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NORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY; FEBRUARY 26, 1919 te that they cafinot be started FA S B co wom’s cmous WAYS B k] The president landed at Boston Moy e i ery foubh VOvams| up pijeve i econotty " declared the fover it 1s that holds up ¢ log Jam had AKE SAFEGUARDS-ADEQUATE. 5 Ha / man from Hyde Park, jusl as his|shaken out with thge vibrations MDlsclosunfi Have been mads Which | el smehding the St S tae e B | o teres efa he wanted to read. L vé been sn - show that there eannst be too much |informal 3ngferen§ez:.l mef tsrflmfld E am tho:oughly in favor of heipihg the|éd but all the censolation 1 got was 4 fied effort put forth In safeguarding ‘hose | the more definite duties of the formal|, & 1o oni "one's own bank account | that I had mussed ther all up when and Guufie who have been vested with high gov- | Peace comterence. It wag only be beo ! i jchieving that satisfied feeling|she had them arrangzed so neatly. ing on the ground that the president|3nd - A sré:| “As for tWine"—the Hyde Pafk man - ernment authority, for regardless ¢f|couid acquaiht himself with the true|that comes from Seeing $3 where pre \s _for t yhj £ 123 YEARS OLD thera will be ot ati p viously therc had been only one, but|paused from emotion. f I open a e e piace of any tire who|situation dunfeanting Burbps, and ic|J N0l () ing the thing Int the|drawer to extract a ciean sbirt I get = : will take the placé of any wio may |was only by letting himself be seen | SPoi THAL ~iman is so & #h | taniled ub In o ¥ad of twiha If T at- Soecristion rise (20 & weeki 508 & month: $6.00 | . icked off by an assassin's bullet|and known that the ailied Siftemnen ERCGUE T0al women I8 Sor) el Pl LA R " M st the PostoMies 4t Newich, Comn., s | or bomb there are those who are pos- | could seefl:numm "‘& = to ’;le‘cnr{cllei ;g ;ts iy :;esem high prices, sho |o 8 bE6K frain the bOOKeise, i, WALF wtend-class matter. sessed of the idea that the only way | their conflictin . e Y | not only knows what part of the coun- | glass from the dish cupboard or & Telephone Calis. reforms can bé brought about is to c‘unversed is suggestive of the infiu-|try the eggs hail from, but she is per- eafving knifc from the kitchen mbled b - disregard constituted law and order sOnally ncquainted with every feather|a bunch of rabia string j#mps out am Bulletin Bditorial Rooms 35-3. ence that he exerts in Burope at the -+ " ne it ol topus. > " pulletin J0b Offes 35-2. | and proceed to get comtrol of affairs present time; Poinéare and Clemen- |on the hen that Jaid 'eém. Winds abotit fe itke a young octopus. cean, Lloyd Gebrge and Balfour, Or-| ‘“And when she became imbued with | When Imogene wants to tle 2 package The necessity for exercising every |lando and Sonnino, Daiz, Parshing |{he mania Uit l‘”’"“’s;d“g"’ ‘:}:: Efie’!e“ e eins- "'j‘u't":e“’ e tori, while advi j1{and Foch, these are but a few of the|the same principle. I ubprove s D 3 lacgs Ieation, W :;;ifiza,ble :! ln]v} leaders Who came to know President|ing. I've always protested in a m;ls- wzr] of twinc, begins l;u‘ i;‘m:‘thfgrba:jl; e, S T e oot emPhasiaed | wilson not only as an idealist at a|ical barytone against hor throwing|end. Theré are no ends: othing, biit than right now when nations are un- |4, when the world needs,ideals as|@way siuits xnd dresses and getting |loops. When'she has ptiled out dergoing a_readjustment and recon-|never before, but also as the leader of |new ones when there was still years|or so of thess loops she frowns i :1 me struction. It gives the opportunity|an invincible army devoted to the re-|of wear in the others—what is mere a.n: sgyg, Deflart mt; ‘fh‘s:‘;-‘:“cle Au’{ which is desired by the dangérous|alization of those ideals. So when |style? glflgtn ;gfi S s aod DAeAthIAE }element to get in its underhanded ! guestions came up in the peace con- 1 h d° " »':1“ Sl rotn i &nd, EHE iwork, to set forth the most radical|ference on which apparently there| ‘“However, with one leap Imogeéne iy ,"g o6 3 f‘"‘t:\? O e i o 164 a t k& for|could be no mutual agrement, all|passed far Feyond my ideals of ecofi-|pulls and at teast ten in ‘hes o S e e & jiatmon 08| were ready to follow his guidance |omy. For months eveiy Scrép of femerge. Shifting her position, s unrest rather thin an adjuistment. It e i Vi i aper, twine, rope and news- [ gene bends over the task. Every fe % toward the long-desired peace. wrapping paper, ine, 2 15~ is thus a time wher. a firm rather than . |paper that Lns ceme infy the house|seconds low mutterings, small excla. 