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diorwich Bulletin and Qoufied Entered at the Pestoffice st Norwieh, Cone., a» weond-class mater. Teleshane Calls. Bulletin Business Office 436, Bulletis iditorial Rooms 35.3. Bulletin b Office 35-2. Church St Tekohone 105 Willimantic Office 23 " Norwich, Tuesday, _ April 22, 1919 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclugrely entitic republication of all news despateli- " it or not otherwiw credited in tals paper also the local news published Beretn. AT rights of republication of spectal despatcd. o herein are aleo eserved. CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING APRIL 19th WATER FPOWER GOING TO WASTE times at the present iven to into 1sl as unite ane whole r as well to convert i the co; mines Sen it wh over the coun to has been advo- Great Britain s saving of coal is t equal ion this country just ority 4 it attent ing it has been that ther t coal will ever s which have ood that gin to take resources, horse power go- this coun. to utilize the ation of elec- might be trans- ances even water. in nich di the Great it could ve 55,000,000 the g ting al a ‘ t 1= not solely question of nd that there ar effort attention. for along tendency much the good of industrial activ- LIFTING THE BLOCKADE. the hat emoy blockade o give ¥ a es and re- e in that may v indemr e am- hitious hich ¢ sound to do regardies i tedly do cannot d ken goods for u long for declining it will by re- mean upon, may fact do busines no insisting mark. Tt to relic certain shortages the world ffering but 1g received with open with it formerly did ierc's ht chance. At will rest with the buye themselves movi does that every the made S abid in-German from as for those siness whi be rms t very s for MOVE IN RIGHT DIRECTION. Recogn r. of the econditions the drug evil in thie country, it commendable stand which has been taken the hoard of pharmacy in Maryland for the purpose of preventing its spread. The claim has been made that the use of narcotics being greatly in- sed throughout the country. This be so and yet it is not improbable that a large part of this evil is just being brought to light. Cemtain: with the increased attention being given to it better results in curbing the traffic in the drugs ought to be ob- tained In view of the disclosures being made, the claim that the federal nar- cotic law is not accomplish all that wag expected of it and the steps be- ing taken to increase the fight a dope, it cannot fail to be recognized that a gréatsbig contribution is hound to be made by the pharmacists in do- the seriousnes by o oal | it | proposed | {ear { can position, | ing their utmost to block the illegal traffic. The cooperation which they can give to the police is bound to be beneficial to a large degree. But in this connection, it must be realized that along with this cooperation there should also go that of the physicians. For the most part it is believed that the doctors are ready and willing to do their part, even if they are not at the present time, but it only requires a few to upset' all such efforts. Through prescriptions which they are willing to issue for the financial re- turn many addicts are not only made worse but others are given a start in the use of drugs. Thus while the situation in Mary- land may not be as bad as it is in oth- er states the time for widespread and determined opposition to the drug traffic is at hand, and with the author- ities, pharmacists' and doctors lined up against it desired results ought to be quickly obtained. And in no way could humanity receive greater help. 1 i DANZIG. | One of the hard fights that have‘ been made by Polahd in connection with the struggle for independence has been in behalf of a port on the| Baltic that would give it a way to the| sea. The logical port through which; to carry on its purpose is Danzig, which was at one time a Polish city The idea of giving up that port has met with the strongest oppogition-on the part of Germany, which was strongly opposed to the plan of even| allowing Polish &roops to be sent from France into Poland by that route. Cermany has manifested its objec- ition becaugg it didn't want to lose the | territory and because with it wouid have to go a strip of territory con necting Dunzig with Poland cutting Germany into two sections. It would| mean a highway through Prussia, the real sacred part ¢f Germany. Although it has not been officially announced, the report comes from Paris to the