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NORWICH, BULLETIN, FRIDAY. MAY 2, 1919 _w"" ¢ through the primary. There will be! conventions for presidential electors, city and county officials, and there will be a state convention for the naming HUNTING FOR A STRAY BAT The young woman in the red straw “1 think he used Euclid and trig- hat ' with the rakish ‘purple feather onemetry in his efforts to locate, the REE AUDITORIUM TODAY AND TOMVMNDD S of the state central committeesand the party platforms, the state convention to be made up of delegates named by county conventions which will inciude those who have been selected at pre- cinet primaries, though parties which have 20 per cent. of the total vote can hold caucuses instead of primaries for the selection of delegates. Nebraska thus goes in for a -mix- ture. The primary system has not come up to expectations since being put into operation and the effort has apparently been made to improve the winged demon. The longer the search went_on unsuccesstully the harder- his jaw set. He is the forceful sort who cannot endure oppositions. ‘Finally, in the little sewing room,{ he shouted that here it was. Whete- upon I banged the door shut. He called out that it was hanging way up in a corner and would I get him a broom or something. A whisk broom was handy so I edged in with that and he just looked at me despairingl: ‘Little one’ he said, his haid every Which way, and reathing hard, for he had crawled over, under and around things in his search, ‘I am not THEATRE Today and Saturday ALICE BRADY =N “THE INDESTRUCTIBLE came in waving a letter in one hand and registering mingled hope and horror in her eyes. = “Darius Black,” she cried, “is com- ing to town- ~He has written. I never thought he would—and still jafter the bat I had grounds for an- ticipation—" Z rhe~wh-wh-what?” demanded the girl who had tangled all her sweater yarn when she jumpe d up. . “And Wwho—". “You know,” insisted the girl in the| red and purple headgear, sitting down on thd iirst thing handy, which Jlorwieh Gulletin and Goufied " 123 YEARS OLD = Subserigtion price 128 & week; SUc 3 menth; $5.00 « year. b - Cntered at the Posteffice at Norwich. Comn.. a wsnd-class mattes, % Tetep @ellein Business O Bulletln ¥l WOMAN - SUFFRAGE SHOULD ad WILL, : SETTLE THIS QUESTIOR @ TUE LEGAL STIGMA OF DISGRACE SHOULD panns. orlal Tooms 35.3. Bulletin Job Office - Willimastic. OFlee 23 Church t. Teiephont 2. 103 situation and it would not be surpris- |chanceu to he a chair filled wich the | going to rush a lace hat or dust off | FE” - — == |ing as time goes along 1f legislation |outraged family ‘cat. “I told- you all|powder. I—I want something life size | WI Norwich, Friday, May 2, 1919 was adopted that would bring about a [about Darius. He was up at thelto swat him with—a real Kitchen lake last summer. He was on leave because he had been ill, and he was a perfectly deligntful young man still greater restoration of the .con- vention system though there is shown a disposition to retain the primary wherever it is found to work satis- factorily, or at least to give it a long- er trial. , iron and steel trusses and factor: }.lnmy amlL ‘Lhing‘s _Ihaé :4\’0 to £ diagrams to expiain ther:- | RRIVAE NI Rl mssa;orl of eyes l'zmi shoulders, too! Along with the sale of the govern- “It- was pertectiy ... ment owned merchant ships to pri- | him there, only he was broom. But he laughed—I've no- ticed men always like feeling superior | to us geese. But I got what he want- ed. WEMBER OF THE ASSGCIATED PRESS, The Associated exclusicely _entitlcet BESSIE BARRISCALE —IN— HEARTS ASLEEP PATHE NEWS who could easily make his living pos- ing for magaszine covers, only he is, a bridge cngineer and just eats up of N ' “ ‘Oh, d-d-don’t!’ T begged piteously, | clinging to his arm as he swung the broom. Large ,bright tears hedewed my appealing ey I-1 can’t bear to kill things. Looking very brave and stern and protecting he banged the broom VICTORY SONGS WILL BE SUNG & b % , voiv - woll-2 ae- | agains vall_and knocked the vate capital, it is to' be expeécted that |and you couldn’t get very well ac- [against the wa nd kno TONIGHT BY PROMINENT LO- « ClRCULA'"ON there l;'ill be a disposition: of - the |quainted with him. Just think! I|plaster loose—and it wasn't the bat} CAL SINGERS. o PR h ed by thi .. | never would have known him well{at all, but a brown leaf caught in a; 3 WTEK ENDINK APRIL 26th shipyards that are owned by the.8OV- | 1 yoi 1o call him Darius it a bat|spiders web in a dark corner. ] ———————— ernment. Thece plants have been{y.qn oot into our house. I found it| -1 Will not repeat what Darius said = constructed and are turning out ves- lsels at a high cost. They are being operated under a government’ policy that is expensive and the product of such yards will continue to cost more han the same thing built under la- on my pillow in the early dawn, @nd the firemen in the village almost got out the enzin~ a hosecart when hey heard -my fecble scream. I don’t care L. Y and when ! they perch on my pillow and sing in- when he pounced on the leaf, cau- tiously removing tke broom, but he so busy. reassuring me—I was g from fright—that it took th> edge from his annoyance. kofi I had to sympathize with him over his SLATER HALL y, anll si s . : TONIGHT g e oo coiins wich et awae 1227 o e 11 hisgming |t o, i, e B o] PRICES — “LADIES ONLY” MATINEE 25c, 50c. intensity - feclings. ch & s g jcan secure. In order to prevent the | ;™ is overy bne about it during{had really killed the bat, and when we M C J d - [Jarge’ saertfics that wouid Havh 1o Be | o sy ey o e e e e e it mas dinnee iss L. Jordan Nights For Everyone Over 15 Years—25c, 50c, 75¢, $1.00 {kpade on merchant vessels which have !inquired interestedly about . the be- | time, so he d when I asked him. ‘Viokiniste {been centracted for but not started jhemoth he had heard was ravaging { You get awfully well acquainted government has cancelled con- tracts for two million toms of ship- ping. There is need for more ships on our premises. I assured him it wa an awful thing. as big as a small ow - ] and with wicked gleams in’ its eyes and that 1 was a nervous wreck, so but they can be secured from Drivale | he said if it began rampaging around goncerns. a% 8 nuch lower JEure.thanland breaking any fuFnituve ‘or any- from the government yards and rather | thing to send for him and he would than pay the government figure orders {do what he could _in a necighborly { are being placed with the private con- | way. cerns where such can be done or else | “And we really slayed awake most ith a person and it was a perfeet shame Darius got his_recall the nexi day—" “But the bat—didn't you find it?” asked the b s The girk in th “Shsh! she WITH N. F. A. BOYS’ GLEE CLUB bright hat dimpled. id. “I had chased the bat out of my window early that| identical morning, but there might very easily have been another in the 8 P. M. 25 CENTS T ——r—————— ANOTHER BIG TIME KEITH HEADLINER SHANNON BANKS CO. e of the mext night at our house be- [house, you know, and I didn’t want L i .m(\\'h::f \\)reimgtch?:r\? are contract- |¢ause the bat ran air races with it- (to fxnose the family to any chances.| Ukraine which is a rich land and put IN THE NOVEL COMEDY SKIT “A FRIENDLY VISIT AT 2 A, M. i E B fontars self and we ceuldn't locate it. But what T wanted to know our people to work growing wheat for| s ing to build for foreisn buvers ati,, wiching to.lose -any tricks, mext |l wear by bluc georgette or my baro- | Russia and also for Burope. N wws NO TIME FOR LAGGING. {3140 a on and. the coat "fd”_"s‘ff“; day I phoned the Placks' coifage and |net satin dwress the first evening) =General Pavienko is in lcor}l;xman]de:é THE MORRISEYS LAWTO! S £ : ton in the government yards is froi rame OV when Darius comes out?” the Ukranian troops which have b