Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 8, 1919, Page 4

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Glorwich Bulletin und Qoufied ~ 123 YEARS OLD Sobscription price 12¢ a week; 50¢ a monf » year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Comn., a3 second-class matter, Teleph Bulletin Business Office 430. Balletin ¥ditortal Calls. Rooms 35.3. Balletin Job Office 35-2. Willimantic Offics, 25 Spring St Telephone 384-2 —— e " Norwich, Wadnesday, Jan. 8, 1919, [ ——A WEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Aswelated Press is exclusively entitled the nse for republicaticn ef all news despateh- eredited to it pot ctherwise credited in paper and alw the locai mews published blication of special despat reserved. CIRCULATION January 4, 1918, 10,120 true in South America. the transpor- tation facilities are far from being adequate. Exporters find that those engaged in similar work in Europs ara able to ship their goods under much more favorable terms than they arc, so that even if the shipping which is needed for trade development was available the lowered rates enjoved by foreign competitors would still place them under a bad handicap. We need a big merchant marine but we likewise need to use what we have or what we can zet in such a way that we can do business somewhere near on terms favorable with those offered in Europe. Otherwise it can be ap- preciated that a great big fleet of m chant wvessels for which we are striv. s 1 | much so that their latest decorations,! closeted with the leaders of reat Britain and Ttaly. He I Brest December alone had made trips abroad, but these were after they had retired from of- fice. tl pageantry, man about the deposition and the FACTS AND COMMENT Since landing at the French port of | 13, the president’s cen one jong ovation. Of dents Grant and Roosevelt 1 s Taft had a wonderful trip around he world on his return from the Phil- ‘nes, but that was before his pres- It has remained for Woodrow on o roceive the greetings of the rchs of the old world to the dent of the new. lven Paris, the city of fetes and never accorded anybody uch a welcome as greeted President ilson the morning of Dec. 14th. The soulevards were lined with people, so e B2 w le PR S he hundreds of captured German can- [ make my suit myself to save money, “That is very dutiful of you,” her tia/ls Ieely fo'remain {dle inourhar- |3 PUREEEE b oS RINLeEr SET R0 | Ak Iy Tt myself 1o sane brother said solemnly. “I shall be bors and our ambition to do more|mne siatue of Strassbourg in the Place, “T have seen some putterns that |Lroud to walk out with' vour old suit business in South America will suf-|de la Concorde, that had worn the|ywould turn a man's hair white,” her |any day. Nevertheless; there are times fer. badges of mourning ever since the 10ss | trother said. “Were they like that!” |when it is a patriotic duty to get new of Alsace in 1871, was black with peo- | “Oh, I don't mean the patterns. 1|ciothes” STICKING TO THE JOB. ple, and from the very head of one|mean the prices,” Loretta scoffed. “It — aved the merican flag. To the It is quite evident from the an-|Parisians the president represented the nouncement which now comes from |country that had saved them from |¢! Paris that President Wilson is not go- | deadiy peril, and to him they expre: . o ke = o | €@ their gratitude by e means in “You're something like the littie girl|the getting of them would keen me ing; fo, confine his POt inthe: weade e ey who started out to make her dolly a |from contributing o all these funds. | conference to preliminary confer- | ofstar ke i iots i ToOER: : 2 : Th P hat and it turned out a pair of trous- | I Go believe in looking as well as pos ences, exchanzes of ideas and seeing e stay in Paris was not all ban- | 0 " inar her brother. | sible when one is not at war put— the delegates zet down to discussior 'l«u' and lfrmm hal xu‘F-lzr]c '*o]' T’r‘e— “Pretty. near” Toretts laughed.