Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 29, 1918, Page 4

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’ und Gowdied " 122 YEARS OLD —_— Sotmsiption prise (3o & week; 30¢ 3 wenth; $6.00 » your. 3 CIRCULATION Nov. 23, 1918, 10,468 THE MILITARY HIGHWAY. Now that the military highway from rwich to the submarine base has been practically finished thers is pro- vided 2 modern road between this city and Groton, the entire distance along the east bank of the s river, Tt is an improvement which has been long sought and one that is zoing to mean much not only to Norwich but to every town throughk which it runs. The state lias certainly donc no work in this sect.on which cailx for zreater approval than the providing of a de- cent means of communication for ve- hicles between -these poinis. The work has heen speedily accomplisted and has already been of invaluable aid in the moving of suppiies to the naval station which is certain to be maintalned even though it may not be the center of as much activity or have as large a population as in the rast year. For years Norwich has been denied the travel and unsiness it would other- wise have receivcd had tlis road been in proper condftion to travel with any degree of pleas 1t is one of the thow drives in this part of *Ye siate and not solely for that reason but be- cause it brings the tawns through which it passes inty better communi- cation with the larger centers should it result in much development along that side of the river. 'This is pa plarly true of the summer colony at Gales Ferry. 01nld mean a boom there such as it has never betor: ie- ceived. And while 1t is mpossible o over- look the influense of the commandart at the naval base and the recognition by the state highway commissicner of the emergency need. due credit must be given to the local chamber o2 com- merce for the work .lone in behalf of this highway. It not teo much to say that but for its clever handling of the matter the roai would not ex- ist today‘to stanl as a permanent benefit to this part of the state though the emergency may have ed. NO HELP IN THIS DIRECTIQN. Turkey may expect that it is going to be able to zet the help of the United States in getting a favorable decigion at the peace table, but theme 1= no reason why it should get any encouragement. It is of course true that Turkey and this country have not been at war but that faet did not Prevent Turkey from engaging in the Most horrible of practices against the Armenians and Syrians. Such in- fluence as the United States was able fo bring to bear did not cause Turkey fo cease from its massacres or to let ¥p in its persecutions. Turkey's pol- {ey of zovernment has always been di- fectly opposed to that of this country. It was unwiiling to listen to pieas of fivilized nations for much needed re- s and vet it now hopes that the nited States will intercede in its be- 'fi'.:" and Jooks in this direction with #ts hands, drenched in blood for help. * Turkey will nevertheless look in Vain. The United States has suffered fhdirectly if not directly from Tur- conduct, but even if it has not s been horrified at Turkey’s ac- flons and standing as it does for the #ellef of oppressed people it is bound to insist that Turkey should be so Randled that it will be powerless to resort to such practiees again. Tur- ¥y is hoping that the United States, which stands for just the opposition that Turkey does, will intercede for it, but there is certainly no reason why it should expect to be favored any mere than Germany will be in this respect just because we did not hap- pen to be at war with it. There is no question bat what Turkey’s wings will be closely clipped and that the imdependence of its subject peoprs will be granted by the peace cenfer- ence and such will gat nothing nut approval from the,United States. WHERE ALL CAN HELP. Much attention is bound to bé given in this country to the readjustment werk, and the changing from a war to a peace basis is not geing to be ap quickly or as easily accomplished as if might be expected or desired. There are going to be many obstacles encoumtered - which will in time be overcome but until they are the great task will be to take care of the un- oprtainty which will prevall, ‘Building trades are of course going 190 experience big business as,soon as matertals are mdde available and the great factories are:going back to tl production of their before-war- e goods in many cases and in others it ‘will be necessary to-respond to the demands of the country. Industries which were classed as non-essential to the war