Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ORWICH BULLETIN, THURSDAY, NOVEWBER 14, 1918 - - - = == which is possessed of delaying the Y mmm ms J‘ul 3 “Well, of all the luck” he beamed.| From the way i which the young Qoufied of the German fiet in the past, and |admits that her armies urc beaten, her ) uGee, I'm glad to see you.” He turned | bluejacket's jaw dropped ofie surmis- and it will call for greater alertness in|means of defense gone and her terri- | pairway . Ly ¢ s The girl eyed him slantingly, her|and sis? Say, can vou beat that? the armistice has been signed that iplete evacuation of all tertitory as far tteri bout her f k- | Wh idi v t that stuff, Bess? s e SRS there will be any relaxation of the|as the Rhine and the maintenance of | ogr N 1eTINg about her fur nec i g Bulletn Taking control of the situation m the ; ;i : ¢ ; S A Baitic. . (rohe war is over, not because @| e freshly serubbed, mahogany tol- with ominous sweetness. “Was it— ° & ] This danger must of course be fully {grensy F PCe has been signed, but|iored jacky greeted the girl inthe big | before you phoned Gert Connors and! : . : s |abpreciated by the ailies It Will be|the terms of the s 3‘&‘1:"{23“3&" hat botatically as & Turch of the ivaln she asked her to come aut o the Grazt, - : Jlorwich Fullefin | e i oo ame oo (et Dtk Sonemes 5 s R | suapasitd b ineo the seat besde | Ll Wit sour et sl Three Shows Today—2.20, 6.45, 8.30 around in his sedt and gazed |ed ‘that her carefuily aimed hand 3 v oLD seeing that other provisions which ars | OrY at the mercy of her enemies. Un- |at her in frank, joyous admiration. ' |grenade had fallen where she = in- EVERYBODY’S FAVCRITE 122 YEARS | bound to have a certain bearing upos | €T the ammistice the Gorman troops|" “That's a swell dress” he went on, |tcnded it should, . “Well, I don't know as she just said Rooma 353, Victonte ot Wha gaat| Gamny Das | & nsuteal eiip Bosin 13 10 25 1iien wide | P % ser” Sbo abeed hiss WAL LGS ke S ahacite e Bulletin Job Ofies 35-2. | aoveed to the armistice terras and it{&ll along the east bank of the river| 1 was in a couple of Sundays ago,” th that has ‘characterized the bottling up | to the terms offered her she formay | Pon By e ——— are permitted to withdraw unharmed |« . dell in th ® Gert Cos » ied- z N month; $6.00 | the na promptly complied with. U ‘and you're some doll in that hat. ‘Me phone t Contlors ?”" he ¢hol . - | B e uer—:yt:l‘:nq' 4 l:-mpm it is L’:: ] ;ef“fl‘“y nf ety {hev | Gee, but it’s been an awful time since | explosively “and—and—ask her to g " riven h fea oms & Lakes wit 2 at -»u-- st Nersieh. Cona.. %3 not to be supposed that just because | The price of {his oo 1 saw you. eome out to Great es m; i ® » IN Sous she. malh yha were talktng tGi] 58 N : ” Willimentie Ofiies, 35 Spring St Tiephme 342 | i) be gwen that they are respected. | rom Holland to Switzerland. The land |pe told her, “and I had it all doped Hegite i ph\‘)’ne and you were e e oun 0 ¢ a — " s e * |as far as the Rhine is to he garrison- S o L R Th N _1‘. 1918, od by troepe of the alli A out to come ';iver tx; your place, only | kind of anxious for her to come and 3 lorwic| ursday, Nov. A e es ang s the | there was such a pile of things I had ! like that—" ---—'————-!—-——-—— ITALY FINISHED STRONG. ge?;!efim "Dur;l never b:» abic to crho‘sl: to ;: after 1 got through vsmgmg with | “Well, T never asked her,” said the A POWERFUL DRAMATIC STORY OF THE west and renew war: 2 the .folks I just had to cut it out.” Jjacky positively, “and I never thought WEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Hew thoroughly reorganized had{at the princiyal erosst o8 i : : 5 . h GREAT NORTHWEST 2 s ety sadlit’ B Posutne Al Ndiam artiy, Wikh the. g5 princiy: ngs, name! 1 heard you were in Chicago,” thelof it. Gert's a cute kid all right" he | : ! yence, Coblenz and Cofogne, the al- little stiffly* ot i news dopaich- || sistance that was given it by the Brit. | lies aro permitted to maintash bridge- |5 onarcy sons T oo or wasn't home. I was at Camp Grant | she'd never come to Great Lakes if she h, French and American forces, is|heads on the east side of the river to T 2 with Lawrence James' folks.” She |waited for me to ask her, and that's clearly disclosed by the announcement |2 radius of cighteem miles, thus assip- | pridled a little and her eyes kindled | the truth.” to the effect that in 14 days preced-|ing to them three hroad avenues of | reminiseently. “Say, we had some| Again he fell to watching her slend- ing November fourth they captured|Sntrance to the heart of Germany,|swell time, I'm erazy about thatjor fingers as they slipped softly aver over 425,000 prisoners and zhout 7,000 should the Germans refuse to accede|place.” her fur scarf. 