un- der such a plan. -Considering the im- portance of bread this step means much to the consumer. or should if it works out as it-is intended, but while the government is taking this step to eliminate the excess profits on this article it ought mot to be over- looked that tiere is a great opportu- aity for similar work in other lines. OUR GREATEST 'SERVICE. Every reason exists for the placing of the emphasis which Rear Admiral Bowles did.cupon - the necessity of <peeding_up_the building. of ships in this country, as he <did-af a Philadel- phia luncheon. There be gave a clear outline’ of “the shipbuilding pro- gramme disciosing the fact that this country now has 400 wooden and con- crete ships, and 400 steel ships urider construction and 400 -more which were being built in private yards but which bave been taken over by the govern- ment, representing in all a dead weight tonnage of 7,500,000. These ships could all be used today if they: were available, -They-are be- ing pushed along as rapidly as pos- sible but there is a shortage of help which is bound to hinder construction until it is overcome. There is need for eliminating this obstacle as quick- Iy as possible, not only for the pur- pose of gotting these ships under con- tract off the ways but for the purpose of being better prepared for meeting the ship building requirements in the coming year when the shipbuilders’ times as many vessels as we have cvc been able to produce before. The settlement of the labor troubles will do much: to heip along this work but no little benefit is bound to resuit from the plan which he referred to of training 50,000 In the next six months o that they will become skilled ship tuilders. There is a part which both labor and capital can play and both should be guided now of ail times by patriotism. Admiral Bowles doesn’t exagzerate a particle when he says ouf createst service can’be rendered in building ships, MISTREATED HOLLAND. How much contgmpt Germany has for the neutrality of Holland, or in fact that of any country, and how lit- tle resard it has for the help which it has obtained from it in the way of foodstuffs and other materials re- quired in the conduct of the war is wanton manner in which the vessels of that and other neutral countrics are destroyed without regard to life or_property. The latest instance Is the sinking of a Dutch fishing boat, almost with- in sight of its harber, without giving any warning to the crew. The result of this unwarranted attack was that a boy of 15 was killed and the ten survivors were not rescued until. they had been seven hours in a small boat. This of course is nothinz new’ for German U-boat -commanders. They have followed that policy from the start and in spite of the promises that have boen made to Holland and other suntries there s no letup in jts say- conduet. is of course so located geo- that Germany has . an overpowering -advantage over it but view of \the treatment it is beinz accordea it ln the cause for no ‘little surprise that- Holland is so_ready to continue its trade for the purpose of indirec@y helping along and aiding in the continuance of just such atrocious acts as that which was committed up- on the Dutch fishing boat. Certain ones in Holiand are of courst making a good Profit off of the trade but it cught not to be overlooked that jt is Peing done at a-tremendous sacrifice of lives, property and rights. EDITORIAL NOTES. Byery time Villa comes back to life he kes it apparent that his recov- ery is eomplete. The man on the corner says: The optimist is the mah who has won his argument before he starts to talk. The reports that the Lenine forces have been victorious and that Petro- srad is in flames do pot hardly jibe. Washington gets nio news from Pe- trograd, says a- headline. Can no news in this case be considered good news? Regardiess of what this season may be ecalled, November has got %o be given credit for behxs a grand month thus far. Whether Villa is leading the rebels who captured Ofinaga makes little differenc: it's certain that he's back task wiil be to produce “ten to two!