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5 Gt NORWICH, BULLETIN. the start. It was intended to give the islanders a chance which they had never had before, to show them how to improve their condition and lay the foundation for future self government. Mr. Quezon doesm't hesitate to say that all this is appreciated, but he nevertheless insists that the time has come for the Uhited States to take off its - guiding 'hand, ' set the islands drift after the brief experience in| looking out for themselves and per- mit them henceforth to he free and independent, He Is of course ap- pealing to the sentiments of those who have always heen opposed to our Philippine policy and who have been eager from the start to disregard our | duty there or to cast aside our re- sponsibilities regardless of the exist- ing state of fair But in the Philippines as well as in other undertakings it is well to be sure before entering upon any such course. With the conditions what Mr. Quezon admits, with the islands bene- fiting from the wonderful work which ve have done there they are not going to r from a continuance of our control which shouid be maintain- ed until such a time as there will be no question about their abilty handle their own affairs, internal as well external. Rather than be obliged to do all over again what has been done it is preferable that the question of independence should not bo hustled unduly, PROHIBITION ENFORCEMENT. With the first of July only a little more than two months aw: not a little concern is manifested in the steps that must of necessity be taken in order to bring about the enforce- ment of the prohibition law. It is a that is zoing to call for no little hinery if it is going to be prop- rly done, and unless it is properly {done it might just as well not be at- tempted. “idlorwich Bulle ™ and Qoufied 123 YEARS OLD Sobseription pries 12e » yoar. Fntersd at the Postoffice at Norwich, Cann., as wcond-clae matter. Telephone Calls. Ballettn Buinem Office 480. Bulletin Bltortal Rooms 35.3. Bulletta Job Office 35-2. 4 Willimantie Office 23 Chureh St Teiephone 105. week 506 & moath: 85.00 WEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Ameeisted Prew I3 exclusirely enutict o the use for republication of all news despaich- w credited o it or net otherwise credited In Wis pepee and alo e local Gews published in P pgep— o beretn are also reserved. a to CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING APRIL 19th 10,058 is 1 of internal revenuey that is the branch of the govs ment that is eoncerned with the collection of the taxes from such a |source. It has a certain force for looking after the violators of the law as to taxation now but that is by means sufficient to take on the addi- tional work. The fact is, how the department has asked to be| relieved of such work because it| the force d because what 1’; fully occupied with the duties| ted with the gathering in of th new taxes that have been laid of this situation, the sug- been made that the job of | inz pronibition should be left the department of Jjustice, or| ferred to it, which action could | )y the president. This de- was forced to surround it-{ + large body of agents dur- d of the war. That all is not ended can he not imyrobable certain relaxations it wou.d employ them in such wor the prohibition law whe particularly when faited to ke direction. It is t there is going to be reventing margt — GUARDING AGAINST REFUSAL. pposed for a minute an the it view ments At the same t wisdom made in the situation bulk. And such a duty programme than other stands While th statement it ment with advan: milit and no plent ture per prep- | thing will { fowed & man as sckade 1 wou and unless | I plann and the shipmer TFéteiving waysin wh be brougi ithorought ture term than How ha writer the whole now | QUR MVNIS‘I;ERTTb :OLAND. has been said in the past about the appoint- | representatives of | Too often it M‘m\‘ ing a political debt and | such a policy resulted in | Irawal of the experienced and | hose who are fully in touch | nditions other men who | he husiness and | must of necessity rely upon their as- | and ason, plomatic has with zreen at derstood whlies a8 the once srations T pected t employ that pr overlooked 1 not the case! to Po-| is go- | There