Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
dlorwich Bulletin and Qnufigi 123 YEARS OLD Sobsaription pries 126 8 work; 5% 3 menth ® year. ‘Fatered at the Postoffice weend-ciass matier. Telephone Call:. Bulletln Business Offics 480, Bulletin kditoslal al Norwich, Conn., 2s Itooms 35.3. Ballein I Ofice 35-2. Telephons /103, + Wiliimaate Office 23 Church . Norwich, Tuesday, M.y 13, 1919 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Aswciated Press {s excluslrely entitiet to the use for republication of all news Gespaich: ® eredlted 10 it or pot cthermise credlied in shis paper a0d also e locai mews published Eeret; ATl righta of republication of special despaich- o heeialars also reserred. CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING MAY 10th. The re of the industrial board hs and it is only what was to be expected in view of the po- | &ition that has General Hines 1t been taken by Director the railroad admin- a case where one a5 opposed by another. s they were unable to get together and reach an agreement on| a i o s While th i - i i Le Mans, taken and occupied by the what should be done it was quite nat-| While the c".lf,re‘,-.mu"“-.{, is “}“‘:}"’; Gerthnti. ELOSy - Betord it atmtetics | ural that one should throw up the mg_ O\FF‘ the magni .v,‘cm. ll'.. orE.\E‘ ‘“1 which ended the Franco-German war sponge and that is what the indus-|has been made to the Liberty loans,| signed in 1871, today is the busy, trial board done, rezardless of the |1d some may be regretting the fact|pustling embarkation center for home- | P . that there will be ward bound American troops,” says a fact that it is made up of some of the T = : prominent business men of the coun- sl T try, and while they considered at the price fixing which they had agreed up- on would result in isting the con- 1 o = v to anlas a bond calls for, it should not be!, raflroad administration was unwilling | S2Ving8 stamps which turnish the op- Y he ARBUIA T poveried. thas portunity for the little fellows to not He took the position thai the big buy- | °MIY_continue to lend their assistance er should et a more favorable quo.|Put to Eet a sound investment with a| tatle BH the he had |Sovernment guarantee, the responstbility ond sys-| Considerably over a billion has been | iy on his sncwla that " ne|Taised in this manrer to aid in reduc- | ol it abgtove and to abide|inE the expenses of the war. Not all| by figures that were I than he|Who have bought them ave been | e et in thate Mk those who could not buy bonds, for ev- | B teimains to b s what ef. |Cryone has been indulging in thrift | fect this is going to have upon the in-|3Rd war savings stamps. The chil- dustries which it was expected would dren as well as their elders have been $eifielped by the price Mo GAL " pennics and putting them DHOMINE 1o the- aftedt Aat. tha nk: they will draw compound inter- torney general has declared that such|®St The lessons of thrift that have action would have heen taken without the necessary legal authority and in violation of the anti-trust law i ates tha 1 of the railroa ministr been by as well as other conditions, but with Mr. Peek atiributing the whole matter | o partisan politics it looks like « mud- | ile which is going to react along with >ther things upon the administration. | | A FINANCIAL PROGRAMME. It is remembered that at the last| session of congre it was insisted | hat the revenue bill include the pro- | vision for the raising of four hilion | 10 v the succeeding congress That of course was intended io see that tha financial policy of that con-| sress wus continued into the next re- ! zardless of who might be in cos m‘} o what the conditions were. | 1t is interosting in this connection to |, not¢ that Senator Penrose has pro- posed a financial programme in whic 1o urges the repeal of the luxury taxes 51 of a bud em, viduals, penditure ers b q legitima anted for price fixing | and oth s of interference with ! bugine s can be question but what A programme will make S ap- has been more unpopulir the | ] e name un f‘l'l 80 or who they hit, and at is re nized that the been in it may | hat will | hat can be’ex- | The weatherman is not doing very {much to help ul(mL; the straw hat b v b will not require many NORWICH, BULLETIN, TmY; HAY 