2 tolerant stand should he taken| [In the great speech that the presi- | o 1oo seized and put away. 1 have|mations and foot stampings radiate CIRCULATION against such trouble-makers. Tt 1g dent delivered in Boston immediately |10 [0 Tuch attention to her girlish |from her. Ste hitches abotit nervous- gEa o = : ' after lan?inglhe did x;]ot attempt 10| 550 aciic pastimes or I expert I should [ly in her chair and yanks and pulls. plain the plan for the league of na- QEM WHO WILL MARRY ME? tons " That was vty pague 9 13- | have inqulrel what she dfd with it e et e b N S AT, i i ' i i vould te impossi-| ‘T have brought her home presénts " ized effort to cause industrial unrest,|served for & more appropriate time | 0 Might think it wou 5 ide Marterhorn of | of completely fresh halls of twine, but hut when plans are made for not only |and place. His purpose in speaking |PIe to hide a regular P ——————— | v house, hut Imo- |sghe scorns -thém. She says her cofi- destroying property but taking life | before the seven thousand who gath- | DAPer in an graias AUDlTo luM i R v ¥ i B is ingenious. As i stonped over |sclefice Will nei permit het to use them it is time that steps were ‘aker which |ered to welcome him heme was to|SCNe I8 ingent & the logical thing to do. It i3 unfor- AV Matines_B:18 nfi Ah{o-flf FEATURE PICTURES ‘3'“““ Fa Matine ogtl' for dlorwich Bulletin e et o A S LTS Today and Thursday MAY ALLISON N In For Thirty Days A FIVE ACT METRO ALL:8TAR SERIES COMEDY WITH NEW ANGLES, NEW TWIsSTS AND NEW 8ITUATIONS: filefia hool Children at Four k=Adfission 11 cents: B-OREAT ACTS-=3 DORIS & RUSSELL In Their Spestasular Scenie Novelty “YHE MUBIOAL RAIROADERS” Chatacter inging Comediénne Willimantie Office 33 Chureh St. Telephorie 105. | through the avenue of terror. ——— Norwich, Wednesday, Feb. 26, 1919 bt 11 ol ol B B e R4 WMEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Assoctited Press s exclusvely entitiee to se for republication of all news despatch- e credited to It or not otberwlw credied in paper and also the local mews published TOMMY HAYDEN & CO. Novelly Musieal Oering : x Py ramount Féaturs Louisa M. Alestt's Fanous Story CARMEL MYERS IN PAUL POWI‘LL‘O DRAMATIC of republieation of speclal despatch also reserved. bad enough when any body made up largely of aliens set about ah crgan- WEEK ENDING FEBRUARY 22 DANCING Tonight £ nace the other night{wntil she has first utilized the waste { would promptly rid the nation of such |Place before them the utter futility of E‘(‘)y:;‘tqh}:igul‘sufr‘;i on the head with a|she has coliected. At the rare ahet l; nent. j another Deee Such as those emanat- |y gmach, As I surrendered without | disentangling it she will gat th}::t stuft u o be svpposed that due|iasshoT She Consress of Viemna in|, yorg other swipes anl sinashes fol- |all Sorted oif and wound "3, When she zniti . v | 1815 and shat of Berlin in 1878, and i, coq and : lay buried. I knew theis a totterlng old lady of 13 and they e e =y | e B e tmerica fcohtinue] dn't blown up, #6 T concluds | Will print her picture alonz with that | dangers whizn surround the president|in the work she had begun by Joining e D llen’ In and that 1]t the woian® WHo RS Shent Siecy= at the precent t!me, both while he with the civilzed nations to guarantee | °9 U S 1 L ibrosd, hut with fhe at- | bermanent peace. The presiiont dg. 1Ay bencath the wreehagy Of three|one years piccinz o ault containing || VIM, BEAUTY, HEALTH gl tempt on the life of Premicr Clemen- | flared thal he would fight and fight| "0\Fh, pouss, during which Tmogene|who built 2 houso of the nails and Comedy Sensational Nevelty ceau, the rounding up of Philadel- e G fea et came mear to Invostigate my ab- |picces of kindling wood he collected Amerieats witharawal from her world | I2YCE 3R AR 1 (TS ™ fe more | from the strects during an argus eyed phia and New York gangs with anar- responsibilities into her former p T. A B. HALL chistic tendenc s and the abpearance | tion of aloofness from the rest of | RN fi"fl]min;w:ns__rbu; Lrln;.n‘v‘idbert‘;ev:; Ve rf‘f‘.t """‘E(,Sg;:“!?erflli’; finie THE BOLDENS of an individual looking for the chief|mankind. Thus he threw out a chal “n“;}‘:‘f‘fpr‘;“,;em?‘g' and surgine like | seif-sacrifice.” Colored Variety Offering ROWLAND’S JAZZ BAND executive with a concealed weapon the | lenge to Senators Poindexter, Borah ; estle ea all over mo and show-| “Oh, well,” sald the VTondlawn man, ” | importance of increasing the vigi-|and Reed who have this past week | D€ Tes ine S i ‘mine's the sume way! Why on earth Fvery | been bitterly criticising the proposed | "€ sisns of toking fro X can't they collect something sensible— league Of nations and urging that| (005 (1Em on some high fhelves and |iike eollar bttons? Nobody ever had America have naught to do therewith. | {05, i o the keystonic or what-lenough collar buttons."—Exchange. lance cannot be overlooked. possible step should be taken to re- duce to the minimum the risk which| AL | those in high places are incurring, and | Hestile critics of the proposed con- it can be appreciated that the meas- | Stitution for the league of nations are 3 i o v ¢ i the new time. dres In hehalt of safety better be too | [S0E RTSHY Judecd by those who | FTTERS TO THE EDITOR Why should this plan of setting the great than too small for it is only by cutspoken and un- Opposed to Daylight Saving. clocks ahead be called saving day sparing critieism that the good and| CONOVER & FORD Rube Fiddler and the Girl ADELINE FRANCIS In a Cycle #f Songs and Stories DA}\ICE » Taftville, Conn. BATURDAY, MARCH 18T THE PRESIDENT IN BOSTON. address at Boston CONGRESSIONAL BUSINESS. light anyway? The sun rises no ear- President bad points of this new venture are| Mr. Editor: I wish to make a f@Pr:«" lier. (When the sun_exn be made to . - Unlen Orchestra of Ten Pieces wi asion to refer not 0NV} Legislation is piledup in Washing- | to be brought out. The constitution |tv W gentleman irom Grotoh =N | come up an hour earlicr you will find THE KING of DIAMONDS Dansing 8:30 O'Cleck t task whick is faced | on awaiting action in {is yet in its first draft; it may besighed t:m li:ll"her n’?filfi‘rfiffl af ;,hc\, {ln;merx]; ]z{\s qo?,z:txw:ds 8:‘33?‘22 t}fi A= s 1 >atis ek s : | arastical; el - initely re- | 2bpeared in The Bi Feb, 31, have the clocks set ahed . it Prris and Ver-|that it will never e pos ?:&toflmbl)y fi:‘;LY::lP:S‘nOlco?ng’"::]((}x) TS| As I read the Jetter I couldmit help | hen). It is not as though we had With HARRY MOREY SKA-"NG RINK B o1 | pose of it at the present sessioh. Ity 4o (57 R finvioved, ‘the de tes | but wonder, a litile, just what sort of | ot tried it out, for we Hav I 1 to expound | js not a situation due to the war, it "‘;mu:n know its faul The sole jus-|a man he was and in my nariow- The Rural New Yorker s 85 per . § on the hope beiter things which | et a situation which was not fully! ifie 18k5 asal e hostile | tninded way I have come to the coh-|cent. of the farmers nre opposed 10 . - tified eriticism against the hostile ; in all nations, ‘ipated months ago for it senators is that they are consuming ! clusion that he, no doubt, is one “" the daylight saving law. ¥ i that is placed in this colifi= | sandition twhich likely to belthe few remaining hours of the ses- |(roton's respected citizene living ih}) 1n ciocing let g all praise 10| «THE MAN OF MIGHT® AFTERNOONS 230 TO & d its ideals and the respansibil- | speounter of the factision in discussing a matter that can- | his own little \kve-l n'«\;nu‘ld hgslrst;ve lwl‘:" the f:x{!mer in o i His .