Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 17, 1919, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Jiorwich Bulletin and Qoufied 123 YEARS OLD Sobseription phice 26 & week; S & month: $6.00 o your. Riéred at the Postoffice at Norwieh, Conu.. ar #eond-cliss matter. Telephone Calls. Bullétin Business Office 430. Bulletin Vditorial Reoms Bulleia’ 305 Ofics 35-2. Wilimantie Office, 25 Spring St. Telephone 3842 Norwich, Friday, Jan. 17, 1919 Assoclated Press Is exclusirely ent 1o 1he uem for republicatidn of all news deatch- o credited o It or not otherwie credited fn R e s a1 loeal mews published PS8 bt of republication of secial despateh x béveln dre also reserved. CIRCULATION s, 11, 1919, 10,057 D] THE AMENDMENT RATIFIED. Favorabl: | neve go to show the import- Tnited States. Th rrohibition { ance of adopting automatic train con- amendment has been ratified hy more | trol v the purpose of pre tlian the necessary nd there ar t reat losses of human sevetal states which have not 2 vetlli « inly if there has been acted upon it, hut among which believed that there are othes will join in incr approvals by When the s slatures. When the submarine menace v tn the es was taken, it was con-| g "doiat the preat need wi ered that the movement had been | Aoatt ekl ziven a body blow by the inclusion | ke the requirement that the ratifi tion must take place within se »ears, when ordinarily there is no lim fxed. But as t eflorts have worked o o1, which appears to be | thréughout the eountry. Aceording to the provisions of (b act the country will o dry a ailin IE- ER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, ction on the part of 36 atates is needed in order to secure an | e amendment to the constitution of the i which asing the number of tion by congress, favor-! able to the submission of the question | 2- gs have turned out it seems only to have incieased the of the prohibitionists. They|, v mmd have taken advantage of the sent mr,,”‘ ofter the ratification of the amend- ment the 16th of next| : TJanu: action thre: foretold by t sults in ch the great the situation and there an nticipa no small amount of co sdeesss will erown their cause there are reemit of referendum action on & question efforts are to he made t have the question referred to the vle in these states and by o is hoped to al, althouzh it that Jegis ed for to v while r been recorded it time before plteations ter the : actior e the vement ds fair to be = s fresd from legal THE NEW WAR STAMPS, During the past vear p: te the extent of somet iwo billion dol these throus have ing t en the war ' and war saving stamps course only a small part of t cial backing given, but it and it has come from those e means and from those wio ha g napired to save and to inve e savings with Unele Sam. During 1919 me kind ampaign is to bhe conducted time has not heen reac covernment can do g of funds by sues, and these star more than government bonds which are non-taxable and which pay th interest at the time of maturity This vear’s ecampaign opens todav, and it is interesting to note that the date has been selected to correspond with the birthday anniversary of Ben- jamin Franklin. the at advocate of frugality, and from his wmple many will no doubt tak interest in this monc s n. There are many wavs in which the kovernment must use its funds for the settling up of expenses incurred tow that the war is over. Pecause of what has been accomplished there will be a desire upon the part of the| people, the same patriotic impulse that has prevalled in the past vear, to do whatever is possible, and through the thrift and war savings stamps it Is going to be possible for the peonle of small means not only o help the gov- ernment but through the investing of emall amounts help themselves. The pood results of the thrift displayed in the past year should not be over- looked or the benefits of such be dis- regarded, MUST KEEP UP THE ROADS. In connection with the railroad prob- leme as they exist today it is interest- ing to note that Director General Hines takes the position that the gov- epnment must continue to loan money ta the roads regardiess of what agtion Is taken in regard to the futare control. The govern- ment has underiaken the task of meet- ing the financial requirements of the warious systems for such needs as it has approved and the half billion ap- Pgopriated for that purpose is now abotit exhausted. In view thereof Mr. Hines has announced that he will ask eongress for the appropriation of an- othér half blillon for the same pur- pese. understanding thoroughly that ¢ roads must have funds with which to keep up their equipment, make ex- temsions and gdevelop transportation tasilities, and {hat as long as the gov- eymment control continues the gov must look after its responsi. in -¢his reapect, the roads inlthe return of tha enamv aliens ——— inspiring ex- | rad new | { be no question but this matter being indebted to the government instead of others. 