Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 6, 1918, Page 9

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The weekly prayer ~church was | he evening at the home o | ed at Jacksonville, week end at the home i Mr. and Mrs. .Tmp K Earl Hglmes af : ¥y has 1 b”n spending a furlough at his hae L J. Y, Miller en‘g?ugufl Thurs- A dl)‘ Mra Richard W, Johnson. Mrs, ! Cora Batham and Mrs. A. J, Phflau After a pleasant social time, Mrs. Mil- ler served dinmer at 6 p. m. War Stamp Committes. + Rey. Frank S. Clark, pmq; of the Baptist “;g“"" Edwin Curtin, Montvil hos Hepe have* b.e‘l?lp it committee for the town. Mrs. J. 1 Chapman has returned | i home after a visit with !rlemlu in| Mystie. Took Part in Play. . The play entitled 'rhe tor was :lveu in 'wu‘ tamp | Brapristor ot L hotp), Comalius/ii gerald; Zebediah Dunn, who hangs _ around, James Church, 1 nmes, in h&uns M ‘huildings here, ',;y bein; one - of the oldqst of n| 5 sell Neal, -ut: ‘was found guilf saulting Deip PITIG A #n'sumsi DAY. Gnerdl: Discomiart Gaused By Coldfin WAth the tempgmt e down. to 1! di belnv zero in the morning bar ?7 s A ing northwest real- discomfort and ‘not -ain: to many )lere there is ne céal s;nl supply of ot! was mors veal - er that this exceptional winter the psople tion of Southern New England. To heat many of the buildings to at desree of eamfort which long cvstom has decreed As proper was 8 thing unknown for the %oy lu mqlt Teamsters and others wh- 'ere oblized\ ta De out of doers suffered i |eruelly frem the eold and there were ta Qridley. - Funera! of "Q.Vr]h Qg!iw. The death. o2 Mejvin.. M ers;- for- .of ‘\m Lo nn oceuprediat the rs, Mf Tuesda; mllth Peters 1 r‘zlgh V anr in Brnmebnro Vt.. cpnhr here from that place savi ‘weoks ago. He has been suffering from asthma for a long time and that-was the cause of _his death. He is survived hyx sister who lives in Vorment, fe died several vears ago. - Mo funeral -took place from undertaking reoms M: New London Friday Peddlers! Parade Qfi e entmxr;nnem* uga,'%‘g Paradt " w: Y bvinlng Dy~ the :sem.era nr‘\hg edist, church.' * X Ja; g] ‘generaq us trowd patronized tf\a varipus vem]era freely. All goods were soid out. A social time ‘Was cnjoved. ' The enter- tainment wassin‘charge’ of Mrs,,Chap- man. ‘League Meeting. ; Sunday ewuflng _the; g meeting of 't] led hy k4 "'W many rveperts of frost bitten ears and noses. Tee cn the rivers hereabouts is now fingers, - |s0 heavy that no one for a week past, has had the eourage te ehep threugh o leqy {n the exact thickness. The last report on the Assawaga river ice was 20 inches, which su es anything that the rresent generation knows. In some quarters fear is .expressed that the gquick b{ea.kip; u will be the destruction of the foot- bridge, whieh has been in rickety con- Aitiov: for the past two or three years. A gradual thaw, of course, vnulq vent the eweeping away of the me- ‘ture, which has been huckled enee this winter by the action of the lce. Club's Reception. :ho anrual reception of the BUO'I ist G e Iart fall, was held lz sping in St. John Baptist fall in the Hyde block, the affaip |88 proving, as usual, one ot the . very plearant secidl events of the winter £eason. Iiss Kalter Succeeds Miss Stott. ’Mhs Jessie Kalter has been engag- to be a col ercial department leacher at Killing High School, te le | succeed Miss Jessie Stott. whe is 8O- as |ing tq the Bfldgegort High School ‘h. to teach. Kalter will come here trom Dovar, N. H, High* Sehool, where sh; has been successtully en- Military Whist. table military whist party, the roceeds of which will he given jsori Red. Cross