“"“"’ ) rests apon it to see that tHe | pas o g S Fhad bly ecome for action be-|a littie lawn kept closely clipped by |fings like a true fillor of the soil. A X s gt il nntahe | that pr 8 have Thced | e Siarcht dch, 'The Kednect mings|Els lawn mowet, (Hes where F To the Brothet Marmers in IWind- | s e EVENINGS 8 TO 10 P. M. 3 g gt | the same predic with the stack| ;¢ ihe world are scrutinizing overy |Stts his knowledge oft ing, 4m and New Lohdon counties fhere' T - - atlof legislation ing many impor- | . c ived | Froin finture's bwn Bas s Tur- | g ameRdrient (o femeal the days | about’ e " aterbuty, 1 eid e isition of territ U tant measur appropriation b o feA Doar ural insisht he probob¥ | fieht saving law before the senate and | Conn., Elizabeth, N. J, of Foft Worth, 5%::m:'l1“ oftice séekers—NMeriden ice terms which, as|which should he passed order iticism of the p by attehding {he GFfOWoh|the house. Get busy and write your . . 5 e been the case in the|geemit the government mashinery “the tFuth, the advoc So tueh for charaeter read: | represéntatives at \\':-shlnztu““ e cn;fi‘:z !:;‘:lr(min“fi!l?‘nr:?! le? x‘!:miaosxta just as likely to be-|ikcen in mo 3 »f nations wil soon ex- | ing. help renove this breeder of discon- 5 & 0 IRg , Up 18 o N SaNes oF certain baes| - o 5 or the: o A1“ Brother tillers of the soil, are You |tent and inefficlancy. OTHER VIEW POINTS basket with remgt;«{ ‘bllls. ‘a\c«:rynfte‘: pa | ahfogate {wiliing that cuch a man sliould éall HARRY P, CHESBRO. When the eommittes Mus declaed | Sf thom have a rght (o a ploce in the ! idenit ther ,(.‘ Ko npel the U hinm armer ? Lapiidhe S8 Scotland, Conn,, Feb. 24, 1911, uvon its substitite b, Thatésd of g&;}';‘g:(guclg;ingchx:axea y over- » 5 biing abs ‘s | Bression a <iean e i reprrting it to the Meneral assemns T2 5 : i tiowed to drift tribunal sitti e | 8¢ £t O His letter, Tie says, Ut For Prohibition But Nut Fer Daylight |bly and putting upon lis passage, let| Goneral Percliing having assured 3 (1 cmsraien Duropean city, Americ 1 = b Saving or Woman Sufirage. it hold anothef hearing, similat to|its that thé overseas mail service is Y1ance of disposing o ness and |ing of it. If on the other the | there need be no lost time on a farm. - 5 vesterday's and go over the detalls|all right, now sive that the c¢amp at 1 ¢ the the last| ex of the league Of nations | Wonder how n&hp My. @aitor: The letter by 4 Far- |[eRleIonrE ANT B0, BUe ey Gl vt o e hins \ o b ironded | wil Il nations evervw it is so ortgir mmer of len. 13th 1 thoraughiy astee |3 vevamp the Measurs again, if nees | S6neFals optlmisin sesms to be like r It 1t s | from fear or agxre e : Plhaadn e o O e [easary, and finally present it to the | fhiat of the Youth of Quebec, who ad- A = iv. | ing for the entire wo t thej seen s hings toat neeasd to :}}\11.;”0\3 a farm. Ll '-)n Al legisiature. In that way some of the|mtited that he was But that - %% fy.n o ” | Monroe doetrine has done il ol A Pkl Cied, tactical errofs in consection with the | waefi't cold for Quebes.—Waterbury 3 & for tho & o | 8 Bire & i Morrison bili may be avoided and the | Republican, rms hui to preveirt here uld not real- | result fnay improve the selioold of thée ‘at g Btate Indifterence is a pwnp for drawing Whal| All Presideat Wilson will have 10! eorots from women. {do in a day when he gets back, wil = be to reorganize the American rails | mesmmam— o roads; make a dozen spieches advoeats 4 I am a real farmer and past wrongs e would have |ize what it _mea ! n hired by the y olo H seldom like fo | know fuliy half baked Jegislation source of a i ' ns etand together for the|stantly a nea of the peass of thael o malkes it plain that F i3 p lons and t ght for that ve adds to the m n o Tt Js ihe sun that make ing the lsague of rations, receive et Children Cry mi'ar condi matte dear reade X not the government and e eR S - : TOHEDR milar cond Work: | Steeat }”|‘P ‘m'[‘\d\‘( (:‘]‘?ekmhsfi.ot’d they can't chs gists, heal the alleged desw'?su;nuoh: FOR FLE-G.L;t navde ey effart to set fc cotias 16 the Hatter of oans| were elosed, Festuuranis ar both red and é’,m“ in ebi= Hursah! 