According (o the reports that 850 | odl: tolashetta: o0 | ctulparamret | o ey cott OVer. fighting the Poles in the vicinity of ECCENTRIC ENTERTAINERS NOVELTY JUGGLER poe A ghtne 5. "l‘)m‘g‘;p'f:-‘dj"i*l“\_;"‘m;‘]‘;‘ |ciated that what was submiticd fo Lemberg. He is a small wiry Russian ring the emergen < not going to A i e . - with eyes deeply set—a courteous, quiet The Dainty Paramount Star ehihes s atarst ¢ o | - . .. |it for granted that the world will roll| L tolmteoni, guiet L"..A LE e Dainty Pal = Tl! s G d ither trom the standpoint ot patriot=| 0T oo " TROL s ls Foiy tor Gleaned irom Forcign Ex.|lf for sranted that utu : {hu cloquen: conversatonalist. "It is| et il s e Secret Garden R Tore working days Teit and vt |the Sovernment to continue to build changes Ectimates of the time required for} AN M0 C0q in a former school the total subscriptions thus far have |2t Prices for which contracts were| . um jnformed that the immediate|(he flight between Newfoundland and | yiging in Chodoroff. His task of hold- MACK SENNET COMEDY ° 3 P n > imada a year or more ago. With priv- stk i e st U SR 1.985 stauite ;o iooether and organizing the West iz, s ” of the desired amount, when it should {4, 00 i ™2t that the govern- |1and and Wales alone is estimated at]unfavor g st unfavor - does not weigh upon him e, (et el over the Ralf Way | ment should recognize the importance { aPProximately 300,400 - Fo_meet this | cenditions, have been prepared by tho . JUST ONE LAUGH AFTER ANOTHER . - kes it quite evident that the |OF, BeLng Ot of the business for the [need, the same dftiring enersy. and | i PSP ORC% PR, O (il Dlo 8 Hegi ,‘g,“fiisff’\;qi’;l\‘g‘i,?“~-‘";2:4 S % edies et S E o b ke of preventing the extra expense |enthusiasm will be required as th: titorz. sumed the Genmeral. “This was long!8 Three Shows Daily 2:15, 6:45, 8:45 4 Shows Sat, 1:30, 3:15, 6:15, 8:15 16 gens, e o »?'““ © T | which must of necescity fall upon the | which enabled the country to meet t fcllow ne table shows rhe @i | pefore the Allies thought of doing so| qu tremendous effort during the people. demand for munitions of war. 4 nachine with | yat b is the ir i = £hsk ive Javs in order to fedch ]‘,hfl Certainly if foreign buyers can get| "It is not merely ‘houses that arc 00 milos per hou=. M1¥- | {hat the Allies call us Polshey ote 1o tena for virenne e, oAk lanips onstructed: Hereat a dog= g |ageded: - Thesnew sHonaes Smust’ be v U drect nadle e SWESLILo) I4ThnG niopletof yus there is need for everyope to.do his |, ."tyore 1o-no reason whys Américan _\Zocq l‘v_‘nu'.m' g e in the months indicated — for a time a touch of the Bel ) p in lénding® to ' the government j, . B e at securing 10 the { orginary conditions 21., di but they now are cured of it} ; A buyers should - not get the¢ same |working clas: their . homes _the = g 1 hat the nation's obligationd may be | p T e T T Ringes on the | norns clas iniehapes Most unfavorable..... 23-.. 28 they are essentially small farmers | . » Eice Ehopiy hiugee comfort, le shiness and peace | oot ungavorable. ... 1415 16 . ana property owners. 1 speak ot Tol- |} Saturday Eveping, May 3, 1919, at PULASKI HALL It . % government getting out of the busi- | which we associate with the g i ince it must be| e 1] ’ ’ can be appreciated what the sit- & f = B Letters from hostesses who have | shevism as a d gEcoi e 4 % ness there ought to be no question as|word ‘home. < . 