13, 1918 bia and Greece, while the Turkish em- pire will hardly be recognized after its wings have been clipped. Turkey of course has already lost -much but it will be obliged to give up more, while the allies are duty bound to take care of the interests of Greece as the| changes dre being made. - The changes'that are coming will be in keeping' with thé great’war. They will make a different. Europe and it is to be sineerely hoped that the plans for future peace will not go awry. P B A B, N STUDYING: GERMAN. It is to be expceted that the gov- ernor of Pennsylvaniy: will, if he hasn’t already, receive considerable | criticiem beeause of -the yeto which he has applied. to the bill -which. would prevent the teaching of German in the public schools of thdt state, but the indications are tbat this legislation would have proved much more radi- cal than most people had any idea. There has naturally been a grow- ing opposition to all things German, land in this connection there has been a widespread movement for the elimi- | nation of the German language be- cause of the opportunities that were | ] | permitted therein .to carry, German| rropaganda - and present —German idcals to the exclusion and- distortion |of American. There have been many {places in this country where the whole { instruction given to the pupils was in | the German language. It was consid- {ered nec to overcome this sit- 1 uation by legislative action. It was this among other thi that gave a to the Amerieanizafion. efforts being so extensively carried ut in connection therewith it can be the thought that the teach-| ¢ the German language should be completely eliminated and forbidden, ‘\u that pupils in the high schools or the colleges could not learn German if they so desired. . Yet that is what the| stanq you to say you never were in Penns law would have done,|love with him he with you?” and that is what the governor by his| “I don’t know,” confessed the Jady, | veto has undertaken to prevent. with a worried frown. “It depends on} Our clementary hools shouid | Whether T am looking at the affai by all means teach English. That from now or from then. Things look gy e S DA ? i so differently.” ishould be required, but ‘regard-| “Oh, yes” agreed her husband with s of what we know about and think bout the Germans it is only right it after the children get a common school education in English and want to study the German language along with other languages they should have that right, though there are reasons to believe t such study will be les: popular in the future than it has been in the past. STILL A CHANCE TO LOAN. i in the way h‘dl they ind others may be deplori inability to make such an in been taught are not tirely that the Zoing to be en- forgotten and it is to be realized | p that is given to this means s go- i he reduction of taxa- tion by t much. And in this case as with the bonds it is not a gift but simply a loan which will he re-| turned with interest in a few years. | Thus 3 the government is| desirous of rec istance in nn.i manner the 2 willingnes be » shoul on part of the people to provide ind through the systematic method of putting money aside make provision for a rainy day EDITORIAL NOTES. The m: An on the corner the 1 the mortal r inspiration ; in rmany’s dele] s apparently like the thought that their country | thought(ully. | descend to see them?” | of the last hope of retaking Paris. Gen. jvircled the town with led Le “Dear me!” suud the attractive lady of 40, meditatively. “I wish he wasn't coming., T don't believe I like the idea at all. “Well, what's the matter now?” ask-| ed her husband in astohishment, “Ever since he phoned you, you have been going around with you head in the clouds, giggling to yourself and burst- ing' out that you were just crazy to see Tommy again. If I were some husbands—why, I even insisted _you ask him out to dinner.” “Beswick,” the good-looking lndv ot. 40 told him, shaking her head at him 4vou don’t understand at all. it is perfectly awful for a woman to have to face a man whom she knew twenty years ago and hasn't seen him since. In the first place, I know just exactly how it it will be. Tommy will blunder in trustfully ex-} pecting to see a slight wisp of a girl in white muslin and biue ribbons, with a baby face and a homegrown com- plexion, weight 162 pounds; or else! he’ll be the experienced sort who willl o clasp my hands fervently, gaze deep! into my blinking ecyes and get off v.hati remark about knowing me anywhere and that T haven't changed a particle. 