3 Aoh. » - to any terms' that may bo imposed on | ] pet you are” the boy agreed with “That’s moren I could say about nh~ ~ ot her by the final treaty of peace. her. “It must be grand out there, but | everybody, Bess,” he continued. wist- of course was only in keepIng| This gtrangle hold on German ter-|you ought te see Great Lakes. Its|fully. “There's some folks I'd give with the magnificent showing that|ritory might be shaken off in an in-|got Camp Grant backed off the map.” |anything to have come.” had been' previously made in not, only {stant if the German flaat could but “Any time it has!” the girl chirped “Yes?’ The girl's eyes were fixed hlocking but in making a fizzle of|win one great victory oser the Anglo-|crisply. Then her tone changed.|{en the scarf. “Whe?" November 9, 1918, | {), “Anyway. |added. gallantly, “and I like her but D e S S, FATTY ARBUCKLE WILLIAM DUNCAN in 2 ; in - THE BOUNCER A FIGHT FOR MILLIONS PATRIOTIC DOLLS GIVEN AWAY Free to Children and Women Saturday . the attempt of the Austro-Ifungar-|American sea forces. In that case the|“I haven't ever seen Great Lakes and| ‘“You, Bess.’ he said soberly. ijans to push imto the Venetlan |9ccupying forces would “nd them-|I don't know as I care to. I'm sick|“That's what I tried to get you on the Plaine. selves cut off from their Lases of sup- | of the north shore. Now, out to Camp | phone for €0 many times. I thought r Italy proves to have been an im-|D¥ and might even be powerless to|Grant everything's so different. The | maybe you'd come, but I guess meybe R e ol Tt tooy | defend their own Lomelands, So to|soldiers are so swell looking; not a|it was just as well you weren't home. pertant ‘Saotae " A make it absolutely certamn that the|bunch of kids like the jackies.” T guess you wouldn't care to come, fome time for it to see the wisdom |great enemy sheuld not win the same| “Of course, I know the soldiers look |anyway.” iligning itself with the ententejwith the last card, even that is taken|fine,” the bronzed young creature be-| The girl ceased her mechanical A REAL CLASSY ACT : rations, and it wae quite 2 while af- |from her unvlayed. The great unbeat- [ side her acknowledged. “but we got|smoothing of the fur and fixed on him | i 4 tar that before it got inte action and |en German fect is to be rendered pow- | some good locking fellows, too, and | iher large, round reproachful eyes. : Y : | tad 5 chance to show what it coutd | eriess fer harm by the surrender of |any way,” he added in a burst of loy-|“Why, Geutruld,” she sald, “What ever | do. Thereafter it made a grand drive | Practically all the medera units, both |alty, “it don't matter to me how they | could I have said to make ygu think{ | for Trieste which gave promise of |Surface and under-sea, and the concen- |look. It's the mavy for me all the!that? b = = isuc(‘eedl:ng until emy propazanda tration and disarmament cf all the|time.” | _The boy gave a sigh of felief. “You ; _ other units at the dictation of the al-| “Well, Lawrence can't see the navy | didn't say a thing Bess he assured ot in its disastrous work and caused|ljes The possibility that the German|at all,” the girl continued to push her ' her “not 3 thing. It was just me that FOUR LADIES IN A NOVEL UP-TO-DATE SINGING OFFERING the headlong retreat from the IsonZo |fieet should be in the hands of mu-|point. “He says all the regular fel-iput a meaning into Your Words that |l seesemsreeceses————— which it was impossible to check un-|tineers and no longer in control of the |lows go into the army.” tyou didn’t mean at all. Honest, Bess, HICKMAN BROTHERS MARIA til the Piave had been reached. Jerman