will at onee . looking forward other channels. The clearing up of present war or- ders such as the finishing of the goods ATTEMPTING TOO MUCH. quite natural because it is the party tell the party which will come irto|fear that it is so. When I met Imo- control by vote of the March what it must do in the way of It is a case of over- stepping and thoush the demozrats are o In a majority in the committee and |tiTe she was like Clarice! the senate it is not to be expected that the measure can be put through with- cut a fight in the upper house. The finance committee such difficulty in getting due sanction |for him to pour it into and behold. for the bills which applied during 'he | Clarice is at thd phone. Well - T .| war or for that which is to cover this | think she’ll be through in a minute— |is awfully bad on older people.” vear's expenditpres, but it is only I'll glance at the paper while I wait! right that the next congress shouid | want the privilege of making its own estimates apd taking nto considera-|did not! Wh tion the conditions which “they must g handle and doing it in their own way. It may work out that the four hillions asked for for 1919-20 will not vary much from what the republicans will and again it mav. Tn either instance the amount is bound are obligations A revenue bill. to be large. which must be met and which must be faced but it is not for {great battie which cpened on October tnose in control now to say how their | 24, and the rotal of 300,601 successors shall do it. likely to be completely changed a few months hence. mined after there is a better under- standing thereof. The very fact that|than any of the big cz the war is unquestionably over changes | Russian front. in the early days of the the whole situation. all the restrictions work have been lifted is bound to,be | received with satisfaction throughout the country. on construction It is bound to be of ma- | were taken terial assistance in bringing about the | Americans in France and Flanders Fraan readjustment which must ftake place|Up fo the und of Octover the allies|L's Pob¢ fled disguised as a footman, for it is well known that bufiding has |took 362, been 41, & standstl: and Miose 4Sth British Division on the Italian Were el:gfg"t’;n“h“f‘o:a”‘;ym;::x front duing 45 hours tonk over 20,000 | but Temember that you were the V| prisoners, inciuding four corps or di-| (the Franks)!" was Mazini's message to secure other work. With the war industries curtailing in their production and therefore be- ing forced to cut down their leng list of employes it is certain that many are going to take up their trade again, and in view of the fact tnat so much construction work has had to be nalt- | gion. ed because malerial could not be se-|state the cured it seems not unlikely that the | which are the most tremendous which building ‘trades will be due for a pe- | Dave ever enzaged the :nin: riod of activity in keeping with tae|and which are, in my opinion, clear- factories which have been rushed so|lV, Proven with a definite precision hard on war work. naecessary to make up for the period of slackness even though it may take some time for conditions to straighten | the world’s need, reaches a climax puts i out and for those who have the money | religion in the forefront of recon-|tWwo-man tanks ran into some to build and have it is going to he terial even though the ban has been lifted, for stocks have unquestionably been pretty well depleted an some |Dooks, or they could be will be required to replenish | Alliance Library, 6, Quee them and particularly so with the de- mand ceming all at once. EDITORIAL NOTES. Those who invested in turkeys know what it means not {p be able to resist | generalize on the strength of some|geant Avertt said. “These were the real luxuries. Did you take your cranberry sance|Dy the Rev. G. T. Sadler with or without sugar? Well, th uaes. . Were a lot of others who aid 1fkewsas, | 120 those Who generalize without any | chine could fire, and that was Arty rel “ongginlly '; experience at all. rules over Thanksgiving will probebly - . : be overlooked this year, but even such | COMmittes dealing with aliens.. It relaxation ig expensive. bs . t home but.who is allowed to re- i i i Will the German bands be playing | cis trench, | in the meantime watching when the allied squadron arrives at| i t,lArEe-because he kas knowl- Kiel and Wilhelmshaven to dismantle 58 b aghbb 1 1 3 the remainder of the former kaiser's|sidered, Germany ought not to be al- | o ,tot paton: of Gorbny S0t sight There was some evidewce to sub- 2 stantiate the claim that the time hon- | 5 Broderick, secretary of, thé com- ored custom of burning barrels in|mes g B A eueht 1ol be repe i the Rose of New England has not en- tirely died out. ing about labor conditions, it is of course expected that the not reduce the regular railroad fares, A : e "tikés the tax off of s bt supervision. 