5 zarded that like the influ-} MuUsIC BY would have heen had the bhoys % e “The sites of the houses must be|received Colonial and American sold- | regarded in that s T on the batflefield lagged when they |0 What should be done. Private ini- ciretally chosen’ and laid out. the|iers into their homes. en It presents Li a]ururuv.g pro- D yere called upon for inereased efforts, | tative should be given the chance it }} o ceq thomeelves. properly pianned | You csuld not have sent D O Y Ropd tor e THE TANGO BAN Thstead of ‘Hecoming weaker -as the |15 Waiting for. and equipped; and T would ask you not ?giel-_m"sh ;\;:\fl}“h&’htfu Rroe e 1 FIRST APPEARANCE OF THIS BAND AT THIS HALL went along they grow manifestly RS E S ECE to overlook the supreme importance | Cnteris T “ h 1lies visit us in an open- ‘ N <tronger. They responded to overy | SETTLING JAPAN'S CLAIMS. |of the plannimg and equipment of |Cverything. Iam e EoiE\E thoy s en) R HEAR THAT ORIGINAL JAZZ—CLARINET AND MOANING thieg ; ; y = 73 Sk P R uats {0 the tworest who il in | 20od homes, and it is a pleasure to.ug led s DUTEHy thay SAXOPHONE call and gave everything they had. Tn| What the full details are regarding 2 ce them a bit of life I toosdre iighng Bolsh 5 3 ! A S the m,and whose convenience' should | t0 give them a bit of heme Jife here.” | o, o "2 o8 0 in this DANCING 8:30 URNTIL MIDNIGHT appreciation of that serviee which |the scttlement of the claims made by | {1 efore be 2 prime considsration.” “You only sent us one,” says an-|W e obdlly rand. alED ithERATeIeR bt # - they performed and the sacrifice of a |Japan at the peace conference will o other letter. “I am- prepared for three | ";‘m“"n‘“"“ s il bo ablc 18 Fe. Special Attraction—FRED 8. WALSH—The lIrish Nigrtingale hundred thousand lives, to say noth- |probably not be made known for some ; “The other day | was present at alat a time—don't forget!” fake Greater Ukraine from Moscow | g NO WAR TAX S 35¢ I8E of Dé Tanlined and infssades Az Bhat. it 18 dectived Ty has | test at one of the ground station These extracts ‘were given by an]take Greater Ukrain o o GENTS 50c i < a njured-and the |days. hat it is declare e han i orte anl Glicial who: dttended el he Y. M. C. A, Hospitali which is bent upon holding all the, hhdships which they went threugh, [been an adjustment makes it evident s al L el e i sl il { monstration connected with the Folk | territory that previously wa tHp people of this country should be League for Ove s Soldiers, that some agreement has been entered oldier: who e B s e Ik S0 A would not advise invas Rus- | r & Rt A At et willing to do their bit in meeting the |into so that it will not be necessary \suox‘}'tfié“;i‘;.;pffin ]tarx‘—”:xlm:n\x?bs{ n- 2"”’?“"(’;215?,23:;‘ ].;‘n:‘“z\‘:;::};m v Tou|sia by a G j{waz were uncertain;and confused, iave] s ) - ‘C“ fio s aaniney countrsy’s needs financially. It is ask- [to hold up the presentation of the |ceuvering in respotise to our direct-|guosts for about a weck of the hemgelyngwhers Iilu menun a1 been re eds of| during the yinter' mor ing very little of those at home in |peace treaty to Germany, and it at the |ions, and then, switching over from jleave in England before they embs d\q\;‘r" (r""*“(‘;l;‘l;r“_itg "m "»;.,(7‘ 2 vears and it The small-growing summiar comparison with what was asked and [same time points out that the danger |‘sand’ to ‘reciev distinctly heard | for their o land. About 1,000 Br! e (06 Tastern Galibin 18 ndw call| mine to es are be adapted to 1 ghven by those who went to Europe. [of Japan withdrawing from the con- |eVery word of a vetse from Kipling.” |ish homes in all ar» nceded for this|ed) as there are relatively few iand refuse verage garden. v We are asked to give up nothing ex- |ference, whether there was any real p;:?uC:Il“&e_:n‘;:}tb;f;]'\;“;&a:h‘;?\‘“}i’::l nurpofn:_ur;lm the end of June; and th Tereantiic. hever s e - P P p i % Se 1S % m! 3 s are in the 2 : = cept what will be involved in saving [danger of it or not, has been over- |joss telephony under tést conditions on | quesr. The league alreads b “We have been blamed for the bom- | rp Lon U A ; : tq4 meet the loan subscrintions. Fotne ) . the Folkestone-Cologne seryice. Along |list aout 500 families which are ready | pardment of Lemberg it 1s true, but we same (SUSpIGion—-{hat P 1t we should respond with increas. | It is not improbable that the actual | the routc a chain of call stations isito receive She boys