government is met by the| “They don't take any but regularwill vou come? I'll be going pretty Blackface Funsters l Dainty Gifl Accordionist But that very reverse was unques- | ProviSo tht should this be the case|fellows in the navy,” the boy snapped soon and it would be something for - tionably ome of the bix factors in | allies may occupy Helgoland“as an |back. “You ean just tell Lawrence me to think of: don't vou know, that Drimeing about & unity of purpose and {2dvanced bass for operaticns against|Jones, of whatever his mame Is, tovou thought enough of me—to come— e Sy, et | ¢ Eosty mumous e e e 3 mavocatve | s oy 2one e sicen mi(| WM. DESHOND in Beyond the Shad * idefi e girl gave 4 shrill. provoeative | Bess. You'd make a it with the 5 87 | 1621y was nenting for same of its most |, Sonsidering these and other caually|, |0 &R e Cirving. to. pre. fellows_and | it's & great’ piaca 0 beyon OWS “Right is More Precious than Peace”| Viuable territory and it fought moct|is”the difference between the present|tend you don't know who Lawrence | Evervbody'd ought to see it." A 5 PART DRAMA OF A MAN'S FIERCE FIGHT FOR JUSTICE valiantly. From that time on it never|armistice and the final peace treaty.|Jones is” she exclaimed. “You make; A lurch of the train slid het dainty > 1 wavered. It saw its duty and per-|The answer is that the allies do not{me laugh. You knmow him well|slenderness against his _sturdy ARMISTICE CHANGES. formed it tn a most successful man-|themseclves know the terms of the ;‘_no';:sg; . e It “'iz‘::s;;:rz ;!;;\‘!Jld‘f’r‘»dfl:n;‘l;:li\;ee!!c:y:r:g!r;gf“d e ' v v toty impos- s > L <ok € Although changes were made in the | 1er and was the means af keeplns the | Fraty, that, NIl WmALEly be MAPSSC 165" Ma wsed to say she was going | let her fingers curve about his elbow. armistice provisions before they were ::{a b‘mfl “‘“{e :a mmmes Ttaly | hated cnemy tare as a winter hedse, |0 charge him board, only ma's such! ‘T dom't care anything about the signed, they had not been furnished| - ttady i ; at THUR, FRI. AND SAT. KEITH VAUDEVILLE FEATURE PHOTO-PLAYS o e TRIANGLE SPECIAL FEATURE CHESTER CONKLIN and FORD STERLING In the 2 Part Mack Sennett Comedy “BEWARE OF BOARDERS” . the definite treaty would have been at|an awful ene to kid a person.” Great Lakes, Geurruld” she whisp- : 3 t0 this government, which explains|%ad a large part in the war and it 1C ‘Gratcn un and it would have con- | “Oh, that gink,” the boy said scorn- |ered “nc- the fellows either: bat Tl | #¥Eoc why the amendments were not incor-| C3rTied It well. Tt was stronger at|(icted of the two words, “rcondition- | (Ul | come just the same. T've been’ erazy » THURS,, FRI. AND SAT. - the finish than when it started thanks|a) » v ¢ gi “What time did you call me up thatito ever since you went up there.'— Paacs 1 hy ni o al surrender.” This would have given g i U e Dr:-i:io;( T:sm:‘.,::.f;:m Tead] |\ the centralizsd control which 0| the allies the Jegal rizht to take everv. |42y you was in?" she asked presently ' Chicago News, ‘B AN EXTRAORDINARY e Al completely turned the tide in the al-| thing and anything. But it ha® not the il B Jdus: what the circumstances wers sy © " lintention to punish Germanv. She 1 ATTRACTION undec which the changes were made - has punished herselt ana witl continve | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR | with brain and bedy, soul and money: |} oo ZZT2A00% 7 727 77 tas no , but 1t is apparen to bear the burden of her sins not only Sincerely that further deliberation on certain DENMARK MAY ASK HELP. |ihrough the long and draadtul winter Rev. Mr, Purkiss’ Position. 