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NORWICH BULLETTN - s UGTOBER - Slorwich @ulletin and q-:fi-a 122 YEARS OLD- Sabsert price 12¢ a week; S0 & monthi $6.00 a year. ; Entered at the Posioffice at Norwich, Conn., as second-class matter. Telephone Calls. RN S t ditorial ooms WEPR Bulletin Job Office 352, Office, 5 Spring St Willimantic 25 Telephone 384-2. ———————esesey Norwich, Tuesday, Oct. 22, 1918, [ MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Aspelated Prss is exchisively entitied to the use for republication of all news despatch- = to It of mot othcrwise crediied In tals paper snd ale the locai uews puuiished txreln. All nights of repubMeation of speclal despateh- ©s hereln are also reserved CIRCULATION October 19, 1918, 10,284 "Right is ‘Mors Precious than Peace” THE AMERICANS' TASK. Tlow important a service the Amteri- in troops are rendering to the ailied es in France is clearly set forth the opposition whieh is being thrown up against them by the Ger- man high ecommand. Fer the most vart the Americans are now fighting aiong the Meuse. They have been iven a mest important assignment nd it i3 recognized by the enemy that e can be relied upoa to do their iuty to the limit. This explaing why he Teutens are making every effort biock them and are throwing re- nforcements in their way and de- ding to the iast every vantage yoint, but it s also evident that in belng miven the task of moving un the Meuse valley, the Americans are being thrown nto the fighting at a very vital point. They are headed for the ine of com- muniecation which runs west . from Metz and over which it is necessary for the enemy not only to send sup- ies but which is required for the movement of troops if the German ar- mies to the north and west of that oint are going to be at all effective in repelling the advanes of General Foch's men. Let that railrodd which runs along¥the Franco-Belglan border he croseed and one of the main arter- es will be severed and what facilities ire available to the seuth of Luxem- vurg will be eliminated. Tt is thergfore of the utmost im- portance thilt the ememy retain this lIine. 1t is of the greatest value even turing a peried of retreat for if the \mericans press through the masses f Germans in this reglon they will rstablish a salient which promises much more serious results to the Ger- mans. But even if the task is big the Americang are making good progress and from the steady gains which they are making ‘there is every reason to believe that they will succeed. THE DANES AND SCHLESWIG. Denmark, according to reports, is zetting anxious regarding Its treaty with Germany, if the reports are well founded, for the Danes are asking about the fulfilment of the provisions cf a treaty executed in 1864 whereby twe dukedoms were ceded to Ger- many with the understanding that che peopie of Schleswig were to be allowed to declare for themselves whether they preferred alleglance to Denmark or Germany. As might have been expected from what is known of German conduct thefs has never been any efiort made to bring about this decision. It is Guite apparent that Denmark has not been manifesting any great activity n this direction in the past to permit the provision to remain dormant for a period of 54 years, but it may have been se it realized the futility of endeavoring before this to sescure the plebiscite. It cannot be consid- ered that Denmark nas been satisfied with the situation, however, but Den- mark is a emall country which could be easily swallowed up by Germany under proper pfovocation, The existing situation, however, gives the Danes an oppertunity for pressing their demands, ‘and it looks as if they had been given new cour- age by the state of affairs which ex- stg in Burope at the present time where the Teutonic forces are being driven eastward before the victorious dilled forces, and not having forgotten €ven if they had delayed, they are en- deavoring to get back the territory which was formerly under the Danish flag the people of which they appar- ently believe would prefer to return there. Tt is a valuable piece of terri- tory invelving the Kiel canal and Denmark has good reason to want it. beca MUST CONTINUE TO SAVE. Mr. Hoover continues to tell ug that tre time has not come when we can show anydet up in the matter of con- seryation. There are sti}l