1 say for prohibition, But|the ca})meihl!ie:tmb;htehew::ugn c.:‘ c A s T o R l A i cunnty which so much ha to Suspend and even the 'y 1 jg (he one which makes me|Ctwn with daylight saving and wo- |gress for the 2 } = 1 ¢t it 8 e much has s could not get | urc he is no farmer at all! In |Man suffrage. : e playing : aDPAPSHE s he has ™ concep- TARMER o. 4. ecause of the et Ll : of the tons upon tons, Thompson. Feb, 24, 1913 g e N [SE ety do s elotled e A that is eaten by the dairy co = % = 101 on the saving of time, and 1a only i state o cticus has been such as to inspire fai WBat o TS of e attohat Tl | down the 1hauktiies Bk Wetld 18 6 Sl s A L b IN THE DAY’S NEWS perposes and ideAls. He 1 e /aFiably true of P | them under its own management. The |~ ° : = BANAT strong words the position of o A e O Sae s city of 330,000 inhabitants found itself | AS fOr geiting in hay the same dav | , United States In its fight for the end- | AtUres. paralyzed and wondered what was to ' if is cut, [ knew a man that had that| “Banat, in southeast Hungary, tng of oppression and insisted that| 1t iS highly probable that th> situa-|come, but they did not have long to|!0F one of his hobbies. But, he used o ; Ay .18 going 0 A 7 Gov Lis- | to say, “Wait until the dew is off the having put onr shoulder to the wheel| O Whieh exists today is going to|wonder. On the request of Gov Lis s off the R ave ong inflience upon the cs ter to the War Department, 800 U, S, |£rass before you start the mower.” states a bulletin is- the task should not be left half done. | 3% SUQNE infiuence unon the calling : wore sent to Seattlo from Camp| Continuing with the Groton man's |sued from Washington headquarters it s our duty to see it through un- 3 & 3 36 miles away, with machine |'¢iter, he writes, “the laiter part of |of the National Geographic Society. selfishly and do our part in seeing|Weeks or a few months, but the unfor- guns, hand grenades and thirty truck- | the afternoon offers a chance for a| “Pelitical football of continental that the guarantee amounts to some- |tunate partof itis thatearly and need- |joads of equipment and ammunition, | ETeat saving of hay.” Just so! If the |power for centurles, battieground for hing, ed action upon several vital matters | The mayor swote in 1,000 extra police, | (10CKS are set up an hour und ihe far- | armies that turned the course of Bu- It was only in this way that the|had to depend upon the failure, inten- |armed them with shotguns and rmpsvinffr 18 wm:-k\m.'_ _lv,\ the clocks where | ropean history, experiment station for | president roferred to the leazue of na- | tlonal or otherwise, of the present|2nd ordered them to shoot on sight .‘fl"l(! he be at this glorious time in the |early reclamation projects and scene tions about which more enlightenment | congress to take care of its regular|&NYone causing disorder. He then |!atlet part of the afternoon? n this | of a pioneer ‘back to the farm' move- is desired but he made it evident that wherey Rumanian and Serbian claims | conflict, is rich in agriculture, miner- | WIRE YOUR HOME FOR ELECTRIC LIGHTS < 5 sent formal notice to the strikers that | 3entleman when it should have been|yness the strike was called off next we should back up our efforts whole- morning, he should take steps to op- eratd all essential industries and place the eity under the control of the Fedetal government. vidently firmness was all that was needed and within forty-eight hours Beattle was itself again, heartedly and not in a distintercsted manner. It was a general heart to heart talk which was Intended to arouse the «ympathy and interest of the people 1 &upport of a supreme effort to pre- vent the recurrence of such a disaster W the world has recently experienced. COMING