| “Well, T have a notion that for m around the table. He has been “‘,‘hh"l“ Ll e ,U‘“m‘}‘if“]“h;mfi “Anyhow, T decided to buy a suit in- [al least this is not the time to wear ceedingly busy since he arrived in|ypc [recident spent hours in confer- |Stead- You see. T have had that blue |my old suit,” her brother said. e ¢ the e ace RLaant : Premier |y really ought to have something new. | With spirit. “You won’t get any v garding some of the many important|clemencean, Vnizelos, ier of! cine | fund subscriptions or anything else in | ons which must be solved. He|Greece, the man who brought |1 Degan looking and T kept on looking | - H eSS Con- of Premier Orlando | n Foreign Minister Baron tine, Kin togethe Victor with 1 the fall” into the morris cha will end by buying it no matter what. had been trying for given up at last. and I am looking one, when Mrs. Davis asked us to come to her house to that ‘war lec- ture. " “They took up a collection, T'll het.” o, they didn't,” Loretta told him. “But the lecturer told us that it was unpatriotic to use wool if we could pessibly use silk and, somehow or other, I did not so much care for a suit after that. I flew around try to get a long coat I could wear over my last year's silk and I had hunted for a couple of days before I realized that long coats are made of wool just as much as a suit is. Some way I had rever thought of it. So I have sent my old blue suit to the cleaner's and I am going to wear that all winter.” RIGHT SORT “T have been trying to get a suit all Loretta said, as she sank . “At first when weng down to look at them I w: imply appalled at the prices.” “Prices don’t seem so bad, evidently, fter vou have thought gbout them a vhile,” her brother laughed. “When Jady is vascinated with a coat she that it?" Not at all,” Loretta said. Thoere a woman near me who vaid she Wees get a nd she had ‘he was ng home to make one oui of her ggest oriental ruz. 1 was goinz fo | cat to suit her nu sition when T make I can’t afford to waste 1oth at the present prices.” “Oh, well, of course,” Loretta said | dubious ‘I realize T am not goinx te cut any sort of a dash in my old duds, but T can’t get new ones when a new suit.” “T beg to differ.” nounced calmly. “In et. I had the mon- all ready once. and T put it berty bond. T had alreadr wut you know how 1 would h her brother an-| fact, T felt sol strongly the other way that T hurried | AUDITORIEM TIME—2.15, 645, 845 Admidsion—11-17-28c (Few at 30c) The Hoyi Comedy Ce. FELIX MARTIN THAT:FUNNY TAD + -OTHERS--(4 MOSTLY GIRLS .* TODAY AT 2.15, 645 AND 846 LAFAYETTE —WE COME— PERSHING—1917 America Pays Her Debt to France ELSIE FERGUSON In the 5-Part Artcraft Special Under the Greenwood Tree 14 Burton Holmes Travelogue EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION LENA KEEFE in “SHAME” WhatisaHishFiyer? IT'S. ALIVE SEE IT THURSDAY NIGHT COMING TOMORROW These Big Keith Vaudeville Acts LINA CAVALIERI in A Woman of Impulse. DANCING LATEST HEARST NEWS TODAY ters in each of the count >, With all of th leadere of |ii 1 had put that much into a & {out this morning to see about having | TONlGHT s been given a warm 1 10, NLies 0L ioiclcacers then learned that we had {one made in a hurry. et b S L el bean thought and ac the pres- | ).i0% o ihe To {_ “Well, T declare!” Loretta said. T AUIBY HATIE a few days to the date set for | TraE e e e { Fenare morse tiandtmis hefora was ; 7 o8 ue i e | views all-importa : “You can Loretta ceformed. Y got a lot of suits. . opening of the preliminary conferenco must_come before the peage con- | o wOtt S RIS Boretin e o e meC s | - Rowland'sti Jazz Band TIDAY END TAUR with the delegates all assembled in On his departure from Paris | . 7 mavedi up enoneh honey afte ,.{mw_ invhow d HURSDAY France, ready to up the various| for the American front there was 16ft|, while to get the sult and then Mrs.