Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 16, 1918, Page 4

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“ts Eelieve but ntiaue to dis- count their efforts. To do. o, how- ever, means that théy Have net omy the great of siil FACTS Mfi Gm The invasion of Russia goes ahead weather and shipping will llles ax-e m -concrol h»tween Whén the dress é&:fie hoife 1t Was t “Everybod; is working this Sum-| : o i b 72 ross th large an [ary tool along the nex mass Eeid Bloymntate oo ¢ e day with the idea of dashing over : hall, who had dropped in. “T deflare; | jio ",fl geuuing - EmalleF 6He: it is just wonderful what these fere |- -E y With hs' arfiv children just out. of high school aré| that fuzbt mme a delivery mm Wit ng!"” n bsm tuman Mary gaspéd, - ‘hav “Yes. I know all’ Absul it a a f“ N explain latef! fte fl"! 'gl%belnx calléd upon. “My !tflW m i( ofi the nian, she ex- uel both have jobs and nm}e 4 Box il elfier hana, that| v gat them™ the rest of the - m o/ smmler i lh een ifi a chrofic state of #'t undérstand,” protésted the! feth across the hall. “Nb Hiore do I, admitted the méthet of _the energetic Hamiel and 1y, was glad to havé thosé tWo E&Pninz $50 a month apiece. And they st as enthusiastic. We S§pent two e®enings figuring how much the\*l Slorwich Bulletin and Qoufied 122 YEARS om_fi ol i 1 b eh PR g o ricorteg y Sorwin Telephone Calls. usin Office 480, Hdjtorial Roams Willlsantle Othce, 25 SPring Sk Telephone 384- QR‘E °'m§s¥“'nnau issikn v réfncl d i#$ doné muéh in ’-g;i! flgfiafi‘ the mm"%n"‘f"%%“x EE' itectioh bl it o o imore a8 there gfl b;e;n“ ‘both. Srofii the sirealh Frank Malls xhpt the original, 1 the hnumw Mnudnm- hi elee faljiéd it could be HMEG down ln Ker. THén ih the ®haserient she Had, found a pérfeet darllne for only $¢ al\fl pAYing $2; had sent it out C. O D. for the balance, &nd \’Vhlch di Whila I was debating bot\uen them i came hér dearest friend with news of a Perfectly wonderfil sale up i elleve but what the ks, _riidl= s .N-glm leve e A'rek Alfin{ ihe rm Mmmqnn Fige to the oecasion ';g;rmifi‘a!} nforc! 8 muimg its Iwum‘siewdam;fifl( weak i i cansed hni“he and he: A friend ny attention % mu your newtv:pet ‘ 169 through Libert¥ bond purchased. Tets &4p be o sidckentiz of eftorts cOntaining an America oW A e BUBHING INTO BELGIUM. !ha dFive which is being conducted the BPM erich and Belglans Buueé‘ll?u éontifient. dre in this ififi 4 a. combinatioh of trefch dnd I ng, t“b rier alohg ihe m‘!w&y leared spaces, the latter m m gnse forests where 1t is in order 16 Stalk the enethy Bol- v empty etboolts.” “Wfilt wlth the waF and everything, Norwich, Wednesday, Oet. 16, 1918, s AR e — MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Asocisted Press is exclusitely enttied % the use for republication-of all news despateh & Thedlted to Tt oc ot otherwise credited in this paper and also the locai news pul s of r‘i‘lmu of ottlal despaléh- o i diso Teeerved . 'F:ghl is Mors firniou. than Peace” DON'T LET THE LOAN FAIL. We are being repeatedly told that the fourth Liberty lcan m be ra‘eed and that there is confidence that it will be erecured. Everyone certainly s that it will ba but it must be ent that such will not be the case the meneral apathy. which has pre- °d during the early part of the od in which it ig to be subseribed to continue. he desire that it should be ralsed 1 be sufiicient to bring to the 356 Who are Alrectiv jntérest- ed in the undertaking, those who can afford to back up the fighting forces even though they are nat able to do any ual fighting themaélves, h a larger amount asked for than hefore, with the armies malking a most gratifying showing and with the country demanding that the enemy must be brought t6 an unconditional surrender, it i5 incumbent upon tho people of the eountry, and that means every one and not a chogsen few, to provid funds which' are abso- lutely needed today and would still he needed if there was any chance ot an immediate peace Even if the country was asked to pive what it is only being ueged to Joan the money should hé provided. Our safety and our future depend up- on it and right now the success of our representatives in Europe hingeés to & large degree upon the support which Is given them rizht here at home. We not, however, asked to give but lend and we should make sucn » handsome response that there could