Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 26, 1919, Page 4

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put forth Ly 2 group of extreme radi- cals to effect a soviet form.of govern- ent in this country. As Americans &nd as men who have spent their lives in this trade, we f2el that you will sooner or later wake us {o the reali- zation that this group of reds aro using thz needle frades and you wcrkers in thoge trades to establi eandtion in society that wil mele our lot as wor intolel ¥ ui will place our couricy on the saine low level to which other nations have sunk thai have tried their wild and ir- regular theories, with Russia as a shin- mg example.” That is a stand similar to.what other labor leaders have taken and indicates 0 tenized labor win staad with s in knoeking out each and every bolshevik undertaking in the country, dlorwich @ullm‘,, and Q‘u?;:é 123 YEARS OLD Somseristion priss (20 8 wesk 50 & meath; $6.00 * year. Fotered at the Posoffics at Norwich, Coma., as woond-class matter. Telophone Cafls. Pulletn Fudness Ofics 480. Dulletin ¥titortal Rooms 5.3, Builettn Job Office 35-2. Willimantfe Offies 33 Chureh NL. Teiephons 105. Nerwich, Wednesd March 26, 1919 WEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Assoelated Press s exclusively entitl fo the nse for republication of all news despatch s eradiied 1o It or not ctherwise crediied in s paper and aiso the local news published beretn. AT rights of republieation of special despatch e herela are also reserved. PROVIDING FOR NEXT WINTER. Nothing has given the peopl the country much more past two years than uel, and apparent $ not undergone such improvement the people feel certain as to where they wl today. A year ago, after thrcugh a winter of age, everyone was \ {order, to fii his Lins durios the {mer and thus not ealy help ansportation but to give some idea as to going to be and pe; of a sufficient supp] vorable season for hau 1xious to do help and e of od short- in hi ere coal ged to get CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING MARCH 22nd or to obviate ronths o do order wa t was p mild v | hut now | urged to get t halds up 1t much ¥ ar wonth it FOR CHILDREN. SANATORIUM cannc mor S cattered cases of tu- ed onsciously y n $:0sc who are un- | M0t hanker getung the of lirected to- disease th to take 1it is w encount ler treatment the i ructions wi ward the The that a be ar dina the he more instity of the caus benef restraint of the no more reason 1o expect anatorium at that place would more of 4 menace than an or nently located in initation will he upgn in suct would be in the uld cert large institution Thos: ed 10 are - for easid atorium are EaVE seem | is to he regretted ~ i for nothing omes to f f from wha n which going to LL:ITORIAL NOTE S mvarmblv the ¢ am is c oper ople ing to I diophones s0 decided beer could not be 1 is perioc condition fully appre- ¥ ituation is e demolisl were ¢ 1z It is report bhout Paris ot seem to thi Of course t y emphasi derstood right spring cleaning { much longer | does that peace i ne wa to jump into control ceived a c nam The allies have re- enge which should the pr. t kind of military though it is unfortunate _Everything points to the fa i not have been avoided by more | was a prohibition tailor speed in the conclusion of ed the new coat sleeves s it will be impossible for their elbows. w 1y be ac- cannot delayed | activity, who f peace THE BOLSHEVIK MOVEMENT. There can he those who propaganda in pending for claszes to no question hut pushing the holshevik this country support upon the whom appeals are being | made. Tt is probable that the seed may | fall upon more or less fertile ground among the altens, where agitators, whatever may be their cause or their objeet, find it the easiest to work, but there is no reason to believe that or- | ganized labor will allow itself to be swayed by any such examples as are | being set forth across the water They can readily discern the destrue- tive character of such a movement and appreciate what would he the result of the chaotic conditions whica would fol- low any such idea. The intelligen. ¢t the . -‘netican citiz>n is serve as a hulwark again s menace. Perhaps this is no better tharn by the reply of J. 1" r leader i the prices of certain commurl - going down being offset by othe the hardpressed consumer seem headed for ief. are Iabnrmvl | goir does up. n't great amount of r ists. but it is like:y that it will have| to be satisfied with foodstufts, ®id and rew clothe: by