Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 22, 1919, Page 4

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- diorwich Bulletin und Goufier 125 YEARS OLD | Sulsariytion price 120 & week; 5% & month: $5.00 # year. ut the Postoffles at Norwix Conn.. ay matier. Telephons Calls. Sutions Office 480, et *Faitorist. Rooms 5.3 Bulletin Job Office 35-2. Witimestic Office 23 Chusch St Telephone 105. Nerwich, Thursday, May 22, 1919 WEWBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Is excludvely entiticd _CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING MAY 17th THE PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE. From the message of President Wi ¢on which was read to congress, it is evident that he has had his ear to the ground for ihe drift of sentiment in ibls country relative to & number of matters on which he dwelt. By his recommendations in regard te the re- peal of the war time prohtnition con- carning wines and beer he ajmvears to te respunding to the widscpread op- pesition which has arisen to the pro- hibitory act regardless of the en- dersement of the prohibition amend- ment which is to become effective the first of next year, though why such advocacy should have heen delayed until this session instead of being urged before the last is not explain- »d, or why if prohibition is to come it shoyld not start in July as well as next January. The recommendatigns that there be an early return of the wire lines and that the railroad systems be turned back to private ownership this vear is in keeping with the demands of the country as the result of the experi- ence that has been had with the gov- ernment control of these utilities, The president’s stand in this regard indi- cates that there will be no vetoing of that part of the republican program. The position that he takes re- zarding the revision of war taxes is likewise along the same line and comes not only in keeping. with the plans already made but in response te pepular clamor and in this eon- neetion it is interesting to note that he considers the strengthening of tar- iff laws advisable Vollowing up past appeals Presi- dant Wilson pleads for the adoption of the woman cuffrage constitutional amendment resolution, legislation for the expansion of shipping, Secrétary lane's plan for helping the soldiers and labor legislation that there may be & democratization of industr: which gives indication that the pre ident plans te work in harmony with the republican’ congres: Concerning the message 2 state- ment has been made to the effect that it Is difficult to locate any tinge of par- tisanship therein, but it is to be re- membered what « partisan appeal Peésident Wilson made tq the coun- try just previous to the last election and how the eountry proceeded to di regard it. The cue therefore at this time wa Over wirtisanshin and try to take the wind out of the re nublican suils | THE LAWRENCE STRIKE. | In Lawrenee, particularly, but out- side as well, there will b tine sat- isfaetion that the strike which has been underway there for 16 weeks is it an end and that industrial activity will be returned to normal in that] city. the strike has heen ch erized by a to- ial disregard for strikers. or that Jaw and order. The imber whe refused to go to work, though a large portion of the mill emplo; in the city were; already back mills under te®ms offered the employe have regorted to all kinds of force in order the to gain their object and disregarded union orders. The 48-hour demand was granted with 48-hour pay and for the most t it was accepted. Those who insisted upon getting the 62-hour pay held out and it is to be presumed that they will claim a vie- tory now that an increase of 15 per cent. in wages has heen granted. Such, however, hardly the case, for whiio the increase will be grant- ed to all and the strikers will be taken back under the increase, the raise was agreed upon in common with the action taken by mills throughout a large part of New Eng- land, while those ho have been working in Lawrence and those in mills in other cities have not exper- fenced tho loss of pay for about four otonths. The raise came as the result of an orderly presentation of demands and not as the result of stone and brickbat throwing, the wusce of fire, | weapons and explosives the resort to which has terrorized Lawrence for 1t was the law-abiding and body of employes, not the L| element that =rought about| the increase and made it possible for the strikers to drop their tactics. OUR FORESTS. Much has been said in this country wewt reforestarion and the neel of it ot enly for the purpose of insuring a proper supply of lumber for the fu- lure, but as a business sition. Because there secm to large wooded sections of the country the impression is gainad taat ‘the supply s unlimited but such is far from ‘aet. What the situation is is shown 'he fact that the