1 believe he is rather a maintains it on a necessity. Perhaps the German nawval depart- anything about the Cyclope just for ‘the sake of clearing up a mystery. Again there is a let of talk being estabiishing more,| madliroutes, but the time. money and thought better be usl in getting the- exisfing postal service up where it belongs. indulged in about Over insChina the authorities are to destroy $14,000,000 worth of optum, but .that represents a very small loss in comparison with the human life it might wreck if put up-<for unrestrict- “You look queer, sort mented the man from Woodlawn as 2 % this direction | the Hyde Park man took the seat be- | o1 PAC (DA% Sl I fAind pl ot side him in the suburban car. ! The idea—no, I'm “I don’t wonder it's visible, = o { _the|There isn't anything to tell! Hone in order to|mgyde Park man agreed in hol Why, ot course, he catled "ark low | there isn't! “It's a marvel to me that when | me up—I phoned you the minut I appear on the street sympathetic|did, don’t: you remember? Yes, first aid students do not rush to sup- |calied. as he said he would. No, mot port me and soothe my fevered brow at all! Why, Alice, he isn't a and all that. T am an aged and de- I did, the very next day! | am He is, too! “Imogene’s niece,” explained the | bert—what did he say?’ Hyde Park man adly. “Visiting, of maBufac- | pyhieen. Pretty, Just and diseovers the wreck of me. or something!” said the man, cheering up a little. "t isgood |not to pay me, after all. to.find one who understands. When will murmur, ‘did we disturb you know “And there I sit, fit as a fi as Clarice, and yet I'm beginning to ! until I am thus put in s place Clarice. 1 feel aged all el gene, you know, she was 23 and had a bitter blow to think maybe at one | with my digestion and that it is rible to be fat when yeu are old. “That gir]! I'l head for the tele- phone to call up some man who wants to pay me a million dollars and is anxious to know when I'll have the found no{ washtubs ready on the front and hating us because when porch if she can’t take their goloshes if they aren’t afraid they caught “Next time you have company,” I glance, the Woodlawn man dndignantly runs like thi; the very idea—what!I've been through it.”—Exchange. With the coming into force of the|tend the final stages of ‘war. Austrian armistice. the Italians have|great conflicis, indeed, have m €onditidns | heen counting up their captures in the|fzzled out. Bismarck showed a Conditions are | and 5,000 guns is officially This is perhaps the larr numder of French sold the Prussians at Sedan, and greatero'clock sounded, and the war tures on the |over.—London Chronicle. present war. prisoners taken by the allies on the|3CK just 70 years. - west front, I'alestine, Macedonia, and sought asylum in England. and it looked as though even would throw off autocracy. yrisoners in the west. who| It is nnounced officially that the “To be free, O Germans, you visional commanders, and several hun- | 10 all Germany two vears later. dred guns—Lendon Chronicle Sir A. Conan Doyle in The London Chronicle: Your representative ex- pressed my views so admirably in your recent issue that I hesitate to return to th- subject of psychis reli- Have but one name, The German public! In all your valleys, and hill to hill, let but one song be h: the Song of National Independ: the old German Bardit, and you shall conquer!” T shold like oncc,-however, to |~ L. o consecutive propositions | living ecino today? — The Lo Chronicl 4 of man, which has never before becn known in gt spiritual matters. A silent rovolu-| Fighting in The Two Man Tan tion has been going on for the last 70| (Correspondence of The Associ vears which now, at th» moment of |Press): B American fighters in the been amxiously | Struction. The propositions are as fol | Work in front of Romagne during the waiting to do- so to figure on the sit- |1OWS: uation which they face. o - o P October and Sergeant J. ‘There will be many cases where the | D27 been Droven beyond a.shadow of | Oct n ! ames Avertt, need for the construction is so great American army’s advance along First: That the Physical Phenomena | West bank of the Meuse early possible doubt. of Birmingham, Alabama, with <een” and |Killed in the thick of the fight rce