\"r nd Honor and Hope would have. The displayed every now and then in the| THE MAN WHO TALKS It seems to be real nice on the part of the government's food conServa- tion agents that they challenge us for our wastefulness not for our gluttogy. We all eat at least twice as much as is good for us, to - say nothing of our drinkink habits. If Coranaro could live more than half a century upon 12 ounces of food a day: and Edison do 18 hours of hard work a day on 16 ounces, why should the average man be consuming two and three times these amounts? Old Diogenes _didn’t ‘have to carry a lam- tern in his day to find that *“As houses well stored with provisions are likely to be full of mice, so the bodies of those whd.est much are full of dis- eases” It was Shakespeare who ex- Claimed: “1 am a great eater of beef; and I believe that does harm tb my wit!” The bliss of eating is about all the bliss- some people find in . this as they need are wastrels as real- ly as the Molly’s who feed the gar- bage cans, Why not hang the card tipon the sarbage can that shows no waste. In John Bunyan’s time there were men Who were saints. abroad _and devils at home, just as there are in our time. The men -who smile. to hide their villainy are just as true to type as the crocodile, and -they doubt- [less date from the stone age. .How much easier it is to pretend than real- Iy to be; and how much more stylish it ¥s to direct than to do. You do not have to be very keen-eved to-ob- serve that there is often more merit in letting George do-it, than there is in doing it one’s self. If not.ome tried to seem to be what they are not in this world what a great time Honesty, irtues are multiplied tand strength- cned, by practice, but man has never been known to impair his health.in this way. Perceiving what -is -right man proceeds to look it ‘rather than do it. We are all. great at seeking the. line of least resistance; we rath- er slide than push, we rather profess than practice. The man who is one thing abroad and another at home, is not as scarce as we may imagine! About- the worst fault that any person may be affiicted with is the conceit. that he is so.nearly perfect that he is booked for,a halo or a crown. There is a proverb that “he will be immortal who liveth till he be stoned by one without a famt” It is often proven to us. that- our mneigh- bors and our enemies know- our faults better than we know them :oursejves. It is no easy task.to smother fauits with virtues, and yet this has been made your stunt and mine. e is a-pro- gressive man who. knows, his own faults better than he Lnows - the faults “of hi§ nelghbors. Somehow, where ignorance is bliss, we decline dom proves himself to be what we highly to his credit that ' he ‘isn't. There ‘are faults of the /head and faults of the heart, the first punish- able here, and the latter hereafter. Those. who are easle-eyed for . the foults of others magnify their, great- est fault. There are a great variety of Gpin- lons as to what constitutes true triend- man down, but the one who up. A faithfal and _true -friond has been oscribed as “a living treasure’— “the true imasge of the Deity. True i arc not jarred by one another’s for in_maversity they stick. the closer. It has been weil said: “No friend@ship shat was begun for an_end endures until the end of life” Per- haps it is tree that it is:easier to ‘die f6r a frien®l than to find a friend that is worth dying for. Talse friends: fol- lew prosperity with the sdme ‘ton- stancy that a shadéow In sunshine fol. lows a man. Our own Washington | told us “friendship is a plant of slow | growth, and must whdergo and With stand the ehocks 6f ndversity before it is entitled to the name. Perhaps you do not bejieve birds ‘Perform feats in something HKe. the same epirit quick-witted and agile men do. The habits of birds are not @s fixed - or unifotm as mgst peaple think them to ‘be. Some birds show ini~ tiative and vepture to test {hemselves on the" wing as_exigencies or.-food prompts “‘thera. Quite recently. 