be no doubt regarding our patriotism and, loyaity SETTING GERMANY STRAIGHT. It is not only possible but entirely vrobable that the war lords of Ger- many fizured along with the kalser that through a shifting about of some of the government officials In that country the United States and the al- lies could be made to believe that the imperial German government had been overthrown. that the people were in control and that it would be advis- able to arrange with them such a peace as they desired. Germany is tos fully understéod for any such thing as that to take place. It has put itself in such a position that even If it were sincere it would be open to suspicion. But there is no chance of the sincerity or Germany heing mistaken at the present tinfe, for it is thoroushly underétood that if the kaiser is able to bring abou: such reforms as it is claimed have heen made he still retains the power to return to the same government which the world has decided must be wiped out for good. President Wilson has shown tha: there is going to be no treating with any such crowd of vandals, and that there is no chance of entering into regotiations while the kaiser's meth- ods are still in evidenee. It is time for the German people to realize that the kaider must go and that the Ho- henzollerns must be gotten rid of at the same time. And what is equally important Germany has been plainly told that it is not going to get a peacs throueh diplomatic channels without any regard being paid to the miltary leaders. Too great a sacrifice has been made for anvthing of that kind But at the same time Germany, Aus- tria-Hungary and Turkey understand that they can have peace separately or together on the same tefms which were given to Bulgaria, to MUST MEET THE REQUIREMENTS Sir Frie Geddes, head of the Brit- admiralty, now in this country us that the U-boat menace is greater than it ever was” and urgee upon this country an increass in the production of destrovers and anti- submarine craft. There has been evi- dence in the past few weeks that the Germans have been endeavoting in their desperation to bolstes up their Josses on land by new accomplish- ments on the high seas. This has been shown not only by the attacks which have been made upon convoys but by the way which they hhve gone after every vessel sighted and the disregard which they have beem paying to the That the menace i sald to be greater does not mean that the allled naval forees have been weakened or that they have shown any leTéing up their vigiance but that the Huns doing their utmost to aceomplish and redeem the prom- made to the German peopre that poliey of unrestricted submarine warfare would win the war. They have been frustrated so far Oeober 12, 1818 10,129 western Belgiu 18 accomplishing a twofold PUFPGSE fer ndt bhly 1§ it gradually bringing about the envel- opmi€iit 6f the Lillé &alient rfém the north But it js dig¥ing so Sfiously ifto the Géfman iina that it is threat- ¢HIAE tha entire Belgian eoast regioh. £hd & the result the Germans kacve not only begun t6 move their suppiieg ffem the ceast but they are already cAgAged in getting theif tréops away aléng With theif guhs And ot ef war material. By the érossing of the rdilroad be: tween Roulers and Menin one of the means of reaching that part ‘or Pel- gium wge déhied (to them. By the later adVande which put them in pos- session of Rou]erslttnd advanced their line everal miles to the east the al- !les Have been abie to cut the rat'read runnifi® A6rth. from Courtrai and at (He same time sefiously menace o third lne running horthéast from that center which seem# likely to be num- hered soofi among the captured polnts in Belginm, And all the t‘me this same advance is mal it more difficult to hold onto the region about Lille inciuding Ro- Baux and Turcoinz, all three of which were large Mmanufacturing cen- ters before the war. Frgm Cambrai north the operations of the allies have lecn carried to such a point that it only a qUestiop of time when the Teutens mugt be forced to get out of western Belgium and retire to what #eems probable just now the river Scheldt, But whether they decide to make A stand there or at some other point it is Apparently General Foch's pian to keep them moving and each move mean& a 'oss of prostife and a further bréaking down of their mo- rale, A BASELESS CLAIM. Tt is