5 ARTHUR F. PURKISS. THE BIGGEST SPECTACLE IN HISTORY OF PHOTO DRAMA ing the al 4 inc ™ nealing to Germany for tae plebiscite | tions e purpose of e e B R e =0 — demands. which it was promised in connection (ke Germany pay for t Sl bbb Ly Ahepj o THER VIEW POINTS Instend of requiring 160 of the Ger-| with the province of Sechleswig which [She has done in so far a ; Sl iU B el e S A FEATURING THE WORLD’S MOST DARING. SWIMMER man submarines to be turncd ovér o] was (aken frem 1t by Germane over g | 2585 €an be paid for, and {o render | reached the ears of the Jews of this| The ciection of Vietor Derger, a the allies it was insisted that they|half century ago. That thia Wwas not| nemin Phe male thinme et (e cone | city. pronanced | inie-Gernan 0 SISt 8 i i azain. The only thinzs th should all be surrendered, and this| so was set forth in a denial which ap- querers way not do umnd: Wwas unquestionably an exeellent pro-| peared to bear the marks of official-|of the armistice are things that |Jew was this: “Many of the leading|sult to - America and n Jdisgrace to isfon. Py demanding all of the un-|dom, but it is evident nevertheless |civilized nations no longer want to do, Bolsheviki of Russia are Russian|Milwaukee. TIs it possible that con- ierwater boats it will bs possible t0| that the neutral nations are zolng to|!Pat Is the cnslavement of the con- : st gress will admit this creature who Jews, t 3 t S vecure greater assurance EAInst ANY | he more or lecs Interesied n the re|ducred popu'ations and the wantom|7eWS. trained in the great cities of [y iy po ag oftensive there as the t the con- = who is under indietment for virtual the terms, What I said, and all T said, about the | {rengon (o t country. is an in- ANNETTE KELLERMAN COST $1,000,000! 1,500 PEOPLE! R i ; Te|ceizure or destruction of pronerty. | America, and are in it for Tevenue|Crown Prinee whom Berger worships, |§ PRETTY MERMAIDS, GRACEFUL NYMPHS, DARING 85-FPOOT e e DM o It 1s to belsult of the peace confersnce which|Reasons of humanity no hess than rea- | oniy.” ] e "} DIVE, BURNING OF SHIP AT SEA, GREAT STCRM IN MID- remembered that the abiiity to sub- | will settle the war definitel. <ons of finance, make it tone that lands | My authority is an article in the| A promisine feature of the pro- || OGEAN, MOONLIGHT SURF SCENES and OTHER BIG -THRILLS % N nders In connection with th: conference | occupied by the industrial people are{ World’s Work for October, 1918, on|gramme tha:t has heen decided upon, s P uem less liable to detection than is it will not be at all surpr ng if Den- | of more value than the sume lands 1 page 614, and reads as follow: and to the utilization of which a large mark comes forward with the request|waste and thy same people held in for- “That Trotsky comes of a strong|share of this money will go, is its ed- to the peace conferees that provis- :_)gn s!a\-or!v. ’ Th;le_rm: of the arm! mercantile strain is very significant.{ucational feature. It,is proposed, so fon be made for that vote of the pea-|lic® Provide for the immedia a- | It explains in a word why he is at|far as human judgment ond tact can might have been done with the U-| pnie a5 to which country they sh:uu tion of German occunation and destruc- | the head of this movement. He has|faccomplish if, {o transforia the Amer- boats whieh Germany under the first | e g part, whioh vote, though it was ap- tion of the property of others; the|the traininz and business sense and|ican apmy into a vast edicational in- o gty g oot PR Forgg 3 3 8] S ap- | terts of the troaty will errange for|acumen that is so conspicuously ak itution. Already the universities. and |, in taking 130,000 railwny carg in. | PATeNtly promised in gogd faith like|the payment by Germary of all the|sent in the ranks of his organization.|colleges of I'rance and Eagland have tead ©of the 0,000 at first decideq|® 10t of other similar actions on the|claims for dunazes that wiay be lodg- | The total lack of any piratical ability—| arranged {o receive the Wmen as vol- stead of 0,000 s - o A Btar 1 will take a | without which -even a pirate crew |untary students an slace a i upon it s to be realized that a mueh | P2t Of Germany, hae never taken o Saptiab el gt 1 1 i zood many days and weeks to make|could not hold together over night— |disrosal their educational parapherna- fitmer grip is to Le sained upon the| P3¢ out all the items of this long standing | explains why it is that the control of L o To their corps of insiructors will transport facilities although therewas| It 18 mot unreasonable to belevs;coount. the Bolsheviki and all their high of- |be added thonsands of Amerieans who + reduction in the number of auto|'1at Germany recognized that if the| g " il e bi term as|fices are in the hands of the Jews, the |by previous ¢xpericnces ird training i lorries called for, while the modifica. | 'Batter Was referred to the people of prevailing element of whom are from ¥ Schl ey & president. Mr. Wilson will be without |Pr e are well qualified to take over class- n of the requirements regarding| CPSWIZ to say under what rule|ine support of a democratic congress.