Who helped to Wwin | poro e orer e orF 3t I8 Ut hot an oy Tetisne 4o sla—aldo ing willingness the same as did the |Settlement has been delayed for future fbeing installed, and the machines are |the war and who are . thousands of | festrorne ihe R " tones | entertained about the Poles. hilts " in_ , sum; hoys who went over the top there |COnsideration, or that it has been left | being fitted both with sending and re- |miles from their own homes; they[and the railw The Poles | SR et ey | grown :.vlfwl\gn ull would be no question about the suc. |{OF the league of nations to wrestle |ceiving sets. . __{peed 500 more. As Yhe .result of an|iere seizing it as a military post and { HOW TO GROW Sk B, % il it céss of this last loan. And that is |With The statement has been made |- Clear voice signals are plready trans- |article published in its columns some | we were compelled to firc on it but, fa Loing TARdE: what we should do and do cheerfully | that Japan has mot intended to hold | 273t WY SAo6, K0T Plane to sround jmonths e e e L e SQUABHES: Plant eight or ten seeds when it is realized that it is not an |Kiau Chau permanently, that it has 3" vet However, fhe possible. range | or i sro o erine, ke 00 nomes | that the Poles are us Two distinct types of squashes are|and thin to not m outright gift but simply a loan which |Promised to return it to China and in ' js quite indefinite and is goverened by |and’ the league are hopinz that commonly grown in home gardens—|plants. The seeds shou will bring an attractive return. The |thiS connection one of the Japanese |the powers of the sets employed. b a0 e i nse Our soldiers. | the summer squas) fruits of | planted until 2l danger of frost is smail subscriptions arc needed as well | epresentatives takes pride un declar- | Many stories are being told of the |made. 5 of war, AL ille & R D as the big ones. ing that Japan has never broken its |demobbed soldier who finds it difficult| An official of the league poi again to fight because the y|and tender and the fall and winter | Agriculture X promise. to doff with his uniform the discipline {on Saturday that nearly 30,000 over- ants and ordinary people ! THE BOMB PLOT. By the capture of Kiau Chau it is |and habits of Army life. seas soldiers have already passed _have regurded the Poles! £ to be realized that Japan toek pos. | Last evening there was a crash at a{through British homes, and Ik ic oppressors. The yhole | @ From the way in which it was done, sion of territory held by Germany |PAFrier in one of the big railway cases have weven permanent i an people now is engaged in af inasmuch no other had appeared at e 4 & ~ {tions, caused by a soldier obstructing |tween the Mother Couniry and the | fia n _indépendence. Th(‘f‘l W8 time, there was a disposition o under an agreement that Germany {the entrance. A di pute had arisen | Dominions.—The London Chronicle. he defeated by the Poles and by GUARANTEED regard the sending of the infernal ma. f::;xjd :;:};2-:26:1‘:0_1— athlong! terx-mJot bpl!?_'npn the li(ike (-eng‘);u;r and the H’m“‘m niolu but they prefer death p 5 Banaith A vears. r it is the plan for Ja- |soldier as to the availability of the , - subr B . f;’,:::gm“ PR3 "";1‘0““ \‘}i“;;’c‘:,‘:."';m;; pan (o maintain occupancy for the un- |latter’s ticket. A -young Tellow and STORIES OF THE WAR inerilutsin Sieine Snempe ELECTR!C MASSAGE VIBRATOR dgainst him, but later developments | SXPired term is not disclosed. If such Just wait o moment s | GENERAL PAVALENKO Do oo ettt i il have wn that such was not the |should be the case there can be little iend; “I'll examine that SUGGESTS ALLIED HELP | Then it asked Lenine (Premier of the $5 00 cage. He was only one of many who |difference frora the standpoint of And he was going to do| (Correspondence of The | Russian Soviet government) for per- . had been picked out for serious in- |China except that it would undoubt- |so until quietly- reminded