quite in keeping with German methods that Forelgn Secretary Soif of the imperial government should put| the blame for all the devastation which the Teutons are causing in rorthern Franed and Belzium upon the allies. Gerthany has about gone around the entente ciréte in plach the blame for the war: that it was driven into unrestricted sibmarine warfare by the aliles anl that the reason it has been treatins {he neutral nations so unjustly is that tie allies drove it to such action. In fact that there isn't anvthing which Germany tas done in the way of ex- cesses and atrocities which it has not attributed to the nations which are fighting it. That is the way the im- nerinl government has o trying to wash its hands of all guilt andq t» make the péople believe that atl its acts aré for self protection. Such may go in Germahy but it fools no one élse. Gérmany mav swallow this latest plea of Dr. Solf bt elsewhere it will be regarded as cfie of the most futile claims that could have been set forth. There is no auestion but what the awies ar: forting the Germans to give ground but that is not making them apply the toveh indiscriminately, to loot and de- stroy churches, museurns and librar: fes, to ruin homes and to enslave, tor- ture and starve the non combatan: ropulation. Neither is it forcing them to take the lives of passenzer: on merchant ships by not ziving them a chance to get away or by shelling or trying to drown them afrer thev have taken to small boats, Dr. Solf may think that he is fool- ing the people by such declarations ag he has made but he will find that he is believed by only a very small por- tion of them. 5 EDITORIAL NOTES. The only answer which the Huns are getting from the men at the front iy harfer fighting. The man on the corner cays: These ars the days when a quitler should not dare show his head. There is no wonder that it 1s re- ported Prince Maximilian will resign the chaneeliorship.’. His effort has failed. Of course Hindéhburg is having a sreat opportunity. for . handing the kaiser that aggravgting phrase “Itold you 80" If Germany f hat it must have colonles it shéuld have thought about that little thing before it insisted that there must be a4 war. The next thing to be expected in the logical order of things is the uncon- ditional surrénder of Turkey. The Turk is weary after a hard trot. Now that the peace nots of Prince Max has been answered it is time to get busy and emphasize the answer by putting the loan ever the top. Now that Brisbans has purchased another paper perhaps he will fore- stall trouble by annetncing who hix backers are before semeonc else does. When it is declared tha‘ the kaiser has no intention of abdicating, it is possible that We haen't read as yet thelreply to Princé Max's peace ap- real. The way the allies are pushing up through Serbia there can be litte wonder that Austria-Hungary is chowing signe of increased nervous- ness. If by any chanée the armies along the other fronts should tire, there are the Ttalizns who can be expected to make things lively onee they start again. It would be rumning true to form if those who are shouting the loudest against the atroeities of the enemy shouid prove to be the Liberty bond slackers, THe time for the raising of the fourth Liberty loan is rapidly And the goal is silll some distance away. It is timo for everyone to get Leek of it and lend. Under government centrol cArriers are to deliver night letter tele- this. Feuce he better walk in the difeetion of General Al- lenby with both hands in the air and keep them there until he satisfles the Pritish commander that he makes a complete surrender. 1t has charzed | jright in rejoicing. sheviki 6b, murder mf aes!roy as they afé driven btk while the vil- lagers welcome the Allies as deliver- ers. A provisional government along denibcratic lines is already A ex- iSteneé in nerthern Russia afid its power advances aleng with the férces of peacé and Order. Were it not for the Wifless, the world would Ppretty nearly lese track of thé Russiam ex- pedition for the next half year. The regiofl lies @s far north as Greeen- 18nd or the Kiondike. The White Sea 18 frozéfi fFém October till May and there can be no material connection between the meh and théir homelands save by the precarious route through a possibly hostile Finland and so down through Norway. Truly there