will be | some time | ason good | | | [ | appear | minister post hard problems to handle ind for 1) or o com tha i judgment to have i | z | | it Mr, experience ht in wnd there vas trom the way rved the country was aidn't go to He went Whitlock, Americs but upon hi Gibson's In midst of s e is not h Hx\! troubled | in which he | in the past| his new post. Mr. | Europe as a di-| secretary to| 1 minister to| houlders fell of the work v n Mr. Whit- | taken sick, and at no time| ould he have been given a hetter time displaying his Tity part he played in th lith Cavell and how well he the duties of the office re- y other important is- | He showed then | capable of taking care of ry’'s interests, and it is cer- good si when such men are! for the nation’s diplo They command much confidence than when they solely for political pu EDITORIAL NOTES. It is the right kind of a start that is | being made in the Victory loan. It is| forth | the response that is needed to insure | wssocia- | success n> actu the =xtra- due mostly method hou fac GOVERNMENT WIRE LINES was only the 1t there w users th graph. The Tifes were t ment erated more Bbmically. Unde Mticipated t sult with proj war time meas not taken pertunity upon the w than could fW¥vagh the reAdy dirc *With the dministration ¢ his coun caysed mor ta éarly ind would be imp ment ti vate companic out said was also that thi added expense, while by officials of the craployes tions that there nad Increase in wages but ordinary outlays were costly and w ul into vogue following control. am stitement +d lines that no rais been required had permitted to But accepting the of increased the increase cobered the additional can be expected to wage increases have certain telephone of New England? That the beginning of what must Jow throughout the country and nfi signs of another boost in rates umder the economical and efficient ad- ministration by the government, with Mr: Burleson at the helm. Instead of providing what was promised and ex- pected we are getting just the oppo- site. in ord ma brur unt It is well 1o | known what he ting rvice more to co are named | \ giving poses | ng hig was due t "This t it { announc 1 he same tirc : = been n> man on the corner says: Tt require much self determina- | go fishing. Zealand has voted not to go but that is a long way off even ihe annual vacation. Owing to decreased crops it is de- clared that coffee will stay up. But even so there will be quantities that will go down. Look about you today and see how many can be found who are favorable to government ownership. Burleson is certainly a great fixer. It must be a bit discouraging to those about to attempt the crossing of the Atlantic to have the English flier drop into the Irish sea, but the non- stop flight from Chicago to New York rather overbalances it. When the D. A, R. demand that En- glish be the only language used in the public schools it is a proper Ameri- canization stand, but it should also be insisted upon in other schools. It seems to follow, as day does the night, that the taking over of an in- dustry by the government is forerunner for increase in wa The fifth Liberty loan not only needs to be given a good start but it hould be kept going wr the same pace. Gernrany has been keeping so closely in touch with what has been going on at Paris that regardless of what the peace terms are they will not come like a bolt of lightning out of a clear sky. There is talk about taxing bachelors over in England, but that furnishes no reason why there should be even a thought given to taxing cats in Con- it the Postal dry. time of rates wouid have t company beea own lines government claim wages as _the which in operat> it reason for hardly what that granted to expense happen now been employes in a part only fol- the seems is THE PHIIPPINES. In connection with the appeal which M¥F: Quezon puts forth in this country for the independence of the Philippine jslands, he refers to the,work which has been done In the islands by this country since they were taken over by the Unfted States. Iie recognizes that it has been for the welfare of the Filipi- m What has been doné has been their benefit rather than the good | of this country that has been ac- already evi- | ¢ Ay evi- | ! | | ion of Hugh Gibson|! | thei FACTS