Craw- | bullet that entered a peep hole ir Phenome- | side of the tank and struck him Among ol- | in_the face. by his second wife. “brother” tamks in line with The London Library contains these | American infantrymen crowding . C. There are literallv hundreds of | ran the engine and steered the volumes upon the subject, but these| *I Was So'mear a number of who can appreciate evidence. ~With | that I could see the terror on such a wealth of materiai available, it | faces when my gun began to let is hardly reasonable for any man to|bullets almost in their faces” single individual experience, as is done | first Boches I ran into on vour col- |drive and I certainly let them His case is better. however, | them have it as fast as my old pounding away until every last of them was stretched out on ground. 2 A curious case has come before the concerns a German who ought to be edge of a chemical process for making | T2Y, Drothers’ on my right and a substitute for food, which, it is con- lowed to get hoid of. of alittle batch’ of Germans behi: ated, but we dare not to do it. His son | MOTPing. These were blow. where it | Ty ordered my tank ‘buddy’ at R Ll Jls it cost us all four wheels. He every per- Germany, and this man would, un- remoyes | lowedl to retain 20 men of repatriable | ITS, 28 the officers call it~ nuisance to his neighbdo: must bear it patriotically. other closely, or endeavored to, recently. The visit was by way of a rest from her work in France, where |of woods, and we began to pour she has been a welcome and entertain- | lets into that, Sergeant Avertt Ing speaker at the various huts out|tinued, “and for a time there there. No doubt Mrs. Wiicox has given | some smoke arising above the less than 16 volmmes. up in full forece and showered She has:put into verse the Love Let- | woods with lead. ters of Abelard and'Heloise, and a new “The machine_gun answers volume by her is among the latest an- | pretty stiff for awhile, as they TouRcements. = rance: all the time and telling him wha Laugh, and the werld laugbs with you, | were going to do—clean out ‘Weep, and you weep alone. woods. My ‘brothers, on either Bo the end of the way far off or|someway had the same hunch. the end of the greatest strugsle the|that thicket must have thought suffered. hell had broken loose, because Pomp-xvds clvoumetance geldom at- thing I knew the firing of,” com-do }ou suppose he must have thought? nearly dying of convulsions over it!’ iy o g interested in me—'no;‘ a particle. Well, 2 man, While o no |1 guess I know! e did, too—he have been .catering €X- |1 must be on the verge of tottering. ukid after you most - particularly. t requirements | Clarice has plainly made this much s 1o’ business - in | apt ReESIY: is uch | Why, .7 did tell you all about it—yes, making it up.- He's crazy about you! Oh. tell me about Her- “I give you my word, this goes on e Prelty d}lcovemd:fior an hour, mabybeA Then, after bid- ) ly sorry for poor|ding Alice -by sixteen times with the readjustment plans can be gotten|glq mossbacks who have gone through xlu‘les mmz hrewell:m Clarice underway but it cannot fail to be re-|it without ever being aware of . the alzed that the outlook for business in |marvels around them. You know!” this country for many vears to come was never brighter and every effort|fully from the Woodlawn man. “My which is made to facilitate the read- [ Wife had a niece once, too!” justment will work to the benefit of turns around with a beaming smile “Maybe she won't stay long,” hope- | Uncle Henry!' she says benignantly, much as one would address a child it g waiting for its dolly, ‘do you want That's right—speak of it as though | to use the phone? When I finally get it were a case of hives or pneumoniamy number my man's got tired of concerned, both iabe: tal. > all , both laber and capi Hyde Park | waiting, they tell me, and has decided “Or she will smile sweetly upon me Only what was to be expected was|I fiee to fmogene for comfort she tells at breakfast. ‘Poor Uncle Hem‘zy. the attitude of the mimority on the|me not to be foolish and expects me senate finance committee in refusing | te perk up on that! It's becauseshe's | night? to approve the plan of fixing $4,000,- |a woman. I presume, and the brain|more quiet, but you 000,000 as the amount to be raised bty |cells that got packed away in her|thoughtless young people are—never taxation during the fiseal year 1913 |head when she was 18 sort of revive |stop to consider old folks at all.” 20. The split upon party lincs was|jhen confronted with Clarice. I'd e > 3 ha_;e l(})l thinl; that I'd