the would-be tour- ists for some time yet What was supposed to be an extinet volcano in the Cacausian mountains has become active again, but that cre- ates no surprise in view of the great amount of unrest in that locality. With Sir Thomas Lipton over to arrange for a yacht probably expects to make some of that interest that is manifested in the league of natio Of course there will be no harm in getting up an hour earlier than usual this week just to get used to the de- lightful atmosphere which will be pro- coming race, he bid for being e e bound to St a displayed _FACTS AND COMMENT One short year ago the fate of civi- ilization was hanging in the balance as the mighty German armies were driving toward Amiens and the chan- nel ports with what seemed irresistable forece. The intrenchments within which the French anfi British arm! had expected to remain until the arri- val of the Americans in 1919 had mel ed away before the hordes of Huns. The severance of the d>fender: rmies, | struction of the British forces e of Pa seemed but a Then at last dire nec- ty foreed the allies to do what hould have been done long before and General Foch was appointed comman- der-in-chief of all the allied armies in France. This was the real turning point of the whole war. Though the anxious days were by no means over, though the fall of Mount Kemmel and Chateau Thierry were vet to be, the very name of Foch i ed the defend~ s with confidence agd all seemed to know that the crisis was past. It was almost four months before the new commander was ready to begin his ird movement that was to end the expulsion of the invader. The | 1. s tion of the forces and the ac- cumulation of the material necessary to success on the great scale that was planned were in themselves enormous But when the great atiack was actually unched in mid-July there no stop till the beaten foc ack- ledged defeat and gave himself up wercy of his conqueror. By ac- ting the surrender General Foch de- himself the glory of forcing the est militar urender in histo few more da; must hav befcre the German armies been without the means of one of apsed any | Belgium, it iz said, is to invite tour- | industry, vided with the change to summer time are being which he said, “Effort= Sunday night. France can never forget the sion_under which rom 1571 to 1914 nor the horrors or the quent four years. Thus her feel- ¢ understood whe ce confer against the ) 1 times. The eariier dis between Clemene: grom_the for appre- guilty of. ready at hand d orth w , however, not enter which the > shoul was e on th into right 1 7 the opponents of SAVING “I've got to §o home and see Grace ties up thgt birthd properiy she's sending away, the motherly little woman, to fold up her work. “Sit right down and e,” ordered the fr The idea! It's tim over being just a moth The motherly little woman began to gasp with proper indignation. “Well count igsaid.” ruL\lessl\ broke in her inoela “And, pro- ceeding to the next paragraph, I'd like 11 the foeiish things a fooligh woman does the mo: in- ¢ foolish is resolving herself and that «Guoth beginning tay where you nd mext her. ou began to gei When it's a real hen and body wastes time looking do they? No. Well, wi chicken no- at the hen, put your- of your life? wrap- ping yourself in a veil and hovering in the background to the annoyance of all concerned? “Yes, I said annoyance. It's perfect- human to be irritated with some- thing unimpressive and ghos vet persiatently within vvr*s:ghL W you want to do i foreground and h yeur effulgence., She's got some twen~ ty-five years the best of you, ygu know so you'll have to hustle. Jdt takes clev- erness to outdo thesyoung person of 18 and you'll have to scheme. When you h the eminence whera daughter Fegir arking to friends that Mothe ys' and ‘Mother does,’ vou may know vou've reached the last lap of your journey. How long since you'- ve 'd her say that " stammered the other said the talker, who work. You are a ibdue daughter wi thought so,” warming to matter of course, breal: and the well known sunset, v takes time to see. 