will be tales to tell when the long| Russian winter is over. “Every place but Notfwich so far as t can find out,” said a local citizen Sunday morning, “celebrated the com- ing of peace last night " And indeed a great shout of joy did o up quite generally throughout thé land on the receipt of the news that Germany had declared her Acceptance of the Presi- dent's terms, as if thereby the war had been_ended and vietory secured. | Perhaps Norwich was not so iar wrong in withholding her enthusiasm until there should be something more | dependable to rely on than the word of the Kaiser! This premature ex- | ultation in the approach of peace is| sadly out of place in America. It is| only in Beriin that the crowds Peace for Ger- many means rescue peace for Ameri- ca signifies defeat. Let Germany | withdraw to her own fortified frontier, and with all Russia to draw on year: might elapse before that barrier could be forced. Crush her armies now | where they stand or at least drive| them home with munitions abandoned | ywhat' and morale lost, and there will longer exist the means to defend frontier. The sole advantage to the in the present situation aside allies | by day is the admission by the Ger- | man staff that the victory erasped for | is hopelessly out of reach, they made a mistake in the Summer of 1911 when they declared that “the day” had come. Whatever the indiv-| idual German soldier may have felt ln‘ his own heart, there was alwi be- | fore him- the official declaration that | victory was in ht after one more effort MHe cannot fail to know that he has been deccived. His invincible Hindenburg has been defeated; hisjy all-highest kaiser has lied! To figml a winning fight is possible be the! cause right or wrong. Victory is in| itself intoxicating, and while victory was theirs, the German soldiers did | not inquire too closely as to the meth- | od or purpbse of their leaders. With | the hope of victory admittedly gone, the spirit of fighting is lost. Only in a righteous cause does one put up a brave, losing fight. This is what Belgium and France have done for four terrible years. They knew they were right and in that knowledge not all the might of Germany could defeat them. A scant thrée months of de= feat however has brought home to their oppressor the knowledge of fail- ure, The moral condemnation of the of victory becomes a crushing bur- whole world though negligible in time den when defeat stares the outlaw na- tion in the face. In one of his cele- brated text-books on war General| Foch has this quotation: “A loss bat- tle is a battle one believes himself to have lost " This means that the Germans, having suffered a moral de- ; feat are ripe for a material defeat, and Foch is the last man to yield the advantage he has won. | When one compares the weeks and | months that Germany suffered to| elapse in tHf: conduct of the Lusitania ! correspondence, nothing is more indi- cative of her dire need of an armistice than the haste with which she is car- rying on the present exchanges. | Prince Maximilian's first note bore date of Oct. 8. The president’s note of inquiry was sent Oct. 9. The Ger- | man reply came Oct 12 and two days | later the President gave his definits answer. Nine days has thus sufficed for an exchange of notes whose sults may be epoch-making. The part of President Wilson’s| reply to the German Government that | most appeals to the popular mind in | America is the unqualified statemen that evacuation and armistice are| matters for the miliatry to decide upon, and that absolutely satisfactory | guarantees of our present military supremacy are essential. To put it concretely, Foch will decide and if he does agree to let Germany withdraw her armies from their present precar- 10us situation, it will be on condition | that the allies occupy such strategic re- | points on German soil as Cologne, Coblentz, Metz and Strassburg. | thereby assuring himself of such a hold on Germany that she will dare | do naught but accept a dictated peace. Germany need go further back history than 1914 to find ample pre- cedent for this. When she was try- ing to deter France from taking up arms to back Russia in the defence of | Berbia, she statéd bluntly that al promise of neutrality would be worth- less unless supported by the surrender of Toul and Verdun as guarantees. and to hear them talk you