1t cannot, however, be felt that any- thing but the right attitude is being taken in asking for this additional ap- propriation when Mr. Hines declares that the aid is necessary regardless as to whether the administration plan of continuing the control for a period of five vears is approved or the roads turned back to the owners in a short time. The zevernment has taken the systems for the national welfare. It asked much of the roads which could not be furnished under the restric- tions governing them before govern- | ment control. It certainly cannot re- fuse to main’ them as they should and none understands this better than Mr. Hines with his long railroad experience. AUTOMATIC TRAIN CONTROL. The safety bureau of the interstate commerce commission has been busily engaged in conducting an inve - the cause of the wreck on the St Louis' & railroad in Missouri September and has ] ade a report to the effect that it was due| to the failure of a division despatcher fo transmit a train order to a station operator. and the failure of an en- sineman to obs top in- dicdtions of an automatic signal, At- tention is called in the report to the fact that “This accident is another example of that of accidents which could be prevented by the use wntematic train control device.” noteworthy in this conneeti problem of control and declares thatj and promot uch de- Inventor: them, h little wwement from the ra read pending their time and money na developi ver aible ap- pa 1 a The two frightful railroad : ¥ this week, roar-e there ccidgnts d collisions, to have to have been | jcient wntions to 1 in the effort to secure such | levices for the railroads it can- [ not be too THE SUBMARINE CHASERS. | to operate in should be con- let to ots which in recog- turned o tared after the uced NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 17, 1919 and there have been plenty of | ;. that happened, but they | “T quite agree with you,” declared the Oak Park woman, “that discontent in a young person is most trying. That's why I've always been tolerant with you when you've railed so against that niece of yours who seems to be everlastingly dissatisfied with some- | thing. In your refusal to have any- thing to do with her. I'm almost in- clined to believe you've shown wis- dom.” “That's very kind of you, I'm sure,” chirped her friend from Austin, “though 1 don’t know where in the world You got the wonderful idea that I'm leaving her severely alone.” “Actiohs tell the tale, my dear,” in- sisted the Oak Park woman. “I'm sure | I haven't seen you with her in weeks.” ? Perhaps not. Nevertheless, l\re been in close touch with her. Are!} you in a hurry? No? Then Pl ex- plain. “You'll recall my havinz told you that my niece had talen it into her head ‘o envy the lot of her sister Mame, who lives in the country,” resumed the | Austin woman. “That was the exas- | perating part of it—she knew as little about Mame's ‘beautifully untrammel- ed’ existence, as she put it, as would an infant in arms. Just on r(‘n?ral prin- was once a perfectly ‘darling’ apart- ment and yearns for Mame's home, where one could find breathing spaces and call one's soul one’s own—oh, well | I'll begin to boil it I dwell on it. Any- way, I said to her one day I think it would be fine if you and I paid Mame | a little visit? ” “Is that what took You, into {he country,” cut in the woman from Oak | Park, “when we were all thinking of beavy coats and flanmels? Why, I you had taken leave of your though laughed her Austin there was method i . Mo hurry on—it really a bad day when my niece and I departéd. On the train she w: the happiest thing! Talked about lhl" lovely drives we would have behind the splendid team Mame’'s husband had | hought and the lovely walks through | the rustling autumn leaves and the! pleasant evenings before a blazing log HER METHOD i fire. My, slie had me enthused—al- most. 5 “When we arrived at the little station it was raining—and it was cold. And we had to walk because nobody met us. “When we arrived at Mame's back door my niece’s new tan spats were | sights and her nose was blue. Mame was busy making chili sauce, o the Kkitchen looized cluttery and wasn't any varmer than the outside because Mamnc lused an oil stove. She told us they| ving coal and wood. “Really my niece had a beautiful time Mame's there was so much werk that we felt we must work, too. Between times, as Mame put it, we peeled on: ions for pickles. “Yes, she had such a heavenly time | I'd had seme of the wonderful walks to me that it would be be nice, too. s0zzy leaves. “My niece made a bee line for th first village store that looked as thoug} it had a telephone. When che came it didn’t sound natural, and tha laughed the Austin woman. “Welly” she concluded, ‘“next day W us home. nd if you hav together for my nicce is so well satisfied w away from it an hour.”