large prob- lems before us if we are zping to take care of the requirements of our sol- diers and sailors in Europe and If we are going to meet the demands of the riations which are depending upon us for supplies. It is necesgary therefore that we should continue to save in order to make it possible to send five or more million tons of foodstuffs across the Atlantic. Certainly we are not going to ba remiss in our duty. We ars not woing to put forth our funds for the carrying on of the war and then fall down on the equally important matter of making svailable the necessities of life, There can be iittle question but what ke problem will be mes with comgas- | ative ease provided there is the same seif denial practiced in the future as there has been in the past. We are gotting to be in the art of overcoming waste and it is going to be easler to meet the situation in the future than it has been in the past. From alF indications the crops awe the demands both here and abroad. But we must give attention ta the situation and-use.the grains, the meat and the sugar to the’ best advantage What we have been deing we must continue for a while lenger and it cannot fail to be realized that the sacrifices which are thus .made are hound to be most valuable contribu- tions toward the quicker snding of the war. With evervone doing if, how- cver, the task becomes lighter and the acgomplishments the greater. THE “NON-SINKABLE” SHIP. Awaited with deep interest will be vhe facts regarding te sinking ef the steamship Lucia, if indeed there were any of the crew left from whom it would be pessible to ascertain the cireumstances under which the ves- sel was sen! to the bettom. More than the usual interest iz manifeSted in regard to the Lucia frem the fact that it was this former Austfian ship whieh was seleeted for the purpose of rying out the plan which 1t was thought mright result in praventing the sinking of vessels which had been at- wcked by torpedoes. Tt was the helief of the advocate of the idea that by equipping the vessel with theusands of water tizht boxes placed throughout the ship Jt would be given such buovancy that the heat would not sink even though two tor- pedoes had been sent into it. The vessel was fitted out aeccording to specification and after having Teen given a test by the committee which was named to investigate the idea it was determined that it would net ac complish what was clatmed. The tioard threw cold wateér en the idea though it is not knawn that the bozes were removed But as the result of the experiments made it was held that it was met an unsinkable ship. it required some little time to get a real test through a terpedo attack: but now that it has corse the inves- tigating board has been upteld in its decision, hut whether the ship went down at onee or remained afloat until it was shelled or hombed will he Im- portant in determining just what benefit if any was obtaided from the non-sinkable device. Efferts have Leen made for a long time to put forth a ship Which would not sink but we are apparentiy ne nearer the solutiom now than ever. PRI VS S BETWEEN TWO FIRES. Now the Greek armiy, which Is sald to have taken under conmtrol that part ot Macedonla which was held by the Dulgarians and ~ which has been brought up to the pink of condition, is Anxious to make a move agzinst Tur- key. Thers is of course no leve lost hetween those countries and it is re- alized that the Grecian force if sent against that portion of Turkey in Eu- rope would create a decidefl menace 10 Constantinople. It wouid subjeet the Turks to an attack aleng a new front when it is having all ¥ can do to lkeep its feet in fleeing from the al- lied forces which have come up through Palestine and in Mesopota- mia, the joining of which can be ex- pected at most any time. A blow in that direction would at the same time make a strong appeal {o these Turk- ish troops in that region which are #aid to be clamoring for peace and prepared to march into Constantino- ple demanding it. Turkey thus appears to be facing a double danger, that of the threatened shelling of Constantinople by the Ger- man Black sea fleet if a separate peace s made with the allies and the clos- ing in of the allies from all directions for the crushing of the Turkish em- pire. Turkey is undoubtedly being Zoverned to no little extent by the } German influence which still remains| there, but seeing the inevitable com- ing the laying down of arms and the opening of the Dardanelles to the al- lied fleels would permit of the offset- ting of the menace from the Biack sea fleet and preserve Constantineple from the danger which is threatened from that direction. What Turkey is going to do is net bejrg voiced about but it cannot stan2 stilimuch ionger.