Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 5, 1919, Page 4

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NORWICH, BULLETIN, ‘SATURDAY, APRIL 5, 1979 ch 21} ullefin Confied "EARS OLD nd in indicated by a recent survey of about one-third of the foreign born workers in the bituminous coal fields; which “shows that approximately twelve per cent. of the foreign horn miners ex- pect to return to Jurope as soon as they can obtain passports. Sligtly more than half of this number intend to remain permanently. Should this proportion be maintained throushout the entire industry, of the estimated 300,000 foreign born workers in the bituminous fields, it is figured that out 36,000 Will return to their homes across the Atlantic as soon as the government will allow them to do With this holding true in regard to other foreign born workers in this ¢ it can be realized that the tide 1 will not all be in one direc- The number of those leaving | doubtless be much smailer than desiring to enter but it may be ible to deal more intelligently with mmigration problem somewhat than it would right now. UNITED ACTION NEEDED. In connection with the dayl 2 plan of movin the last ng them ba ht sav- s the clocks ahead an day in March and n hour the last of tober, there kas been certain opposi- sted inasmuch as the war is nd the conservation of d: for the purpose of improv- tuation. The idea of s is for the purpose ople working under the Many have e those who t of the ad- that they 1 not sce the nec- 1in the cou it tmposed a of them. keeping do ligh their wi st hours light bur- n ot favored [ Ay inish) as they v of illust: developed the si n Canada. railroad. z the trouble that would| CORN PRODUCT: 8 DECISION. | corpe plain eys to any | rded ard | tion 1AL NOTES, indic favorab! on te | that is needed now nd soon speed. towns about letting it be known opposed ‘to prohibition d from a bit late. The scked the door was be- Was stolen. with the first reports Japanese land deals ir tradicted, it's hard to teil facts are or whether it another case of making a of a shadow When you stop to think about ere decrease today in the ned men about the here was a vear return house be swing- weather the under fu cities and the the horse Even now. n out mber of unifo eets from what The man on the corner says: The time doesn’t seem to have any se- effect upon the dining room at- ndance. 1t seems possible to catch most any of a proposition on one of those points. The sultan of Turkey ought to know withotit asking for it, that his people will get justice and get it good and Over in Hungary looters are being immarily shot, but thers was no nought - of stopping their frightful when the armics were invading ghboring territory. If as is held by the war department secr containing 1.4 per cent. alcohol is intoxicating, the same results would be obtained just twice as quick by the utilization of the 2.7 per cent. brand. When you stop to think of the read- ing matter that the soidiers have been furnishing us, it cannot help being re- garded as timely that the appeal of General Pershing for reading mattéc for the soldiers skould get hearty response. Apparently no one is doing the pro- hibition canse any greater harm than these who are trying to enforce it by the methods used in searching trains i | but What is America going to stand for? It is reaSonarle that every American should stand for exactly what the flag stands for—freedom. This govern- rient represents demoecrasy and can- not_consisteritjy support monmarchal or autocratic power. It must maintain its faith in the people whether they call_themsclves Mensheviki, Soviets or Bolsheviki All human conflict is horrible, and too often wmereiless; and we do not have to go away from home to learn this. Under preseat condi- tions_the situation is confusing, but cur duty is plain enough. mot support any system which de- parts from the doctrine of Lincoln: o man is good enough to govern nother man without the sent” This is democracy must stand or fall How much easier it is to hlame than to praise. How easily we can speak of an adult a: being bad, when he may be better than the speakcr; or to cail a child wicked Who dees not know the meaning of the word. We seem to forget that it never helps any one 3 ill of them, or to speak to their detriment. It was only a week ago that a New York orator atilience “The mouth was made to keap shut. t is not only easy to say the right hut com- mon for most people to say the wrong thing because of {houghtlessness. We arc all guilty! There Is no dodging the indictment! And the force of sug- jon is so great that the ruin of many may be traced back te this lack of knowledge. We are asked whether we have ticed “how swegter the robin ever again iat most from the that the mati; tire singi of b long before inced in pos The to the m season ma of mos were ealivenin: Adam and ¥ of the zarden o begin to sing he- star has hid - ind_conti evening star 1 Tha now of a sqito ke the en- the ssion birds s ap ou cnow t thénn ¢ the bin r it \ dbrea toust ohin b s of New J cots M and blaz There is truth, for cdge, and is some ed. It is no compl have it said: “He my!’ The man plenty of the harder t by the The truth needs n cid to aid it, no oil to smooth it it is and always will be sufficient to itself. Truth lies between ex tremes. ' The greatest enemy of truth is said fo be prejudice, and jts grea friend, time. Truth properly presen cd should not lack fervor, or take on| he appearance of spite, nothin, th dull ways un- We have had a great world war to decide that “Right is might” in op- position to the autocrbtic idea th “Might is right!” We need not look at Hurepe's Central empire ness this dangerous failacy have plenty of it at home. handicap of democrac It of men who fecl that they are on top. Man as a rule had rather show his authority than to attempt to demon- strate the divine charzcter of equal ity. In most mortal combinations for the making of money of making of men, Might rides a high horse, and Right goes on foot. No =Zovernment will ever demdnstrate “Right is might* unless most of the forces composing the government are imbued With this divine idea. We must all sirive to make the fdéa practical It seems to me as if too much is said about governments being true to God, and teo little about governments being true to man. If they are not true to man 1 do not see how they ean be true t6 God. Isp't it as much a government’s business to check pover- tv as to promote wealth? ban upon deception for the accommo- dation of money as well as upon indi vidual miedemeanors in defiance of . Justice has never yet s uneasy and riotous, It is lack of it and loss of confidence in the powers that be and partiality and jealousy that does this. The near- er goyvernments keep to equa farther off is Bolshevism and anar- chy. The world today is simply suffering because of the unrighteous conditions man has created evérywhere. Before the war England imported over 30 per cent. of the glass used in that country, but sinee the ifpor- tations were stopped they have been able to produce enough for their own birds. The | {nr‘ seems to be the general weakness| Ho put afa WHAT 1S BOLSHEVISM? (By Catherine Breshkorskaya) ¥ that which is now called “bolshevism.” The history of cvery more or less civ- ilized - people testifies that there has not been a theory, a religion or a philosophy that has mot been disfix- ured, or even abused, betrayed in its deepest meaning and ideal. Christianity, as a teaching and re- ligion existing for twenty has undergorie many distortions and mutilations, has been transformed to the very antithesis. One has only to recall the “Christianity” of euch a ruler as Philip the Secorid of Spain, with his inquisition when avhole na tions were doomed to be burned and murdered in the name of Christ's love ity. We cafinot forzet, too, Russian czar, Ivan ihe Terrible, who_himself tortured innocent neo- ple holding a cross in one and nails and a hammer in the other, the whole time saying pra to the almighty, aracio that not bolshevis religion, and hav: all the perpetrators of those deeds were themselves monsters jmoral and mental characters? would have become of the wi their “religion” had triumphed all_the others? we not see as over hums ism. founded ches us can be - that mom: on what ces: reforms uly made history, as little distres serving ail th 1 for d ruction of and anyone of came at sociali . of speech. We had cqua r both sexe the nationali If the constit n peor it wol centuries, | ¢ cumulated despotism and _desofation. ia has been devou of inquisition, triumph Philip O. Sp ed in Ru: is a of their funeral piles. d 1l|em without an: without ism is bassdgon and the, stinacy. above all Even the resul mistakes and errors course of sion for desruct be so Rome cessors £t ! | Nothing in the World is so old as| It was a match to the dry fuel ac.iHurmie-s to Flush Kidneys and Neu- | during many centuries of | and suffering, of servitude | For sixteen months} ed by the fire and Lenine flaunts it of social just as in the name of Chuist, | the hurning of his vietims d and writhed on the Philip of of Russia—both of feeling for human- of justice or God or man- n Lenine d by since their fanat- imess and ob-| themselve: d and man. g to their do not change the tivities, the law: testifyin their can —in easure in ruling fire and blood? aps. But Iis policy and of cannot e of mind and cr sism peo- | They who knows ot that self | their them demag Ton although minority by day, ust now s n nst L probabl fore we s ideal of nd There is and aite and task spent peonle realize and justi and w i hope sirbng one- they stice honest he crust o hody their bar [ LFTTERS TO THE EDITOR | F. J. Disagrees With G. I have in olunicers w l' mpl Lo comp: i | erfully six months’ could he dded April 4 Sunday Morning Talk GLADNESS GOD'S IDE o the world e command mean rejo eft out. The men H heltered from || #¢ n is where | ¥ el as| no kne God. | = grace mak tender and ing all the deeper of Christian faith is somett lies too deep to be dicturbed | waves and tides of earthly tro ource in the very ow is not prevented b is swallowed up in the floods of he enly joy. That was what Jesus meant | hen He talked to His disciples of | just as lie was about to go |Géthsemane. He said their sorr should be tutned in to rejoicing, that