1 don’t know which ould bg worst! “The last time 1 met a man who gave me that sort of soothing sirup, T said, ‘See here, Herbert, I know vyou back in 1812, and you know it, so behave! How is your rheumatism and where do vou buy vour wigs? And a! pretiy girl heard me, and he hasn't! forgiven me yet. “T am ve nervous about Toemmy for in the first place, how can I cailf a man ‘Tommy’ who owns the mint, or the next thing to it, and who is ac- customed to having leading financiers chewing their knuckles nervously in| his anteroom waiting for him to fin-| ish looking out the window and con- ‘Audidacy may enrapture him,” her hushand. “Go ahead! said Did I under-| some cautious interest. “Things do. That ‘explains your nervousness—" “I'm not in the least nervous,” cried| his wife indignantly. “The idea! Nev-| vous over a boy I played tennis with and quarreled with and went, to picnic parties with—only he isnt’ that now, and that's the trouble. And I don't care, A DELICATE REUNION Beswick Hurtle, if you had a tender heart and a sympathetic comprehen- sion, as a real husband ought to have, you'd rfeel for me in thy dilemma in- stead of sitting there llke a frozen| image. And you'd know that, no mat- ter if a woman wasn't in love with a man ages ago, she’s just as anxious to look—er—nice and just the same as she did when he—er—thought she was nice. So there!” “Who says you don’t 160k nice?” de- manded her husband beligerently. “I have semething to say to anybady who claimed there was a better looking wo- man your age to be found—" His wife gave a despairing shriek. “That’s just it!” she wailed. “T don’'t want at all to be a good looking woman of my age, especiahy Wwith Tommy coming to see me. If men weren't such geese—but, vou see, he'll never stop to consider that I've been growing up and onward all these years. And T can't stand seeing that Ilittié flicker of bewilderment in his cyes when we first meet. If it {sn't that he'll go to the other extreme and expect me to be wearing cruches and tottering about supported anxiously by my grand- child. o little “Whatever it is, he won't use any sense—anr he'll blame me for it. He'll be indignant at me forever more for shattering his memory of me—" “Well, by heck,” satd her husband. polishing his glasses vigorously. “I'd like to see this man you're €0 wrought up over. You must have had a ter- rible case on his. Why didn't you tell me about him before?” “You are utterly insane!” said his zood looking wife. “I am surprised at you, if you were a woman you would understand perfectly. How would you like to appear as a vision be- fore some of the airy little damsels ¥ou hung s “If impressed and filled with admirstion. I'd have veu know I've kept my figure. I'l bet this Tommy of vours has a regul ¢ window by this time, and in his hair, and ten gold crow: tn his mouth—" “Beswick!” gasped his wife in re- lieved joy. “Do you supose He's got fat? And bald? I shouldn’t be a bit surprised if he had—of sourse he has! Oh, T don't care a bt now about his seeing me. Why, T was thinking of him just as he looked then.” “Well, if women dor’'t beat tion!” said her husband. N crea- IN THE DAY’S NEWS Le Mans. “French his tory often has been made at Le Mans. Jt was there the valiant General Chahzy made the last stand| st Prince Frederick Charles in and his defeat marked the passing Chanzy, memorialized b Le Mans, made the hi: a statue in oric comment, when he heard that Paris had capitul- ated, ‘We have still France,’ a remark which lives in French history along- side the Verdun slogan ‘They shall not v'a century earlier Le Mans ed the final defeat of the Vend- , those counter revolutionists who adhered to the Royalists not so much yalty as through ignorance at the Revolution meant: just ns outside of Petrograd little of the sxgnh’lm‘» of Ule v\ellhro“ of the Tsar while K through loy l)f w. The Dc.,\samfi of L( \A.