acreage of American ‘orests has been reduced about 65 ,er | fonnd in a’ park is public property cent. by cutting and every year al- most twice as much American timber is cut as is replaced. This shows what the situation is bound to be unless greater attention is given to the matter of referestation, the elimi- nation. of needless waste and the giv- ing of proper protection through reg- ulation against destruction by fire. In this conneetion Henry S. Graves, chief forester cof this country, takes occasion to compare the situation in New England with .that in France, each having 'about the same forest area by showing that while New Eng- land produces about 60 per cent. of the lumber used in its own territory it produces because of poor manage- ment 50 per cent. less lumber than France due to the fact that “France has been systematically building up her forests for a term of years, while New Engfind has beén as unsystem- atically depleting hers.” New England doesn’t differ much from the rest of the eountry. There is the general disposition to waste which has been in vogue so long that it is hard to overcome it but it ought not to be difficujt te understand that there is as great need of guarding the future supply as carefully in this country as there. i3 in France or ¢lse- where, and it can be done by saving as as by i is the time of the year when public parks as well as residential grounds are being put in shape for the summer deason. They are being made tive in a variety of ways by the cultivation of shrubs and bushes, the tting out of flower gardens and the ooming of tlie grass plots and the wooded sections. Such is being done that all may enjoy tne recreation and beauty spots. - It is a strange idea which some people have of such places as shown by the argest and fining of men in another city for the pi blossoms. - It can_ be readily appro- ciated that such freedom cannot be tolerated if the parks are going to serve the purpose for which they are intended. Let that idea be carried out for a short {lme and there would be little to attract and all the work that has been donme would go for nought, Yet the idea which some people have that what is to be is ne and not much- different than the class holds regarding the flowers shrubs on privite ground. As lo they can be picked or torn up Wi out being discovered there are those who think they haye a perfect right to do it. And it is mueh the same regarding the littering up of such public places. Papers, boxes and other things that mar the general effect are thought- lessly scattered where it is the most convenient, and yet there are those who worider why more is net done for those wha have no, pleasure spots, and why parks are not kdp{ up better than they are. WHAT THE TRIP SHOWS. Now that the reports of the com- manders of the three American sea- planes have been received concerning their trip to the Azores it is possible to get some idea regarding the sta- bility of the machines in which they crossed and in each Instance the re- port is a decidedly favorable one. It shows that it was through no fault of the seaplanes that all three did not reach the designated point at Ponta Delgada, that engine trouble was not responsible for the loss of one ma- chine or the injury to the other and that had the fog not been encoun- tered it is probable that all {hree would be in England today This speaks well for the character of the Liberty moters and the type of seaplane, while the ability of tha crews in meeting the conditions that were encountered is not to be over- looked. Not only did the NC-4 go through without injury but the NC-3 showed that the capacity of the ma- chine for alighting and taking care of itself in a storm far exceeded expec- tations. Much money was expended in the construction =na development of these planes for much the kind of work they have been tested on. though they were inténded for use in connec- tion with the fighting of submarines, and they have proved to be a piece ¢f mathinery on which dependence can be placed. There are doubtless many valuabie points which will be furnishedi the builders and operators as the resuit of the undertaking even though bu: one of the trio reaches Europe and there is certainly every reason for the country as well as the navy feeling proud over the accomplishment and thankful that it has been carried through withuut the loss of life EDITORIAL NOTES. There is no question but what the alvation Army can make good use of the contributions of a generous pub- lic. 3 From his message it quite evident that the president has been hearing from heme though a long distance away. The man on the corner says: There's so much to remember that it can never be crowded into Memorial day this year. The experience: of the American and Australlan aviators recall the old saying that it is betler to be safe than to be sorry General Pershing has