picked out a|glowing with the superb health which b R S g e e i wife who, at 18, was as doggoned silly | is my boast, feeling like ar:)-'ye:’.l‘-‘:;l:l: 1 told the crowd they must be afterward. If I take a second help- outgrown whoopingz cough and mumps | ing of dessert Clarice always worries. and measies and foolishness. So it is | She says at my age I shouldn't trifle our friends are gnashing their teeth |come to see us Clarice always picks out a warm corner for them and asks coming out in such weather, which “And what is Clarice saying? Tt|feed Clarice bread and milk and make “Did you? Oh, vou|her go to bed at 8 o'clock, doggone it. GLEANED FROM FOREIGN EXCHANGES | sense of the dramatic in arranging the prisoners | formal close of hostilities in 1871. Just ven, before midnight on the day the ar- t capture|mistice was signed at Versaflles. a There arc'the read-|]of. prisoners ever reported in a sus-|German gun sounded, and was an- justments which must be faced and tained batiic in the worid’s history,|swered by one from the French Jines. W tt s s d oan ber e e nearly three times as many as the|It was the agreed programme—leav- taken by |ing the last shot to the French. Twelve % Now ’th:\t the revolutionary spirit v . : v as reawakened in Central Europe, An interesting comparison. with- the | v eill i 2 1 fruits of this ten daye patlle Is the | There will it end? To find a parallel = for such a shaking up of thrones and fact that between July 15 and the end |a; e The anncuncement to the effect that | & ShinGenatis Ehin r the total of | Fight of rulers we may have to go 1hln that revolutiofiry year, when the Siberia, was 367,512, Of these-254,012 | el n ks and Austrian . emperor v the British, French, and % Prussi “Have but one family, Democracy! Mazzini’s dead voice find a STORIES OF THE WAR French Before denying it, let a man read as| ‘buddy,” did their share in giving the that prices will make no difference, |a general view of the subject, Bar-|Hun his due. Avertt's ‘buddy” though the rush for building material | rett’s “Threshold of the U is likely to have its effect wpon the |28 a more rarticular in cost for some time to come, but 'what | ford’s “Reality of Psychic looks likesthe sreat obstacle to bufld- | 13} hese ar o e il ing just now is the troudle which is| o Digjectical Society :nd the Life|in the Argonne sector. Avertt's being experienced in getting the Ms- | of D, D. Home, written after his death |Went along with a lot of other It was during the American “push” got at the|in the rear. Avertt was the machine- < square: | Sunner of his tank while his “buddy” four should be conclusive to any man |mans encountered in a sillow trench fast, and I just kept going ahead and | “Passing beyond this hastily dug and at the same time keeping tab on p 5 A hump in the hill along the roadway, “From every point of view.” said Mr.| or what had been # roadway before our hea’dy artillery opened up that machine_gun- 1S e an wo dau; ers les " Of course there isumuch to be said | they should be able to ‘convey the se- | JATlY those which struck a glancing in favor of the elimination 'of the|cCret process to German: lightless nights, but it doesn’t hardly| Would be extremely useful. fit in with the demand for saving in the use of coal. % and we went up after them sort of The man on the corner says: Speak- | e of g‘t"?h age who is interned has| jgeways and T got around on to the e right to insist on going back to side of that hump, and my ‘brother’ munition | doubtedly, cxercise that right. By an | O the other side was doing the same, workers of the country will be able|agreement between the British and |20 We Wiped that bunch out to retire on their earnin; When Secretary MocAdoo Il 1o petun S oL remEiETabic the increased Pullman rate, but does | 3%¢ and that 20 are already being held. | . 1\ "en afl of whom were Ameri- ST (e cadn o dnto kesh o Jip shidcr cans using two men tanks invented but they by the French, always watched each “And we cannot futérn hin because wheel to keep after those gunners if German governments we are only al- jiffy—I believe it was by enfilading R £ idea beinzf!o k;ep a hundred yards or nient would: e wilhin 2 at ing and. exceedinely |so apart for their mutual protection, s L b k‘;":;g popular American poetess, Fila Wheel- |and it being important also that they 2 . er Wilcox, has been in Lomdon quite | not get too far ahead of the infantry. “Just beyond the hump was a clump many a cheery'word from her own|tops so we knew there were Boches poems, for she is the author of fo}in there. About four of us .opened