\xN like tno i of Vendee, declined to serve army of the new-born Re; did not oppose the new govarnment but they recalled that the royalist army had been made up of adventures, pro- fligates and ne'er-do-wells, and they did not consider army barracks a pro- per plac for Chr eat, a remnant | put up their last fight were and defea ermann. L uu\l \he the second century the Romans walls, T St. Julia Mans and became its § of them remain. hop. Le Mans lnx"n\ \\Pll be kn).\ as a been bo- Among r varyiug periods William _the Conquvor, Pl must in the fut Good will be taken see that when the German in inv care of gn the | le ink. reaty it is not done | s e { rma Of course G y will find plenty to ask guestions about in the treaty but that will not me ny change in the provisic There t sho planty statement t Foch will retu a few day nificance |fl: effect that | to the front| eneral Now it i willing to surrender the to the all The rid of a liability former k: Dutch want to Jupiter Fluvius is taking the reservoirs are properly care of in paration for the nd opening of the prohibition sca- ) 1 ected th to wipe ou on. The anfl the o bel but e 66th cong in- ends to meet the problems it faces | in & manner that will prove more sat-|gq lstactory MORE TERMS TO COME Much has been 1 to thould be done in connection with wing up o terms hose countries tha Germa 1 the w tourse that Germa lorce but they and they have | sition to do has directed. led and now r dose that is taught in bad comp: thown no particular di ytherwise than Germany Chey proved to be easil lhey must take the bitt: tnown to be in preparation for them, tnd it is evident, excent for the in- lemnity exacted, that they will have o pay quite as hea While German lerritorial chang n comparison wi laries of the oth tions. The dual nonarchy has disappeared. Austria vill be only a shadow of its former elf. Italy, Czechoslovakia and lavia will receive fmportant parts ts territory, while Hungary will co ribute to the inc ng of the size of tumania and Poiand. Bulgaria from he part that it played will doubtless ndergo certain will be slight changed boun- | for ice days once he gets headed in the r rection. who are | peace 3 have no | Germany inflicted | ipon the world. been telling about the many things that northern Canada | can produce but there is no question| but what it could find a ready ma on. Stefansson ha this g Just bec: use the fightin; ped, the peace terms have been de- livered and the Liberty loans are over it does not mean that the campaigns has stop- | for money are at ait end. Prices have been forced of | sight these days, but whe use of these price 18 luxu: and ut cul 4 tax because of it, it is pressing ty hard on the little fellows. pret- When China instructs its delegates not to sign, it is possible that they would follow Italy's action and return home if the distance wasn't so great and the chances so good that it would e obliged to undergo boundary banges where it joins Rumania, Ser- all be over before they could get back. {A course | | the | prior 'Machine nd King John, W r-de-Lion was cru Destowed u beautiful w is . (eucen Ber 1 the founded n- by the This made cf ‘rance. The otre Dame noteit « h oof La Cou 4 two other “Le Mans }s on : Taris to Brest the Huitne Rive No larger than Bayoune, N. J., s 1t was v for a from h, tanning, and bemp-spinninig tlour-nilling, of ma and manutacture ing n.aterial, STORIES OF THE WAR Administering Relief Through Ant-| werp. (Correspondence of the Associated | Y L TP appears to be y throug! ough the a process of resurrection, tonnage *handled since port was reopened more than three months ago represents that which would ordinarily come through this port in one week during the d to the war. Ships now come straggling in, and along the seven- mile waterfront the winch h('.xrd aking here and there, and the in some of the great sheds is unpretentious an rice and ago pork, and there ar iing and manufactured “which, however, is | | it h nerican Commission of Re- lief in Belgium had seventeen steam- Franklin Providence, R. 1. Telephones: Union 963 Company Union 1857 Engineers Founders Machinists Manufacturers of HARRIS-COR- LISS ENGINES. - Brown. Valve Gear applied to all makes of Cor- liss Engines, Engine Repairs, Shafting, Hangers, Pulleys, Bear. ings, Couplings, Clutches. Large stock always on hand. General Mill Repairs, Special