indefinitely postponed his trip to England. He is going to be ready to move into Ger- many if it becomes necessary. Now that one flock of fliers has gone part way across, there'll be something in the future for the océan| greyhounds to bark at besides the moon. There is stifl an unmeasurable amount of talk being indulged in re- garding the coming .prohibition, but it doesn't hold a candle to the thinking and worrying that is going on. Contrary to expectations, now that two other members of the cabinet have returned from Europe, nothing is heard about the plans of the post- master general for a trip abroad. From the way in which Helland ap- pears to be siding with German impression is gained that that coun- try had bet all its money ‘on the Huns, or else is a large investor in German securities. / It must have been an impressive sight to see a case of eggs dropped from the clouds but the . consumer would have been much more pleased to have seen prices come down positively and as quickly. * =1Paul Duggan has heen ill since Thure- MAY 22, 19 s 19 ; * FACTS AND COMMENT 'Two ends are sought in exacting from Germany sums mentioned in the peace treaty. One is to restore northern France and Belgiufa to the point where the stricken people can become self-supporting; the other is to keep Germany from enriching her- !self by supplying her victims with the goods that she deliberately destroyed.. No one who has not been in the de- vastated regions can have the faint- est picture of conditions there. The discharged soldier- returns to find not only his house a-‘heap of dust but his_ field torn up with shellfire, stones and gravel in- place of the rich soil that generations of cultivation had produced, stock ‘all driven off, tools stolen or destroyed, the planting sea- son upon him and no possible way to make .a start. ' The factéry worker just back from the army ‘finds per- haps the bare wails of the old plant. The machinery “is all gone, part de- stroyed and the rest already set up in Germany. . The miner finds shafts and coalpits flooded. Subterranéan lakes must be pumped dry before the work of restoration can begin and there are no pumps at -hand. ~ Meantime Ger- many with industries intact would de- light' to manufactire and sell, and thus 3 profit from the destruction that she hergelf has caused. The diabolical - féature of the whole economic situation in- Europe is that the now defeated robber mation plan- ned it, expecting to win the war in-| dustrially even though, it might be lost on the field of battle. Indeed as it is now hecoming most of the de- liberate confiso: and - destrucfion was ordered after the zeneral staff knew that their-armiss could net . win. Thus it is fairpess. and net revenge that has put into the peace terms the| demands that cows and sheep, ma-| chines and ships shall be handed overj to replace those -that have been stolen or destroyed. ©Only in-this way will it ught heme to the Germans what e done te - their - victithe, ss of their cows means | milk for their bables: Rather sheuld it be a cause for devout thanks- giving that the cows-are not taken from theiv burning barns and that their own. families-are Teft with a root over iheir heads. - Some of the kind- liest veople in other lands deeply re- gret that some ‘part at least of G many was not ravaged by fire and sword, and this feeling is not a feeling of revenge.. Secend ,thought. how-i ever, causes a feeling of thankfulness t our soldiers found -their duty in ghting v mies and not in pillag- ing homestead The latter, though undeniably merited by the Germans, could not have fajled to exert a debas- ing influence on-those who must have done the work of destruction. Per- haps after al, the -orderly confisea- | tion of the property for the purpose of | restocking their victims may have an effect quite as salutary on the au- thors of the trouble. H | Politicians are the same the world While the republicans in the United Sta senate are striving des- perately to make rejection of - the league of nations issue irre- spective of the merits of the amended constitution, the party leaders in Ger- many are bent on effecting sucgess for themselves and ‘defeat for their oppon- ents out of their ‘country's desperafe internationals situation, Unrepentant though they are, it is slowly dawning on the Germans that they must sign the treaty and pay the bills for their four yvears of destruction. The lead- en weight that the allies were to drag for generations in expiation of thel crime of warring against the father- land is destined to be Germany's to drag for years to come. The Ebert- Scheidemann administration would avoid the odium of signing the treaty, yet still more does it dread by refus- ing the ter to bring Marshal Foch and his armies yet deeper into Ger- man Meantime tEe. independent,so- cialists sit tight and enjoy the admin- istrationn’s dilemma, knowing