AND COMMENT Director General Hines finds it quite as easy to raise the wages ol railway employes as did his predgces- sor, Mr. McAdoo. Regardiess of the rapidly inereasing deficits in govern- ment railway operation, an advance amounting to $65,000,000 a vear ha een granted to the members of :the big four” brotherhoods, the _same men who Dlazed the way.to higher wages by act of congr The process Degan in 1916, By the threat of a gen- eral railway strike the four brotf hoods of engineers, firemen. cenduc- tors and trainmen so worked on tne administration ca lae e of A n tional clectio? that congref was dra- gconcd into pussing the Adamson jaw munting the men engaged in jitor- tate railroadiaz ;wetty nearly all they had den ded. When the gromnd was cnce broken otber ruziway. 2mip oyes naturally soughi increases until ibe| companies found _themselves payirig $330,000,000 more wages annually than before the process began. This, how- ever, was only the heginning. Since the government took over the roads at the end of 1917, $910,000.000 )y has been added to the payroll, a total increase in three s of more than a billion and a quarter. Tha e rage advance during these thres yes has been $650 per employe. The administration is not to be crit: joed for malking wartime adviices in wages. nakes its ofm prices lahor well as for znais md these prices may not fairly be _com- pared with those prevailing in time of peace. England alsp has been com- pelled to. grant her railway men in- creases averaging $570 per man per vear. But the administration is to be| Severely condemned for granting in- creases on demand without making it clear both to the emvloyes benefited and to the general public that the money to meet these increases must come out of the business of tranpor-| tation and not out of the United States | treasury. It is perhaps ioo much tol expect that any administration iwill voluntarily assume the odium of in- creasing passenger and freight rates to the point where they will meet the cost of operation, but steps should he taken to acquaint both travelers .and | shippers with the inevitabie advance that they must pay. An administra- | tion is not honest with itself or with | the nation if it appropriates the pop- | uiarity that follows higher wages and! strives to avoid the unpopularity that| must come from those who pay the bills, I The fifth war loan which is now be- ing offered to the public was a sur- e both in amount and in the lib- Al rate of inferest. Four and a half billion, less by one-fourth than was| for last fall, will be enough to] job and no oversubscrip-| tie accepted. The possibil- | United States bonds | ind three-quarters per | interest is a privilege indeed, and from any reasons of pagriotism, ing ought to be snapped up| The total number of United ! risen from until it million, and no| the number will Victory bond- | in fivel the peipet- | tes govern- people are for | asked 3 rt off once n wdred tho! ell over tweniy an tell wh 1 the campaign for the over. Twenty miliion rs mea at IS0 ly interested Cnited of thes in their never be or o ould take econumiz e to t using w and is ac mortal W loan holde is finan ny time r found o from a solsheviki who among | whatever | those who ! and saved | who hay patriotism | war, the nation is} {o the good by the num- zens who have taken stock = have resc order to giv Apart fronf 1 financing manent! Though France is not to acquire the | Saar valley as her own, is to have coal therefrom for a veriod of fi vears compensation for her mines of Lens district that the Germ: completely ruined the end af the fifteen years 4 popular vote of the inhabitants is 1o be taken region. s solution while France ential ‘to " th retsoration of industrial life, not violate the prihciple of self de mina Premier Clemenceau thus done the gracious thing in yield- ing his immed claim to the valley | and the have been enabled keep their resolution that | shall be no more forcible annexations of unwiiling populations. teen fixed remains as the chi lock in the way of harmony. ve held one session after | vs no sign of was 5e- Britair | ation of 1 of | cret | the that and s fourteen peace, nor. was seeking access ition has now de- fillment of Italy's y violate poi would accord to Serbia re access to the