machinery of all kinds. - {on one word ships in port early in April and the American base for supplying the American Army of Occuptaion in Ger- many was unloading five others. Shipping men are anxiously await- | ing the opening of the American base at Continch, about two miles outside of Antwerp on the Malines road. Bar- racks are being erected at Contich for the accommodation of 20,000 soldiers at a, time. This is expected to inject a little more life into Antwerp port. The grounds picked out for the Amer- ican base is a vast plain, dry and well irrigated, and the doughboys will find living and sanitary condition: there much better than in other bases which have achieved greater prestige. The American have taken over some of the piers where North German Lloyd steamships formerly docked. The early work was arduous, as the piers were encumbered with gravel im- ported from Holland by the Germans, ostensibly to repair roads, but actu- ally to build reinforced concrete shel- ters, dugouts and trenches. One hun- dred thousand cubic yards of the gravel had to be removed before the piers could be used. It is estimated the Germans had enough gravel there to repair Belgian roads for fifty years. Fifteen thousand longshorcmen and stevedores are idle here and the only solution shipping men find when questioned as to how the situation can be remedied may be summed up “Ameri What Convinced Bulgaria of German Treachery. (Correspondence of Presgs.)—The {reaty of Bucharest be- tween Rumania and the Central P ers, which terminated Rumania’s par- ticipation in the war, was the grave of the alliance between Bulgaria, Ger- many and Austria, declares Andrew Liaptcheff, Bulgarian minister of war. Under the terms of this treaty Bulga- ria was compelled to surrender to er part of the valley of the Ma- river in Thrace. Th events dissolutionized the and other Bulgarians, jaccording to M. Liaptcheff. Reviewing to The Associated Press vinced Bulgaria that Germany was = false, the minister said: ormer King Ferdinand was con- ed of the military supremacy of many, but his government refused give troops for other fronts than e of the Balkans, and, in spite of h pressure from the Germans, it re- fused to sever relations with the Unit- | against who aimed to conquer eco- the country, disenchanted in her plan of supremacy n to Bagdad with Bulgari: sary connecting.link. There- any assumed a very dis- nd cool attitude toward that in the Buchar- peace treaty of 1913 Bulgaria was v il Instead of getting new acquisitions she was to surrender her old ones by giving up to Turkey the southern valley of the lower Marit- red clearly ¢ of Germany and the people saw anger which threazened their po- litical and economic freedom. The formal breach was only a question of $time.” M. “The resuit was Liaptcheff asserted that Bulga- + box. Insist on getting the Bayer pack- 5| = Chlcago: The Associated | “FAKE” ASPIRIN. WAS TALCUM Always Ask for Genuine “‘Bayer Tablets of Aspirin”’ In Bayer Package BY ‘SPECIAL With FRANK WILLIAM DUNCAN: REX BEACH Presents a Pn-wu She of His o Comedy _;.inu:i:u fl “TOO FAT TO FIGHT” Frank Mcintyre—Well Known in Vaudeville and Broadway Afforded One of the Funniest MOBH.MI of His Career The Author Succeeds Admirably in Making His Hero Do and That the Conventional ero Never Does. This Rex Beach Story Publ lished in the Jai uary Issus of the CONTRACT M:INTYRE i ] Say Thinge ety KINOGRAM LATEST NEWS FILM “In_Latest Episode of N OF MIGHT" DAVIS THEATRE d ALL THIS WEEK " MIKE SACKS Marcus Musical Comedy Co. In the Smart Revue De Luxe —OH BABY— A Score and a Half Betwitching Maids, C Stunning, Tantaliz- aig Lassies Gowned and Costumed With Lavish Disregard for Money. Fashion’s Wonder Show. Beware of counterfeits! Only re- cently a Brooklyn manufacturer was: sent to the penitentiary for flooding the country with talcum powder tab- }els which he claimed to be Aspir- n. Don’t buy Aspirin Tabiets in a pill age with the safety bhoth pa kd"e and other w: You must “Bayer Cross” on on tablets. No say “Bayer.” Never ask merely Aspirin tablets. The name “Bayer” means you are getting the genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” proven safe by millions of people. In the Bayer package are proper di- rections and the