effect that this knotty problem has been decided by agree- |h) that Danzig shall be internation- ialized. Naturally the details in con- pecticn therewith are not furnished at {this time, but Poland will given | the seaport that it sceks and the way | to get to it for usc in commercial de- sopment without actually making it Poligh property. Such a solu nected to entirely Germany but is perfectiy { that it cannot to he ‘much more sentable than the placing of s control. It is a compru- ingement, which may or may of future trouble, but | no more friction outright to s in the con- i be ter Polist | mi {not e the cause | ces t can cause { than it would | Poland or leave jtrol of Germany o give as it ONLY FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN While there {magnitude | building operations w {delayed for various re whether | the stroctures are of a public or pri nature, in order to give employ- ment to those who are coming back | from service in the army and navy |and those who are temporarily out of i"mylu_\’m‘ nt because of the curtail- i is of la beginnin been a mov underway for = ment of the abnormal industria tivities which were carried c a ar, special attention hei in not a few cities to the on of dwellings. In many sectio the country there 1 demand either for increased facilities or bet in is ven erec- is housing homes, this nection attention to be attracted by the Detroit which is arranging L $600,000 apartment house, th vili not differ from othe been built or will be in other cities, olely for occupancy h children, that is enough to give it special ction and arouse interest. Where L ch is not filled with 1d apartment houses, which promptly refuse to families_where there It has not been an- there will be any speeial that will go with the| ding sgmps or go- i uc apartments will ldcubtiess be hailed with delight, and | without attempting advertise the | apartments there f¥ every reason to ! pelieve thut they will a paying and « “To Rent” signs windo is a plan adopted with success ne °r apartment are concerned. eannot organiza- con- structed will by fami- But ity w flats owners of nt them child need that nduc ments cart to b | venture the b cities | cottag in other houses R or CDITORIAL NOTES. Now that the dandelions are with there’s no use delaying the gar- dening activity any longer. The man on the corner says: long time for the law of ty to bring its influence to L There's been plenty of talk telephone strike but now that gone back to work there It Kes 4 | r upon | Inasmush as there will be no over- | ption of Victory loan it will advisabl scriptions in early. With Kentucky moonshiners siioot- fing internal revenue men it ook as if prohibition was going to be |accepted there without a struggle. A western paper says “We're to have dearer and poorer coal” It's ~Dad | |enough to have it cost more but if it| lis to be poorer the name ought to be! | changed { It was to be expected thut ¢ kaiser would deelare i war, but real was the kind c tes ac- be to get| { me {didn’t want ’ e didn't want lish he got If the president i. | home until the mi keep the Ge Y |idle when there cager to get home? { If it is true as reported {Turks are planning anot 1 massacre of the Armenians, there! ought to be no further warning needed iin dealing with the Turks The bolsheviki along the east front are said to be on the run they have heard the rumo e allies are going to send food into the} country along the west front. The claim is made that German: going to get damages from the al for an illegal blockade. But it is well remembered that Germany set out to do a lot of things it never accom- plished. With the new steamship company | which has taken over some of the gov- |ernment’s wooden ships having diffi- culty getting dockage at New York, there ought to be a chance for New London. 