| “Patriotic dufy,” her brother chuck- - v om questions and do husiness for the per- & oSt D ey Aoty f'Tr(-mcvm starfc i drive lled. “T got from Washington | BE T o fection of the neace term i B AITNeSS | hat took every cent agwin. T went on |in the early officc mail and 1 went ; ] How long it will requir shani T Nt on day, wthflockineL for somothing mode SR b sl T " > 7 —IN— rereement no one knows. How 1ong|ihe A ? = s ' | the same, something that wo o have it ready day after tomorrow. 1 om0 o knowe, o lons e Al Chopeat ERfuon e % SIS (S SV O SR T WIS GKATING RINK ||« : sia e Bol S iUttt bl fi‘w e e hould get a nice soft looking bro on the shoulders. hange. OLYMP!C HALL HIGH SPOTS" he would not sit as a delegate,|ing for him there from the moment | 3 Seimoudhiotasity B et e Clooree ed Wnier. Mar e T e e - AFTERNOONS 230 TO § he wouls 175» chosen to organize | it -0 b Rl so muech in pis sixty vea \]1]“ r-tmul:'ago q0~ |\.=‘an to view the AN ENTRANCING ROMANCE the Conference, that his efforts wowid [Tt 217 B¢ Thaning Cross Station untl | ¢, seemad somehow as if 1 | camnon that for four vears sent death EVENINGS 8 TC 10 P. M. OF YOUTH AND EN limited to forth ,and’ ex-| Busland. of contae it s wate tbe|destined to keep right on 1 and devastatiton to iheir land, and Tl iining his position, and as such that | Lloyd-George and - Balfour that |5 2 _rspiring people fo thelr ) the children clamber on the carriage 5 o Bt 3 Al dud balfo ol istory’s verdici on the | an on the grim barrels i : niry, regarding the 14 points , . Y G e ».c.| LETTERS TO THE EDITOR || EDITH ROBERTS d the neace that uld be con- | anchester, where a stop overn { epneraticn or more after their deaths, | (hat are the toops 0‘;_““ e it A perusal' of the New ¥ ded, while ATl 7 cas made, the presic t LREXLICT [esatier o leat ha st interesting. returning| Mr, itor—A perusal o 3 S 5 uded. whil beéngsaizee. fwas made, thel presldens Hitered » | Jut Roosevelt himself was pe ¢ OF o) Encif ponts (ot ieni= | N ork vibers of morning reveals | I Tod Browning’s Production \ | garding the Y swhichshe bRl 0t e e & waiq (o see the stamp of public approvai af- | home. French or Amer- | wonderfully the erip of this powerful | e b has v 7 heard. H 1, | - | : n Governo -cus 11| Would make abroac e Uaiten Sencead e s tlxed o many « and poli- | vior is the same. Al-|per Testimonials from news- FRED vho t the previ-| As sination of t i \‘ i ughing or singing, a!-‘w sers and eitizens ?t y ¢ Y A. Buck- | auestion whether ation i SI0EH A SC 2 | one cheerily or | ceful witness to thi - - G common- | main in Eurcpe, and this seISiEr odice on £ ith a smile when they | irom thos mpion DRI [N Fuope, aul ; the country (wo S| meet an Ame : e v % compelled . a e ‘; ”~ A i v'\;‘ 'lelr bl nmm1 and ve and shout 2 guerre est finie i of his policies and acts o R TSR e g P 1 terms of an old Pis recting en the ch | Friends encmie or he had S h bt & ae | i the e istrans rms of an old-time Sheis. potitient Ry s e e e ke hraee hiree ot TN oliege 1y than is indicated fo zress to o bac 27 be o ace | Oadat | his character, the »d purity of s vertheles oznizes the responsibility which h Tliance whose | "0k as_civil Stre of all are the lights at|his private life, his s e amept R l" f ° - - has taken in bringing proper | oh ## w'l ot the prin=| KECHR SRl Sami night, inl the hamlets and villages or|C3nism, hiz unseltish patriotiom, and elief Unit B 1 sislators | peace tebms and he is determined iberty for all | 5o that it origingaid | SUIIE friendl from - the isolated |::"““'“I‘" Ll S ¢ b mount of atten- | stick as close vpossible until the| it Juckson Roosevelt's i [armhbouse, in regions furt ACK- | " Whether or mnot one could always I F Sily DUNGEER o thesi ONe Gl i1 e ; 's day the president|influence o Andiite starts from!| HOT SO0t noc eemed & Jeseried | prove all’ of Rooscvelcs politica byl rance o session | shou rw the cradle of t n neration. | ‘2P 1o 2 elerehy musht, s Hour | e e on S rivilege OF A eeatl an wel- | been helping (o bring Germany to her | FeSPondent has traveled at night| becat of his unique per- | Csgood ‘Memorial, Park church, at 4 ! . amendment to the | NO REGARD FOR PUBLIC. wel et T i witho immer to be seen in the | PXIViI¢ CE SEHETIe 8y Memorial, Park church, a atit ok (il o m\ form ‘\l‘ °s cherished ‘."