se and t would violate the spirit of point one, | in that it would be an adherence to| the now discredited methods of secret slomacy. Therefore though Lloyd and Clemenceau in favor of offering Italy some aprom President Wilson h: set h e ik flint against making the slightest con- | cession. There the matier hangs in-| ismuch as it requires unanimous con- | sent among the big four to make| recommendations binding. i Fiume Great nunc her r Adri islands hen of Austr entenie had yet President W 1S a is for there any Jugoslavi the sea, sit veloped, claims rritors time the Lecopt n's As the the would ven which free and sec actu nt The fate of the former kaiser, though | far I impor nt than many the now before the peace con- cannot fail to hold the all whom his mad course has injured. Thetheory of sov creignty has ever been that the mon- arch represents his people and is not answerable for his acts, inasmuch they are not his own but those of his In William Hohenzollern s6 it is evident that he could never have gon on without the united German at his back. If it be argued that he deceived his people and usurped powers that were not his by right, the answer is that these acts would prop- erly fall within the jurisdiction of a German court. Great as have been his offenses against humanity, there exists no legal machinery for bringing im to justice. To create it for the occasion would savor strongly of ex- post facto proceedure, something ab- horrent to modern ideas of justic There is then little chance that W! liam will face a court on a charge, much as certain people would enjoy tearing him limb from limb. As military offender he might be brou; to trial before the courts of any nation on whose soil he has violated the laws of war. This however, is more likely to befall thoge Cerman commanders who act- ually directed the campaigns of frightfulness, leaving for the former Kaiser a fate similar to that of Napo- leon whom he so admired There is ample precedent manding the surrender of general or monarch as peace. ) Should Germany declare that isl powerless to take her. former monarch from his asylum in Holland, the Dutch would doubtless be ready o order him to move on. Ive has an unquestioned right to order from its territory any obnoxious for- eigner. From Dutch soil there are but three exits, Germany, Belgiuim dnd the sea. The last would mean surrender to the British, and t act, as in N poleon’s own case, might well be fol- o own « for de- the beaten a eondition of coftiplished has been antieipated from |necticut. lowed by lifelong exile. . ydler in deep amazement as thi$ total|it a wave around the edge with a curl {might be a little | “and one {and all the French I knew had to do ives capitalists, | L At} providing | ! to war or carried it| people | criminal | military | naton | EPISODE A LA PARIS _The young man from overseas had|sit on, when I became aware thinzs been back home long enough for his!were happening. \ iter to have reached the point where{ *“‘Wa'chu doing? 1 “besought the she had hegun to look at him with|barber. He threw soapsuds around the seeing ‘eyes. Tt is a delicate matter |room, waving his hands as he exploded to find- fauit with a bero, and she|into some sharp pointed language found the going hard istaccato style. He seemed o mean “I wish, Bobbie.” she got out at last,}what he said, and he wouldn't let me “that you'd take a little. more painglout of the chair, so he fiercely and with your logks—not that 1 mean to|delightedly proceeded in his nefarious eriticize—but' ‘there are lots of little|crime, He had shaved me. He then things—" singed my hair and then he trimmed “Huh it, and while I wasn't looking he gave | demanded the returned sol- | { tized me that | o this strange thing disrezard of all rules of What's the matter with me?” “Oh, you're perfectly wonderfull” his ter told him, enthusisaticaily. “Only when the girls come over to see you— vou know it's you instead of me they really come to call on—I think ~you spicker and spanner, you know. = Hair brushed and glossy and face scrubbed and rosy and all of And the way your eyebrows are roughed up. | turned soldier burst forth in a low moan and shuddered a little. | “Cease!” he said in anguished tones. | “Eyebrows, is it? You irred one of the saddest pages