chapter, the home of Mr, and Mrs. | illips, Academy street. Mrs. Phuups, Mrs. Ada Spencer, Mrs. Adah M. Patter and Mrs. John A. Gifiez: made up the committee in charge the affair Ralph C. Young, autemobile inspec- tor for this county, was in Hartford Tuesday on a business trip. e TRAINING $IX HOURS DAILY. Brigadier-General Gharles A. Doyen Writes That ~Weather In ann Makes No Dn‘hnuu Erimler-l}enpral Chatles A, Doven, second in command of the = United|q =|States Marine corps, one of the most wonderful organiationy in the ser- viee of Uncle Sam. has written a let- ter to Georze A. Berry, Winter street in which he uknowladgex the receipt forparaah o W a3 ovtacan St lorwal 0 as a S but whh:h did not reach General De- yaGn in i\rac: until ;u;‘v 1n$:{anu Y. eneral yen ani r, Berry been friends sinee boyhood and wflre chu s in the days when they were at- ing schopl at. Concord, - N. H, TTY Was ngterwuds engaged in bus- iness. The. nuc'in is an uem, from"the £ - |letter: Heunwm Fourth Brigade, ‘oembc Jour days at seheel and also uary 11, George: Your lst'tir 31‘ % and Christmu box of cf deed great yieasure to he e oo e to hear after all “ these vears, I weil n{an ‘happy Wwith you in Cencord nhsn ¥ a.store in that elty. It seems a long time ago, and, as a mm:.fm itmnnnmborot }l?hvulh T ;149 not m- tfal and kind of 7 yuu t,o remember me and ta send me | years an d gxl;. we' have & box of. ‘We are not having a p r here, nor yet is there mln;' diffficalt about it. ~The. weathi been: pretty bad since Chris: i as snow 1ty of foed and clo g 2nd hxe been ;ble to keep p toum . brothir, Hai Muter ‘and from' my foth- |1 n who is in Concql'd 1 have, not been back to. Manchester for five or six There, 30 fow that | ormasely tem et II'O. ) - inéd. Most of my old teion fi o g .p?:,.l:‘;ou hya:fi goOne awa; 0] see ‘again | - wishes for | first queta, ang thig | who e /figx AL other: @] imposed: upon the neople of this see- of this ice | vice, which' has. been meeting| {in cold are emned ; s . this 3”; s another du.nu r § order of the depa: l.’a,fl(‘bl final 15 per cent, of 119 men. d g\;{ “ngn mi:;tu&mfl s number of fit must be mt!se ta m,n hut there 15 no tion of lt, s@ h -examination: W mm m‘;m hnd :K w‘ifl' "%‘gwrf ti&p- superior Wb*wil]i‘!z 1 B, Kent be ted in the work by L ¥ Peryy; M. B Boti of these tion to ::.3: m‘f{:? Rhyslc;} exam nations of ngl ints. B.%; | ot of the men already have been cerufied for ser: under the old reguiatiens, but they will be required to again underge a’ physical examination. Old-Fashioned Winter Weather. s whis not over-particn- towraqity slwwgd tampe ures as 30 hq;w zero hcrq, the readings were not_beli ))y many ]zenl!le who saw tiaa. oxmenesd in u ch hat th ‘80 much so that the s:bln uchmu-!;‘f the city wers or. red closed to.r the day mer the morning session. . The cold forced anmother near-heli- day upan "the business men, in so far 28 % was. concarned, .for' few peo- ventured out to endure the rigos of the Arstic weather. One of the girl students at the high ;che;l‘ h:d Jer ot :;:un wjzuet he:; er way to sel an re O eases reported of nippedg;?alzl' and fin- jers. ! Water ln Frazen. Continued severe weather is bring- ing this city face to face with a criti- eal situation in sa far as its water supply 'is conoerned it was stated on Frost that is now deep in the gmune continugs day by day. to freeze up pipes, leaving homes with- out &, water supply nn4 endangering the gervice through some of the mains sections of the eityv. Tn any case, ‘the ‘city's supply of water is ;hm anq the meost rigid econemy should be practiced in the use of it. The - practice -of ‘allowing” faucets to ;lrlp in order to ple:'ext:;‘ plpi; freez-' "0“5 al is time d ;:%u?d (seonunusd by every?:ly‘lg wh lareu whethier the city is ade- v nrotected. Rnd Blocked With lce and ‘Snow. ‘n:rrolley s"v"f; “between = West ompson and Webster was discon- tinued Tuesday because he{‘ road was bleghed with ice aud 8 and the !a: plows could not foree a route through | dur. he cars. Men were mlun? "’the day in shoveling cut ompleted Within Appropriation. A meeting of the committee on:the mstfrueti:: ot“{.ha ‘!