dose for Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Rheu- matism Lumbago, Sciatica, Colds, Grippe, Influenzal-Colds, Neuralgia and pain generally. “Bayer Tablets of Asplnn" Ameri- can made and owned, are sold in vest pocket boxes of 12 tablets, which cost only a few cents, also in bottles of 1100—also capaules. Aspirin _is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacturer of Moneaceticacidester of Salicyli 25¢ get disgusted with the set that is in and take the chances with a new set. City government is a business en- terprise and to be run economically should be run as a business is. We make it a political affair on a partisan basis, and as long as we do so, tear- ing up Hillside avenue a year after it was finished, to lay water mains that could have been laid just as well a year ago, is only a natural conse- quence. Occassionally we get a bus- inesslike government, but that doesn’t suit us any better than the unbus- inesslike one does, and so we change it. No administration is in office long enough to have much of a past or much of a future, o as to co-ordinate last year with next vyear or paving with water pipin, Sometime it will be different, course —Waterbury American. Mayor Ole Janson of Seattle is in New Yok and later on will be theh._ guest of tne Naional Association of! Marvafaciurers, a1 whose meetings he will speak. Evidently the occasion will not only cerve to show what a drawing card he is, but it wili give thé East a chunce to ook Mayor Hanson over and see whether he is of the stuff to u €t Lp or noew — Waterbury Americ It is mterestmg 10 compare the op- erating revenue with the operating| costs between the years of private own- ' ership and Govenrment direction. Op- erating revenue for the average first quarter for three years was $821,000 Iria could have “cancelled the partial success of the entene offensive” in the Balkans which terminated Bulgaria's | participation in the war if Bulgaria had been aiming at military success instead of political results. He said that Bulgaria at that time was chiefly concerned, not in stopping the entente advance, but in severing herself from the military grip of her “former al- lies.” The minister complained that, al- though Bulgaria had helped to trans- port the entente armies through her territory and supplied them with food even after they had passed into Serbia and Rumania, the services of Bulgaria were forgotten after the collapse of Turkey, Austria-Hungary and Ger- many. According to the armistice, he asserted, Bulgaria was to administer Dobrudja but twomonths later Bulga- ria was asked to evacuate that prov- of ince and “it had to be done in the most[000. For the first guarter of 1918 it| pitiable circumstances.” mounted up to $1,125,000,000, or more! The war minister concluded by say-|than £300,000,00¢ Operating expenses ing that the entrance of the United|were :nm, for the first period as| States into the war ‘had this specialjccmpared with $1.81,000,000 under) {meaning for the Bulgarian people— ient ownership, or almost' that it decided to conquer itself. Firm-|double. And mind you, for inferior, 1y convinced of the sublime aim of the{and curtuiied service. There is an elo- United States which seeks to impose|auen: leszon in these figuve Bridge- jupon the nations a new method . of solving conflicts,” he declared “the Bulgarian people and army whole- heartedly accepted and made their own the principles proclaimed by America because all Bulgarians believe that the just cause of their race shall triumph and the small peoplé see itself united at last.” ine Patk Board has set 23 thar 5 elms on the Green will attract the attention of New FHa- ven to the new trees to see whether it will be possible for the city to resume once more that appearance which leng, long ago gave it the sobriquet of the Elm City. Here are the next generation of the elms, perhaps destined to suc- ceed to the patriarcns which yielded to old age and the elm tree beetle, perhaps destined once more to form the arch above Temple Street which only 30 years ago was without a peer in the country. Perhaps the newest elms will grow up to escape the blight, perhaps the steady demolition of ¢ne elni through- | out the city has resulted in the elimi-| nation of the breeding nlaces for the larvae, perhaps the advances in the| science of tree-growing will be such that the department will be able to combat the beetle should it return. It is a hopeful outlook. It is an ex- periment which everyone who is in- terested in New Haven should and will follow with close attention. It is only in the last two decades that the central green has lost its historic appearance because of the removat of the elms, Nothing but the passage of time, of | course,_ can replace the glants of the other @ays, but may success attend the exneriments now begun.