} It can certainly get no consolation from Germany and precious little from the allies but the quicier it throws up its hands to the latter the quicker will its present conditions end. EDITORIAL NOTES. There is still plenty of need of tak- ing all possible precautions for the rrevention of the influenza. Germany can deny sea c-uelties and land ruthlessness all it wants too, but the facts are all against it The man on the corner says: From the speed which it is making it would seem as if the “flu” had wings. Germany must now krew that the United States 1s heart, wsoul and pockethbook back of tha forces in the field. Lenine is now charging Trotzky with stapting a counter revolution. Another case of regues failing (o agree, Germany cannot fail ¢o be impressed by the fact that the American flying machine squadrons are steadiiy growing larger. That the unsinkable Lucia should be sent to the bottom can cause little surprise, since that is what has hap- pened to all such vessels. Uruguay is reporting an increase for the year of nearly two and a quar- ter million pounds of wool. Probably it has solved the doz problem. When he hears the news General Foch will understand that the Amer- | icans buy with the same enthusiasm and determination that they fight. The influenza germ may be su smail that it is difficult to find it with a microscope but it is certainly big enough to cause a whole lot of trou- bie. 2 Austria-Hungary's talk about = federalized government hasn't caused the Czecho-Slovaks to waver in their demands for a republic or in taking stepa to get it. It wouldn't be surprising if the kai- ser was spending a good par: of his time trying to figure out just which cone of the methods of kicking ty- rants out is going to be used in his case, Think how much more easy of mind must be those whe plunged into the limit to help raise the fourth Liberty loan than are thpse of wealth who refused to do their bit beeause they could get a greater return for their . going to be sufficient to take care of ¢ jn } easy. can't tell Alice,” sald the conserva- tion enthusiast. “It's Alice's beok.” “Her book!" th ks, P, e ation “When did she I never knew-she wrote at all!” e Conservi reply. arn igo that lie in that divection. But when she was a very young girl—you see, I was born in the same block as Alica. and Bave known her ever since we were children—she had great dreams of becoming a famous author. 1 usd to hear all them—and encourage her, pected to Dblossom into a renowned artist. When we were 17 I°painted wild pictures and Alice wrate a book. “It was a mild, little, love story, with a rather original idea, but so crydely written! We thought it love- ly then, but Alice was thapkful seon after it died in the borning. The pub- lisher failed the week of publication, so only the few friends upon whom Alice modestly pressed the few cop- ies he gave her before the receivers took his business over and decided to run it V!& differently ever saw the valume. t I felt almest as dis tressed as Alice over this seeming catastrophe, and 1 took one of the copies to our ilibrarian here 'and gat him to put it in the library. “Well, we both went to prepara- tory school that autumn. We wanted to get ready for college as quickly as possible. We were busy as bees g\‘ery moment for ages and I° don't! that | elieve Alice ever thought of book-—I 'know I didn’t— until she_be- gan to attract agention by her bril- liant sociological werk. “A fellow workers who had heard of the thing somehow or other twit- ted Alice about it, then seriously ad- vised her to see that it was with- drawn from all possibility of cireu- lation. ¥f she didn't he said, some- bedy would give it untimely resur- rection some time and she'd feel ri- diculous. So Alice went to lots ef trouble hunting up the man who bought out her ' unlueky publisher. ‘When she found® him he said he had no idea where the plates of that ook were; he didn’t even know