in my Fr 1 career, which I had thought forever | going 1 buried. * Eyebrows! And eyes! Oh,|leave my roll in a barber shop when| Seel there was so much else to see. How did Parisians have coin to pay butch- ers’ Dills if this was the usual cus- warfare. | ing irc This =0 hypn |T resolved to through. “After that he took a little box of salve and gently anointed my eye- Dbrows, shaping them with his finger- {tips and finally brushing them daintily linto a fine line—sort of plucked ef- i fect, like the brows you girls are wear- ing. “He stood back and regarded me with his head on one side, and a hap py thought struck him, so he pounced on another box of salve. Meanwhile I began to worry. A joke was a joke, but !what was all this sartorial attention| to cost me? 1 didn't want to all “Tell me this minute!” i sister. “Is it very awful?” tom g . ‘Horrible!” he assured her. “If you! “Then I noticed what had happened absolufely hadn't dragged it out of me|with the second box of salve—the bar- no one on this side of the water ever ber was beading my eyelashes, upper would have known ahout it. Of course,|and lower berth, beading them just some of the boys i my company found {like a chorus girl's. There was a whisk | it out, but they were just as ashamed|of rouge on each cheekbone, and I of my disgrace as I was, and catch|scrambled from the chai as he them telling! You don’t realize thejapproached me with a k. T nobility of the average man until you drew the line there, and d the find him heroically shielding you—' damage. 1t was 45 cents. I'm so exaited I can hardly stand| “I stumbled from the shop and ran cried his sister. slap bang into my captain. He took I was sayin one unbelieving look at me, threw up s in Paris on leave befor protesting hands, and, mumbling in a home,” her brother went on,|low, awed tone, fell against the near- day 1 found a nice looking|est wall. I ran down all the alleys to barber shop and . decided I|our barracks, climbed in the back way 2 shave. and got the stuff washed off before barber couldn't talk English|more than two or three fellows had scen me. [ still shiver when I think of it.” 2 “Pshaw!" said his eister disappoint- edly. “T thought something terribly exciting had happened to you.’ “Well, it was plenty while it Jasted. said the returned soldier. “Believ me!"—Exchange. ordered his most of my com- pany w ing for French veeded 1 “The with ordering rolls for breakfast and how to get to Grand Central sta- tion, &0 we ¢ it a draw when i came to razors and bay rum. I was' sort of dreaming away in the chair and thinking how different it was from mud in the trenches as something to l tury home of was utilized by an earthenware factory | I more than a centry ago; at Merzig is| a Roman cathedral of the twelfth cen-| s is the birthplace of | An old castle at Saar-| rule of the counts of Ardennes, the proprietorship of Nas-! sau, the garrisons of France, the iron| rule of Germany and now awaits the | decision of the Paris conference for its future fate. IN THE DAY’S NEWS The Saar Valley. “Ancient castles and monasteries crowded by new factories which sometimes usurp historic ab beys, wooded zzed hills dimmed Ly ' pall of-smoke.” Such is the pre- war picture of the Saar Valle tained 1 i ic_societ 2 r its precious coal deposits, Burope. this val: which now is playing s con- uous part in the pea iberations is a highly compact are vhen compared o American coal; § bulietin contin - Val long the mi old brucken saw the v STORIES OF THE WAR HOME OF GREEK REFUGEES. (Correspondenge of The Associated Press).—High tpon the hills of th bustling Macedonian city is a pic tlement where $,000 Gr amons tf , strsctiy aar rive aking from Conz ito e Moselle, five southward into the river is artificially Rhuine and Marne ca- dist e of le: than ain where xtended he 1, an air line massacres of 1914, make their homes. | Hundreds of other. Gereeks who were interned by the Bulgarians in Dobrud, during the war ave joined them re- hemselves lie about| CentlY. The houses 1 this _refugee themselves lie about| ounp ‘were constructed by the Greek| about 70 overnment. space equivalent to a| War SOme, ,rge New Yors iurnished room is produced. | 15iteq” to a family of from five ird of the an- | SHe0 ¢ he settle cientious nar the