| New York. the case with the ordinary warshiy, nd with irresponsible revolutionlsts n charge there is no telling what HEARST-PATHE NEWS and Other Subjects Matinee 17c—Special Bargain Prices—Evening 22¢ plication of her historic-aptitude for |nal-Courier. indulgencs for the immoediate ap- [me Wavs of peace—New Haven Jour and teach them. The «onceit of it all of Gierman territory and the re- | they wished to he placed that they|In the elections of last Tuesday the| T regret that this statement is taken brilliant and is a super) réflection of all of German troops from Russia|'Would declare for Denmark and that|republicens carried both house and [as an indictment of the Jews. What!American forehandedness. Never be- Tas apparentls mage for (fe purmose| that province would thus te lost, and|Senate. the litter by the majority of | the erticle no doubt had in mind, and|fore in the history of the world has parentls e DUIDOSE| o P that reason It has persistent. | WO, Dossibly to be incrsased to four|certainly what T had in mind. {there heen, during the ecution of of preventing any undue misappre- 'A% 1t it on by |25 A result of an uncertain Gutcome in | that shrewd business management wasia w: uch comprehensiva plans made &k 17 hensions comcerning the first provis-| 'Y falled to permit an expression bY |45 the former by che substantial|hehind the Eolsheviki movement in!io anticipate 1ts demoraiizing influenc- lons. None of them, however, can be| 1€ _Péopie. mafority of fortv-five, enrs 4, | Russia. The Jews are certainly 00d|ecs upon the arrival of peace and to considered as being In Germany's fa.| ih the adjustment of such affairs|ho as He himself suys was sommand- | business men. take quick ad et e vor. \ as the peace conference must make it|{ed to make tle race by Pres €5, as noth- It can he no more a cause for regret | b among high minded and patriotic Jews | ing els e 5 r thitTihoke 1akdors ars Jewa fhgd. we is capable of fienting for the | Influenza Epidemic Is Decreasing In Most Sections and the have ©vistians that the kaiser and | 3 nrinciples of government she hold his piratical erew of junkers bear the e counteraction. It i is not unjust that it should be asked|son, was defeated in the Michigan & ¢ CUT THE EXPENSES. to act in behalf of the people of tha:lf\lm'inl campaign by T In not a few instances has evidence | POt Of Germapy which is apparently Perty, formely seoretq . nnder Roosevelt and the dear, she has so little inna‘e taste fe St ing But We Are Still 18,000 Gross heen given of a determination on the| OMtrolled by superlor ferce, and undor Rooserclt and't G o e for Demsnd Is Slackening 5 part of government departments to| “ile injustices are belng righted “in v it that she is able to péepure during . e . 1 re R T i e | stones to throw gart of sovernment departments tol ShC? SISO SI° P Gnt, Tiin “tuay | ehip.” lost eut in imote, Amon th Behind On Orders and It Will Take Some Time To 4 Vi Sl S reasons given for the politieal defeat| 'The most brilliant member of my | === R = tch U snse. The fact that the fight- | Proper consideration shouid be given ili ch . Wies. e Faol that the Tight ormation from public school teachers e R that the Jewish children are among r 3 at the very moment of the fri- | elass in college was a Jewess. as ceased and the best of indi- | t0 this matter. It is time to correct|umph are found Mr. Wilson's p ionsare that it will not have to be | the results of all Prussian outrages|al zppeal to the vaiers @ the count i “ s 7 their hest students. Graduates from and theése will be forwarded to drug- ! v erway and a general y as to the AL THREE MILLION ARS med again makes it evident that| "hi'c *UCh work is underway. ur\‘- nrllh:r:](;:nvrf'r:?a to .