X of her lines have|forward, but I was just kept pepper- already passed, and deservedly so, in- |ing as and talking to my ‘buddy’ to 3 g away g y Y’ Jjust ‘What? OH, no-0-o! I'm not going to not! e he he bit not ‘Oh, ' she last how ddle, day ter- Alt they and cold said “you Most erely grim was even need free Re- from eard, ence, also ndon i | ks. ‘ iated hot the in his j was by a n - the fair tank | the them tank. Ger- their fiy Ser- the this have ma- some one the left nd a the “did, in a Sergeant Avertt explained that the: the bul- con- | was tree- that were went t we that side ‘The near, it is @ifficult to refrain from | doughboys back of me too were firing ofi the precise nature of | right along with us and the Boche in all first DRINK HOT WATER | - BEFERE BREAKFAST ' Says you really feel clean, sweet and fresh inside, and are seldom ill. If you are accustomed to wake up with a coated tongue, foul breath or | a dull, dizzy headache; or, if ~your meals sour and turn into® ggs and acids, you have a real surprise await- ing you. Tomorrow morning, immediately upon arising, drink a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. This is intended to first neutralize and then wash out of your stomach, liver, kidneys and thirty feet of intestines all the indi- gestible waste, poisons, sour bile and toxins thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal. Those subject to sick headaches, backache, bilious attacks,-constipation or any form of stomach trouble. are urged to get a quarter pound of lime- stone phosphate from the‘drug store and begin enjoying this morning in- side-bath. It is said that men and women who try this become enthu- siastic and keep it up daily. Just .as hot water and soap -cleanse. purify and freshen the skin, so hot water and a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate act on the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels. Limestone phos- phate is an inexpensive white powder and almost tasteless. stopped and I figured all the Boches had been killed or had decided to beat it before we all got there in force. “Along about this time I noticed that the tank boys on the right were swinging around the side of the clump of trees, and from the position of their guns and the speed of their tanks I judged that they were giving fits to some Fritzes running away. I then switched so as o run along side the’ thicket, at a distance, and joined the tank boyvs around the end. “Just about that time there was a volley of machine-gun bullets, and some anti-gun stuff too, from a hill a bit to my left, suddenly my tank just began to tremble or something, and then stopped, and shuddered all over. \] looked down and my ‘buddy’ was limp in his seat. One of those damned bullets had come in through my ‘buddy’s peep hole and hit him square in the face. “My ‘buddy’ was dead. His ' final clutch on the throttle off the gas and the old tank stopped, and there 1 was, and the other bovs went on. That's about all I know about that fight, or whatever it was. and I'm and another ‘buddy’ too to take me up front again where things are doing every: minute. This tank business is great business for the boys who like to shoot.” Avertt said that when he went into action he determined to keep count of the number of Germans his ma- chine-gun “touched off” but when he began to use his gun he could think of *nothing but a purpose to spread death and destruction and that he quickly lost count of the number ke saw fall. Here’s the Formula. Popular formula for recent enemies | of democracy conditionally— —Chicago News. “We surrender un- here’s the kitchen?” The manufacture of handkerchiefs has been undertaken in Canada on ac- count of the absence of supplies from England and Ireland. waiting around now for another tank! THEATRE " o e e 4 £ = s KEITH SUPREME VAUDEVILLE—FRIDAY AND SATURDAY -BENTON CO. ... Four People. In the Comedy Sketch “HANDKERCHIEF 13" - MARIE AND HER TRUSTY PIANO TRIANGLE FIVE-PART [BREED Today and Seturday TWO BIG FEATURES CONSTANCE TALMADGE “SAUCE FOR —IN— THAT DEVIL BATEESE} Hearst-Pathe News OTHER VIEW POINTS' In the report made by Major Tracy, one of the medical inspectors of the schools in Hartford, is found this ob- servation, relative to the increased sickness in the schools: “On ac- count of the high price of milk. coffee was being drunk by the pupils a great deal more, which also resulted in under-nourishment.” i This is the mutual consequence of {the shameful profiteering in milk, made possible by ridiculous restrict- jons and special favoritism. . There is not a commodity