Triumvirate” { three. gre mod Premis Venizele Admiral Kountouriotis and General dungl: who, repudiating King Constanti espo d the of Allies when Germany sou y to win over recic army. Many | 1 in the beds of the | of the peo been helped by th re it carved out; American Red 1 which came | jy)ly of the United States and its peo- wines. | pla old; n the | " As the Associated \ a planted | eng was visiting ess than three cen-| carts leaded with birth of Christ heir prais- 1so men- | ns are | | rucken re miles, a to] 5 nt he | r of | Greece's been given The Qu: honor of patriots has of in Pennsylvania : in the Unit- “Th evident. e moutl valley, it is{ : Toward | o ne- | foc more th x dir rtion pselle Rhine 1le " Press corre: village, two 0x- eck refugees who the Turks from the Sea of ang t 1 he Wwhose rems 1t Cor day Macedonia by made their way slowly mountain road. The come from Dobrud Rumania, where they exile the Bulgars. wo_month all the t »m = aceful imid many The Away from ard many were hey the and Dr had 1 way aid n Red Cross and small 3 towns, Serrig, Mexz nea virtually got cam: which leadin Many food me: gh arbure TiE. from is Saar-! gion with all the field the Lorraine bord metropolis of the )0 por mined any_me Muck only N 1o five how these rnourished, loag trip by train, motor-truck and art | The faces of the: ning refugees | ore an inexpressibly sad and haras ed look. Ior five years they were driven rer and yon by Turks and Bulga 1d had never known w t | was during that time to_have ¢ and shelter. Under the Bulga were forced to live in the open or in dugouts or stables,. hours a day at hard labor under ant intimidation, was the lot of some of them. Three-fifths of a pe d of black bread a day was the pitiful re-| compense they received from the Bul- gars. Often those too weak to work wWere beaten by their ruthless masters One vefugee declared to the corr pondent that at one time there wer more than ¢ deaths a day among the! refugee colony in Dobrudja from mal- | nutrit] certain sections were forced to e largely on the of watermelons which the Bulgarian | soldiers threw in the stre The older residents of uburb” of Saloniki, most of whom | had fled from different parts of Asia| Minor during the wholesale massacres | there in 1914, have bitter experiences to | relate about their (reatment by the| Turks. Some of these people lived in| the city of Phoeis, where the whole ! i’ electors of Treves: at Serriz is, Christian population either had been a chapel where Frederick William IV | driven out or were killed by the Turks, | laid away the remains of King John|The women wept as they told about | of Bohemia_Taben has man ancicmllin- outrages of the Moslems. The| abbeys: at Mettlach 1s an eighth cen- | worst story was that told by an intel- Doctor Tells How To Strengthen Eyesight 50 Per Cent. In One Week’s Time In Many Instances Prescription You Can Have ¥Filled and Use at Home. Philadelphia, Pa—Do you wear glass- > . Ar 2 m of eye strain or| it eve weak 5?7 If so. you will| be glad to know according to Dr. Lewls there is real hope for you. Many | whose eyes re failing say th have had their eyes restored through the {principle of thi derful free pre- lon. “One man savs, affer trying Was almost blind; could not see | it all, Now I can v i n werc Y ns up the of sefore the W o; 1 the canals to | ¢ northeast | but 40 mile from Sumter of cene of the first Krench arms in of foothold the man soil. There | his son at his side, { 1 - French forces| of the army of | harles. The Ger- adroit sort of cam soldier Gniforms | the French to opposing a much n was on hand at that mil “ranco-Prussi uccess of th nd | | a h g eon 111 the unprepar on Ge zort Napoleon led n belie point When first m r force th the Emperor's son illeuse the war was on. the| retreated in few hours, | 1 Faris the victory was hailed as | smashing initial success. Later it! was learned that fewer than a hundred | men were killed on both sides. Four ays later the Germans recaptured | | Saarbrucken and proceeded toward | | Paris | “Nearly fired the | he' said the Greeks| Prussians and i this refugee ! every town v ong the Saar some historic landmark. At Sa- | arburg are the ruins of the old castie | | Free Zetting zlasses, descriptions may fited by following Here is the pres active