'One of these women and were on the train geing dow cther day and T never saw grant example of m Daughter wore plucked eyehrows—you know, the thin, straight, black line— a hand made complexion, a marcel ind an impertinent cxpreseion. Just looking at her complacency inspir her child ntown the such a pet peeve. MOTHER. present | .move down into the | you with the desire to shake her good and hard and hope for the best. | “Mother, of course, was seated, but she gave forth the impression of hov- ering. She hovered with each and jevery breath, and it e e} you jintensely, She simply uot get over the wonder of having such a per® fect\child. Her eyes kept traveling over the marvel of those plucked eye- brows as though her offspring had in- vented the process. Once or twice she picked a bit of infinitesimal fluff from daughter's coat, once she asked her if she felt a draft. She was so busy admiring her that e even forgot to look around and see whether the pop- ulace wis attending o its duty like It was a superb admission of fact that of course nobody could he doing anything %lse but th “And all daughter did was to be an- noyed. Mother most plainly frritated her. Every particle of her shouted ferth, ‘For heaven’s sake, leave me olope!’ She wished that mother wouldn't fuss so. 2 t woman had spent some time | h curling iron and face powder her- If and let daughter mend her own s, if she had hought a new suit and omitted daughter's near seal fur, if she had made herself so good looking | that you would have known she was | there, and forgotten for a_moment to| pay any attention to her child, if she | had been too busy with a committee mee an or something to sew on but- 1one messages and hang up dresses and sort out the dress- ing room disarray of her child—pluck" ed eyebrow people always are wretched ly t young person | would have n to take notice. She ve realized that h > instead of and echo, heen a little rreud of her. “The ideal parent hypnotix inte the belic? that it lege to be he 1a happie: 7 “I'll bet i lost in id the morl littin her nd everybody i the mail weman, un- bmt T guess orst, massisted, | package \off.”"—Ex- | niding 'l let |in getting that change American iling to earn ed by the In the particularly the d all the rail lines of the countr seventy-three leading r o earn their ope thus far American s lik amounts government, month of ‘LETI'ERS TO THE FDITOR | A fore raticns hemisphere ed it put all race all involved Oriental | oy that by a | { lined to for a time -oblems fa these da reluctant to yield a zained under \VBI rnments aore rducting their | meet _the ill paying | fit during the war. La- hoth countries is na- | in or- | the | sum | p from | holsheviki | vernment owing | WAZCS Curr ution vu[fn"mu‘r- between ed and the great abor may be mad national taxation, The among us would have the confiscate the plants out nothing to the less radical E nership would have the go hase the properties at a fair val- uation. These plans differ in degree, not in principle. Whether or not the! { plants are confiscated outright, unless | lhm are managml year by year so that they produce more than they cost, the deficit must come from general taxa- tion. It is the worke; themselves who must eventually pay these taxes after the accumulated capital vof the country is exhausted. Unless the pres- ent day workman admits that he cares not for the future of his country, he cannot logically demand more money than he is worth to his employer. England lixe America covered that the railways that before the war were earning over four per cent. on their capitalization are now losing, Railways costing $100,000.000 are now earning nothing. The daily loss to the government is $1,250,000 and the gov- ernment guarantee has yet two years to run. A bill now before parliament proposes to establish a ministry of transportation to conduct the business under unified contro! and thus elimi~ nate the waste due to competing capi- tal. Later it is proposed to have a com- mission on which government and la- bor representatives would sit. Those proposals are the merest temporizing yet they are all that the government vernment | p Bad F ditor: the or the Fa After r differer head American Air Aita\ks on Subm:r‘. G (e ponden The yme mdnne of Amer mer occasior are to executo w it when tr summary ual opera o of i the difficulty age of mach | of machines from the U without propellers, withou defective parts and lastl ure of Ttalian machine: ni bombing for which they were int ed. The United States had turned in lm ning them, of the rrec "d States magneto. the short- Italy for planes when machines were | i not delivered from enough One of the higgest plans of the ser- vice was the “northern hombing pro- Jeet” calling for the cooperation of Americans with the British in almost continuous bombing of submarine bases on the Belgian coast. A great many hindrances arose, some of them shown in the summary being: Lack ot machines, lack of material, lack