full well that its days are numbered. One month was allowed to the Gere mans in which to decide whether to accept or reject the neace terms. No modifications will be permitted and no| haggling over the terms will be toler- ated. Several notes have béen sub- mitted by the German peace delega- tion, in which has been pointed -outi the impossibility that Germany could pay as much, has been. demanded or| even continue to exist under the pro- posed terms. To all of these the al- lies have vesponded, calling attention to the fact that they themselves have| managed to get along under the di i culties imposed on them by the w and showing no intention of altering their-demands in the least. Instead | of that, they have sent General Foch] to the Rhine and are evidently ready to resume the war in c the terms ot accepted en bloc. In the face of Hindenburg’s public declaration t Germany {s utterly incapable of resistance, there is little @3ubt but that the six German signatures will be at- tached to the treaty on or hefore the fatal seventh of June. The 66th congress met on Monday in special session as summoned by Pres- ident Wilso; a cabled message from Paris. ¢ the first time in six years the republican party is in con- trol in both nches. In the house they are 39 to the good but in the sen- ate the majority is.only two, not enough to be safe when. it is remem- bered that there are a number of out and out nrogressives among the repub- lican scnators. The party can do nothing without them and it remains to he whether they will do any- thing with. them. Certainly ;no indi- cation of a conciliatory spirit on the part of the old guard was shown in the first d proceedings. The pro- es are ready for a fight, and knowing that the fate of republican legislation lie in.their hands they will} not be obliged to make any conces- sions to the regular republicans. It was in the Taft administraation that the republican party was wreck- ed by the obstinate refusal of its leaders to read correctly the signs of the times. With substantial majori- ties and perfect organizaation follow- ing eight vears of Roosevelt's reso- lute and inspiring leadership, a -repub- lican administration seemed assur- ed for a term of years such as had followed after the Civil' war. This confidence was the party's ruin. Feel- ing sure of their power, the leaders neglected their campaign promises, disregarded the popular desire for a lower tariff and in general pursued a course in legislation that calle@ forth protests from within and indig- nation from without. "The steamroller methods of the notorious Chicz vention of 1912 were th Out of this di party leaders the rty was born. Though' the breach has been partly closed, much of the b, terness of those former days pers; nor will it be forgotten as long as Sen. ator Penrose and' others of his like are dominant in party councils. Tt he- hooves these’ autocratic leaders, it they would ' accomplish anything for their party or their country, to make such concession: may be needed to keep the progressives within the ree publican lines. progress ———— 1 Explanations. Needed. Of course taxes are -necessary, but there’s a hot season -coming, when the general public will be unable to understand .why .ice-cream soda is classed as luxury rather than as an absolute necessity. — Cleveland Plain Dealer. - £ 3 Deen River. — Ex-Representative D, day,’threatened with pneumonia. »|in crowded centers, |Cross who ifight to .| “chow.” “T was just about to write you a note, Aunt Mary\' said young Mrs. Gray, as she opened the door to the older woman. “I wanted to consult you about a birthday present for Jim- mie.” - “Your subject is always ‘Jimmie,’ with as many subheads as an old- fashioned sermon.”’ returned her aunt smpiling:. - ’ “Well, you seem to draw me out, for you are almost as fond of him as I am.” “I can see his faults, though, and that is why L brought you this maga- zine. There is a contest in it that I thought you might compete for and perhaps win one of the-$10 prizes.” “How exxciting that would be! L could give Jimmie a splendid preésent. What do I have to do?” “You have to tell how you l'e[c:‘m-l ed your husband, not of actual vice, you know, hut of Ilittlegannoying| faults. The best letter wins the $10. e ] “Why, Aunt Mary!” exclaimed Anne, “I'm Y.rprised at you, Jimmie doesn't need reforming. Of course, he has his little personal peculiarities, but they’re a part of him. I would not th'mkl ng t6 overcome them. They Kkeep him so human and lovable. “Anne, the very last time I was ‘here you were quite disgusted with his_untidiness.” “Yon must have dreamed it. Jimmi the most scrupulous care of | “His things? he But what you were gomplaining about was the way he littered up the place with cigar and cigarette ashes.” Of cours “Oh, that!” admitted Anne. “Yes, ‘that, * " persisted the aunt.