—Exchange. Gieaned From Foreign Exchanges 1 stood at Westminster and saw_the new. I saw a man turning a handie and a column of water rising,like a sclid thing. Irom the beginning of the world the taters have been moving. They have rolled from shore to shore in mighty waves, moving impressively znd silently from century to centurr, this way, that way, for ever and ever. They have been drawn up by the and lifted to the clouds come down to the earth as rain. They athered fearful sirength in and swept across the eartn with pitiless destruction. They have made i never since the earth was made have they heen for 2 moment still. And yet. through all the acons of time, no man tili now 1 eon watir from a well save in a bucket or something to eonta We lei a Lucket down a 1 filled with spar new sight xh,vl i £ water now to be scen from a well without 15t as you turn a hand a river for hundr a chain big eno te coming ) is one » geen in London no it will be pumving e to g water out or salving sunken shi Mr, Wilson is to stay where porsuh and m foreign ¢ he blizzard of 8. No one has eoing to Fi the cold w that With a in the price of steel tors and cotton =oods there § dency in the right direction, but and butter are still as flizhty as Of course if the full report of the peace conference will not be avaflable there does not appear to have been such a great need for taking over the cables. From the bombarding that Verdun received the wonder is not that 1197 of its houses were rendered unfit for occupancey but that even three es- caped destruction Employes in New Hampshire who have gone on a strike for higher wages don't scem to be at all thank- ful for the fact that they had not been thrown out of emplyyfhent. If it is so that the bolsheviki are killing the Germans captured in the {Baltic provinces, Germany will be more anxious than ever to hand over more arms and ammunition to them. It didn’t seem quite consistent to ask General Wood if he wanted the ap- pointment as commander of the cen- tral department. That course wasn't followed in selecting commanders to go_over there. The story is now being told that the Elks have been using their funds to aid the Salvation Army in on its great war work. and there can what they selected a grand good eney. Many enthusiastic claims ing made about carly flights across the Atlantic. M seems not improba- ble that they will be accomplished but no one ¢ feel very optimistic about v scheduled for April first. Someone has asked as to what will be sent back in those German ships which are being considered as trans- ports to bring American soldiers home. The first thing attempted should be \ b ‘ Taylor, | ihe | custom and po: hank vou, bovs 've done” i 1 banner whick eves of sol Now > are wear come off.” D the s Lord Coleridge claimed nt a meeoting in London that Marshal Foch bha n above the sta alpost rmer conque i He had the Germans in the hollow of his hand, and he coull anticipate such a victory, such a would put Sedan and Wate shadow. Put he resisted the tem tion, because it would meaxs th {rifice of more inn stamped him not only rior but as a great Christion man The meanest thing in_the whole war was the Germans' abandonment of their own kaiser. The Berliner Tageblatt learns that the British admiral conducting arm tice negotiations with German officers and offieials has had oc: on to re- mind the Germans of ths right to oc cupy Heligoland should the conditior: of the armistice not be executed fully, Great sums have been earned dur- SAGE AND SULPHUR DARKENS GRAY HAIR Brush this through faded, streaked locks and they become dark, glossy, youthful Almost everyone knows that Sage Tea and Sulphur, properiy compound- ed, bringg back the natural celor and lustre to the hair when foded, stre: ed or gray. Years ago the only way to| get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and (rouble- some. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for “Wyeth's Sage and Sul-| phur Compound,” you will get a large! bottle of this famous old recipe, im- proved by the addition of other in- gredients at a small cost. Don’t stay gray! Try it! No one can possible tell that you darkened your hair, as jt does it so naturally and evenly. You dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through vour hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning the gray hair disappears, and after another ap- plication or two, your hair becomes dark, glossy attractive. oldest power on earth do E()mf'ffi)'nll farmy of nearly a wmi'lioa men, aplest means ever | hut worst of { cautions tz { place ol {ers finally ned that after qusk several pors ons | ft_drifters Generally 1Tice of §3 for the herrings = of $T.30 per cran the in ork took irom $1 take over $300 for a vo month, graaf, official representations been made to the ex huise centinued stay in Hollni involve the countr; to ‘MUJ to h'x\r gl n refusal. The Chrlitvan.a Afterposten lishes an ith a prom ifrom Rus: “The Bolsheviks,” he safd, “b ¥ expect to incrcase to three n by the end of March, “It is not possinia,” concluded th in Russi | who ",vl‘l’u hfrr 16¢ they had got out oo so Conditiens in Petrozrad. thev sai restanrants no food coull spies or ernment were tions, even be ities, to anding pla nd for the hombardme One of the first August, 1914 