(’ij\,l]r‘ |t \x":.\w\-'} oiniEAs e e e ;_:(,nx:m\ \‘(’)'u \\'cr:.‘:( re‘ ‘((:)h’l\ee]r‘\i‘l!“:u o'clock Saturday afternoon, Jan. 11. r e court was|up {0 Roosevtlt as his ideal of stur- Ml 57d vale the - cheery 1 a different one from any vou hga | _N° admission charged. i Sl of their|dy purpose und homest manhood. Iti“hize and the villase o a = i happy fuet that the saldier a papers devote columr s pr 3 ; P niss rernme: ines sides altiough < prgducers hvio D e i L e e tion ot penih ¢ e “Wiite e Pt daps (Poiescommission deueument i o8 AMMOUSN | | ndeq themselves tozether under th IS E ey cony oo it MY S| remote part of France where war fthe N S 2 yeonstderabloy rflian to) \the sod Al G e e o e ictory, a viciory for which he \\m.\r'd' e lishts ot s e o remarkable career as the im- ting supply of modest but -com- % ame of th men's league, an Fe so hard and gave so murh | wonderful, even if they are but candle | ! member of the United States | fortable houses for working people ; T Vi milk distributing companies over the | i = | or little Tamp. Where once camions | 1YL & Commission I met him} 3 paving and cleaning of : o H to be paid for the commodity colmy yeace T S OF TH Sy 3 s | several times. N ] + | streets and cou: together with Tous Jiein fon heienpmmanliy. ) & reace] - STORIES OF THE WAR jor staff cars loomed lightless in the | ™\ "ihose t7nes, the jovial side of | proper water supply and sower drain- i e t i Gk de vchiaid | The Recent Battlefields e for 1t o4 | this many sided man always struck | age facilities I buck o its Rith ] hall sit nor| (Correspondence of The As ! 1 ; 168 sounds Glike, o slioplegorocam. ywied o state is) : o representavives each | py The land of rece vatriotism and his per- | In reality it would require a lot of nne ocked upon, | ¥ A b5 toibe thell 10 Praass. e & dises Tand y . for his country in her!ywork and a lot of money. hat i¢| 71 e consi i nt the four! .pe e s Thers o village now but where be forzotien| Byt consider what Waterbury would ent reason for in- |1 > fve rance. | 5 pitted fields and the s Taaslom gsiminesy canipont| geners: citizer of {Jook like-in 1920.—Waterbury Repub- e | ; e it mean | Tea As | Are e s bos noton e e tever political lican. { it such is not nossible for | Germany her « vinter sky is lac 1-gnd | spitab; WILLIAM A, AIKEN —ALE _priiaEn. = ; without serious resulis be- | ferc of sociaiisis and bol-| e o D e audinccersuy h, Jan. 7, 1919, Don’t wear vour bathing suit to a experienced. M in impo 1 westward. | have taken t o tp- Soiusd B Ton A uctresbinerits = S e New Years' party just to show that . baat ooe forthem o nev iy ve crent hmoisitollns R on e s OTHER VIEW POINTS | " o < % ve it in sufficient ntities, hut be- | without de- of their homes and | . opoe % 5 has ¢ : 2 1 sufficier antities, are fow And prob. | @ cheertul oftering of what there is,| = - a p e the milk producers and are few and prob-} for the farmers know now that the| What are the three most impor- : G ines L ot e i minter il ave passet be-| O (B¢ femers fnow now et the | U 8 o i Watbe| Qhildren Ory ot determined to hold ou til th ) il ith privilege e reclamation and reconstruction|ynas disappeared. The rationing of | Cught to accomplish during 19192 = int tide \dptarnins Dol ot il o el e ee¢ | are undertaken on a large sc | cortain foodstuffs is stil i offect.| We should say that they are in FOR FLETCHER'S has go! il 2 4 X has been pro-| Along the re- | Bread tickets are mecessary in public | Order of imporiance - Tk n tance where tho | it is | bridged for the : tol catine no matter how unpre.| 1. A revision of the city charter CAEcS o 1A imposed_upon ic or oc- man_territor amion trains | tentious; butter and milk are seldom ; ets no consideration. Those ip on the right|move slowly and always southward.