by | jury or death through a well organ- Szed and dastardly scheme to get rid of leading men and authorities in all sections of the country. Too much credit cannot .be given that New York postal clerk who from the account of the Hardwick affair quickly recognized the fact that @ 'Whole bundle of such bombs iwas awalting despatch through the mails ind took immediate stens not only to prevent such action but set in motion an, early investigation for the purpose Of. warning the country and getting the authorities busy on the trail of the Wotld-be acsassins I is impossible to tell as vet what organization may be responsible for fie attempted murders. The very method indicates anarchistic tenden- cfes and must to a certain extent give e -authorities some inkling as to witere the responsibility is likely B Those who have practiced ppeached such doctrine are known apd it is not believed that it will be laag before some moveg will be made o land the guilty ones and deal with thém in the manner which their con- duet calls for. Such a menace hay- ing been revealéd there can be no de- lay in dealing with it. Perhaps a pol- icy of tolerance and leniency has been manifested too long already, but cer- tainly with such disclosures being made it is time to deal with the sit- uation in a manner befitting the cffffie, an or , ABANDONING PRIMARIES. The primary system has not worked ont.as well ‘as it was exnected to in meEmy sections of the country. It was ofty a shert time ‘ago that Idaho did awdy with the method of selecting candidates for office by the primary. It is-now followed by Nebraska, although this latter state has not made such a clean cut of it as did Idaho for in- stedd of doing away with the primary entirely it has abolished it in the se- lection of candidates for certain offices and retained it for others. Aecording to action which has just been taken all nominations in that state will he made by the convention system, after this year, except for gowernor, cangressmen, judges. school superintendents and members of the egiglature. These will be - named # edly’ mean the development of that part of China as a Japanese: colony rather than a German colony. But what the agreement is, if it has been temporarily or permanently reached, there can no question but what German interest in the far east has been abolished and henceforth it will be a matter between Japan and China, wherein the rights of China should and doubtless will be properly guarded. ! EDITORIAL NOTES. Have you bought these netes that will entitle you to wear the Victory buttons? Not what might be called real bang up weather for the opening of the moving season. There is a great opportunity mow for May to lend some real encourage- ment to the home gardening army. The man on the corner says: It all depends upon what you mean when you say that the peach crop is a fail- ure. Now that a new league has been ap- proved all the fans will be eager to make a study of the batting and field- | ing averages. here talk. of submitting the Adriatic case to arbitration, but from the attitude Ttaly is displaying there isn't anything to arbitrate. With a luxury tax. being placed up- on the drinks at the soda fountains, it can be expected that the water wagon will be charging increased fares. We have already begun to see how diligently the ‘general assembly can work when it gets down to business during the week before final adjourn- ment. ' Now that there is a reduction re- port in the price of corn and pork it is possible that the democrat: will point to the fuifilment of the promise made some years ago. Governor Holcomb hasn't changed his mind on the commercialization of Sunday and it is not a small part of Connecticut that will applaud him for it even though the veto is overridden. Postmaster General Burleson wants congress when it meets to Iook eut for the financial needs of the wire lines, | b i that he had ceased to be-a “red cap.”i Victory s to be celebrated in the publishing world by edition of the Bible. The v have many an interesting j There will be a central celumn NCes Spe- cially designed to commemorate Peace, and pages of hand-made paper upon which may be recorded a family rool of honor, and a like, record for friends or colleagues once in khaki. Printed in Clarendon type, the vol- me will come from the Pre s that long-famed mame he work the question in the House of Lords as to the exact type of memorial to be erected on the graves of British sold- 1 iers in France and Flanders. Con- siderable difference of opinion appears to_exisit. o The matter was frequently discussed by the troops during the fighting on the Western front. One suggestion that was well supported was that a certain proportion of the captured guns should be melted down and cast into crosses or placques for war ceme } teries. This plan automatically solves the preblem of what to do with the trophies which increasing numbers of towns and villages refusc to accept. When Sir David Beatty was invited, at Liverpool last week, in a sporting atmosphere,. to say what he thought; the odds were against Jutland proving to be the last naval tattle in history, he replaied, “A thovsand to -one against.” Other ‘mdmirals whose Jjudgment was subsequently invited put the odds even higher. Now we have Sir Douglas Haig incidentally observ- ing in his dispatch, ly be assumed that in all future wai the flanks of the opposing forces will rest on neutral States or’ impassable obstacles.” Whatever statesmen and people m believe about the war that was to end war, comb2tant experts svidently take CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use ForOver 30 Years Always bears the or in other words te make good the harm that has been done’ them while under govetnment contrél. Signature of i berg o Press)—General Paveluno, com m he West Ukraini: that the entente allies ians to fight the bolsheviki and that they also settle the dispute between | the Ukraine and Poland over the Lem- fields. “It would not be hard to ¢ bolshevik invaders of the Ukraine if| the Allies helpe to organize our| resources and 0 if the Allies settle the Lemberg oil field dispute, thus iree- ing the West Ukrainian army so that 1t migkht join forces with the army of General Grekow in Greater Ukraine, said Gener: ed Press correspondent. “I think th would be in the interest of the Allies We would thus check the Bolshevik in- | vik the eat the vasion of Europe, restore order in the i ional spirit and hopes which before the plete | been padsky efugee Now invade: After suggesting that the Allles aid | inians to fight the Bolsheviki, vilenko added: “Whether the | te to Russian in- bly will be deter-| i mined by what becomes of the Bolshi- ! ion to become one of the federated states ndependence. defeated par it 1 Pavienko to the Associat- | Ukraine will gravi: fluence again po government. tly However, our of Russia; but Lenine rejected plan. ow we want separation and com- Our efforts lo\\'ardJ this end for the past 18 months have by German oc- cupation and partly be General Sh to whom rallied the Rus: army officers is the Bolshe nd land-owners, who are the 42 an THE NORWICH ELECTRIC CO. FRANKLIN STREET nat- | Constipated Children Gladly Take “California Syrup of Figs” Fer the Liver and Bowels Tell your druggist you want genuiné ®California Syrup of Figs.” Full dire ctions and dose for babies and children of all ages who are constipated, bilious, feverish, tongue- coated, or full of cold, are plainly printed on the bottle. Look for the mame ‘“Cglifornia” and accept no other “Fig Syrup. tor, W The Bulletin Building, Garden Tools Planet, Jr., Combination Plow, Cultiva- Hoe and Seeder Manure Forks $1.00 up Spading Forks Cultivators Hoes, Etc., Etc. ATER GLASS Auto ScrubBrush ................ 15¢c Sink Brush and Rubber Scupper. .. 10c Household 74 Franklin Sireet one 531-4