1 saw a’ chickadee fiy to 2 sunflower, bale ance himself Peneath the seedpod as a humming bird holds himgelf before a. fiower, ‘and ‘exhibit sufficlent’ energy to peck at it five tithes before he flew away for a rest upon a neighboring:| bough. . He. &id not succeed -im. his purpose, but he disclosed a remark- able amount of strength and skill Last week I saw a goldfinch upon be- holding ephemera, or day-fifes, some eight or ten feet from his_ pérching place, dart for them like a_fiyosecher, check ‘himself in mid-air, dart at his uarey, turn_about on wing and re- urn to his perch. Both of these feats surprised me, as did also a nuthatch running upon the ground with a lot of sparrows hunting for weed-seeds. The ways of the birds are wonderful. It is amazing how Germany._strives to make everythihg work for her suc- cess. Admirai Von Tirpitz says she must rely upon the .ruthless work eof her submarines, so many of which go to sea and never go ‘back: but Herr Germany is apparently so much in- torested in its wrestle with Italy that it has forgotten about its opposition to Chancellor Hertling. Siberia of all provinces of Russia ousht to be the last to think of de- claring its independence with ex-Czar Nicholas as emperor. As soon as those who are entitled to them get theif questionaire they will have something to study over Guring their_idle hours.. +Petrograd is sald to be getting sick of Lenine and Trotsky. It has taken longer than it was supposed it would to arrive at that condition. Every true friend of the soldler is offéring his mite to.support the Y. M. C. A. in_its work of belping him at thé cantonments or at thé front. Probably Germany would be satis- fled if Russia did not conclude a sep- arate peace provided it doesn’t offer any more oppasition than it Is giving =t present. _ 3 2 3 * Possibly the drop in the number of vietims of the U-boats for the past week is due to the fagt that Von Tir- pits admits that the submarines can- not win the war. By Mh’lflfll’ ‘egreater attention upon the Americans the Germans are nmnufly _trying _to frighten our They will find that it is only axtng tter soldiers. Of course, after all that the Ger- mans have been. for the people | of Belgium and M, it David, a leading German socialist, de- clares: ' “The @erman dfmies must continue to fight vigorously, whilst] the German soclalists stimulate paci- fism 'among Germany’s enemies,” The German ‘cries for'peace are the product. of her three vears of war, and it is her hope to win the victory by art which she has fafled to win by arms, Doubt- less. they are sincere enbugh, but they are in spirit the tender of a victor in- stead of - the vanquished. Germany knows this war is not to be won by arms, and success by attrition is'what £he cannot expect with confidence. The war is far frpm its end: but the gn- tente have faith that three to five years more of strifé wjll compel the central empire to unconditionally sur- render to the nations which stand for better governmental methods. Most men who are great have play- ed the part, not leoked it. Tt is-real- iy ' strange how ~disappointing t men are in their looks.. We have Tever seen @ great.man who looked (Written Specially for The Bulletin.) Tho early church silver of Connec- | cut cut is of very great interest, writes Curtis_in_his from which previous quotations have in this column, on_account of its béduty ahd quaint- ness, but. also pecause of its associa- tion and history. Nothing else brings us intimate touch with' the life of oumr he'‘ declares. Generation after generatiohs of the sturdy Con- mecticut stock have _hallowed the most religioys gct of their lives. been made forefathers, ips requently in _domestic Presented” the tankards were use before they. wer churches, the offering of devout Chris- tian men and women. 'This plate i nearly all in peecisely’ ihs. same world: and all who eat twice as much | Stion an when, dECIBlA M ?"“5‘" many | Connecticat have banished” thess sacréd memorials to safety deposft vaults in cifies and to boxes and baskets: stored. {in_country districts; he.compiains. The substitution of the individual the cause of the change. ng be most fitting if these.discar&ed me- morials were @eposited in- some cen- tral place. where- the protection would be ample, yet where their historical and religious significance would not hidden, and workmanship couid. be, studjed and ad~ While not so likely, when silver is stored in a safety deposit vault in the name of a. churéh, when placed in.the custody of an in- i .the danger not ofily of fire and burglary, .but that it may -be ut- and thus. - through drift into_alien. hands and-be “lassfo the church forever: “there- i always, terly forgotten, caralessness of moré: than one Con- necticut church has been-destroved by fire, he observes; and.in one Case Mr: visit_resuited in the-locating of church silver that had.been com- Pletely forgotten: o The. silver their ancient” Much®of it is of great hlstaflcni 1'nl‘ue 200 pouna wiré Aiminutive wife fo call ‘her 230-pound husband “Drckie™ Hefven't ¥op .no- most ndniesof endearyrent belong_ in. the silly class? Lioyd’s comment Wide habit is: 1t thakes my blood Foi to hear magnificent men<called ‘Doys’: They are the finest men: the-world has Hoxw. these young: men who seem of ‘50 little account o long to tarry. The next man sel- | their neizhbors:loam up in the annals They -Besitate. #t-.no- peril; and-even in deati: by -their Patience: and trust teach their feHowmen how . nobly and._ religipusiy ., die. -« r ges- net._apply. to men of such yacommon merit. are magnlficent this. noble titie. ever produced!”: thought he was:.and very oftem it is| They deserve “GROUND “SCHOOI vyouns. man. goes i for . immediately” conjure up- visions of swl(l. filght in a huge bat- tlepline someéwhere among _ the e .behold. ,ur you Nz . summary. destruction: to Huns f’]r behind their own now sailing majestically over ‘snow-. A veritablé “Acer of the Dut’ Bighiy capped Alps pictiresque and gbr‘o the service—that of R ‘a mattsr of Faik, & Jostined to spend msqy months ¢ooling Bis heels ;i or somié other’- tral he will ‘Dot at -Mineola, For ‘montns, a-wheel or start a motor. Iucky, he will not go, up'uat. Perhaps he may -stand’ on and- gaze inlo: the.pilot's-cabin of one of the practise.machines. im, not.imn dizzy fligh. but performitig camp. . ond wondering .. whelher be able to Ay~ In ‘that he, 1§ ‘mich Tike the rest; o We aré all_here . rudzmenmr\ 1éhsons’ and hou-/.er e, s From thy ceaf a_process of. &ducati afecontinuaily . being, set, little harder fhin st o Diligent studenls with the wrg:?r ai el o e Sty B “thie "athonl ot Jiia.: e pected to learn. rpon.l terial values. ‘Le: admonishes thé: prophets it s wma- 27t dg- well? “That is the ‘The lnasx of the: fine ‘arts| Jiving. No one )x, save through Think ‘over. ihe. Christian virtues: are easy for men? | the art of .rigl becomes a et efforts and How many of, ti How many, acauired through. sl discipline! Take, tru of us ‘to speak Children have x-h:':“rfln"c they naturally prevaricate. us are ohildren of must-learn to. be acjous 2 emm. 1t is not & nqwe givers in " the .won that jt was hard for Lfip part with t.hn.\:.vmnnnx‘ learn to' be ’i% °3&£"“ m tic outrages enkindled the wrath s m: uf“‘b.’fgh;: as. early as_ the 17th his part. _Very few of . them, weiy well-dressed or well-groomed. * It is seldom a hero looks his part; or is .conscious of the fact that he merits the honors o TNd s P oS e Greely looked more like a jump- ing-jack than a fashion plate; and neither Bdward -Everett Hale = nor Henry Ward Beecher nor Caleb Cush- ing_were goéd advertisements for Yashionable_tailor. . Men of brains.and ‘men of genius do mot run any risk of being mistaken for society favorites, des. The best dressed men in tbe. country are probably tailors; and {be next best are those who are mot what they se b6, or who_never what is h!zhni;fp Dlés of ‘gt before we. ings as "eagles. the" bell will live up to appearance. Mén who do are mot made in the lm ‘:“-.‘;!hl to turn out a fashicn- - ; ';m % rETk e S and some of it is of very great beauty. He. tells us that the oldest piece of communion plate in the state be- longs to the Congregational church in Guilford. It is a quaint old beak with flaring lip, and pounced ‘ensraving “H. K. side. It was the gift of Kingsnorth, one of the first settiers of that town and a man of substance and worth. He died at the age of fifty, in 1868, during the great sickness, as it was called, and his will reads: “I 'give and bequeath unto Ye church here fifteen pounds to buy any such utensile for the sacrament with- I as they shall see cause.” The beaker” was made by William Rouse, of Boston, a- contemporary of Cap. tain: John Hull, the mint-master. One. of the beakers belonging to Congregational church in Groton bears the engraved inscriptios ‘The ift of Sr. John Davie to the Chh. of rist at Groton.” It was made by Samuel Vertion, a silversmith of New- p't:‘n. R. 1. The story of the beaker is this’ John, who was a son of Humphrey Davie, of Hartford, and cousin of Sir Wililam Davie, of Creedy in Devon, England, was graduated