|to be had, and cheese is scarce: but| MUST ENTER OTHER LINES rreling over the division | s if ther deem it} They travel leisurely now, for the|of plain vegetables and certain meats 3 : get from the public have of country in-|need of hurry is gone. They bring is and the carefully auestion } ced vone them cen- { back the ge of battlefields, all| hoarded of the light red and o o become of the ot i Mul- | the things that go to make wa n- | white wines of the country are forth- K z{ xxmxflx xuuumgfimu const Sl miles | doned or captured | TR e of T coinigare toit & 1 the = i eedicn . Essen.| Truck load after truck load of| ¢ (his season there shein thel endangered or 5 o oy At this seasi here i ~e s . - mads o el Ba i e St bt i i e e e B imbalVs Teatile Shoyp { I natur: 0 malke 1siness 5 e great | bayonets and trench knives and pis- | it Yenison red-legged hares and a&® e == S 84 . ich work have not sufficient concern to bring 14 any suc ! ns c alogue of paraphernalia | "3\ ivavs ie at home. e 342 WASHINGTON ST. i wwe is decide S e e n the Rhine counte~z | are brought in. "The battle zone is i ndustry as will not cause the inno- | N e in Frankfort . | still full of it all, in heaps and racks, z ale as it has been | T & bt 12X possibility of tr by | waiting salvage raports the flo- . - pubtle wels |20 mear wote is shown from the| Now and then come fra Dmansn: toloper | Announce a Sale of Crepe de Chine and Voile stion but put out of service for much TR “Tron | plane camions, burdened with - ; ifal of the| T U i g e 0 e ot ch v Wwith six associated | mantled flving machines of every tvpe |‘company is : 310,080,000 Mex- | Bn i) o s e A s beer ec ”dr by theland every mation. engine elican approximately $5.700,000), and WAISTS L tha ere | come too quickly when will be im- in for triall and sunning on t | the ntury being’ fl 2 : ses nd yet such a| e to show such lack of consid- the coun- “u~ E K;\I;m\ mil for the for the requirements of the|try. riends were of It is our express desire to have it known that th the only ranche ')"‘ Propg > for allied ; show B = | sa' of War advertised during thz entire y: at reduced th —— oosunationid d through frail fabric or the OI_DS prices These Waists ars now marked at cost price ¢ : 1 Al imonthe crash. A fair proportion of t b R Gobnio PR Fa4) : L ; EDITORIAL NOTES. ‘-mfi:v:\o's’:l tes months Ffii;“’_ hE alal acel coosst thnt mnihs) e | The assertion is made that the character, ta 4 and general : | Those who have been nursin and Germa ittle pro- | Boche. | Head or chest— i treatment which patrons commonly associate with our merchan- war work. Not a | pet dandelion along expe |aress towa v settled| Ther trains of captured enemy are best treated disc will be iound, as usual, in the Waists. X oSl the year blossom wili be much E oo artillery, particularly of motor bat- | “externally”— i i g from ot} | disappointed at the int ntion of i Hoh driven and manned by French- | . k o meet the war re- | B8PPR Tl and these are py outts | W (ST BoavRTarar ey n 7 will undountediy | o, . A guns are decorated with! W\ I ! e K o AR | e man o the comer eay: 1 Sl (ap e e A Y (RS VAPORUB Y. | KEAKIKOHIOIONOIER A ally’ will true when ! oo O S : merely no higher | soldie gh and wave a graeting.| WO tiFe e : ; h !\\mvl one could ever 65 lexforaity Adhcs oo he o AR creep through the ages| NEW PRICES...30c, 60c, $1.20 f cxpenditure for a fur co ; e 3 i Ty ha nitely k | The one great trouble w: Hor i o5 . porte gnation of George (' Rugsia. A 18 developed | jg that it isn’t so, er uncertan cf its own « t ; T eestricting the .nrflv' It must make the ex-kaiser green not ventured to crust 4 teaspoonful of Dr.Caldwell's Syrup Pep- of mleasure cars, whil Busi- | with envy to hink of missing all the clements advo sin each night at bedtime has done me a re to come into|fun that is going on in Berlin tion of prorerty w ] e o A 11 lities It is not the family or a state alone rehy. Temporizing world of 9904, as I am 62 years old and was %itua 1S With | Aok neduras fie denth. of Tosados lsm_was whut overthrew getting badly constipated. I had previously ion vith |]; ing means a dis- | coooi Sl e taken a lot of salts and pills without rcal i hey must make hole country. £ Zent ak ief.” (F aQ oTit~ of their facilities, cven| According to the commander of the = e ;ifigg {f;’fi"fiifj;g ‘grfizef“]f“’n:“ \‘fi.