‘rad;‘ school was ‘vesday afterneon, It was after- announced tha Qg';lu committde's il show. that.dha; build- irther . the now made is tnm this |- camp on F e)m- in charge of the mi;;tm and. iflel na - | Bolshewiki, an .tive‘ for the em- in - salye comes is twofeld. Bx- [ thru and stim- tmt that lls'ht- COUNT CZERNIN'S SPEECH e it Version Permitted to Go to England #nd America Was Completely Changed London, Feb. 5—The most import- Qgt passage in the speech which Cout r the Austro-Hungariap for- minister, delivered before almu) on Janpary 24 which screating a storm of anti clever]y distorted so as to com- G on Wl el Olff Bureav permitted to go to England and America. anlu' ta Pmsiémc Wfiwns ® | sroposals, Austro-Hungarian Zor- terltu queted as gaying: i is no harm in stating that T rd the recent proposals of ‘President . Wilson ‘as an -appreciable approgch to. the Austro-Hungarian nt of view, and that to some of hem Austria-Hungary joyfully eould give her approval. But she must first lay down this principal—that insofar propositions cern her al- };e whether in the case of Gej 'S possession of Eelgium or in the case " “Turkey—Austria-Hungary, ful to her engagements to fight to the nd in defense of her allies will de- nd the possessions of her allies -as shs, would ner own. That 1Is the stahdpeint of our ailies, in regard 'to which thn is perfect reciprocity.” “The correct text of this section ‘of Count Czernin's speech as printed in the Vienna newspapers, follows: . ~ “Se far as these prepositions. eon- cern her allies, whether in the case of German posse; s, Belginm or Tur: key-Anstria-Hungary, faithful to her engagements, will go to the extreme in defence of her alijes. . She will de- fend fthe pre-war, possessions of her allies as she would her own.” By, removing the comma between "G nossessions” and “Belgipm” q,rnpmn the important ad- ectiy gre-wu Count Czernin was M“ to say that he would defend Germany's pessession of Belgium. This is the very thing he emphatically dis, claimed. . Fle definitely-. dissociated Belgiym fronl German pogsessions and, | declared that Austria. would defend cnly the pre-war possessions of her allies. It is this declaration obviously op- poged to the German militarist pro- gramme and to Bulgaria avowed war aims mme which is ecausing suck .a”stir in Berlin and Sofia. SOCIALISTS SUPPORT BOLSHEVIK| GOVERNMENT Ask That United States Recognize the Present Geversment in P-trograd —_— Chicage, Feb. 5. — The ns,tlonfl executive eommittee of the socialist party announced its peace programme today. ' An address to President Wil- son. and members of cengress sup- ports the Ba]lh:\ iki peace proposition and n the administration at Washi nsum m jein in the discussion between the central powers and the to attempt to get oth- to join. ¢ er_entente alli 1t asgerts that mere statements of peace conditions are futile and likely ta multiply causes of disagreement. Belligerent nations, it says, must meet one another in conference.” It - |asks that the United States reco%— many {* —_— Gamg h Frqm as Chaplain in