they shou L joy Wl world could no aw a joy carth’s could not put out is not the absence comfort overcom ing thror sfiguring them take which h tl y from them OTHER VIEW POINTS Question is asked what ha: come of the boy who used to rig up| those wooien doughnuts and pu nailed to the sidewalk on April 17 ‘well, he has no use for suc] spends the day tryinz to er thinks he knows some- tning when be doesn't—Meriden Jour- ral. If such financial relief is to be gly- en, there should go with it legislation that will bring trolley companies under more stringent state of control than is | v held, especially as concer If the i it should regularly have of the combanies to |itself at all times that the compani are still unable to pay considered a fair asses s given for use of streets that belong to the Leople. With monopoly ri obligations that may strike street rail holders as burdensome bu only insistence upon these obligations Wik safeguard the rights of the people. 1t must be granted that convincing sons. have been advanced why thc Children Cr FOR FLETCHER'S 0. kid tricks mun ) | are not so | favorea s from tubercu ien more stead lit, ‘K‘nam |these | through SALTS IF KIDNEYS OR BLADDER ' BOTHER| I tralize Irritating Acids —— i Kidney and Bladder weakness re- | sult from uric acid vs a noted authority. The kineys filter this acid | from the blood and it on to the Dbladder, where it often rémains to irritate -and inflame, eausing a burn- | ing, scalding sensation, of setting up | an irritation der, obliging three time: is vou I.O sedk relief fwo DY‘[ dur the night.. in constant dread, the! 1 th a scald- very profuse; | ty in avoiding it. weakness, most folks call| can't control mm'l-‘ tion. While it is extremely asnoying and’ sometimes very painful. this is| really one of the mosi simple ai ments to overcome. Get about four ounces of Jad Salts from vour mu arm- acist and ta of vater before ntinue this for two or three dn)s H will neutralize the acids in thei urine so it no longer a source of to the bladder and urinary thich then act Jad Salts is inexpensi d is made from the a lemon juice, combined wnd is used by thou who are subject to uri caused by uric acid I d Salts is splendid for kidne: ne bad effects whatev Hére you have a pleasant. -water drink, which quickly with ! itation TWO STAR FEATURES Burdenr of Proof BESSIE BARRISCALE —IN— A TRICK OF FATE PATHE NEWS ving the Homecoming Parade of the 27th N. Y. Division about the, does nc The th which s that in a time when from increased taxat corporatior contemptuous now to be it makes mad ailwa; suifer pu! ervice most have been convenier om tax man public burdens. the aver hopping think of Our dis te that Hartford no f tehes from report inc th It 10t be e the various ommission in commission T nity. It should has bills advised h\ port ed ave pointed | 3 great op- | out and- |1 1 has not| the chamber of market painstal fTproved n able erested i DANCING TONIGHT T. A.B. HALL ROWLAND'S JAZZ BAKD House Cleaning HAS NOW ARRIVED WE CAN HELP YOU GREATLY IN THE SELECTION OF NEW AND UP-TO-DATE FURNITURE Never before have you had the opportunity to choose from such a varied stock. Every piece of FURNITURE bought of us carries with it the highest quality the market affords and most reasonable prices. CASITORILA SPR Norwich ING Visit our store and see the spiendid line. HOURIGAN BROTHERS 62-66 Main Street Finn’s Block Jewett City t the neck of the blad- 13 The | § normally | | {d Mon., Tues., Wed., April 8th, Sth, 16t All Norwich Will Be Talking About |The FINGER The two-edged swerd of filmdem th modesty and secrecy from the most vit in the world today. Pau! Smith’s colossal motion picture based on hi fight that clesed the vicious Barbary Coast.. The workings of the SEE moeney from dishonor. this subject! “syste Avray Prices—Adults 28¢ Aum'm THL BIG HOYT REV E 22 PEQPLE—MOSTLY GIRLS—22 PEOPLE Featuring That Funny Fellow—LEW BREMS SPECIAL MATINEE FOR CHILDREN TODA Each Child Will Receive a Present 4—SHOWS TODAY—4 KEITH VAUDEVILLE FEATURE PIC RASSO AND COMPANY SENSATIONAL EUROPEAN JUGGLING NOVELTY GILBERT & KENN A Harmonious S VIVIAN MARTIN in ““Marandy Smiles”, A DELIGHTFUL PARAMOUNT COMEDY-DRAMA IN “THIS WAY OUT DUTEIL & COVEY The Nut Comedy Couple '—Chri it realizes t o people at large | interested in the whae: provision of the former in which it iith. Such a retail market taken care of conscie: full re rauch mor il than in the made g that t v tie rets in must and t opportunity given a an THE FLONZALEY QUARTET MAKES RECORDS EXCLUSIVELY FOR THE VICTOR Whether or not you own a Talking Machine, come in and| hear these wonderful records: Molly on the Shore (Irish Reel)........ Quartet in D Major—Anda.ntc. s Canzonetta Op. 12, No. 2 ;' Grainger ... .Mozart Vicndelssohn! The Talking l‘fiachm Shop 46 Franklin- Strest VICTOR HEADQUARTERS N.S. Gilbert & Scons SPRING PATTERNS WALL PAPERS Why not select early and avoid the rush, and when selecting papers look over our stock of CARPETS AND RUGS FURNITURE We have a new and attractive store, a stock of de- sirable quality, and prices right. Shetucket~Street Opposite Laurel Hill Bridge

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