‘lt) P Sreone Rregt sh air forces plans had been made | The death of Colonel Roosevelt on s 2 S onne, i), | meeting peace (imel thres days before the armistice w:s|Monday morning has come as a. di ¢ the readjustment talies | signed to attack Berlin from the air. |tince shock fo the entire nation. He no 'm'-“nm; ut what| Germany knew that it was escaping |. B A e R ST A 5 organized establish- | many things by getting out the | 1 + s 1ty 10 do whether | struggie as 1t a0 Constipation is one of the penalties of fey have n putting their whole| The price and style of men's hats | age that should never be neglected—Dr. Cald- rie to airplanes, munitions or|are to remain unchanged according to ' | well’ - in i 1 1 3 ‘ war production the hatters’ convention, except for 1 e l.s Syrup Pegsm A pombmahpn of &mpl'e O - o ot DR Bl et M laxative herbs with pepsin that relieves consti- b €2 a T i e2 g 01 Laieac o Sl That will mean a rope instead of a | — pation in an easy, natural manner, without grip- formation has been recently given|string to hold the straw: Ten months ago, W. H. Kelley, a 3 3 ’d : £ s . the effect that efforts ara to be| If is so that there e 15,000 | lumber salesman of Omaha, had a pair Inziof stram, anciis as positye an 1ts effect as it through the consular represen- | British prisoners in Germany not re- | of shoes re-soled with Neslin Soles. is mild and gentle in its action. es ¢ is country to h: them | rorted, is possible that the death | Mr. Kelley does much walking and has greater attention to the instrue-|lists of other countries will likewise | worn these shoes constantly. He savs i ¢ Vi on of the countries where they are)he changed by a similar discovery. | “they are still good for another ten = W 2 i E cated relative to the n of this| Knowing what the bolsheviki have | months of wear.%’ DR' CALD ELL S 1 C ountries in connection with foreign | been doing as terrorists it causes no | Good shoe stores carry Neslin-soled b4 BU K SAWS ade and the laws which have been|surprise to learn that they are k | shoes in many styles for men, women n s V»A rezarding the me. The g prisoners of war. | and children.” They cost you no more i be little question that this isneed-| Of course there are some in ( | than shoes that give less wear. Neslin \ ’ 1. bul it is quite as important that|many who will not learn of Hoover's | Soles are also available everywhere for - . hould be taken which will lend [appointment as international food di- | re-soling. Remember—these soles are The P”f"” Laxative 9 P2 e uragement to American business|rcctor with any great amount of | Created by science to be what soles = r info competition with foreign | pleasure, | should be. They are comfortable and S . ounfries in supilving the wants of | The Poles ought to know by this| ¥ aterproof—as well as long-wearing. 0[&’ éy Druggt.rtx Everywbere hose nations which have peen looking | time that though the Germans like to | They are made by The Goodyear Tire Toos » us during the period of the war for | fiziht they prefer to do it for them- | & Rubber Company, Akron, Ohio, who 50 cts. sAz.,) $I.00 e ouse 0 upplies, but that are henceforth go- | selves | also make Wingfoot Heels—guaran- —— ing to have the opportunity o retuen Berlin has gotten rid of its bother- | teed to outwear any other heels. A TRIAL BOTTLE CAN BZ OSTAINED, FREE OF CHARGE, BY WRITING TO . e o 10 the markets which they patroniced | some chief of police, so it is apparen 4 DR. W. B. CALDWELL, 439 WASHINGTON STREET, MONTICELLO, ILLINOIS Bulletin Buddlng, 74 Franklin Street before the war opened. that New London isn't the only city eolin oles Teleph 531.4 In reaching out for in d for- | which is having trouble with its con- L AT A4 L Scphoneias clgn business, and this is especially | stabulary. e

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