of properly trained personnel, both pilo: and enlisted men, necessity of compi cated negotiations with the Roval Air Force in the matter of supplies of all sorts and neecessity of ferrying Italian machines from Milan, Ttaly to the north of France. Neither the night nor the day wings were oparating offi ciently at the time of the armistice, in the opinion of those who compiied the summary. It was planned to have 12 squadrons, six day and six night. This, however, ‘was reduced to eight when it was found that the United States army could not deliver the planes required. American machines with Liberty inotors were to be used for the day weork and a con- tract was made with the Itallan gov- ernment to deliver ihir 600-horse power airplanes for the 1 ght work. The Italian machines, it is stated prov- ed ,wholly unfit for night bombing work. What is considered by the American navy the most successful aviation op eration resulted from the Killingholme \ America quickly project. This was an agreement by which England was to furnish 50 sea- | planes and 50 lighters and the United | States was to provide 40 seaplanes.and 30 lighters by March 1, 1918 for offen- : work in Heligoland Bight. The sh were successfully doing simi work from their station at Fel stowe. Approximately 1000 America: were sent to Killingholme to train and | ist_the British while awaiting the | arrival of the American planes. By| July 1 American planes were a: nd the British turned over ion to the Americans. It was ary to leave British planes, how- | “owing to the fz of the first| can machines” It reported the rican propellers were radiators leaked and that it 0 before the first wholly rol was undertaken. ps, how- | kept after Killingholme | unde Anmr subma had v {0 cace is recorded of where | submarine was sunk its very efficient sea- one su and a Ably edited oime b; ) OTt 'ER V{E‘fl POKNTS ROWLAND'S JAZE BAND Frcy, ‘s opinion yhibitior pro: prohibition a urprisingly le v to record | 8 ister. er during many icc i1l hold- there is | ce of fee will | level. The hat . hereabor made the © munici- the peo- provid- | heen any < public or- veport ad- no expectancy that he vlant was his city, and the There h 2 glven why t igncred. Cor inpleasant hond ins, Jame back, fr joints most frequer i to overworked, weik | <. Dalsy Bell. R F. D. 3, Box 234, nnah. G Tites ‘[ was suffering for eighi years from pain in back and could not do any of my work, but since I have taken v Pills 1 can do all of my Kidney Pills have given thousands who suffered from bladder trouble. Try them. be or l“\()?fiflvfid to WHEN YOU WANT to put your bus- iness before the pubiic, tnere is no ' medium better than rthrough the ad- verTtising columns of Tha Baulletia THEATRE S, ALL THIS WEEK, MATINEE: DAILY MYRKLE-HARDER C0. MISS MYRKLE SUCCESS! SUCCESS! SUCCESS! NOTE—A company of real artists and plays and productions have never been sufpassed here at any price, publi Ask anybudy. TODAY—A. H. woop’s ELT!NG THEATRE SUCCESS “CHEATING THE CHEATERS” : @l If This Play Does Not Surprise and Please You, You Are Absolutely Hopeless : THURSDAY—TOM WISE AND WILLIAM COURTNEY THEAFRE PRODUCTION “PALS FIRST” B A Story of Two Men Who Went to Hell and Back for a Woman PRICES—Matinee 250; Night, 50c, 35¢, 25¢, (Pius War Tax) ; Children in Arms Not Admitted. Seats Now Sclling for Any. Perform- ance. that Verdict of press and GAIETY ¥ NOTICE! Unable to Handle the Crowds Who Are Coming to See “MECKEY” At the Auditorium The Management Has Decided to Run a SPECIAL CHILDREN'S MATINEE TODAY AT 415 Admission 11c TODAY AND THURSDAY THE BEST BILL OF THE YEAR May Allison —_—IN— PEGGY DOQE! HER DARNDEST MONTAGU LOVE WITH BARBARA CASTLETON and FRANK MAYO L THE ROUGCH NECK Pathe Travel Series NE of Mie- ke's grest est pals was Min- nia Ha Ha. Ses how their lives bave been wWovea together in this epoeh making photoplay to be shown at x ¢ name of theatre and date here) AUDITORIUM TODAY—Mat, 2:20; Eve. PRICES:—Adults 25¢; C 6:45, 8:45 idren 15c| DANCING TONIGHT T. A. B. HALL CONCERT N. F. A, Girls’ Glee Ciua FRANK NOYES, Violinist Slater Hal'l March 28th, 8 Admission 25 i i | | | P. M. | 5 orc To disregard able from : point of view. legram. high be STATE ARMORY, NEW LONDON, C()WJ "THREE DAYS ONLY—10:30 A. M. TG 11 P. M. March 27, 28 and 29 See the Newest Models in the Best Makes of Machines Music Each Evening ADMISSION 25¢, INCLUDING WAR TAX FLASH-LIGHT BULBS AND BATTERIES The Norwich Electric Co. "Phone 674

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