‘?xv ui. ¢ graat L BTcat univeraitits ‘Ste lowy M ‘SyIch in PULASKI HALL o : 3 3 kel Rty e L 1t is not necessary to continue the ex- BTy s problems confronting larger proportion than Gentiles. T did penditure of money on the same scals EDITORIAL NOTES. hat would have been required hadl the armistice not been sigmed at this time. not s. SHIPFED DURING glad to mail to any individual one of with the coming of peace Tt v 3 r‘lyn thle ;]‘f(;vs ws'rp not lf)\'ers November zoth < lln.ase b(‘mklels together with a quar- Locks as if the Hohanzollerns found | ¥8ys be a dcbatahle qu-stion as to| O cducation. 1 4id make that staie- : QOCTOBER ter-ounce sample, free. 14 cheaper t0 move iiag ta remain ana | FHCLhST the president sumed or Jostfiment about the Holkheviki of Rusdia. SWAHN'S ORCHESTRA (% ; + f The names of Oscar Straus, Rosen- HOW TO USE VAPORUB IN by his attempteq etati ) fost the bills. more votes by his attomnied dictation| walq of Chicago and Otto Kuhn of p " Z ——— TREATING SPANISH IN- It is therefc rent . Bvi i i to the ‘citizens as to ho i et WHEN YOU WANT 10 put VOur bus- e Js therefore apparen: that many| The divine right of kings has been | cast fheir batlots. Thoush po New Yark city are only indicative of | inSa Batora the. pudiic,” thers. 18’ m6| on Monday, October 21, we ad- FLUENZA lants which were to be established, | huried so deep that it will never be|gained some votes for his party the great mass of patriotic Jews who | medium batter than through. the ad-| . Or Monday, October .21, 1» B Y much construction work which Was| heard of again. tindoubtedly rained disapproval for |Sefve their coundry and their God | vertising <olumns of The Bulletin. b e e D Sa s SR L SRt sy underway or contemplated, many con-| 1t will of course be utterly impossi- |himsel? and disapprobation for the l:.‘::;:f’,“a‘\:fl[ q\de":'l,;L dfiffihv‘ri:;,}si:.(, ! l‘h" ?lffbw;};? t;lle hphl\lj(l::li.\(llll}a‘ e tracts which had been let in anticlpa- | ble to restrict thanksgiving o only |method emploved. The presence of so {due to the influenza epidemic, stating | treatment. tion of the continuance of the war|one day this November. many men of mediocre ability in plae- 0 that all deals @ will not be needed and the quicker 4 quantity ehipmenis| Apply hot, wet cloths over the \t is entirely possible that the juni. |5 Of Fesnonsibility in the administra- o ! poly. hob iting we have back|in until the skin is red—spread on - % 3 | were postponed, and requesting that!throat, chest and back between ihe such plans can be stopped the quicker | men will enzage passage for Europe |Llon I8 naturaly causing anxiety as to|§ g€ ben | e femt e e D e e e ] | VapoRub be p i in small lots|shoulder blades to open the pores. the expense will be decrensed. t it i % the management of the greal problems lonly. This condilion stll prevails. |Dry lightly and rub VapoRub well dust as sodn ag it 1s possible. that will be up for settlement in the i N But it Is not alone in conncction| Possibly Bill Hohenzollern would {orders for e - ! _ near future. One certain incubus that b 7;!1 1219 4 ighteen thousand (18,000) | thickly ¢ with hot flannel with such operstions that it will be | iike to forget that he declared “I will | the administration has iong carried is g& M OY ?5 | 8‘361’1 S hfl¥ s e crabes e Sl S e e possible to bring about large reduc- | not abandon my sorely tried people.” |Congressman Kitchin of North Caro- <=} = double our daily output. The epi-|around tiie neck, as the body heat re- 342 WASHINGTON ST. il e Seiniran o R s | vh e Srvistn AR Iriieien AT we are.working night and day to cateh | cach imulate the lining ef up. In the meantme, we ask the/the air pas to throw off the in- trade to be patient with us. fluenza germs. In of head er chest “cold, which often accompanies that he camnot expect to and will not | {0 be campelled to impose it. but bur- § ENORMOUS SHIPMENTS HAVE |influcnza, the vapors tend to keep the HOuseho!d WIPED OUT EXCESS STOCK air passages open, loosen the phlezm 158 100, per cout” bo troated any difforent than he treat. | (eNSOMe as it is, it was not necessary “ions in expense for it is declared by Last of the Remonoffs, last of the|lina, chairman of the ways and means Senator Smoot that he has been told | Hohenzolierns