would Rave came on thé Marke! changed eomewhn since then. N0 [ the gander. the | ready | French Government when the nations |ing,of the Lus'tan'a (charitably as- | from ! prised that France will not atéept her what Foch is winnifig from them day!word especially in the facé of the German record cf four years of treachery and that in fact | dishonor o mand &he would consent to and also the occupation of the German . naval bases on the North Béa inciud- | ing the island of Helgoland. such drastic terms as these, she is in a far more desperate plight than we terms there is naught to do but carry jon. recent enrollment of 13,000,000 men in the Unite@l States and the six billion | loan have had their effect on the effect less drafting and subscription go for- ja {tion the moment we are positive that j German is broken and can in | tr weré going to put in the savings bank thought they intended to buy the whole Fourth Liberty loan whéa it But things have v goodness!” \f’t aid in befl\ the first MOPMINK a5 shé started d6wh= town. ‘HAve ¥ou got some mohey, mother T think it would be ecohomy to buy & menthly railway ticket—S$5 will do and, of contse, i'll pay it back. Ast1 opened my purse I saw John opening his fikéwise in order to en- dow Samual fof ihé same purpose. “ ‘Lunch money!’ Mary gasped fiext. Tll have to buy lunches, won't 1 ‘So'll 1,7 added Samuel in turpfiae, ‘Gee! I neafly forgot I hzd to eat. “They tore down the steps and John and T regafded each other someWwhat bewildefed. ‘T sippode 1 ean do with- out those «hoes I was goingz to buy to- day.! 1 told John. 'T guees I can’t pay the gas bill on, my Way downtown. John added to the sympogium. ‘T have to get 6fe mofe money at the office, Well, it's all right—glad to help the vouhgsters gét 'started. “Mary cameé home with the an- nouncement thet she Must have a dark zingham dfess, as her Ruit nro\wd 0o tot. and as she had net time to shop would I please go and get her oneé? And pay for it? No. it positively must not go on the family bill, as she in- tended to defray her own éxpeénses summer, and ghe would pay it k out of hér salarv, shudder when I think of that singham dress and its deep rodted power of disturbance. I tramped miles inz bargains and at lost bought at a store where, having ne ge account, T pald $7.75 cold eash. the Sublirban businéds siréet bf glhs- M dfeskel—And after dinner they 8r¢ atray to see them and Mary came back saying that two would be sent Ufy i thé Mbrhing early befére she 1671 Andl &he was to keep one, and dld ! have any Mohsy, hecause Nht right baek when she returned tke twh snz“nsfil from dowmo:m i * that Wwas §0 more, part of which John contributed jusl as -he Bnd My troubles uuudry Wag starting but to buy o box of ¢i- hessare thing ol which purchase he deferved on whe nfier"f.flas o 8pot. Mary chese one of the 135 Pinkhem’s szeuue lwo, took -the others back, gave me & M Jam, ROHRBERG, 620 s“ on aceouint that night and :mmediately Pittshntgh, P * borrotved 1t back the next hlght to N.8., e, P, pay for a simpiy dariing crepe d=| Women Whfisufie’mm‘-hym"f ehine thine that she had ot collect. | Weakness,asindicated by displacements, — mflammnon nlcemfl'm, img'alarifiu, “No, I never dared add up what the | backachs, headachy es, nervo children owe %8, Mary began figur ]"the blues,” should accept M: oha Lyiit Pinkham's Vegetable Compound = | ing eveninds and sighing and Samue CoTtneted 160K DR oy slu. Mar.o poree. suggestion and give thorough trial. For over fos years it has been estimAted that when she got iz vaid bick out of her firat two werls” gal- comctmg such ailments. If you have terious complications wflm f ary she would be $3.60 in debl, with' nothing to live 6h for thé néxt two or | ‘vice o Lydia E. Pinkham tdaqm Co., Lynn, Mass. Weeke, while Samuel turned pale over TO PEOPLE WHO CHAFE his peneiled effofts and snent evening sunk in deep thought. pect it iz very #ood for both of ther and will develop their charaeters and Ovet one hundted thousand people in this ! country have proved that not! g’ng relieves | the soreness of chafing as quickly and | gscnnanemly as '‘Sykes Comfort Powder.”’ lmmedutely -ny ‘husband - ughi flxru )otsln of E. Pinkham’s eganb\eoum- onn fot me, a nickel when we need it much easier when the ¢ being waps eaf ck on their schoo! aliow doesn’t permit them to bu anyvthing.” On the whole” ‘a’d *he woman ! from across the hail. | guass it's just | as well Evelina wasn't strong enbugh to work this vacation.”