from Harvard in 1681, and became one of the first settlers in Groton and its first town <lerk. In 1707, his cousin. Sir William, died without male issue, so John of Groton succeeded to the baronetcy. , Barefooted and in his shirt sleeves, he was hoeing corn on his farm when a messenger arrived to_tell him of his good fortune and to salute him as Sir John Davie. He soon left for England and the beaker was his parting gift. Belonging to the ancient First Con- gregational society of our own Nor- wich Town is = a two-handled cup made. by John Dixwell and. bearing the inscription in quaintly ensraved letters: “The G' - of Sarah Knight to the Chh. of Christ in Norwich, -April 20, 17227 She was famous Madam Knight, who wrote a. diary of _her |journey from Boston to New York during 1724, which book was _re- printed a. few .years ago by the boys in - the printing department of - the Norwich Free Academy. For a num- ber of years Maamd Sarah = Knignt was_a resident of Norwich: she lies buried in the old grave-yard at New Eondon. “There are _sixteen silver beakers owned by the First Congregational | Church of New London. and two of tifem bear the inscription: “The Gift of the Owners' of the ‘Ship Adventure, of New London, 1699.” They were made - by two 'Boston -silversmiths working In partnership, John Fdwards and John Allen. A ship named Adventure and built -London, was ownéd at this time by Adam Pickett and Christopher Chris- tophers; ‘of New London. It does not seem & wild Might of the fmagination, 'observes Mr. Curtis, to conjecture that thesc - rbeakers were presented ‘the { %% church as a_thank-offering either' for a prifitable merchantile ventute ‘or for a fortunate escape from some harrow- ing experience at sed In 1725, Governor Salctonstall ‘gave by will a silver tankard to this church and in 1726 his' widow made a like gift. In 1793, thé church, by .vat Fad these two vessels made into three beakers by J. P. Trott, a New London silversmith; buf care was not used to preserve the o0id inscriptions. The, Congregatiohal churgh at North {Haven owns a large baptismai, basin up6n_Which is. inscribed: “The Gift {of the Rey. Ezra Stiles. D. D. LL. D | President Yale College, to the Congre- Zational church in North Haven 17947 The donor was one of the most distinguished men of his time and a native of North Haven. There w: a time when the First Congrégational church, Hartford, | conld' boast of an array of plate made by, the early silversmiths. This fact is ‘revealed bw the Court of Probate recorgs. In the early part. of.the last century, a pinch of poverty was felt or else’ it was thought/ that’ the style of these vessels was too old-fashioned. Whatevér the cause, the plate was, sold. é 3 THE® DICTAGRAPH. LETTERS T0 THE EDITOR _Should 'Be Acourate. Mpr.:-Editor: You might say to: Mr. % ig|J. E. #ughes that when he-: makes aeks | statements he should be . accurate: cach . ane a ] Commadore Vanderbilt - ‘mever:: satd, “The public be damned,” but./his son, to say ; Williamr H., did. , "Go ,Yours -traly, J. B: WOODWARD. New London, Nov. 15, 1917. By National Geographio Society. | b ‘!.lhy lb“g::“nfl\‘p'l::l'ds (D‘ Y A Wl‘ ic ocie! % %'v ington. headquarters; ns, 0. whom. they. are nntad, the ~Esthonians or a.race -numbering a million re than 400,000 of whom re- tho) retain. many characs “which bespeak- their Mongo- n m‘l&h. They are long-armed and hort-legged, have _broad, faces. .and o, Fiie, 4F8 naually beardless and ihazgonline e "oniy !Qcctfl of fhe Msths in yuu -of figg« muh them'as'a daring pre- people of the Baltic. whose and 1196 Canute VI|: Muon against them, o “ rhn} H&lg Wlu gfl“ vr”rk" eac Mr"“. i et S ‘!é‘i R eufi?f- mk}an‘yi. -l!fel r. siomach do FOUR S 1.30, 3, 7, E: | AUDITORIU} MONDAY, TUESDAY NOVEMBER 19 KITTY GORDO i "Phe Beloved Adventt ~TODAY LAST CHANCE TO SEE The True Story of Russia in 7 Parts A Corking Cook Co TODAY-AND TONIGHT MUTUAL WEEKLY THE EXQUISITE LITTLE ‘S TAR VIOLA DANA A:SOUL A Matro Wenderplay ‘of Love and RQSCOE.