whether they were in existence. But Alice wanted them so badly that he hunt- ed them up and sold them.to her for $50. I expect she might have had them for nothing it she hadn't been so anxious. Anyway, Alice had them sent home apnd her brother used them as ballast for his sailboat ungtil e got it capsized, somehow, and lost boat, plates and all. “From the very nature of things 1{ “Then Alloe forgat about |him that the book was crude t that ‘being that she'd outgrown it. in the time when I coniidently ex- rian told her he' all She' matter, I'm certain, th so eegssor had placed that ij.the library, with the consent of the board of directors, and he had no authority to e it out again unless the di- rectors discussed the question at a regular meeting and gave their offi- cial sanctlon. Alice 't want the thing talked abous, so she explained the situation to the librarian, tolg an So the libra- | withdraw it from the regular sheb and put it on a pecial shelf in his office, where vis- tors would nat greet it. “But the other day that mew Mrs. Jenking, who's so mquisitive and gos- sipy, went downtown on the train with me an remarked, in the course of conversation, that she had only just learned that Miss Bill was the ‘writer. 5 “‘She isn't) 1 said. ‘She talks about her work, sometimes, but she doesn’t write about it.. And she hardly thinks of anything but her work and the war. } “‘Well,” said Mrs. Jenkins, ‘she must heé a writer and of rather an advaneed type at that, for 1 noticed a novel by Alice M. Bill in the cata logue of our vilage library, and it was on the starred list.: “Well. my dear, the proverbial Ifeathér wouldn't haye been needed to jthrow me off my balance. The truth came t0 me in a flash, and I deter- mined that Alice, who's got a lot of responsibility on her shoulders at i present. shouldn't be worried about it. Sp I told Mrs. Jenkins, quite truth- fully, that Alice had had 'several Tel- jatives of the same name. that two of them had died about fifteen years ago (five or six years _after Alice wrote that wretched little tale, you'll nitice), that I'd known Alice ever ince we were babies and knew she'd ever had even a thought that would need library starring, that ks were ‘sta.rrsd for various reasons, that if Alice sheuld ever write anything I'd i be sure to know abeut it. | “But it eccurred to me later that i“ would be just as well to rem ail chance of similar dangers, so this {morning I came in_and tpok that book joff the slarred - shelf without asking tfor it. Nobody saw me 4nd to-morow the library purchasing committee will receive ap anenymous centribu- jtion sufficlent t, rveplacee its full iv ] ut every time I think | starred shelf 1 giggle.” f | f | 1 of - that LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Appreciation for Work Done, Mr. BEditor: It is a physical impossi- bility for me 10 send out a letter of thanks to each one of the thousands of business men and manufacturers who have underwritten the advertising of the fourth Liberty Joan. May I encroach upon the space in your paper to the extent of asking that Yyou express #he keen appreciation of the Liberty loan committes for the su- perb work which these patriotic and generous men? “Yours for¥ the FourtR Liberty Loan.” F. G. MACOMBER, State Publicity Director. Hartford, Oect. 18, 1918, Will Give Danielson a Wide Berth. Mr. Editor: Let me ask Svdney Paine, chairman of the Jiberty loan of Plainfield, Senator Adams, pre dent of Red €ress chapter of P’lain- field, Commissioner La Frante, \ice president Red Cross of Plainfield, Re resentative Sheldon, Rev. Davny. t chairman of the Moosup branch of the Liberty loan committee, TJudge Prior, if they are guilty or not guiliy ef inviting the hundred or more of the promYnent citizens of the town of Plainfield to that narrow horougn. ef Danielson where drunken man wers seen falling in the ditch and where thal good looking cop genily picks them up and invites them to skiddo which they proceeded to do without ance Serio , Was it nec- essary for the cop to stop a pairtotie ion which was celebrating tie of the Liberty loan aai in form Senator Adams that if they mzde any noise going througn that hurg he would arrest the whole ctowd? He did not inform the sena- tor what he would do with so many prisoners as theré would be about one hundred and fifty of the prominent