1t is useless for people to get all ex- cited over the thought of being told they cannot have what they want, if they want it. [ook at the way many New England people are being de- prived of the use of the telephone. he! anding \diers | that er the | great Poss! hat | ments, |to see | leadin | man him 16 doesn't | ¢ jin the first six months of the war will} It's a fine building]” said the pretty young woman, who had not been married very long, “Everything just the way we would like to have it, and you had better go around right away and see the agent before somebody else gets ahead of us. And it has an elevator.” “What!” cried her husband startled tones. He shook hi “That settles it. No, Clementia, shall never do yeu the injustice of making you live in a building with an elevator. It doesn’t happen to be one of the new fangied kind that roam around in a ghostly way with- out any driver, does it?” “It certainly does,” declared - his wife, with spirit. “That's the thing that first attracted me—the elevaor is an elecric one and—— “Girl alive!” gasped her husband. hank your stars you told me about it. That kind of an elevator - has wrecked more lives than -an -adding machine could count during a_long, hard winter. I guess I know. Before I met you—ilong before, so dry those tears— I was corazy about a girl named Susie, whose parents resided in one of these gold plated apart- surrounded with haughty and electric €levators. She in doormen “Wes she pretty?” “Tremendously homely,” the young man, instantl | it was her personality which attract-} ed me. Susie lived on.the third ficor, and after the doorman had waived me through a vestibule as big as a church and the door had unclicked and let me through into the inner sanctuary 1 looked around for the elevator. It did not seem visible. There were paneled walls and subdued ligh n_unexpected places and mirrors and things, but the ele- vator was too triumphantly conceal- ed for a plebeian like myself to locate it declared | “T expect| So T waked up, which, of cour: 1 should never have done. Susie papa and mamma chanced to he'leav ing their home at that instant and met me arising from_the stairs. They Jooked very pained Susie was at the door and she asked me instantly why 1 had not used the elevator. 1 ecamef bic rily that 1 was intensely ath-| letic and preferred exercise. ut three nights late My goodness! You certainly her often enough. Are sure she wasn't pretty wer : e “I was taking her to.the theater tol repay a dinner party,” explaned her husband. “I resolved to ride up in state, so I explored the hall carerully while the doorman watched me s piciously, I looked in ail the many mirrors, and at last I was rewarded. | One of them wasn't a mirror at all,| but just plain glass, and through it J} saw the elevator. : “So/far as I was concerned it might as well have been out in San Fran- cisco, for I had no blasting materials with me to get at it. There was a brass handle on the panel heneath the glass, and it remained unimpressed at all my shakings and tw Wien I saw the doorman star me threatingly 1 shot ups arrived breathless. ‘When Susie and I came out and headed for the elevator it wasn't up| there as it should have been had I| come on it. She did something mys- | terious and it sprang up to the third floor and the brass handled door swung open for us. She uttered mno| reproaches hbeyond looking irather aloof as she remarked that she really should think when there was an| elevator there, I would use it. | “I knew where its lair was now, so| the next time I went there I looked in the right glass, but the place empty. 1 tried to imitate what Susie had done, but again nothing hgp- ! pened. 1 yanked ond press and | pushed, and the doorman, o b | this time thought had my number | all right, staried for me in two leaps, but I beat him to it and -again used the ornamental stairs. “Susie had the dcor open and saw me coming. My downfall dated from right then, because the suspic- | jon which had been growing her eyes that I was decidedly in- tensified and overflowed natural amiability, and it seemed to affect papa and mamma, too. Susie never was homef from then on, and I was saved for yo 4 “I don’t helieve rupted his wife. 1bout rents knew it,” v in queer her a word of i “This flat for $200 aid the young man. suspected it the minute you elect elevator: and we can't cent over seventy-five for a ears more or So imter- 1 am talk- ..1‘ said pay thousand | forget it “T might have known that was why vou acted so about elevators,” said thej pretty young wife. “Tell me— was g 1 or did vou only make her News. re Gleaned from Foreign Ex-' changes “Hoary-headed, 1 entlemen’ was ly applied tc y commercia suggested an defective description directorate of | concern. The| age limit for di- mer Da Chronicic cught the views of ene business.” men, proaching three-scor “When is a direc 1 stion, and —so0 long vigor representative of Britain's who i& ears and too o0ld?” answer Wi retains his | to accept! ap- ten. as the he ready ne of | he old | an is a sold as she loo d a man is as old as he feels, i been - ir s. The fact can be just as usef voungster of ind the