OUT OF RUSSIA, To those who have been clamoring for so long for the recalli the Americans from Russ are there as part of the allied forces, the anhotincement to the effect that they o be withdrawn as fast as pose ible comes a pleasing bit of in- ‘ormation, H bhe attrib- tted to the appeals which have been made or whether it is becouse it has been recognized that there isn’t and never has heen any intention af keep- ing them there longer than it vwas e to give the desired protac- tion to the stores which had been gathered in the northern part of Rus- #la for the relief of the Russian peo- ple But the withdrawal of the As ®00on As possible forces cannot mean {hat they will be able to leave for some time to come. It will be June or there- abouts before it will be possible to mavigate In the White sea. It is not to be supposed that ther> will be any abandonment of materials unless it becomes abs Pitely 'y, and to get them away means that they must &% by water rather than by land. It Is a strange development which has taken place in regard to Russia. That country was an ally of the en- tente and every effort was made to Maintain it even after the revolution took place. But Russi dlgsention and it was unable to re ite feet. Bolshevism then began to fiise havoe, giving fermany new en- eouragement and t tening the peo- ple who still remained loyal to the al- Jies. In preventing this elément from gétting possession of supplles which 1t greatly needed it was nece send forces to protect them ptotection resulted In econibat necesss with those who had but a short time pre- viously been friends. The expeditions ary forees hot being intanded for of- fensive work, no war having heén de- #fured, the conflict between the ailles Afd the central powers having eaded and efforts being mado to get the Russian factlons together the docise 10h to withdraw those In ths Archane &% region can be regarded only as EDITORIAL NOTES. Some progress is being made in the south. A dozen or more participants in a Iynching have been convicted and sentenced. The man on the corner says: Man wants what he wants with great in- when somebody says he can- rot have it. No announcement has heen made of any arrangements for displaying the gifts received by the presidential par- ty while it has Leen abroad. The fellows who are going to strike because they cannot have their beer will probably expect the dear public o establish souphouses for them. If the constitution of the league of is all that is claimed for it dent ought to have no diffi- culty in convincing the skeptical, France is opposed to the plan for sinking the German warships, and it is to be remembered that France un- cerstands the importance of saving. If President Wilson makes the same impression upon congress on his re- | turn as he did upon Boston, it looks | like a home run for the league of na- | tions, If the former kaiser has been saw- ing wood ever since the anrounce- ment was made to that effect, he ought to be able te begin taking or- ders Keep the campaign for the nea east drive in mind and don’t ‘forget, if | you cannot make a big contribution, that every little bit helps when every- one participates. hen it is announced that there were 2575 coal miners who lost their lives during the past year it becomes { evident that all the danger is not re- stricted to the battlefleld. Possibly the real reason for Senator Borah's refusal to attend the confer- ence with the president is that the idea is so extraotdinary that he can- not make himself believe that it is real, Thers are several matters of direct concern to Norwicth which will come up for a hearing at Hartford this week, Will Norwich be heatd, or will | it do its kicking or praising later on after it is all over? Much good work has bsen done by ihe companies which have beén en- gaged in salvage work in European waters, and there can be no questicn it what remains a Jot more to be profitably done. But there is, how- aver, no reason to test them further Py sinking