citizens of the tawn of Plainfield, and all the <aid opromineg sbrating the oversul e scription of their allotment by two ne-half fimes their quota. The ived the glad hand of welcome in all the villages in tae town of Plainfield and later by the town of Brooklyn. What made this more aggravating was that Mr. Adams had notified anielson that they were coming and they said “Come along.” We think in the future Plainfield will give Daniel- son a wide berth. CITIZEN. Plainfield, Oct. 21, 1918. STOliTES OF THE WAR Americans Grow in the Night. (Correppondence of The Associated Press.) “American soldiers seem to grow in the night so that each morning there are more of them than before,” writes a British soldier in TFrance to his rel- atives in England. “Americans are the topic of conversation everywhere,” he continues. “The villages are full of them. “Their automobile trucks are on all the roads, and their columns eof in- fantry are everywhere. We are be- ginning to knew the songs they sing and the phrases they use. “To many of us they were a com- plete mystery at first. We had heard of America only as a distant country. Then suddenly they were in France— tall, well trained men with a genius for making friends and adapting them- selves to new conditions. We watched them with curiosity at first, surprised to find how like they were to other men. ‘“Then, before we had quite recov- ered from the first pleasant surprise, they were fighting—making a reputa- tion in a trade where the test is not They came up from their vil- lages singing. and fiitered inte the trenches, more and more of them each day. The papers hegan to talk about their fighting. but we thought ‘Surely they cannot be doing much yet’ And then all at once we began to see it for ourselves, and we were of the opinien straightway that the papers had not grasped the weonder of the facts. “They were so keen and so fresh, those first Americans. r others as kgen and fresh are geing up to the line, and eyery day their places are being taken in the villages by yet others. What would the Germans say if they really knew all this, one won- ders. | “They are merry and light hearted, but underneath they are taking this business very seriously, and some of their talk shows it. That's the way to take one's fighting, s neither too maich in earnest—which is morbid—nor too much as a Jjoke— which is foolish. The wise man is he who neither overrates himself nor un- derrates danger. The Americans are wise men. “The peasants like them: mother the old them. _ has been done by And every day 5 you know— Thay comes so guickly. Sspasnelo have 4n instinct which gives them a realization of the homesickness which musi sometimes come io these men. When years have gone by and it Is possible to see the war in perspective it may be pessible to give full value Lo what these women have done. “Meanwhile, as I was saying, the Americans ge on arriving and spread- ing all ever France.” Treating Ciyilians. Renewed evidence of German r lessness in dealing with the eiv popuiation of invaded territories is contained in a captured army order, It preseribes the treatment and the procedure to be followed in a section south of the Vesle river (Marne sali- ent). All the inhabitants capable of work- ing, the order says, must he used for the needs of the army, regardless of their age. Their ‘“‘salaries” are to be paid inh paper currency at the rate of 50 cents a day as the maximum for men; 40 cents for men and women beiween the ages of 17 and 20, and 20 cents for boys from 15 to 17. The inhabitants, however, must pay in French gold or silver for their ra- tions. The supplits of course w taken from the population before being sold back to them. Views of the Vigilantes Spies. By Courtney Ryley Copper. The recent raid of the l7-beats off the Atlantie coast was not at all - jusual—to those who knew tae wori- ings and plans cf the Imparial Ger- man government during the four years of ‘the European war. Long before America shook itself into wakefnlpess sent home the thugs which (ierfaany iad placed in Washington as ity rep- resentatives, and declared war upon the maddened nation, Germany was planning and striving to zifeet a U- base, almost within hailing distance cf New York city, where sunplics could be forwarded to submarines iaying off Sandy Hook and destroving every ship that dared