drug store Bon-Opto tablets let in a f Eve be roubles of the simple iption 1o and get a4 bottls Drop one Bon-C urth of a_glass of w allow to dissolve. With this | bathe the eyes two to four time | You should notice your eyes | perceptibly right fro. flammation will quickly | | | and | to save them now he- late; Many Lopele ve been saved if eves in time. wo fine a to me. Atmosphere ut Wi o ned hazy fier using this pre- Fything ead fine print |« : e P anics Tt ln” sresgiin o | e eoks time T mar fetta me «nd | 57 fo Drer cngthen thets exey so as e tojiald be st e hand ‘for esilar aime ared the trouble and expense of ever swd aad cher drugginte, | oL 7 e & 0 glasses, but |seription for fifte seems clear. 1 can {without glasse thousands who 1 them in i my daughter suffered from a weaknes One box proves its extraordinary hea he Benedictines which | ligent peasant woman, who declared | that | cation i of | Americanization ion. exhaustion and exposure. In | AER DAUGHTER WAS SAVED FROK! OPERATION Mrs. Wells of Petersburg Tells How. Petersburg, Va.—*For two COHAN & HARRIS Presents The Famous Irish Singing Actor Chauncey Olcott IN GEO. M. COHAN'S SPARKLING COMEDY THE VOICE OF McCONNELL Olcott Sing George Cohan’s Latest Songs ears and pains in hes Tight side; at times she was so bad she could not do &ny work. For twe years she was at tended by the bes’ Ehysicianehere,m: oth agreed that ehe would have tc be operated on. J suggested Lydia E Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound, and at first she refusec to take it, but finally consented. From the very beginning it helped her, anc now she is entirely well, and teling everybody how much good it has donc her.”—Mrs. W. D. WELLS, 226 North Adams Street, Petersburg, Va. If every girl who suffers as Mise Wells did, or from irreg\xhrifies, painful periods, backache, sideache, dragging "down pains, inflammation or ulceratior would only give this famous root anc herp remedy a trial they would scor Gnd relief from such suffering. Hear M. PRICES:—50c, 75c, $1.00, $1.50 (War Tax Extra) SEATS NOW SELLING N\ for Not Later Than 6 P. M. Telephone Orders Must be Called nog BiG BILL OF FEATU Keith Vaudeville HARVEY, HENEY .AND GRACE ical Oddity—“On the Golf Course” THE SURPRISE NOVELTY MARTELLE A Gleaming Personality THE ZIRAS In a Series of Class; 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. For special advice women are asked t write the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. The result of forty 7ears expetience is at your service. For a Chated Skin Over 100,000 people have provea that nathiné relieves the soreness like Sykes Comfort Powder AUDIT sower. Fleshy people take notice. 3 5c at the Vinol and other drug_store The Comfort Powder Co., Boston, Mass. a butch: i in home take a shop Phocis, she ung girl who w the most attractive in town and cut ber hody into pieces. They hung the opposite her the Turks WM. DUNCAN in considered | | “MAN OF MIGHT” ORIUM 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 CONCERT ORCHESTRA POPULAR PRICES pieces on meat hooks and offered them for public sale, she said, to show the| Turks contempt Greek Christians. | What most impresses the eye of the | risitor in speaking with these un-| fortunate people s their sad, wan and furrowed faces. They h been driven about by the invading foe until hey have reached the point almost of despair and distraction. DANCING TONIGHT T. A.B. HALL HOW TG GROW EARLY CABBAGE 1 While cabbage does zh in food value emely earl. or the liome zard be sown indoo: and to the garden abou danger of frost is past quires a ri smaller ¢ teen inches and cultiv tween rows not rank very| a few plants of an; variety are desirable The seeds should | he plants reset| the time that Cabbage re and the plant of the| apart in each dire on, or thirty o be-| THE SMILE DANCE and twelve inches in the| 1om, row for hor Itivation. It is a good | erish Hall, T plan to pour tle wate nd the | THURSDAY EVENING. oots of each plant as it is being set| zarden. | re is dar ¢ cutworms 2 ville, AVRIL 24TH Band. Music by Rowland's Jazz band of stiff und the ster age will ma- seventy-days garden.