U, Q. Forces. Rev, Anselim Mayotte, o ecurate of az Mary's parish, uniformed as an of the U, 8. ;my ieft Rere —en oon route to N gfich cify he Wm sail” m - Franee for serviee with | tonight, - {mw-lfl]-? sr& %‘;n &:&:“1,’1“3{3%‘1“ |ilene 340 ol d|have been dead or bevond recoves Hallsted nize the at Pswox!r: The exeeutive committee sent a re- quest to cretary of State Lansing that they ermitted to ~forward, Lhmugh Russial soeiallsts, the follow- ing to Leon Trotzky: “Gonyey . congratulations of soeial- ist party of Ameriea to ecomrades of Germany and Austria on recent revo- lutionary activities for peace.’ ‘A me of congratulation was to Trotzky. vy s BELIEVE THAT BRIDE : ' PERISHED OF €OLD Mrs. Frank Hallsted of New Haven Was 'Mvri-d Saturd-y, ~ New Htven vean'n Feb. 5.—Mrs, Frank Hallsted, a bride of Saturday last, - was found dead and her hus- thand: badly frozen in the apartment ocenpied by, them at §4 Frank street The man is now in a hos- with his feet and body so badly }fiu:ld that his condition is serious. nflng of frozen water pipes in to the discovery of his and - b&‘! his condition been “out'a few hours later he would it de fa.otn government “m . tl:::- e\'&;ployte B‘;n 2 muni i and rent an?-mu about two months . 3 )m statement may gfi :% married Saturday. suq): that in!ormatfon -Austrian.| € umuun in Germany nd Bulgaria, | gaf fa:zh«' 640D AT ¥( Rub, as lo; ; to each & Address No. M 108 BRITISH PROBLEM:IN SHIPYARDS: Rm;amaéfll to te Committee by -;“‘Aéndsrfin ghlphuudlx\g cmh for twenty- Whg Emergency Fleet 1 sfns,u investi= 1o is afternpon that aborproblem in the ship. yards wnuli e to adopt the Brif- ishpenalty elause'making it an offense amenable’ 40 the: mm for any work- man to attempt te: laluee a fellow “to-q; govermn ts ite' solve s “latior-problefr is yefcwfl to meet the itisistent-demands ' o i\, Italy -an@:Frante for and foodstuffs. ~ The- adniinistration’ of the o-ofc tive i Vement “bettveen Canada an: this “cou hag hands ‘of ihd g poy mal ters nts and th rtnd by’ th of thg two mittee has W ntment of rector uf Lhe " req ments will ba PO mq to the United States employ- irough its va- - the demands nce by a “famous Premch seientist,” who ob- {ained them !mmlih a ee ‘?ehra‘t’ed Rassian reyolutionary paper. The names are not given, it $3id, as iZeir publi- cation would endanger the lives of the men. The mest important dceument is a cireular dated June 9, 1314, in which the German general hea arters or- ders all ewners of factories to open thelr pos: 1914, informs military agents on: the fron- tiers of Russia, Frange, lu;ly afd Nor- way . th nlimited credits have been- apened at Germs ?1 l‘fi in Sweden, Norway,” SBwitzerland, China and the United States; ~which the general headquarters authorizes them ‘to use for the purpose of dest troving facteries belonging to~ the enem: strikes. amaging lg plies and destroving electrieity centers. Special agents were being placed at their -disposal, ‘it was added, to bring about exploslons and firES provoking burping sup- ? | the interior te gr: ¥ |PURE LARD , |pormerserin m» S0c/1, 31c, 21 [ . “’C Iefler tlun Butter far CRISCO GREEN AIN i POTATOES, pack... LL@W ONIONS 3 !&- ROCK . 47¢ | TURNIPS, peck. . LARGEP!‘NWMS -‘!lUlCYP &Wgfi WLESS S BALDWIN APPLES Zpackqge....