come fortk. The story of it all is contained in a report by an eperaiive of th 2 States Secret Service to his chiet “In regard to the efforts {o et the party on Long Island, wil! say that I have covered him for several weeks. At first he seemed inckined to junk vorably on the pians to use his beat as a supply base, hut ihre: the knowledge that the secret sec is watching him. He therefore, a parently, hag abandoned the me. | Bridgeport Telegram. And “the scheme’ was o use this “party” and his motorboat, to carry forth supplies at night waiting submarines. What thes were to have been dependedl enfirely upon the activities of Capt. Kar] Bo: Ed and others of the German mn.vi staff in America. That they would have been sufficient for the Lombing and destruttion of many shirs, goes without saying. And that this is onc of the reasons why Imperial Cermacy should be made to understapd dep. racy’s code of ethics, is a foregore conclusion. OTHER VIEW POINTS Not much has been heard’ of the ists lately. They have probably uded that they will have {o en- jav ihe blessings of American liberty fat some one's eise expense) whether they want to or not.—Meriden Jour- nal. It has always been the boast of eur navy that it does evervthing that the army ddes, and does it just a little better. Naturally the army dissents from thig claim cn general principles, but in the case of the standardized Christmas boxes for 1918 tne soidier is willing to admit that by planning B S NOSE CLOGGED FRO A COLD OR CATARRH A C: Nestrils To "%pon”[‘l: AL‘ Passeges, orareterenasn e corepecn In one minute your clogged nostrils will_open, the air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe freely. No mere hawking, saufiling, blowing, headache, dryness. No strug- gling for breathe at night, your cold or catarrh will be gone. Get a small bottle of Fly’s Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrasmt, an iseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It penetrates through every ajr passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and relief comes instantly. It's just fiae. Don't stay stul!ad—u'a with a cold er nasty catarrh—Relief Suffered Thiee Years Before Finding “Froif-a-tives” Cexteat. WEary, Bostox, Mass. “For three years, I was troubled with Constipation, accothpsnied by Dizsiness and Violent Hesdaches. I {ook medicines and lgxatives, buf without permanent relief, Last Oectober, I heard of *Fruit-g- tives” or Fruit Liver Tublels, 1 used one box and the results were so pronounced that I bought twe dozen bexes. I continued using “Fruit-a-tives” until the tweaty four hoxes wers finished, when my physiesl eondition was perfect”, JAS. J.ROYALL, 50¢. box, 8 for §2.50, trial size 20e. At dealers or from FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited. QGDENSBURG, N, Y. —————— e for twenty-pound .packages the navy dges eensifderably better than the army with its three-pound cariun.—-Provi- dence Bulletin. Fateful has October been in the past {5 many . weuld-be &utocrats. The early snows of that Ocfober of 1812 brought ruin to the ambitions of Na- poleon. He also, suffered a crush: dcfeat in the same month at Trafal r on the water and still another at Leipzig on land. October has been . zreat month in this war. Tic Mans couried its fates with duccess several times. Is it now the aliied turn? The predictions run that way.— In asking the French not to shell cities which the Germans are the laiter mak { humanity. How does’this theuzht ac- cord with the zeal for destruetion re- vealed in the construction of a £un %o sheli Paris, or in of all French and Belgian cit & reach of German ulness like Rheims, Amiens and s; Ypres, Liege and Namu American. Five thousand farmers were asled why sheep grow searce. 4’1 but cichteen of them answered cencisely, “dogs.” ‘There are abouc :0.000,960 the United States. There were 48,454,000 sheep last vear. Not dog kills a sheep a year, but in- are not exactly rare in which ding dog hax Kilec $164 which means from » dozen to Tt is pretiy wuorth. forty sheep, on cne trin. hard to get at the value of the sheep that these dogs Kill in a year, hut if iliey are respongible for ths reduction of the numnber of sheep in this coun- try from thit of five vears azo, they have d'minishei the agricalty wealth ot this country by about §12( 000,000. While they are deing this, the degs consume fn food, at a con- servative estimate, the worih of §i.