and last of the Haps. |Committee. Mr. Kitehin was an out that “in some bureaus there are to-|burgs. Autacracy ls fast being crowd. |2nd out opponent of the war from the day employed more than 10,000 peo- | ed out by democracy. hn"!n sv;.)n. u‘r‘m lm;._‘ce i:wb he ;,;na.lg x:‘\: ple, and 1 know that in one of them | In asking for the speeding up of | paq womied i and the Nartn shomtd the bureau head said if he were al-| the peace conference, Germany indi-|pay for it. Such a burden of taxation lowed to select 40 per cent. of the| cates that it is anxious to hear the|as the country is now cartyinz is un- cmployes and had the right of direct- | worse and have it over with. doubtedly noi a cause for popularity ing their work, he would accomplish Bill, the one time kaiser, Xnows |of the administration unlu enough more than is now accomplished by QGffer Remarkable Values In n and make the breathing easier. In ad- ~ On October 1st we had_on hand at|dition VapoRub is absorbed through for Mr. Kitehin to rub it i h Llnens i Certainly the situation is different|ed or planned fo treat ofhorm o o e Co dioe 5 0 b the greacest part of it. f . today than it was a month ago. There | The oalling off of the Work or fight | X wrent vrereimnn e oid that the (o With the curtailed manufacture of linans abroad and with is work which will have (0 80 on be- | order comes at a season of the year |art of taxation consists in i a8 inary demand for linens for the many new homes over the country a tremendbus stock | bloed to the surface, and thus alds in of VapoRub, accumulated during the | relieving the congestion within. | summer months. This is now gone—we actually shipped during the menth of | HOW TO USE VICK'S VAPORUB A October over three million Jars of AS A PREVENTIVE { | Vapoltub. We are speeding up our factory as much as possible and the problem now is (o distribute the fec- {tory's output as quickly as possitie. | TuelZe, except avolding ose | ‘We have therefore, for the time being | 070 & i G LA abandoned freight shipments and are (0¥ coUShIng, sneezing and spitting, thor by Parcel Lost or €X: lance by plenty of ood food and ex- Fo i e ercise In the open air. The Public SIS0 Health Service recommends that the the factory and in twenty warehouses |and stimulates the skin, attracting the cause it will be needed in bettering which is not the most attractlve for|&reatest amount of feathe about to opened, it seems certain that linen prices will remain @ ronditions during times of peace, but | holding down the corner curbstones. |goose with WGl eor domid tims. where there can be retrenchments im- mediate steps to accomplish such are not only justified but called for. We bave spent and spent lavishly to win, and having won it is time to bring Tt is questionable if there is any- thing which will prevent Spanish In- fluenza. except avoiding those The man on the corner sayst It took | N5 If this is a true def | some time but it looks as it the al.|Cemocratic lender whose 7 KL the LXes lies have at Jast supplled the vaccine | Sorancd o hoimg oo sttt Though Champ Clark was returned With stocks now on hand an exceptional opportunity is af- to forded to purchase hardly be per- that killed the fight germ in Ger- b 8 to congress from his Missouri distriet the expenditures to a sensible limit Give to the united war work fund,|he wm’?f:t be sp‘,\:ku of 1;10 new with as much gpeed as is possible. | not only because it is & privilege, but | house, that place passing tmder re- REVOLT OF GERMAN NAVY. as a manifestation of your apprecia- | publican control either to James R. tion of the gervices rendered in your | Mann of Illinais, at present the repub- That the allled nations are giving | hehaif. ¥ %f‘mn ngor leader, orrmer, G}ll::t IM fue consideration to the mutinous| Even i 3 Massachusetts. Mr. Fordney of Mich- senditions which have occurred in the | wag :\’;t ':;ez::s;?x:':n:;yw:?