‘,...,.fic zqu.m.........,m;_ v suwsnsmn OF PAYMENTS 'u-abATs_ DESTROVED AS - ON/PUBLIC EAND ENTRIES{ ——r Voted by senate For Men - Engaged in Military .Service. ‘Washington, Feb. 5. — Bills passed today by the ‘senate permit the sus- pension- of payments on public land entries by men engaged in military sar\-ice authorize, the segpetary of t permits for the) cutting of timber for mining purpos- 10¢ e T Representative ~ Miller, Back From JErance, So. Informed the House.” e Washington, Feb. Representative tle front in France, told the house t day that .he believed German subma. yines are being destroved about as fast as Germany can build them. He praised Vige Admiral Sims for On Question of Legislation to Develep Water Power Reseurces. ‘Washington, Feb. of Commerce of the United States to- day sent a referendum to- its 985 commereial _organization members thmughput the ‘country en the ques- tion of the passage of legislation by ‘ongress for the&ilevele ment of the vast water power re;oure! of the United States. ial committee of the chamber has T gpded the enactment of; sunh legislation after an inquiry inte the subject. President Wilsen at 3 npfint £on- ference with heuse leads passage of 2 bill te ve: ing. water power meureaa ;mi atits suggestion g special -commitize was named- to mfler all sych legislation. This comi expeets to repest a general bill at this session. WOMEN ARE WILLING ‘TD 'WQBK At Pragent 1, Enuaw in, A. lsylhm. e, ‘Washington, Feh,. — Women throughout the cauRiey . are. express- ing . their. williuwm in:. work om| - farms, ‘according to- sued , today by .the Baie miormatign, Pyl e fi"emflt eites Ko statement vmmr‘.‘ of Canada: scepdul!y es to. copporations urgamzefl in one state hut conducting mining opera- tions in another and permit persons of eighteen years or over tn maka home- stead entries. The senate. also pmad a hill- pro- the methods he had adopted ~with, American @estroyers and cruiser con- veys te combat the submarine menace amd argued American shipping could be handled by naval officers and not/ by the shipping - board. Tl'mne were' villing fcr cessions of territaries by |ne Americans in the crews of the two the states of V&% nsin: and Minne- | transparts ‘which he crossed dw sota in order to¥ re-establish the|Atlantic, ho said. boundary betweng‘u\g twosstates at N ceptain pointe ihing LABOR UNIQNS NOT ¥0 BE UNITED STATES AND CANADA TO GO:0PERATE In Djstribution of Lahor War Purposes. m— e ‘Washingtan, Feh. 5.—Complete co- operation between the United States nd Canada in the eflecttve distrihu- fon of labor for war Dprposes was naugurated today. The department|iso of labor announces that. by mutyal agreement Canada will not import 'l bor from this couptry without the consent ‘of the United States and the American empléyers will not import Canadian labor without the consent For at Skuw&hwn, Me. Skowhega_n Me Feb: 5—A peti-, tion by the Madison Woplen compatiy for an 1n;gmtion to - restrain labor uniens from aid to the 300 emr- n strike since ssed by Judge b M Sgegr in the supreme mur( ay, The court held that ‘labar could not be recognized as defen: e umncqrpmted 8ad pure- 1y voluntary organizations: !flfilfl for the Mother ONSTIPATION makes children uncom.formble, cross and irritable, justas it does older people, Dr.Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin is'a mild, pleasant tasting combination of simple laxative herbs w1th pepsin, that acts easily and natur- ally and lpramotes normal regularity, Children like it and ke it willingly. It contains no opiate or narcotic drug. Druggists Sell Dr. Caldwell' s Syrup Pepsin 50 cts. Gtwo sized $1,00- A.tual botde ean be obtained, free of charge, by writing'ta Dr.°W. B. Cdldwa!l, 457 Wahmgtpn 8., MM IL FAST AS THEY ARE BUILT: ) Miller, who recently visited the bat-' RECOGNIZED A§ DEFENDANTS. Becision in Madison Woolen Gq, Case moyes nt me cqmbggy's mill at Mad-

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