- or one-fifth of this enrrent eir 200,060,000 Laberty loan, in a year. What 1 worth iy there is nofie; ring. but while now ang en one of them has a high rateq value, ir is pretty safe to say that th® who'e jot wouldn't fetch enouzh to the dog population of this country h food fer two weel Hariford Times. Object Lesson in Waste. An impressive object-lesson showinz the resuits of waste in a large manus facturing plant where thousands of —— e WY SUFFER SHI TORTURES When a post- cardwillbring free samples GUTICURA S0AP 0‘ammintmem which give quick relief and point to speedy heal- ment. Bathe " with Cuticura . Soap and bot water and follow with a s e "~ gentle appli- cation of Cuticura Qintment. This relieves itching, burning eczemas, rashes, etc., and peints to speedy healmeng in most cases of severe skin troubles when it seemed noth- ing would do any good. The mission of Cuticura i8 not only to soothe and heal but to prevent sKin troubles by keeping the pores free from impuri- ties by daily use in the toilet. Sample Each Free by Mail. With 32-p. baok on the skin. Address post- card: “Coticura, Dept. 9T, > everywhere, Soap 2ic. Qintment 2 and 50¢. ASK US TO SHOW YOU OUR $25.00--SPECIAL--$25.00 DIAMOND RINGS Beautiful Color Large Size Best of Cutting LEE CLEGG THE JEWELER Opposite Chamber of Commerce Building, City OPEN 8 A. M. TO 8 P. M. T T e SR S TR DR. ALFRED RICHARDS DENTIST Office Hours: 9-12 a. m.—1.30 to 5.p. m. Wed. and Sat. Evenings -8 Room 2M Thayer Building 299 Residence tel. (2%5 Tel. The Piunoi Ti_lner THIT GAVERELIEF 8 5,000 PERFORM IN NORWICH ERS Scenes Alone—And There are 1 INTERPRETED i ,mrg mislde $50,000 Spent ¢n 500 Feet of Historically -Reproduced GUESS WHAT IT COST ES KL EVENING ... PRICE p! N b G meats, cakes, c i W —— e persons are employed is given at the Pa. thrown awa, {ruits, fr FlorenceReed MILTON SILLS, IRVING CUM- 'MINGS AND AN ALL-STAR CAST IN The STRUGGLE EVERLASTING AN INTENSE DRAMA WITH SUSPENSE AND THRILLS SRt WILD WOMEN AND : TAME. LIONS ROARING SUNSHINE' COMEDY s e e HEARST-PATHE NEWS of fact. Within.” Hun-snakes cunning, and and by day. lunt of the Westinghouse Ionufacturing Co., East Pitisburgh, The company fited Lp a :torage attery iruck as a traveling exhibir n it w ‘aced a coliection of fued including breal, butte kers, pickies. pockets. hich could b um ‘et if cared for. aldown the shop ign readi “Wasted. Ft om vour haomes. Material belonging o the copan It estimated that the tendstnfis sted each day amounted to 3 $35 and $30 the cos WE REPAIR OF ALL KINDS 42 FRANKLIN STREET G. H. PATCHEN, M. D, “Clinical records seem to show that there is hard}; nized form of discase which has not been complit permanently eliminated by Chirepractic adjustments. There is another feature of Chiropractic fully as in- teresting as any that has been mentioned. This. is its HYGIHI"%IC or PROPHYLACTIC influence. The real mission of the Chiropractic, as, aléo, that physician, is to prevent the occurrence of D. M. WOODWARD, D, BUILDING 220 THAYER : Telephone ) Bulletin Building, See for yourself the ing, form some idea of the i waste in the factory, and thus fluenced to carefuiness and &aving at a time when ewervone ougl no effort to prevent waste of all kinds, —Manufacturing Record, The Norwich Electric Co. (Licensed Doctor of Chlropnctu:); TODAY AND TOMORROW 6-Part Artcraft Special The Hun Within This is no picture of faney—but The reserdscof the, {Ubip¥ $tates Secret Service are filled with just such black and damnable schemes 38 are engineersd ‘by “The Hun way the work. Ses their then rejeice in that swifter, alerter brain ¢f Uncle S8am § which checkmates them. by night A great picture—see it! GLORIA SWANSON - In the 5-Part’Triargle Drama SHIFTING SANDS uU. 8. WAR REVIEW ' OFFICIAL - On the other hand. the waste of manufacturing materials, amount- ing to hundreds of doliars’ wortn a day, is a less o the company, ail of etc, and also a of | which is mainly owing (o thought= monufacturing mate lessness and carelessness on em- opper, ead, T 1loyes. The loaded truck was driven up and aislés whers the em- ployes couid, Dy looking anl. observs :grefate be -in- to smare ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES says: vk cly and the carnest disease.” AR LTS Norwich, Conn. \