times i Tatest | proof h are | Tuable Be to an 1 additic n. | dotu of concern, acquired cefal experic n find on old n vou h old his old ideas head on youve| course, the has earned hew-fashione ceen on new as, stabilized worth Mount Elburz towers 2,700 f : has been puszii into ages. is surmounted e daa fa ret m rioned old rement. But | n—progres- | nd the siv in his asian rs th ounded crater that remote a burned itself out in some age, before the ¢ c0- | logic rived There are mount ' Vesuviu other enjoyir which | on i ! pX ) renewed L similar ere ex up on tt an be nces in -rs have s of others only in grav- | < ed of the ot herlock dy, and arif ket, pr Holmes after some indecision | wastepaper rm into the valuable 3 to the haa blown from the ta ket dene such a hing Arthur, in narrating d the unust followed utes bas- plunged his -extracted ve never % the | 1 course | with wholly amiliar.” of ‘“red flag| irey ot T he he ptings of h Brisbane, the scene riots” caused by an mob, re-| calle our former Titan warfare for| he freedom of the world. This capi att m, the Penin whom eper of sular he w ane w oldier, but T Riding over some high the battle of Vittoria, he “What a glorious site for ” Soon after his landing n Australia he established near Syd- an observatory where he compiled the first valuable catalogue of stars visible in the Southern Hemisphere. Sir Edward Bulfin, who cded General Watson as f i ¥pt, is a 1 neral public. ed closely th obser: bas sue- comman- me lit But events remembler that Ceneral very notable work, for whi Bulfin did | he wa at the| equent- | we heard | cne of the salem. And it was his g * an organi- zer and leader, his determina- tion in attack and dash and drive in pursuit,” as General Allenb: id his dispatch, that gained knighthood. Nature in her own way is looking after the solitary war graves scattered throughout the shell-shattered Picar- dy countryside. Those that lie in the thrice-fought-o ground hetween Albert and Combies are covered with early spring primroses. In Lieramont the daffodils are blooming, and the unded | of | government trooy { and | Only the cathed [ elses | arch's { ment. ! tended { pected { | | | brambles on the graves in Bernafay Wood are green with new leaves The lonely warriors are to together in central cemeteries under the care of the Imp: W Graves Commission. The French government. in compliment to the British soldier. has purchased cessary land, and has presented il time to England.—The Chronicle. it fo London 3 IN THE DAY’S NEWS Germany’'s Louvains. “Germany has Lieges and of her own, a bulletin National Geographic Society, f her self inflicted scars is Mazdeburg just now the scene of bit between Spartacans and uvains om the ‘and one 1 ha the | gdeburg suffered the most { from her own bar- couil- Emperor Ferdinand 11, cap- Three thousand soi- ¢ few thousand armed ans. held the rivelled, remorscless Tilly and his r more than vengeance the city a d by s ugly men He ing month. by mak- welte biood . 30,000 civilians, men, children, who were ed or crushed by the remainder were men, wo-| not burn- | toppling wal in or drown and a few hous and some 4,000 ens who took re- | fuge in the former, were spared. Even | the morose Tilly ws irred, for once, by the s cle and wrote his emper nce the fall of Troy andl such | t “the ladie could not tor: teome of | ze eighty ye earlier | zony at the command | . For u year that prince waited before her gates while the city well fortif provisioned, defiied him. We: this ridiculous pe ; under t It agreement and started off ruck where to be was | monarch would | that myst of the reign of ous mil tary Ferdin: figure shrewd minded believer ted successfu Magdebu before Tilly's depend ars “Wallenstein had military here which threate power. After h quest he styled himser Baltic nd the Ocean.’ murdered Ferdinand wept, ordered 3 1im, but to hav citizens astrocious hern con- | Admiral of the Whe said to ne home inventor of ci that can b despite the C n to the Students principle of 1 is oft lled the * Von Gue ostered im- | | al t1 burg experi- 2id to have| overy of the pos- | a Il by clamping together two parts of a copper sphere, from which the air| had been exhausted, and hitching fif- | teen horses to each hemisphere. The that the horses could mot pull! > hemisphero apart may be an exag- | ion, but the principle is sound. “Martin Luther sang in the streets! of Magdeburg, along with othe; urch | choristers, for the bread and coins that | citizens might hestow. This begging ! was the recognized means of support of the children of the ‘poor schols’ at-| sons of peasants. who ob- tained free lodging at the hospices of the children of the ‘poor schools' at- granted the privilege of singing for their meals In return they were ex- | to sing’ in the cholr of which supporeed their Magdeburg s the | an province of ! fortified. Tt iy | of Berlin, lies most- Iy on the left bank of the Elbe, an important railway center. a leading market for sugar and chic ory. Its other industries before the war included making of chemic loves. chocola in church te HOW TO GROW BEETS s may be gro 3 hest on Garden be gocd seil, bu loam. The ¢ time the lasts young beets four to six week: own in. a drill v eed balls to the foot It should be borne 1n mind th seed ball contains from three see and that the beets will rs considerable thinning. The voung| beets that are pulled out in thinning| may be used as greens during the] be ready s The seed should | three | be: | to the gov | prices i to be | 12y s Gentlemen Shave With -wa Cuticura Soap The Healthy Up-To-Date Cuticura Way Nomug, noslimy soap, no germs, no free alkali, no waste, no irritation even when shaved twice daily. One soap for all uses—shaving, bathing shampooing. Doubles razor efficiency, not to speak of value in promoting skin punty, skin comfort and skin health due 'to its delicate, fragrant Cuticura medication. Lar- gest selling skin soap in the world. e~ Cuticura Toilet Trio -me Consisting of Soap, Ointment and Talcum are indispensable adjuncts of the daily toilet in maintaining skin purity and skin health. By bringing these delicately medicated emollients in frequent contact with your skin as in use for all toilet fiurposes, ou keep the skin, scalp, air and hands clear, sweet and healthy. The Soap, Ointmenband Talcum 25¢ each everywhere. Forsampleofeachfreeaddress postcard: “Cuticura, Dept. 12T, Bosten.” Teday and Tomorrow Matinee COHAN & HARRIS Presents BigiBlL OF RESIORES The Famous Irish Singing Actor hauncey Olcott IN GEO. M. COHAN'S SPARKLING COMEDY THE VOICE OF McCONNELL Olcott Sing George Cohan’s Latest Songs PRICES:—50c, 76c, $1.00, $1.50 (War Tax Extra) SEATS NOW SELLING Telephone Orders Must be Called for Not Later Than 6 P. M. Wed- nesday. Keith Vaudeville HARVEY, HENEY AND CRACE ; In the ~ Musical Oddity—“On the THE SURPRISE NOVELTY MARTELLE A Gleaming Personality THE ZIRAS In a Series of Classic Ideas Paramount Special Feature PAULINE FREDERICK In the Five Part Drama OUT OF THE SHADOW BURTON HOLMES TRAVELOGUE Gay Paree in War Times “UP THE FLUE” Lyons and Moran Comedy EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION Who's Who In Norwich? $25.00 in Prizes to the Lucky Ones Who Guess the Most Correct Names. Hear M. eariy Where the beets are to be given hand cultivation entirely, the rows may .be placed as closely as twelve to fourteen inches apart and the plants should be thinned to two to inches in the row. A late planting of beets made in June m be or as late as August in some localities, for fall use and for storage —United States Department of Agricultur From A. to Z ! The first name on the alphabetical | list of the American Expeditionary Force is Pvt. Aaee and the last is/ orp: Zzeppenfelt. Between the two names there are more than 2,000,000 other: Geor: coln e Washington, Abraham Lin- neral Ulysses S. Grant, Rob- AUDITORIUM TODAY AND TOMORROW—2.20, 6.45, 8.30 THE MERRY WIZARD CO. Australian ‘Entertainers—All Star Vaudeville Acts “LIFE’'S GREATEST PROBLEM” By ANTHONY PAUL KELLY, Starring MITCHELL LEWIS WM. DUNCAN in I CONCERT ORCHESTRA “MAN OF MIGHT” POPULAR PRICES B. Lee. Woodrow Wiison, several| sars and & few Bismarcks adorn| > ranks with intermittent frequency, cluding the commander-in-chief the Army and ¥, there is but| Woodr Wils He is a pri-} and according to the Stars and| ipes has just been placed in the Hospital ch was organized in Pitts- one ITE. There is an abundance of the names men, _intluding Geoy hingtons. The name of the first dent is surpassed by 79 Robert| , who holds the record for rers of the me of great men. and seven Gran four Bismar ,000 Smiths to ditional predominance of the s of most citie! American 1 numbers. There are Joneses and a f Greens. Sullivan aggrezate 1d Cohens 4,500. OTHER VIEW POINTS | The dead in the army and in th rines as a result of the war, bout 50,000. That was a heavy for us to pay and ought to be willing to loz nment to prevent any such r from coming t6 us again.—Mid- dietown Pre The food infia eems to be run of the m food handling of th not of the natural matter 1 wi —Mliddiet The ticut d {th W 10 De th it it kr ion price g overtime fanning ti Food produ is tr es th sen is did 3 te of t 5900 work yeste a law requiring an em- a man to p: 4 hours. The em who quits must wait until th ular pay day for his money.! is simple justice and the only{ is that empl ve so0 long| it—Hartford Post. suggested some Connecticut far: I plant much corn this vear velopments since then tend port the theory. The tr in_the Chicago m the weather reports indi- rain in the uth and southwest, causing delay in planting followed later by even more de- in_cultivation. The rainfall h ¥ the normal in Indiana,| northern Illinois, most of | Tennessee and castern | all this being the cf ! i i in full w ed ti is T of t is up- ar been B ; R pro- be from these checks is certainty of the fixed eat, which has worked still work to bring the acre- rn to a low point. If the| co-operates with the govern- | weather - i ment toward checking the planting of | corn in the west the Connecticut farm- | ers should bear the fact in mind and plant as much of thts cereal can care for. —Hartsore Cour: he seriousness of te strike cannot be f until this actual situation ipitated in a_community a ¢ in the Massachusetts terday. Without the telephone ness would be almost at a standstill in any large community, yer Secre- tary Burleson might be said to be o CONSTANT PAIN AFTER EATING The Tortures of Dyspepsia Corregied by “Fruii-a-tives” 1. Marmy's “Tor two years, I suffered tortures from S Dyspepsia. 1 had constant pains after eating; pains down the sides and back ; and horrible biiter stuff’ often came up inmy mouth. I tried doctors, buithey did not help me. But as soon asI started taking ‘Fruit-a-tives'(or Fruit Lizer Tablels) 1 began to improve and this medicine, made of fruit juices, relieved me when everything *else failed.” MRS, HUDSON MARSHBANE. 50c. a box, 6 fer 82.50, trial size 25e. At dealers or from FRUIT-A-TIVES limited, OGDENSBURG, N, ¥, AFTER THE PARADE| ONE STEP up Broadway HESITATE at T. A. B. en- FOX TROT up in the Hall fiddii bury ligious agents of Journal-Courie alone to er in a few ye as great. anything BRrReeD) THEATRE —TODAY— William Fox Presents Evelyn Nesbit —IN— Woman! Woman! YOUTH—ADVENTURE PASSION—MYSTERY PEARL WHITE —IN—— The Lightning Raider GOING! GOING! GONE! Harold Lloyd Comedy PATHE NEWS trance AND ATTEND THE JAPANESE FESTIVAL GIVEN BY THE OVER THERE CLUB MUSIC BY ROWLAND’S JAZZ BAND 1 g while burns.—Water- Democ There is a less e Salvation Army institu ith profit study. > ud sapprovel of the assed and persecuted by he government, recognition and reg the army stuck 1o it efeat after defeat found it e firing line, and there it remaine its t of let Rome in this re which e the n d Today mankind. country New Haven | | merely ow i to needs to get unfortunate that the state { representatives should have! 1 to the bill It is ect upon s0 obviou v 1o 1 2 it shouid house to tr for that reason| have heen beneath| it in that . It] in re: rions allj have studied the question re- | Those hot members who m—i sted upon tre he bill lightly kili-} i1 Connecticut's chace for two }mra! legisla- | es will adopt with- | ct a bi ogrelsive on that all he licensing of dogs | simply because the | generally understood. | for licensing cats is just} , but it is not »d. Those members who the bill howed that share the general lack of infor- ation on the subject. After the facts re once known, there is no longer ! question about the value of such| ation to be hoped that thel to have such a bill enacted will | e vigorously renewed at the next s on of the epublican. he > == THE SMILE DA in Parish Hall, Tafiville, THURSDAY EVENING., APRIL 24TH. Music Rowland's Jazz Band. FAT PEOPLE GET THI Best safe home method. Get a smaii box of oil of korein at the drug- i gist's. Follow plain directions under |$100 guarantee. New book tells ail about reducing weight quickly, pleas- 1 antly, lastingly, in plain wraper, free; rite to Korein Ci NE-588, Station New York., N. Garden Tools Planet, jr., Combination Plow, Cultiva- tor, Hoe and Seeder by taken 3 for it ity if rea e nec Ty If some fore people were to think speak would ne tvic Manure Forks $1.00 up Spading Forks Cultivators Hoes, Etc., Etc. WATER GLASS Auto Scrub Brush ................ I5¢ Sink Brush and Rubber Scupper. .. 10c The Household Bulletin Building, 74 Franklin Strest Telephone 531-4