—United \griculture. } onsibilities of citizenshis can be left to his loyait! will—Bridgeport Stand Ahou fan otiin Depa nent OTHER VIEW POINTS 10se surprisii ed of celebrations as di day over the me in | mer or earl convers of the Y on_ sho: to find parade who nd the In | of not be aterbury | i proposal to bave com- ime that they baseball players, | an the chief otels and a great singers, but the es W n likes his pro- contented in it. ought to be regarded as no derable part of words the pleasure sl by the cost are fall. Der: ome hard these men kee arloughs it the d very limited w. service. They ose in these plan prefer some other wtion. des Isa paid L lead s than opera not 5 was ire Dl th th like hange is P : would apprec The chie soldier and g | of them one can of enthwsiasm tell k of er to ¢ e of t home to work is to z to The cir service, t there is a over it, except their tri E the greai experience. the in_health. ter. refere quite among men of marked who have Leen th as happened. But after tt SPEEaN g of o memor: s American it in Jan not to enter into hevism at that time ndications that the Pe might recognize Len: war were straightw pon the committee. There | is no toleration in Connecticut for any | arance te bene Th Conferenc The dogs let loc of ROWLAND’S JAZZ BAND s that the soldier is | ion at Hartford the Hartford in the late sum- unéer- | {on, is t common individuality inking over all that nave o youan,anal CAS T ORIA THEATRE Today and Thursday Hale Hamilton —N—— “THAT’S GOOD” A PICTURIZATION OF RICHARD WASHBURN CHILD'S STORY PUBLISHED IN THE SATUR- DAY EVENING POS’ JUNE ELVIDGE AND A NOTABLE CAST HEAD- ED BY FRANK MAYO IN THE MORAL DEADLINE PATHE TRAVEL SERIES e r———— i | | i | | | a ¥ ard- | | =) tion with several mem- | Division who ave | not ! have e: pressed their views on general the thing which comes mos 1y to the front in conver: r ik to busi- war geport r ! topic he | promin ness, to put a and all that goes Post. thought n | with it returning the family | majority but no at deal | In rance | blood n | cheeks and in helieved yuries a_drop of her will have rosy I and u Many | Other | === n hildren C FOR FLETCHER'S | C luke warmness or hesitation on this! matter. Americanization means ed of the i 1t to the higi but it means discipline urruiy pression of the violent cither i or action. Waterbury Am That the earnest, thinking people of the country are aroused over the ne the movement in favor was evident from | the character of the attendance at the| recent hearin in Hartford over the| bill to create a State this great anufacgirers are terested. It was shown Waterbur also nd T 1 speech ne degree, of the Our 1 den problem. especially in- t one gre e el BB ek Conditions indicate an tion with its T Why? The answer is the Americ zation means_ greater efficiency Again it was impressed upon the committee conducting the he: ng that | not bullets, but teachers were required This is the idea expressed in a few words. Teach the foreign-born citizen. an interest in him. Let him price of Show know —EEP THEM DOWN iy Mr. John Held, merchant, of Salt Lake City, keeps an exact record of the shoes he wears. He writes, “Two pairs of Neolin Soles have worn for me 19 months and I am on my feet ninety per cent of the time.” This is not an extraordinary exam- ple of the money-saving service that people get from Neslin Soles. It is typical of the experience millions are having. These soles do wear a very long time and so help you keep shoe bi They are scientifically they must wear. Get Neslin-soled shoes at almost © good shoe store. Get them for yeur e family in the styles you prefer. And have these_cost-saving soles put on your worn shoes. They ire very comiortable and waterproof as well as durable. They are made by The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Com- pany, Akron, Ohio, who also make Wingfoot Heels, guaranteed to out- wear any other heels. fleolin Soles By employing the EST CCSTS PER TON NESS PRACTICES. but prices are subject to Motto: uality uantity uickness increasing firmness in the COAL Ad it therefore seems desirable to order early MOST MODERN and ECONOMICAL methods resulting in the LOW- we are enabled io gucte the LOWEST PRICES POSSIBLE in kesping with FIRST QUALITY COAL and RELIABLE BUSI Our Spring Stock and Prices ars now available, change without notice. We would like to quote on your raqu THE EDWARD CHAPPELL C0. TELEPHONE 24