—New Haven Register. i % i OTHER VIEW POINTS The raise in pay which started with the chief justice of the supreme court bt errors continued all along the line to the messengers of the courts includ- ing stenographers, and took in execu- tives in various departments at the capitel. If there was anyone who sought a salary increase and failed to get it it would be distinctly worth while to have the ineividual pointed out. He would be daistinctly a rara avis.—Hartford Post. ‘When you buy of a mail order house, vou vay the high cost of transporta- tion of an individuut article by e press: when you buy of a local store, - merely a trifling fraction of! cely low freight charge.—Merl- den Journal. The tearing up of the ne sive Hillside avenue pavement, to ) water pipes, it exasperating. But we must put the blame in the right p]:u‘&% —on ourselves and the system of city government we tfol e We need at the head of things a ense and foresight. so secure] in his place that he can have no higher interest than to give good govern- ment and not concerned in protecting i expen- [ Prisoners Killed Dogs and Cats. The six hundrcd German interned in cation | Holdsworti dney, recently j killed all the dw"& nd ca it the compound in an attempt to compel the camp commandant to rescind an ord- er temporarily stopping their supply civilians camp at does counts in 3 for himself and his party. Instead of this we choose men to run municipal business for the number of votes they t. point exscutive s THOMAS H. INCE'S GREAT SPECIAL ArrucflOfl Mldmght Pml; A PJCTURE OF A THOUS, THRILLS, AND EVERY A SENSATION FULL OF CITING” AND ~ SENSATI SCENES. - IN THE .14'm CHAPTER QF"j TheLightning Raider “PM ON MY WAY” - HAROLD LLOYD COMEDY. . PATHE NEWS SLATER HALL TUESDAY, MAY 13, !’l‘ At8P. M. UNDER AUSPICES OF LOCAL COLLEGE CLUB s Connecticut College Girls WILL GIVE THEIR MUSICAL cou EDY, “HALT, CECELIA." Tickets may be secured of any mem- ber of the College Club or at va Ston'’s. DANCE—Tonight \ TOOKER HALL, Uncasville MUSIC BY ROWLAND’S JAZZ BAND of food and water. Thd German: either ate the Australian pets or pre- tended 15 have done so. _\nym they raised the heads of tie anlf ; on e 4nd confinem: 1wonus for the compoun rike to compel g the two ‘men ani whea us off their food and water they kill- ed the comp reic. Nine df the ring- ie uicrs were wriested and the dem. 4 'on ended when half ra‘inas were’ ued. Lots of men try to imagine 3 have poor health and the only thiag: the matter with them is laziness. ¢ THORNDYRE 2% REWPTOR 2% payment of votes or to win the votes The ult is a .or charge of public wo ably chiefly the power of their party, themselves in office. = This group is changed as frequently as as the voters brought Teliver. Skin diseases,_~¢ qmckly yleld ® Resi 1f your doctor said to use Resi- nol Ointment for that skin-trouble you'd try it without a second thought! Well, Zzousands of doc- tors throughout the country are prescribing Resinol Ointment to heal sick skins, and have been doing so constantly {orover fwenty years. So why not take the come s no THE NORWICH We can fit you for a bined advice of all these wise med- ical men and Jet Resinol Ointment make yoxr skin weil ? It usually stops itching at once, makes sleep possible, and speedily heals the eruption. Reginol Ointment is an excellent heating ing, too, for burns, scalds, tats and stabborn Yittle sorss. Sold I Resinol Soup clears poor comp! every day count. BUSINESS Thayer Building, ELECTRIC RADIATORS 42 FRANKLIN STREET Business Training Pays Our courses are thorough and practicafl- Arrange your enrcllment now. Make' JEWETT BUSINESS SCHOOL OFFICE, ROOM 308 ELECTRIC CO. high-class position._ Norwich, Conn.