ing to Irom Harv soutl solved the my: near an upper what appe dinary clock. dow manipula Thursday — Friday PECTACULAR SCENIC SlflGlNG COMEDRY Ci “ECHOES OF ERIN” 4 People in “Soncs and Stories of the O!d Sod”—Special S enery [OM MOORE and GIRLS i Laurel, Miss. — e 5 i was sunenngwn.h i tained all week,” continued the ! roman after pausing for breath | In that ideal, untrammeled existence o | G’REAT STORY OF VICTORY 'S\t GREATEST THING 1N LIFE" -~ Saturday 3—BIiG' KEITH ACTS—2 FARAMOUNT PICTURES kbt oo BEATRICE FARROW The Girl that when the second week opened up, | cold and dismal, I could see she fair- | 1y longed for home, But not so with | me! T told her I wouldn't budge until | DITORIU and drives she’d raved about. Mame | must have heard me say something | about walking, because she asked me if we'd mind going into the village for some spices. I said no, indeed. My | niece was agreeable, also, and confided | joy to see a little life, if it was only in a poky old : village. She thought the drive would making besides my h, | are at liberty to publ some peor suferin .C. SANFORD, 12375 Laurel, Miss. Thousands of women dragalong from day to day in § dition as was Mrs. from displecemz flammation, ule ache, ,}Eeadache, “I was sorry to have to tell her we would have to walk, but assured her that a walk through the rustling, beau- tiful leaves would be fine. However, never a rustle was there to those wet, Such women shonld pro Sanford’s experienceand root and herb remedy, T Liydis ham’s VegetaBle Con l'ehe from their suff: out she said she had been talking to | her husband and it was bliss to hear | TWICE DAILY 2.15—7.30 Evening 17¢, 22¢ IBASSADOR GERARD’S Authorized Version of UR YEARS IN GERMANY” WILLIAM _)Ll\CAN in A FIGHT FOR MILLIONS JILDREN'S MATINEE SATURDAY 000--Patriotic Prizes—1000 ecml su;gcr his voice, but she feared he was )lL as i 1 he s going home on the first trai“ in the morning, she was so worried and m\mus all the while smiling from ear, H disclosed that TONIGHT S5 HALL, MOOSUP! f..’usi: by Famous Orchestra n't seen ome time it's because | th her- | self and her flat that she hates to be | f11~1.‘w were not t Coast herring fishing by | contro.ed Xl\’vlo ‘ne round o Investigation One drilter secured Ih(‘ rocard 00, TONIGHT PANRCIRG of $51.200, $149,000 | ard geveral averhge B Some fishermen months' 609, whilst was a_common thing for a Iad to| the movements ¢ ern command. tion followed | vage. Do According to the Amstardam Tele- Rowlend’s Jazz Band ovs instanc the ‘..,i»‘y vs. Y. M. C A BASKETBALL Saiurday Evening /0 good teams and a real game ts under- | men were too Today and Saturday DOUBLE FEATURE BILL Vman Martin IN THE FAIR BARBARIAN MABEL NORMAND IN THE VENUS MODEL PATHE NEWS AT OLYMPIC HALL FRIDAY EVENING LANG'S FULL ORCHESTRA TICKETS 55c A COUPLE LADIES 28¢ now revealed si .vj i.aa? d to be the dial of an or- A raid on the cottuge THI PEOPLE SHOULD TAKE PHOSPHATE Nothing Like I‘Inhl Bl(ro-l'hl\lplln‘r to] Put on Firm, Healthy Flesh and to Increase Strength, Visor and Nerve| ¥oree, Judging from the count nd treatments v of making thin people fleshy, soft curved i there are evidently thousands of m and cessive thinness. Thinness and weakness are usually due to starved neryes. Our bodi more phosphate than is contained modern foods. Physicians clain is nothing that will supply this defi- cleney 5o well as the organic phosphate Known among’ druggists as bitro-phos- phate, which is inexpensive and is sold ! vich and most all druggists under a guarantee By and by sup- | the neces- | & sary phosphoric_food elements, bitro- % phogphate quickly produces a welcome the | increase in weight ircuently being as< by Lee & Osgood in Nor of satisfaction or money bac feeding the nerves directl plying the body cells ¥ transformation in the appearan: tonishin This increase in wesght also carrias with it a reneral improvement In the ¥ X sess and vousness, sleep lack of energ: of perfect nervousness, leeplessness and general weakness, it should not, owing to. its remarkable flesh-growing properties, De used by anyone who does not desire | to put oa IT WILL ?1"‘" YO SATURDAY, ss prepara- ich are con- being advertised for the pur- veloping arms, neck and bust, and re- placing ugly hoilows and angles by the es of health and b-aut\ vomen wio keenly feel their ex- which ncarl)’ always accompany excessive (hinness, soon dirappear, dull eyes become bright, and pale che&'k;l glow with the bloom — Although _ bitro-phos- phate 15 unsurpassed for reliaving SKATING RINK OLYMPIC HALL AFTERNOONS 230 TO § iNGS 3 TC 10 P. M. crisis—New Haven uid have ing to We d(\ nots For :.nf‘.nts and Children In Use For Over 30 Yeais £lviays bears d o p Wt s niiere m,v"?".'/f’i{ THE VALUES WE OFFER FOR ""\LE AND CONVINCE YOUR- cevesenss. $7.00 and up $1.85 pair covsen e e ess SO0 DOIP s osiasiersis i A DULDD R AP, $6.00 $2.98 reev... $119 and $1.50 VFRALIS (Extra Heavy), $1 .50 pair ARE FOR ONE DAY ONLY SARGAIN HOUSE Street, Norwich, Conn. “rner Washington Square

Other pages from this issue: