Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 21, 1919, Page 4

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1798, - 1019 Giorwich Gulletin und Qoufied 123 YEARS OLD " sumeristion price 120 & » Pntered 4t the Postoffice st Norwich, Comn., ar wecnd-class mater, Telephane Calls. Baltorlal Reoms 85.3. Bulletin Jsb Offfes 33-2. Willimastie Offies 23 Chburen St Telephone 105. week; Sue 8 month; $8.00 E—————— Norwich. Wednesday, May 21, 1919 WMEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, titlert news teh- lue credited in thls paper and also the local mews pul Berein. Al rights of republication of special despatch- s berein are also reserved. The Assoeisted Presi Is exclusively ent to the use for republication of all s credited 4 it or not otherw! CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING MAY 17th HAWKER'S FLIGHT. Though the indications point very strongly against the possibility of Harry Hawker, the intrepid Austral- fan flier, and Lieutenant Commander Grieve, who set out for Ireland from Newfoundland in the Seopwith ma- chine, ever being heard from again, it is to be sincerely hoped that such will not be the case. The N.C.-3 turn~ ed up after it had,almost been given up for lost but the possibilities of such in the case of Hawker's machine do not exist for there is nothing to keep his machine afloat. He was not with- out certain devices for safety, but it is a question how long they would be serviceable in midcgean and off of the steamship routes. Hawker's attempt, though he had a faster machine and carried less weight, wag for a much longer dis- tance and almost without safeguards. It was by far a much more perilous journey than that of the American naval aviators. Theé huge seaplanes with several times the power of the FEnglish machine were equipped to take care of themselves in case it be- came necessary to alight on the wa- ter. The cou selected was the shorter and safer and the route was patrolled by warships for the purpose of guidance or rescue in case the lat- ter was necessary. In view of the first attempt it was the logical thing to observe such precautions, but Hawker has always becn a fearless flier and ¢ daring has been his conduct in the air that ho was prevented from part pating in work 1t (he frent daring war. Instead of reduacing the rish the minimui, 25 w1 the cise wirk the Americans, Hawker braved all dangers. 1t was a case with the odds against him and where he must sue- ceed or stand excellent chances of los- ing his life and from the present in- dications a double sficrifice has been made, regrettable it is, thougn nothing definite is et known, EXCLUSION OF BERGER. Vietor as Perhaps prised at the lowe opening day when he refused represent the district from which was will Berger was sur- the action that was taken in the house of congress on of the special was clecteq, not t must undergo a thorough vestigation by an election which will go over the facts in the case and make its report later dur- ing which time it is possible that the appeéal which he has taken will be passed upon by tiie higher court. in- “committee At the present time Berger stands convicted after a {uli and fair trial o* disloyal acts duriiy the period this © enznged in war. mmitted in divect special laws that E to cove such conduct and h which he was fully cogn ran Berger has been elected to congress the socialists, but it is not a matter of his politics, but his standing as a citizen that prevents him from being seated. It would be a pretty situation to al- Jow a man who has been found guil- ty of dislovalty and sentenced to p son, even though ho has appealed his ase, 10 participate in the making of new laws or the unmaking of pres- ent laws for the rest of the people of he United States, and patticularly so when he has actually defied the very aws that were considered necessary to preperly protect the nation against the activity of those who were play- ing into the hands of and giving en- couragement to the enemy. The right action has been taken in his case and unless his appeal is de- vided in his favor there is no chance of his becoming a member of the 66th songress. Those who cannot abide by laws should not be lawmakers, BUILDING OPERATIONS. From all sections of the country there are coming reports relative to the activity that is being manifested in the problem of meeting housing conditions. Construction of all kinds has been almost at a standstill for two or more vears and the result is that the effects of this stagnation are now being felt in the lack of heuses. The normal growth in this direction h een retarded so that there is a scarcity of homes and rents though the population has continued to increase. With conditions normal there would be no hesitancy whatever in speeding up operations so as to quickly over- come this condition, but conditions are far from normal and the dispo- sition is to wait until pre-war condi- tions return. There is an inclina- tion to withhold orders to builders until the expense connected with sueh operations declines, otherwise it suitable | NURWICH, BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 21, T919 is figured that it will be impossible to get a proper return from such in- vestments a few years hence. It is a serious question to know how tohan- dle just at the present time with ma- terial and labor where they are. Sl = It is to be noted, however, that the |, WhY CiSs¥ what kind of uniforms L do you mean?” asked the -fluffy problem is being tackled to sume ex- {looking girl in the pink ruffled blouse. tent in most every community based “I don’t care what kind, something on the nced which exists and the|becoming of course. The main statements made to the effect that | thing that they should be uni- there is little or o prospect of any |forms and have some kind of—em- % 5 . blem on ’em to show what you do. appreciable decline in prices for some | pp"tireq of having people think I tinte to come. Now attention is being | Gon't amount to anything at all just given to the best way of meetingipecause I'm not a yeowoman or a building needs and of building new jnurse or a Red Cros said. I work houses. Wheré ‘first cla¥s rents have |awfully hard keeping house for my long been lacking there appears to|father but people think I'm a ‘para- be an opportunity for pushing build- |Site and lead an aimless existence ing activity under existing conditions |JUSt because I'm not labeled. i P Yesterday I went to a club meet- and making good in the long run, bul |52 354 there were some girls there while much construction work will bé& undertiken it is certain that it is far below what would otherwise be in_ gray uniforms and everybody looked at them and smiled approving- started were conditions more favor- able than they are. ly and a stout lady nearly knocked me over trying to get a better look. Now, if I had been wearing a uni- e S L ST | form—I dare say 1 work as hard a[s those girls do and don't have as much SETTLING W ITH e SERNWANY, fun out of it, eithe! 1 think there Germany will not have to spend as]ought to be a special uhiform for much time looking over the &ill pre- | efficient. housekeepers, a neat blue sented by this country as it will scru-|and white effect with crossed spoons tinizing those sent in by the entente|for emblems. Married ones could nations, for all that, Uncle Sam is ask- | have some distinguishing mark with ing is that the lasses that have been |PINE OF blue stripes for. children. sustained as the result of the way it carried on the war be replaced. It wijl not be required to spend as much time thinking about where it is going to get the gmoney. 10 meet the United States’ bill as it will those of other countries for the billion dollars, more or less, i that will be required to adjust the de- mands of this country are in all pro- THE QUESTIONS “l wish women had to wear uni- forms, all women,” declared the girl who was pouring tea “And housekepers aren't onet Think of school instance. Of course. know that after they have taught a number of years vou can tell that they are teachers without having them label- ed, but just the same I think they ought to be as a mark of honor. There's my cousin Grace. She works the only teachers for 1 » awfully hard, and doesn't make much | hability under this nation’s control to- }money. Now if she could wear a day. simple, inexpensive uniform it would When the suggestion was made and ;be lots more economic: f_ur her agreed to that the ‘various -countries|and everybody would =a, hShM a should take in ‘part’payment of their |teacher we won't charge the poor thing much for her dentistry or her doctor’s bills or her 4lothes’ ‘And_girls who work in offices should be dressed in_ something neat. with an especially busineslike coif- claims the German vessels that were seized in their harbors it gave this country a chance to gather in a hun- dred million or so of the bill in the shape of valuable cargo and passenger OF UNIFORMS fure. Think what a blessing it would be to have georgette waists and too claborate Bair climinated from of- fices, “Society girls, if there any such animals left” nowada could wear fluffy things but they'd he sort of ashamed to, you know, and it probably would result in their doing something useful. Of course I sup- pose some of the nice old fashioned mothers would not want to wear very tailored uniforms especially f ones, but there could be some suit-} abje costume designed for them. And if housemaids and cooks were com- pelled by law to wear awfully at- tractive white caps and things I'm sure lots more women would be will- ing to return to domestic service. “Can’t you see how silly it is_ for some women to be labeled and others not? Nurses and people in the ser- vice of the country, and widows who; wear weeds, and actresses with Maty | Pickford curls are all so unmistak- ably ez to identify why should T, a sober, industrious housekeeper go throuugh life being a_lazy, good-for-nothing so- girl just because I have no right gnia of any description. It} are | the fat} i By taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s | taken for a but-: THIS WOMAN SAVED FROM AN OPERATION, Vegetable Compound, One | of Thousands of SuchCases. Black River Falls, Wis.—**As Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetsble Compound —, 52ved me from an operati ere organictroublesand my side hurt me so l{ 1 could hardlybe uj | from my bed, and was unable todom housework. isn't fai “Well.” caid the girl with the: fluffy ruffles. “I think it would ! make a lot of tusion. You know | perfectiy well, ( that women | W cease to pick professions by whether they were suitable or no all they'd think about would be whether or not the uniform was be- | coming. uniforms were more attractive than the married women’ people cease to marr It would be a very difficult proposition.” “H'm!” sniffed Cissy. “I kn what's the matter with you; yeu j hate to think of giving up ruffles. “Of course T do. Ruffles are the best insignia for me to wear: they show the sort of person If you want to go around in ham and crossed spoons you and then you'll long for ruffle: cago News. ow st ships to the number of about 90. That property is of more value to the coun- try in that sliape than it would be in dollars. It gives us the chance to add materially to. our merchant marine and ships are just what we need for the future as much as we did during the war. Those ships are a valuable acquisition and though efforts are be- ing made to have the agreement changed it is not likely that it will succeed. Such represents only a purt of the claim of this country, but it is to be remembered that this government holds many hundreds of millions of doflars worth of Germarn property and securities in this country, either in the shape of investments or cash so that there need be little worry but what our demands w! be met in full, with the possibility that there will be some that will have to be turned to Ger- many's credit against other cla CUTTING UP TURKEY. Théugh Turkey pas fiot as yet re- ceived the terms of peace to which STORIES OF THE WAR Events Surrounding Serbian Ultima- tum. (Correspondence of the Associated Press)—The events surrounding the drafting and despatching of the Aus- trian ultimatum to Serbia which in- augurated the world war are given their first amplification in the forth- coming publication of the war recol- lections of Conrad von Hoetzendorf, the former Austro-Hungarian Field Marshal. The advanced proofs of the volume a significant parallel to General Luden- Catastrophe” indicate that it will prove which is entitled “The Road to the dorff’s memories because of its drama- tic and intimate revelations of Austro- Hungarian diplomacy and war polic- ies and because of the candor with which it discausses Imperor Chparles, the co-operation of the Germak and Austro-Hungarian general staff, the relations of the former Emperor Iran- eis Joseph and the German Emperor "Willlam, the social and political in- triguing to the Austrian Empress Zita and the whole hierarchy grandduk it will be expected to submit, it cannot N;\}}:kwfi:m‘fulj}for ‘:::lr‘i;gsml?;stlf&r(: fail to appreciate what must be ex- fcrrrwriy = cor'tsponflov1l BFl ihe pected by the move that has already been made by the allied nations in taking possession of Smyrna and turning it over to the countrol of Greece as mandatyry. It is another step toward the end of the Turkish empire even as the defeat of the Turks by General Allenby was the be- ginning. Cologne Gazette, who for two years was assigned in a personal capacity to Marshal von Hoetzendorf's headquart- ers. Nowak reported the war on all the eastern fronts and while his name nominally appears on the title page, the volume is known to be von Hoet- zéndoef's authorized and personally re- vised recollections. Discussing the events immediately That the allies are in agreement as | following the assasination of Arr-h»l to the action that is to be taken in re- jduke Frederick at Sarajevo, No k gard to the dismemberment of Turkey |states ihat few, if any people knew the plans of Count von Berchtold, then Austro-Hungarian Ioreign Minister. | Not even the high military officials| were informed nor was it known whe- ther he was communicating with Be lin, according to the writer. “Indignation in political and diplo- | matic rcles ran high as a result of | the murder,” reads the memoris tary leader quoted von Moltk ‘we know the catastrophe is evidenced by the fact that all were représented in the naval demonstra- tion kit Smyrna, the Asiatic Turkish port that is largely Greek in popula- tion. But thal port is not all that Turkey must give up. Turkey has <hown itself uniit to govern other people. This has not recently come to light for it has beerd known for many years, but the time is ripe for taking action that will curtail its power and henceforth there are reasons to be- lieve that Turkey will be restricted to a small section of Asia Minor and posztbly jose what litfle it now has in Europe including Constantinople, Time will te€ll what the exactions are going to be in that respect but it is already being pointed out that s, come 1 some day; the sooner the better for| Y This was the sftuation Marshal von | Hoetzendorf found on his return from | a feigned holiday in the Tyrol where| he went after the killing of the Arch- duke at Sarajevo, in order to create the impression that the situation w not menacing to the peace of Burope difierent fhan actually nndertaking the responsibil There can be no ques- tion but what I'urlkey is facing tie next thing to disappearaince but that doesn’t mean that this country wa any part in the guidance of any sec- tion of that empire. the deliberations consulted the Gen- eral in purely military matter: Hi. opinion was sought only in connection with the military prospects. The dip- lomatic situation was not. mentioned nor was any reference made ecither to the Serbian ultimatum or to any other itimatum. Von Hoetzendorf frankly analyzed every possible hostile constellation :mr!l did not conseal his conviction that the | Austro-Hungarian monarchy was un- equal to the demands of war on three ts. He referred to similar views ¢ expressed in the preceding n he had pointed out exactly such complications and en- tered upon minute consideration of — jevery emergency growing out of a pos- Farmers thoroughly understand that | €ible interns 1al clash. they cannot méasure their cider by the “Count Von Berchtold asked EDITORIAL NOTES. With the Greeks placed in charg2 of Smyrna, Turkey will have to look around for a new door mat. The man on the cormer says: Ev-| erything seems to be geing up except the steps on the trolley cars. number of blossoms on the apple irees. | Whether the prospecis for the LR et archy would improve in the c It is not to be forgotten that you|Of the next few vears. Von loe: can-still help the country and your-|dort spake ,flm‘:.l\‘:lga:ci?x“ 0‘.':()1“\:1)')‘ i i i arins |10 huge arma credits and the seif by investing ‘i war Savings|oo.s with whieh stiér nations were slamps. ‘. arming, He declared that he would PR es ~ | Re { be guilty of lying if he said the chances | It is pretty near a week late but|or the monarchy later on would | the straw Mats are gradually making|more auspicious. On the contrary, their appearance long with a happy | believed they were hound o grow countenarice, - inclination to grant war credits and | What a wonderful -peace conference |the growing nationaiistic¥propaganda.| N i e e e : n 1 mili xper solely was able to get everythinig it wanted |y reply to the Minister's demand. | and asked for! Count Von Berchiold sought no furth- er information and the conference dis- banded. There are several things about the transatlantic flights that are not e “For a decisive conference on the| pected to make that method of cre ultimatum the ministers were sum- ing the ocean popular right away. moned tiree days later to Count Von Berchtold’s residence. ¢l Emperor Fran- Government sugar to the value of Joseph was not present but Count $80,000 has been. stolen and ¢hose|Tisza the Hunggrian Premier HeEgen. withe the rihartisires von Stuergh, the Austrian jehd ithothe “theftfarrested. But |y, ghal von Hoetzendorf, Min what canning operations was the gov- ernment getting réudy for? Qs eexpaiin’and were present. one naval Count von expert Berchtold again conducted the deliberations. Two It is quite a novelty for congress to receive a message from a president who is mot even in the country, but particularly so when he has alwaysin- sisted upon delivering it personally. It seems to be pretty clearly demon- strated that there is an added degrec of safety in a séaplane which is not to be found in an ordinary flying ma- chine when making flights over water. ministerial officials were called aseist in the techni the note. Von Berchtold read the ul- timatum: Nobody objected. Count Ttsza alone wavored for a moment. The complictions which might threat- en to affect the national problems of Hungary made him appear il at ease, but he too finally gave his consent. “The note contained ‘severities. It was plain to cveryone that the mon- archy would insist its representatives be permitted to attend the Belgrade investigation (of the rajevo mur- in to alities of drafting You would probably give as much to the Salvation Army in the course of a year as you are asked to now. Then why not have it over with and let tue Army put its work on a higher basis of efficiency? S: der( because suspicion was very pro- nounced that not only Premier Pac- hitch but the royal house of Serbia was implicated in the assasination. “That the note should receive drastic formulation was to be expected in view | Novgorod domination e | worse in the face of the prevalent dis- |\ of the prevailing attitude that the mon- archy thus was broadly challenged could not do otherwise than demand complete satisfaction and a guarantee that Serbian machinations should stop for good. . “The conference then proceeded to give the ultimatum its final textual formulation. The diplomats present discussed this phase thoroughly be- fore two exper rendered into the French language. The sold- iers present had no part in the deci- siop. The final official version was once more read aloud and the confer- ence promptly adjourned.” Nowak describes the scene Schoenbrunn, (Imperial palace) short- ly after the conference as follows The old Emperor never for a moment lost seif-control. He now was fully aware that the monarchy had been un- dermined and that its fate was in the balance. He asked von Hoetzendor{ concerning the state of mobilization and whether everything was in order. The Chief of Staff reasstrred the aged monarch. Without outward sign of emoticn, rancis Joseph, in the pres- he Foreign Minister signed the in the According to Nowak, he believed that the men in the Ballhausplatz actually expected the IBelgrade government would succumb to the Austro-Hungar- ian bluff or that if it resisted, the is. sue would be decided by a swift mil tary campaign which would ried out with such speed complish localization of the war and prevent other Kuropean powers from intervening. i THE DAY’S NEWS EKATERINBURG. Ekaterinburg, the east R n city to which the Kolchak government, set up at beria, is reported to be moy its headquarters, is des- cribed in a_bulletin from the Wash- ington, D. C. headquarters of the N tional Geographic Societ, The bulle- tin, after calling attention to the fact that this city also figured in recent history as the rep d s of "the imprisor and of the Romanoifs, continue katerinburg, geographically, is well adapted to be a gateway through which the Siberian government seeks to spread its influence and oppose Bolshevism in European it the most important city mountains, lying abou ik, sout in the in 310 y t the city of Perm and the mile Nowak describes the episode of the ul go\‘ornmenL_ of that desired that the United States act as|timatum to Serbia as follows: -thirds of the I‘erm>l the mandatory for Constantinople as|_“The minisiers were summoned to|! “Eh ‘lj“l,“(“d. ‘ir“‘:fh“‘ o of Armenia, and there are sections |Ballhausplats (Foreign Office). e moc\:f b ;”»'rjhr“r‘}n'vm, passe here Great Britain, TFrance and |Hoetzendorf, then chief of the general|the sreat S an highway. e and | % avas hurriedly recalled f “Tvan IIL sent Gérman spies imto Greece will be in control. The desire |po)g) where he was on leave granted |what he regarded as a Promised Land . this country act s mandatory in|phim after the Sarajevo assasination.|of natural resources, and ttaf part of the world is ' de*idedly)Count von Berchtoid who conducted brought back favorable task of developing one of the richest mining regions in the one-time cm- % me Ivan IIT laid the founda- tussia’s material progress in 's. He summoned an archi- tet from Venice who was commissioned not owly to build palaces and churches, but to make big bells, cannons, ‘to fire off the said cannons, and to make every sort of castings very His name was Murcli, but small wen der that he was nick-named Aristotle. or these protean services he received ten roubles a menth. early the eleventh century Novogorod be o axact tribute from ct and to send settlers cunningly. as But when Ivan III, four cen- i later, reached out from Moscow o Novogorod, deported a thousand of he wealthy families, d sent Mos- their places, ; released from “But the develop of the mine region of the east L n with Peter the CGreat, duri ¢ time Ekaterinburg, the Scranton of the “rals, was founded. It was as slow in many of Pe 'S re- g root. In contra to periments now launched before Lenine's breakfast in Russia it is interesting to recall the storm of pro- 1 Ask for “Bayer Tablets package—marked with ““Bayer Cross.” v Aspirin tablets in a pill box. t on getting the Bayer pack- age with the safety “Bayer Cross” on both package and on tablets. Ne other You must say “Bayer.” for merely Aspirin tablets. The name “Bayer” means you are getting the genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” vroven safe by millions of people. Beware of counterfeits! Only re- cently a Brooklyn manufacturer was sent to the penitentiary for flooding the country with talcum powder tablets, which he claimed to be Aspirin. Never ask . i not need the o 1 suppose if the office girls’; Would | prs, Binzer that has made this famous the note} y lapidary works were engaged in cut- ting and polishing malachite, marble, WHEN BUYING ASPIRIN ALWAYS SAY “BAYER” the best doctors in Eau Claire and they wanted me to have an operation, but Lydia E. Pinkham’s und cured me so I did tion, end I am tellin; all my friends about it.”’—Mrs. A. BINZER, Black River Falls, Wis. 1t is just such experiences as that of | Vegetable Compo | root and herb remedy 2 household word | from ocean to ocean. Any woman whe ! suffers from inflammation, uleeration, | displacements, backache, nervousnes: | irregularities or ‘‘the blues’” shot not rest until she has given it a trial, d for special advice write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn. P e = test against the census instituted by ! Peter, because it was a ‘profane num- { bering of the people’; or against the change in the calendar, assailed as an effort to destroy ‘the years of Our Lord,’ and of that frekish, if harmless.' edict requiring beards to be shaved off,! which was regarded as an insidious heme to disfigure the ‘image of God' $0 Christ would not recognize His owni at the Judgment Day. ‘Peter named the city for his wife, later the Tsaritza Catherine I, that strange figure in Russia’s bizzarre his- [tory who was daughter of a yoeman, ifoster-child of a humble pastor, wife of a Swedish dragoon, sold after being taken prisoner of war to a Russian prince who fancied her, paramour o Peter the Great until the birth of a child impelled him to acknowliedge her| |as his wife, to crown her empress con- sort. and to clezt the way for her suc- cession to the throne, No queen of produest birth ever did i (or would have wished to) adorn her- {self as did erstwhile Martha Skovron-| sky at the coronation ceremonies. Her {crown bore more than 2,500 gems, with! {a walnut size ruby sustaining a be-| {jewelled cross. “when Pcter took her to Berlin the daughicr of Emperor Frederick Wil- iliam, father of Irederick the Great,i © in a volume preserved as her | {memoirs, that the empress appeared 110 be low born, and that she wore so {many decorations that her dress rat- i tled The Paris verdict of her re- I mains unknown because Peter left her ch sought a free Rather he seem-! the refinements there is saving, ‘I'm a soldier; | a little bread and {ed denry {and is quoted as | i beer sfy me. ke Cleopatra, , and other| royal courtesans, C was far| ifrom beautiful; positively homely, from ! |most accounts. But when she dsr‘ond-i ed the threne her common sense re-| deem her illiterac; Her gflm~lud€‘ni {erown, and the luxury and power it Istood for, did not turn her head, while! {other head-dresses tell the story of h idevotion to her husband and of loyal [to her people. When she accompanied |Peter in the Caspian campaign made the supreme sacrifice (for Greenwich village days) of ‘bobbing’| her hair, and wearing a close-fitting fur » to protéct her from the sun.i She 0 set a fashion of wearing the cocked hat of the army. ! “The former Russian government maintained an important mining school, chemical lat ory and gold; assay office at Kkaterinburg. Imperial | porphyry and jasper and the govern- ment mint for copper coins was locat- ed there. “The also was important in- dustrially nd commercially. Paper, s s, and machinery were'g It had flour mills and trade was in cereals,| sillk goods, iron and cattle.” OTHER VIEW POINTS It will not surprise us if some' people, who keer ppreciate the’ importance of ntaining local au-| tonomy, question that it was not the province of the' state board of education to ask thel attorney general for an opinion on he right of town and echool di jtricts to establish homes for teach-! Towns have their own attor-| interpret the statutes for; | them arc_not beholden to the attorney general for legal opin- jons, If it can be maintained that the question raised was entirely local and one which cach town should decide for itself, it may well be doubted that the state board of education had a right to_interfere in the matter, f {1t is recalled that when Gov. Hol-| comb was attorney general the offi- Icials of towns thruout the state cul- tivated the habit of asking him ques-| tions relating to the laws governing; their towns and which in noway came within hi. swer. He an- | stions but in- ¢ officials that not given in his capa- general but as a pi He assumed the self-| task of straightening out| proviice 10 a local qu attornes ttorn ate impressed of Aspirin’ in a Bayer In the Bayer package are proper di- rections and the dose for Headache, Toothache, Earache, Necuralgia, Rheu- matism, Lumbago, Seiatica, Colds.‘ Grippe, Influenzal-Colds, Neuritis and pain generally. % “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin,” &meri- can made and owned, are sold in vest pi et boxes of 12 tablets, which cost only a few ceits, also in bottles of 24 and hottles of 100—also capsules. irin is the trade mark of ‘Bayer l KEITH. VAUDEVILLE MATINEE 2:16 EVENING 6:45 and 8:45 ANV] THEATPR TEMPLE QUARTET Four Brothers of Mirth, Music and Harmony R ) = A5 i i3t J. F. SULLIVAN CO. I RYAN & O'NEIL Eccentric _Comedy Offering Songs_and Darices De Luxe Thomas H. Ince’s Special Feature Photoplay HENRY ‘3. WALTHALL in “FALSE FACES” A Powerful and Thrilling_Dramatic Production in Six Parts, RSN L rk BURTON HOLMES TRAVELOGUE | LYONS and MORAN GOMEDY The_Land of the_Mopi¢s __Chicken_a-la_King COMPLETE CHANGE OF PROGRAM TOMORROW. AUDITORIUM Now Playing FUN — MUSIC — GIRLS JACK CORBETT AND HIS DREAM GIRLS COMPANY Extra—Feature—Extra “WHEN A WOMA! S 2 Big Melodramatic Sensation KINOGRAM World’s Visual News Reel WHEN HUSBANDS FLIRT GOOD CHRISTIE COMEDY i —— BreeD Today and Thursday Viola Dana —IN— False Evidence Adapted From the bancuu Novel “Madelon” By Mary E. Wilkins. e e s JUNE ELVIDGE i The Love Defender The Story of a Young Married Couple Told in an Extremely En- tertaining and Interesting Manner. FORD EDUCATIONAL WEEKLY DANCING TONIGHT T.A.B.HALL ROWLAND'S JAZZ BAND | i | . | local difficulties for town officials and they had the advantage of obtaining legal opinions without cost to their towns. It almost became a popular Impression among local officials that Judge Holcomb was the general attor- ney for the state and not the attorney general. On the whole it will he more sat-| isfactory if the question on which the attorney general is asked for an opin- tonfi is essentially state-wide in its scope. We do not say that the opin- on on teachers’ homes was in response to a question that was local and noth- ing more, but many may think that its application was circumscribed by local limits—Hartferd Times. Chapter 186 on Dogs, occupying seven pages in the revised statutes| of Connccticut, seemed when it was passed twelve vears ago like a mighty builders or building as well get out of their minds is that investors may effective instrument for the reduction|if they wait a year there will bega radi- of the number of the state’s worthless cal reductions in building cé: per- canines. They said when it was pass- haps to the pre-war level. Thélle will ed that it would greatly encourage|mever be a return to pre-war prices eep raising. The answer to that isjand perhaps no important reduction hat, after a dozen vears of it, our|in prices at all in many lines of ma- of -domestic animals aterials. The principal portion of the vear to secure se or a lovomotive:js the passage of law which should actuallyjmoney p wages to the men who diminish the sheen killing dog to the build it and this includes the men who extent of encouraging the weuld be cut the lumber or dig the ore.as well «iee, rasig darmer . The friends as the machinists and carpenters, the of the dog have proved more numer-{men who run the freight trains: the ous, or af least more effectual than and motor trucks the transport the the friends of the sheep industry, materials as well as the painter who We have a new law( so-called, but it'simply put on the finishing touches. won't be worth the white paper space The wages of these men have gone up tasi-rva— Pristol Press, inot to come down again.—Waterbury One thing the prospective home- Republican. The Bass-Clef Club SLATER HALL FRIDAY, MAY 23d Soleist — Edgar Schofield, Baritone TICKETS ON SALE AT CRANSTON'S. Electric Table Lamps AN ENTIRELY NEW LINE OF STYLISH READING LAMPS SUITABLE FOR The June Bride The Norwich Electric Co.- 42 FRANKLIN STREET Train For Business Life Don’t be a putter-off. Remember that good intentions without action spell dis- aster. Enroll in our new classes and fit yourself for worth-while service. Day and Night Sessions. Afternoon Sessions and Saturday Afterncon Classes. Shortband_ Typewriting Bookkeeping Jewett Business School Business Office, Room 308 nufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. Thayer Building, Norwich, Conn.

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