the German warships, | precis lifg their pri Ole Hanson, the mayor whose cour- age and energy nipped this Bolshevist attempt in the bud, was not without reason counted on by the labor forc- es to side with them. Sixteen years| ago he had driven a covered wagon across country and landed in Seattle after stopping a week in Butte, Mon- tana, to take part in a labor fight in the copper district. In Seattle hfl,i opened a real estate office that was a sign himself as a farmer (which hereby protest against his dotng) an- swer the question? I can answer He'll be in the barn milking! wish to say stop his h when the sun i nice and brigh hardships he h cows bear, in silence, too. ea It also h: you. In ending his letter that takes the liberty to |ment, our Groton Bahat never has cut a large political figure on its own account. “The district derives its name from it,{a form of government it never had. But 1| A territory governed by a ‘ban,’ who that no real farmer will | corresponds to the German ‘markgra; ving and go Into the barn or the early Polish ‘pan’ ,meanihg up there shining, so |master or lord, was known as a ba- That's one of the s to bear and the poor jnation. Dear fead= er of the city, when a cow that ls giv- ing a large amount of milk is milked | élung to the counties of 'ly in the morning and late 4t night, that cow has (o bewr pain, taused by the pressure of the milk in her udder, s 4 tendency to dry her off. Therefore less milk—higher prices for | Banat. nat under former Hungarian desig- Banats of Dalmatia, Bosnia and Croatia disappeared during the Turkish wars but, curiously the names "Torental, Teme's and Krasso-Szoreny, though this group never was ruled by a ‘ban.’ ‘“Long referred to as ‘The Banat!, the region today commonly is called Sometimes it is _deseribed more exactly as ‘Banat of Temesvar’, thus identifying it {friend goes out of his way and br 3 icsias o ik Sii oy e o | £ s y and ngs | ity less than 200 miles southeast of unusual qualities Established now as one gre: of the an anti-racetrack law. 1914 he narrowly missed elected to the United States senate| on the progressive ticket. He had ad- | .y .boaq t vas 5.3 v vocated: the mifiimiini wags law for hl[ ahead it was 5.30 before it wae for all| women, the eight hour day workers, industrial Washington. ose them. They they all. the ranks and though he had himself eager to help the working class- : _ e e e orking class— | Only the other day they were talking to highhanded seizure of public and | ] | fight the co . Private property e showed that he| (T G SOTR horer, There s o quess S Nertio e tbunn fon She RiNelOl O b, inia | corolelilitno ihorel law and order, and set an example of 6r a person walking through bofore firmness and 'brave performance of |t & Pers duty that will not be confined to the |} g State. of Washington. Working for Peace. People here complain president neglects home « people in Great Btitain ¢ thinister. however of salesmanship. | suffrage. pro- ve citizens, he became indignant | ure as the daylight saving jas at the crooked crowd at the Seattle | 2 e racetrack and got himself elected to | the legislature so that he could pass In the year| oy ina pan i ; {0t tha range at night of the split in the Republican party, ! .. " et v 0 lican Party, | we have no ventilation probletns it Jogs inaen backed Roosevelt afid in|the cows are kept a ereat deal cloancr, insurance and | oI about all the modern improvements in | <OV B legislation that stand on the statute | ounq, the old pasture throe times be- books of the very progressive state of = ; Naturally then in the |, ! ¥ recent strike the labor forces believed | that the mayor would be found on . e Aihop: | half of {he night before owing to u their host, for they soon found out that | eiEhbor’s house burning down.) This g Aty | ai%er the cows. Thoush himself risen from | couldn't tell where the hills of cofn because the ffairs, and ire Making | morning and he said, “Well, that's ly the same complai Gecerhs | ing