of the home on the market today, excepting cotton that has advanced so much in iprice_in recent years as milk. | milk could be purchased any where for seven and eight cents a quart, and a little further back for six cents in summer and seven in winter. Today you get a brand of milk called “pure,” that is from two to four days old, doctored and ruined to suit fads and fancies, and to make great profit, which will not keep a day, if the weather is slightly warm, even with ice, also,sky highs For this miserable stuff, never en- joyable to drink, you have to pay iseventeen cents a quart and at t?e rate of twenty-two cents a quart if bought by the pimt. There are two weapons in the hands of the people and it is time they were employed. One is for all older folk to stop using milk. The other is to start a milk farm in every large city and place ,it under - henest officials.—Bridgeport Telegram. The first Moro girls ever graduated as nurses receiveé¥ their diplomas as members of the clasgs of 1918 from the Philippine general hospitai. “HICK MANHATTAN"—FLAGG "FOUR SHOWS SATURDAY-... Ten years ago the finest kind of | ' TWO.MINSTREL BOYS FEATURE MEDY .. . JEN—— NAT FARNUM Bon-T;nAfi:;l{;;l’ Show JACK KERRIGAN “A MAN’S MAN” “William Dugcan THE FIGHT FOR MILLIONS CHARLIE CHAPLIN | AFTERNOONS 230 TO 5 EVENINGS 8 TO 1030 P. M. | AMERICAN NAMES IN CANADIAN CASUALTY LIST Ottawa, Ont., Nov. 28.~The follow- ing names of Americans appear in to- day’'s overseas ¢asualty list: Died: S. Pugh, Plymouth, Pa. Presumed “to have ‘died: "J. Hailey, Boston, Mass. ' Prisoner of war: Thomas Hendersol Meriden, Conn. 1 H Prisoner or war repatriaté. A, Shaw, Providence, R. In: J. Lyons, Dorchester, Mass.; H. Lumb, New Jersey (no ci A German Notion. “It is a splendid victory for the German people,” said Scheidemann, the Kaiser's Sogalist mouthpiece. Some way the victory represented by those armistice terms sounds more French and English than Ger- man—New York Herald. SEE British-capital in Nath expects to build up ‘a considerable ‘business in upholsterers’ and bookbinders’ leath- ers. What is Castoria ' (CASTORIA is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Merphine nor other Nar- cotic substance. Its age is its gnarantes. Fer more than thirfy years it has been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishuess arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; . giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Panacea—The Mother's Friend. ‘ The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the Signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made uqder his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and “ Just-as-Geed” are but Experiments that trifle with and eadanger the health of Infants and Children—Experience. agpiust ,@E@h'@‘ for cifildren.” Dr. Gustave A. Bisemgracber, of your Castoria repeatedly in and fiad it to be an omi-the market.” Rave ever kmown and 1 What can a phiysician add? Leave them, but 1 kmow, § (4 QENUINE fla:é:fi;__ I Letters from Prominent Phlysicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. Albert W. Kahl, of Buffglo, N. Y., says: “I have used Castoria in my practice for the past 26 years. I regard it as an excelle'nt»medicim £f. Paul, Mian., says: “I Hdve unsed ice with geod results, and can recoms mand it as an excellent, mild and harmless remedy, for children.” Dr. B. J. Dennis, of St. Louis, Me., seya: “I have used and prescrided your Castdria in my sanitarium and eutside practics for a number of years ent remedy for children.” Dr, 8 A Duchenas, of Philadelphis, Pa., seys: “T bave used yeur Cas foria In the case of my own baby and find it pleasant te take, and have ebtained exeellent results freom its mse.” m.fl.medChM,Imlm!‘IhuMnmq:mhm cames of calic in ehildren and have found it the best medicine of its kind Dr. R. K. Bskildson, of Omalis, Neb,, says: T fiad your Castoria te be & standard family remedy. , It is the best thing for infants and- children I e Dr. L. R. Robinscn, of Kansas City, Mo., says: “Your Castoria certainly has merit. £1s not itz ags, its centinued use by, mothers through ail thess years, and the many attempts to imitate it, sufficient recemmecdationl it to the mothwrs Br. Bdwin F. Pandes;"of New York City, seys: “For several yéars [ liava ekt el i 'Eflltlnehdpu.unm Dr. N. B. Sieer, of Broeklyn, N. Y., says: *1,ehisct %o whiaf sre called patent medieies, arkore msker alonelimows what ingreients are put in advise its nse” -ALWAYS In Use For Over 30 -Years “The Kind You Have Always Bought

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