é:g&} igan will doubtless succe=d Mr. Kitch- German navy, the disposition which nas been manifested to oppose the provisions of the armistice and the order which is said to have been given Table Napkins from $5.25 dozen. Table Cloths from $8.25 dozen. Lunch Cloths, hand hemstitched, from $6.00. IMMEDIATE SHMIPMENTS To |nasal passages be coated with & . weak solution of Menthol in liquid Tray Cloths, hand hemstitched or scalloped, DRUGGISTS 1IN INFLUBRZA . | o e e o | hin F 1 DISTRICTS purpose VapoRub is excellent. Just v+ Preferéifpe shipping pr ieas| from 75c. : Towels, hemstitched, from 85c pair. ‘Bath Towels, from 65¢c each. Bath Mats, $2.00 each. to those put a small portion up each nostril idkitions: sgicken by, infuenza. - In|Domitile 4 fme dusing the day;and e 1 - Il snult well back # ad. : order to #fch these scctions as quick- back mto the head Iy as can be we arc duting ihis|KEEP FREE FROM COLDS BY IN-: emergency, making shipments by Par- cel Post, direct to the retail rade, of HALING VAPORUB : not more than three (3) dozen 30c size Colds irritate the lining of the air Kitchen Towe]ing, 29c yard. in any one. shipment. We prefer that |Dassages and - thus. render them a the jobbers order these shipments for |much better breeding place for the Fancy Hucks, 45c yard. their trsdh Dut fo save time we will,|germs. At the first signs of a cold i it the gedd is urgent, ship direct on|use VapoRub at once. Melt a little S0 creat will ko tha demand for these linéns that the stecks receipt®of check or money order.|in a spoon and inhale the vapors is being given in as chairman of the wavs and means lent start has been made and events|committee, while Mr. Kahn of Cali- in Eur.ozm should add interest to the|fornia will become undenhtedly head campaign. of the committee on militery affairs. Though we may have raised big|Mr. Kahn, though German born, has to the ships of the navy to assemble | crops it is quite evident from the con- |Peen one of the country's most loyal In the Baltic is to be expected. ditlons that we are going to need them | SUPPOTters in the war. T'ram his place it is realized of course that thase|all and that prices are mot likely to |25, Tinority member of the military BT 2 na: 1in fhot tMy | Geecend. very rapily: iomen Petbita e s mfil (kv e aple to| “Go get him" says a German prif- |draft and other WAr measures ngainst e e oner of the ex-kaiser on being told he |the opposition of Chairman Dent, who, position to eause much trouble If they | was in Hollawd. There can be no ques- | democrat that he @ opposed the pres- are still possessed with the bellef that | tion but what he will be gotten but|ident with all his might. It is the ro- they will be able to overcome the pow- | perhaps not in the Prussian manner|tention of sich men 23 Dent and erful allied fleets which have for a!which the Teuton suggested. Kitchin that made the couctry uneasy long time been ready and waitiog to| "It is probable that Bill lohenzol- |23 o the ability of tha present ad give them battle. It can hardly be|icen still sticks to his oft repeated ministration to cope with the great believed that the German fieet would | statement that ho did everything pos- | T 0 e Of the future. giving all the information available |from (ime to time—keep the keitie p A ek T . so far on Hpanish Influenza—Iits ori- | just slowly boiling and inhale the stand any better show today than itfeible to avaid the war, but he must e ? 4 isi ; ; . ¢ : gin—the symptoms and the treatment, | steam avising. would have in the past, but the danger | admit that he could mot prevent the |, \ACh nature begine io assist o man ICHOHOIOIOICI K | Mes in the possibility of a surprise at- | ending much as it must have . THE VICK CHEMICAL CO., GREENSBORO, N, C. may be exhausted befor: the ond of the month. So we mu resorve the right to close the sale and withdraw the prices as soon as these linens are sold. Naturally, no new accounts can be |arising. or VapoRub can be used in opened during this rush. a regular benzoin steam kettle, such as most druggists carry in stock. If [SAMPLES AND INFLUENZA BOOK- | this s not available, a ver . substitute to use is an ary LETS FREE ON REQUEST kettle. Wil half-full of boiling water ¢ have' prepared a little folder {—put in half a teaspoon of VapoRub good " tea- No store remts permit low prices. Have you ever thought this out and talked it over at home® galled fes Lo L evocabie. o anity | B lgeu contrary and tries to part it on : 4