some, milking by lantefn light in | th i g2 are working abot 18 hoirs | (¢ MOFNINE in the month of August @ day and they will be tortunate to in the prohibition bill and woman's ! I strenuously objeer. to his mixing them up with any such meag- We here at home on-our iittle farm follow the practice, in the summer nionths cf turning the cows back up- In this way It i8 not unusual for us to be up at 4.30 but last summer with the clocks ght enough for one to fini the cows junless one happened to run into a H Sometimes one had to wander I remember one morning In Jun: st, T think, T got up ut 4 has been said beforz was (I had been up more than which only morning that ¥ mention I took a efoss Tt was so dark that I were except as 1 stepped upor them. of appropriating one n%llion dollars to There is a ques- When we were thrashing oats the latter part of August we had to give this practice up and keep the cows in the barni and milk by lantérh light. I told one of the men hired by the day that we' milked by lantern light {hls Budapest, Temevar, picturesque and buhy be- fore the world war, bears both scars and monuments of its eventful history. Its springs wete known to the Romans Thé Tartars destroyed it. Its diet was the foundation for the Hungarian representative system. ‘Near Temesvar were defeated the peasant forces headed by Btephan Dozsza, in their encounter with John Szapolyai, of Transylvanla four cen- turfes ago. Dosza was captured, a throne of fire was buiit in mock henor of the 'king of peasants, and as he was placed amid the flames a red hot | crown was Set upon his head. Thus | Dosza's name became a Hungarian by-word for heroism, and, according to popular belief, Szapolyai was smit- ten with blindness for his cruelty. “Today the crumbling walls of the inner city of Temesvar, from which radiate avenues, like wheel spokes, to four suburbs, bear testimony of the strong fortifications built by King Charles Robert, of Anjou, one of the most powerful monarchs of his day. ‘Rich agrieultural lands about the ecity, and throughotit Banat, recall the drainage of marshes, swamps and thick ferésts, instituted by Matla Theresa, the ‘Good Queen Bess' of Austrian history, who, incidentally, al- | most acdomplished the overthrow of | Frederitk the Great. She failed, partly hecause Russia abandoned the Allles of the Heven Years' War. “An arsenal stands where Hunyadl Janos built a castle fifty years be- foré Colufiibug_get sail for America. That famous Hungarian general is One reads in the papers from time survive the peacemaking—Springfield tc time ahout how the rural districts Republicaf. Below Zers Point. The peace conference are being depopulated. The Do¥R afe not staying on the farms. ete: Noth- ing will help to denopulate the rural towns like setting the clocks up an annot pre- | hour, vent Germanv from making {euiit von There 1§ also a rural social problem. Bernstorff onn of the delegites to re- | If there is anything going on in town ceive. the pe: ¢ terms, but the the when he arrives.—Albany Jowrnal. mometer will record extteme frigidity |the field when the sun is way up. Be= g gf:!&vg;; than the State 6f Mar¥land. the farmer must stop work and leave Cause swhatever is going on begins on credited with being 6ne of the first military leadefs to substitute strategy and organisatoin for personal cournge. So suceessful was his theorv that he all but drove the Turks ott of Bufope. “Conspicuotis in Temesvar's prin- cipal square is a Gothic_schaft, order- ed there hy Bmperor Franels Joseph, in tecognition of the city's defeniders during the 107-day #fege acalnét Hungatian févoliitibnists 6f 1849, “Bafat covers an area a little gmaller, and has a population slisht- today has & population by its prineipal | i Bulletin Building, OUR WORK (8 DONE IN ACCORD- ANCE WITH THE REQUIREMENTS OF THE NATIONAL BOARD OF FIRE UNDERWRITERS AND THE LOCAL INSPECTOR. THE NORWICH ELECTRIC CO. 42 Franklin Street CK SAWS, BU AXES, WEDGES, ETC. The Household 74 Franklin Street Telephone 531.4