(Fatty i ARBUCKLE in Fatty at*Coney Island His Most Laughable Screen Chara HEARSI-PATHE NEWS Coming Monday' and Tuesday Abr.e Joyce & Harry Morey: “HER SECRET” -, — e and forced' a number of the lawless bangs to accept Christianity. and allow s to.be baptized, Hardly had warlike proselyters, thenian ehorés, however, than the. in- Lobitants. reverted to barbarism ang their heathen. practices. [Matinee 10c. - Children 5¢c Evening 15: 4—SHOWS TODAY At 130, 3.15, 6 and 8 p. 2—Star Features— JULIAN ELTINGE N "THE'COLD DECK IN. 6 ACTS They ‘stacked: the cards on. “Levil” “Laigh, but stirred by the love of two good women,-he Beats them in the ame of death. The Countess Charn As “man to man” woman” Mr. Eltinge will you immensely in this br of fun, thrills, and high s COMING MONDAY NEXT MARY PICKFORD in Her Greatest Succesy REBECCA OF SUNNYBRGOK FARWM feft the ks~ A quarteraf < Waldemar was mere; He ‘subjugated the north, portion of the-iand and bronght tie inhabitants under submission- to It was nevegmna: The Norwich Art Stude Association PRESENTS TAN HA IN A NEW ILLUSTR CARRYING AT SLATER HALL SATURDAY, NOV. 24 TICEKETS ALL SEATS RES Sale of Seats at Cranston BIG DANCE ‘Shafirion Hall, Baltic Saturday, Noveémber 17th | Music by Picketts Fill Orchestra of Willimantic Sanjos,, Baxophianes, Xylophones, Etc. y ‘A Geod.-Time. For All O atcount of war taxes L.adies 25¢. Gents,50c, the Danish willing . submiésion, more than a hundred years the inhabx| ilants gave their conquerors endlegs trouble until, 1343 Waldemar IV, de; cided that tHey. were <not worth ‘thel 50 -he sold his nd_in their Tits of the SWord, Who were Eraty their neg of. noréhward from, Teutonic lands. “For more-flian 500. years -the he 1ot of the Kst Dancing, 8 to 12 nians. was virtaelly. hat 6f derfdbin under their: German | New 'Bfl&;n’. 3 ‘mher Gities have 7 seen enough o, run the affairs of (and. in- most *Home Town" nsx.mceq fail. 1 :ecommendation: 6 Sy an, edicient person be is 48l Spraing , Job Tman can get Becpie-to write him let- ters etating that he is well qualified 'tor be.-president: of ithe United States ‘Jieople, in--outsideyplaces -may believe ‘dm is- said, butatha residents in his e tewn feel, entirely. different about it;sThey want . man whose qualifica- | know, ana A Chamber of Com- Terce, properly conducted is a great imstitution for &ny -city, and it | beshoped that in the lst‘| century both the nob)ea ad the fortified towhs of JEsthonia placed themselves under the p ton of the "Sivedish ’ it thes acknowledge. a, new eter the Great’: ssful wars dgainst Charles XI ‘For the last thirty years the Rus Eovernmoent. has, duct of the seems to be ical moment.—Qhio master . ufter e king syste] fho Hsths, lrymg e§peci; bp) ish the' Esthonian' linguage to Which | have clung Fars‘a regiilations as to the .use.of xha the schools have ~(r\ed o Wcan Lhe people from thei: One charac; teristic Which hos gerved to preserve the Esth languaga. through- the, cen- turies has beén the people’s love for and they have rare natural gift Tor versMication.: FePhe. -orihedox *"Greck chirch bt a also have conducted an‘“active rrogram in Esthonia,.but according to ihe latest' religious cemsus. ninety-six ‘tions they Flace confidence. the reorizanized cham- bet will shave -a more suecessful than tiie one “which New Hritain Record: + Loy Kerensky’s. Belated Remaric. Kerensky is about Jate with the news Secret ‘Garvice~ Efficiency. “iOne gratifying thing about our con- CHILDREN, NEED FOOD—NOT AL ‘How' carc]m it is to accept alcoholic me everybody knows' that their whole upon correct nourisimen our pale, listless, underweight or pun taly hced the special, concentrated food th OTHER VIEW PQINTS ks what has ‘becorbe ot estaurants that -used to ‘chitdy wih and rEl'l"owth the old time hang out the sign twenty-five cents.’ heard from ome of them he was_going e quit philanthrophy and Meriden. Journak: o into | business. citizen Who - heard: 3. {woman remaric that _she wouldn'tiuse fag for a dish -eloth s I now’ puzzled to know ‘whether. or,aot that ought to. be considered e teea~ sonable statement. 4 in ths form of a-statement to the af-: tect that; she_would make such 4 nge. the, flag; there would have been.no asubt., in h;s mind.—Waterbury - Be- the_American If ehe had ,pui nfi rove their nutrition and repair w: ing school tev-m all ch The. Chambe process of -feorgai erce :s,,tn aniZation and 1t 13 to, Do Hoped ihat it will be better Sone ducted:in the future than in the in the city Jje for 4.1 the .post of secretdty, brce of its great nounshmg power. Scott & Rown

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