--Chicazo News. incuteate all sorts of thelfty virmies | but meanwhile it is very harl on Join | at Vinol and other drug stores, Trial ch ree. and myse'f, who never seem»a to i much cf | The Comfon Powd:r Co., Baston, Mass, on to intercefle for her” ued, “Germany n blunt guesti hoping to evades ns of the pres- | time to extri- | ident, sauce for the goose is sauce for! If Germany was not to accept the word of thc, were she cannot be at peace sur- | when the natigns are at war, Apart from the surender f fortresses. England might well de- | the entire German fleet before| any armistice; I Germany is ready to accept| think, and until she does accept such We can well believe that the er- {mans in determining them to get out from under as besa they can. This be lost in large degree un- ward undiminishéd. The surest way to get our men and our money back again is to double our bid for victéry. Views of the Visilantes THE S0B-SISTER AFPEAL. By Gertrude Atherton In speaking of ihe Hun peace| moves Gertrude Atherton said re-| cently: “A.great danger lurks in the belief that we are ‘on’ to Germany and al her tricks; in the belief that the Gov- | ernment has the situation so well in| hand it is not necessary for tie indin- | idual to bother; in that pride (which | oft goeth before a fall) :hat scare| stories, disseminated by German | agents, are easily recugnized, and are! but to laugh. “When it comes to brains the Ger-: mans are outclassed, even in this young nation Moreover, we have now | had four years' illuminating experi- ence with the Germans, and we know | that they are liars, The morz they protest, the less we believe them, the more keenly we %earch for the nigger in the woodpile. But while we have brains to maich the best, we also are very soft and sentimental people. Ruthless while we ve a great war | to win we are liable to violent reac- o ro 1mnore than put up a long and stubborr de- fense. . . “The P&clfls!s are still with us And by the Pacifists I do not mean ccieties existing under that name. they shot their bolt and are frizhten- ed into quiescence besides. 1 mean thousands of secrét pro-Germans who are waiting their moment to work upon our sympathies and insure the ultimate triumph of their otherwise doomed fatherland. “In the City of New York there is a powerful group of women of Ger: man extraction who are now—to use | a sadly overworked word—camoi- flagging themselves magnificantly, and | it may safely be said there are ecorre- | sponding groups in- every city of any- size in the union. These women con- ; ibute heavily (and with the utmost publicity) to wdr relief organizations. Before we went inté the war, they were equally blatant pro-Germans, or, seeing that didn't work, gavé thous- ands to the ‘cause’ -of pacifism—in other words, to keep the United States from settling the fate of Gefmany. ow théir new pose wins them “Say, Doctor, x This Prescription Works Like Magic.” Physician Says Nuxated I;.\:snu ngckly Puts dAtEon- i trength and En Intogth: Veins of Mene:fi Brings Roses to the Cheeks of Nervous, Run-Down Women. A T Ask the first hundred mon(, healthy people you meet to what “Nuxated Iron.” Dr..James F 1 R [\] chester County otgani¢ iron—Nuxated Iron, to ages. Nuxated Iron will increaset nervous, run-down folks in two Mawnracruners’ Nore: Nuxated Tro owet eir strength and see haw many rancis Su! of Bellevue Hosgtal (Outdoor Dept ), New ospital, says: “Thousands of le suffer from iron deficiency but do not know what to take, xfl Healthy women, and strong, vigorous iton men. To malke absolutely sure that mypatients got reat organie iron and not some form of the metallicvariety, T alwavs prescribe Nuxated Ironin its original pack- on recommended abave hy Dr. Sullive, be obtained fram anv wond dmg:(n with or witheut 3 ptysuhm 's prescription on,an absoltite manufacturers’ guarantee of success or money refunded. formes physician ork, an the West- ere is nothing like entich the blood, make beautiful, he strength and endurance of wuk Inot realizing that iPREMIER OF AUSTRALIA ON cate herself and t fatal pesittén high enconjums the averagé oitlzen | aiser and the Ger- any one who re- 8 mained a pro-German after the sink- des- potisms.’ suming that they did not know all T the circumstance$ during the early J. Ham’s Fate. months of the war) is hopelessly de-{ When the exuberant buoyaney of fective or crooked. Senator James Hamilton Lewis 15 re- “Now the moment the Prussian Called it is easy to understand w! hierarchy realizes thet it is in i@ jast!he transport upon which he was a precarious hole. and makes the Alli a ‘reasonable offer; these women will passenger didn't sink when torpeaosd. borr | He was not to be drowned, but v i i ! | n. 1 MAGK SENNETT GOMEDY Burton Travelogue : M Patriotic the uxauno&-:?'umfl e ifi ¥ Chatles D. Jeader of the Nor- wich Community . Chbrus. Coffie and have a g66d Hmeé To Hell With the Kaiser AUDITORIUM 220 645830 Drake and Walker BuosBas Qe Musical Revue 1918 A Real Colored Show SEE THE - - Creole Beauty Chorus Genuine Southern Artists KITTY GORDON —IN— “MERELY PLAYERS” Supported By IRVING CUMMINGS GE ORGE MaeQUARRlE JOHNNY HINES and E! MURIEL OSTRICHE Directed by Qsear Apfel Kitty Gordon is heré seen in a society drama with a sufpMsing elevénth hour finish. A beautiful star fn & remarkable story. |Protest against any -more ‘uselsss slaughter of our boys in Europe.’ Beware of the sob-sister ap- an alrpiane.— ’in- Enqu peall™ " CUT THIS OUT—IT IS WOETH MONEY Don't miss t‘!'!a Cut \Ut this slp. GERMAN WHINE FOR PEACE fi_ls Agé' hS A WAy Y LARGE quantities of Sflmom are pur- chased by the Government to be sold to the Soldiers and Sailors. We aim to make SumotA cost the men serving their country and the public back of the men, as little as possible. ~War conditions turn men’s heads to profit making. We believe friends and users are more valuable than the profit of the moment. That is why you can buy SumeA at the same price as always, BLACK — TAN — WHITE — RED — BROWN weeks’ time in mdny instances.” N ean “Your Patriotic Duty” BUY LIBERTY-BONDS Paris, Oct. 15.~“Gérmany with de- feat threatening to hecome a headlong rout now wh.nes about peace” said ¢ William M. Hughes, premisr of Aus- gs tralia, at a luncheon given today by kid Stephen Pichon, the foreizn minist ¢ ¥ at which all the members of the “f’"i’{;{’:‘; ¥ Tren¢h cabinet were present. constipation i “Endeayoring to induce President|sluggish bow Toe &0 good Co. -,DAws muwm Today at 2:15, 645 and 845 The Popular Comedian KRED STONE In the 6-Part Artcraft Picturs “THE GOAT” u. §. OFFICIAL WAR REVIEW BURTON HOLMES Travel Pictures’ “WITH THE HAIRY AINO" PEGGY PIERCE In the 5.Part Triangle Drama “GOLDEN FLEECE® VAUDEVILLE TOMORROW LEGAL NOTICES, 7 NOTICE "r‘a‘é" The Selectmen and Town Clerk Town of Nofwich will be at the Hall in said \orwwh on Frlll 1Sth, Saturdsy. Oct. 19tk, Oct, 25th, 1818, from 9 t o each lty except bétWeen the hours of-1 and 2 p. m. td examing the quali- fitations o lectors and admit to the electors’ outh all those persons Who shail be fuua‘d qaulified whuse names appear list prepursdl by the Registrars of Véters of said Town fin- der thé title “Td6 Be Made. And if it shAll appear that the rights of apy "§"" said list under the title “T ):'ill afiet sald Fr!dm oet. befora Taeqda\ Nov, 0(%1 will meet_at the Town erkl Office in sald NOFwich 6 Monday, Nov. 4th, 181, from 9 & m. t6 5 p. m., t5 admit those only wnose quadflt’ltlun! mature ng!«;x Oct. 25th and down to Nov. 5th, 181 Dated at Norwicl, this i1ith d&y of Octéber, 1918, (*,xapm . B! g,u‘mcx\ ok %%LL Salettmien. CHAS. 8. HOLBROOK. octlid Town Clerk. Assessors’ Notice All persons liable to pay taxes in the Town of Norwich dre “an xw nell éd to réturn to the Asse.lvon ‘ora the the firet { Novemm ef, 1948, & written of prifted 1ist. properly signed ang sworn to, of all nxlhle pro nfloylv, wned by the: rst da. Gtk xr‘n‘m YM!\ to fl\‘k October, 1918, ST le will be ehar igt u‘ 6f 19 per cent. addition Sccording to law Blanks éan be flb!lh!ed at the M- ressors’ Office in City Hall, or will Be sent by mail upon applicatien, Otfics Hours: § 4, m. to.5 . m. Lists will be réceived bcslm\ln: Tuesday, Oct. 1st, 1918, Dated at Norwich, Conn., Sept. -3Th, 1218, ¥. H. WOODWORTE, A. L, HALE, M. I. CURRAX, sep27d Assessors New York & Norwich Line Hart Tr@on Corp.. Telephone 1450 v ® Leaves Chelgea . Dock, Nnrwiel\.: Tuesdays, Thursdays and Surdays, at § pom., it Leaves New York, Pier 55, East Rives Mondays, Woanesdavs and Fri- days at 5 ». m.

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