{ He ought to be checked now, or he| will get to be just ke his father. sounds horrid to* spe; brother—he was It} < so of my own| really a dear—but | after poor Sarah died 1 was pestered | to death trying to keep the house and | her things as she would have liked “James smoked incessuntly wandered from room to room. ding the by_products as he went. ery time I custed I found ashes inj| some unlooked for spot. Match sticks | mingled with the ferns in the big erc, and the loveliest -bits of | cloisonne, the Rockwood vase, uml Tiffany bonbonniere, were all ash re- JIMMIE'S BIRTHDAY : ceivers, eyen the Breton cup and saucer thet Sarah had. treasured from her studernt days.” . “Evidently you didn’t reform him, Aunt Mary.” « “The contest is for husbands, not widowers, you pert minx. It is re- ally important that Jimmie should be prevented from making a similar nuisance of himeslf. He is as daffy about you ‘as you are about him, and a little gentle firmness now will be salutary.” “I amsafraid T'll have to buy his present out .of my - allowance. It would take too long.to work up to the contest, But I thank you for tell- ing me about it.” \ “The point is,” inissted his aunt, | “that you uld begin now to take measures “Why didn't you train him You | had him in those impressionable ! vears.” i “He learned to smoke when he was; away at college, and when 1 labored| with him he declared it was requiredi for a degree.” ) “I have o lovely idea! I might buyi him a smoking ‘sét for his birthday. I} saw an awfully cléver one the other| all Damascend " bra a lot ofl cr and a darling tr: add such a touéh to a living room “How about the dini bed room, the sun parlor be a joke to get a lot of and scatter htem through “I'll go shopping tomorro you come to dinner the nex it isn't & party. Jimmie I made about annivel loves to have you h vhat did you get from Anr ked Jimmie a few minutes lat room, Wouldn" ng slhie ARCHER & HELEN HARRINGTON SINGING COMEDIENNE CHARLES RAY. in A Typical flay Comedy-Drama, IN THE COMEDY SKIT “A JANITOR'S 'rhouuu,n" FEATURE PHOTO-PLAY : 3 CHESTER CONKLIN in “FOQLISH AGES” , Two Reel Mack Senncit Comedy for Laughing Purposes Only THURS., FRI, AND SAT KEITH VAUDEVILLE PARAMOUNT PICTURES BELFORD PETTY REAT & BRO.. A NOVELTY ON GLASS “THE GIRL DODGE! Full of Pathos and Humer ” Auditorium Theatre TODAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY HARRY MOREY —iN— “THE GREEN GOD” KINOGGRAM | ou'd never guesd.” '§ WwoRLD'S BEST NEWS REEL a set of Damascened ash re- | : ceive: 1 None of these: for me. There’ wa a coffee cup or some old v Anng auntie never considered that seriou much rather treat Jimmie thamu him.” aid She broke all records. gave me a hig box of got my favorite wife for y She not only but she a STORIES OF THE WAR | Fighting Plagug Outbreak. American, Dritish, French and Greek icians are striving with might and main to prevent an outl i of the plague in the region extending alongj the north shore of the Aegean Sea from Saloniki to Constantinople. In this work the British, French and Greek armies and the American Red Cross are cooperating. “America and England as well the far, off corners of the earth cannot| afford In these days to ignore out-; breaks of disease 10 matter where they| occur,” declared a Bri canitary of- | ficer in charge of the work of cleaning| up Constantinople. “If the plague is, allowed to breed here in the Near Bast| sooner or later it will reach England! and America. And its ravages if al-| lowed to spread will exceed those of; the so-called influenza.” | Zastern Macedonia which has been a| battleground for centuries and whichj since 1912 has been fought over again| and again is today horrible mes: The early summer sun is breeding flies and! mosquitoes by the millions, the un-| healthy Struma Valley is streaming! with malarial vapors, the stfeets of Drama, Serres, Kavalla, Xanthi and the| hundreds of other small villages are! filthy beyond belief. | The returned refugees live in shell- shattered ruins under sani ti condi- | s unspeakable, Their rags are alive with vermin. From the biz Red| Cross warehouse at Kavalla housingi three hundred famflids of refugee from five to a dozen dead from typhu were removed daily last month. The children of Lastern M iare pitiful sights, suffering the result of semi-starvation, with their little rib: | drawn flesh. With hollow Ck—lus[ro‘ eyes they lic about on the streets in the supn indifferent to their fate. | Each day tens of thousands of! loaves of bread are distributed by the! erbian, Mace- | Bales of| Red Cross in dozens of Se donian and Rumanian cities. clothing are given out to the Serums against disease are in thousands of peasants and ing” baths are given to those living| Rumanian War Orphans. Twenty-thousand Rumaniau orphans through the Rumanian Orphan Society send out to the child- ren of America an appeal for the price of @ suit of clothing is prohibtive. Thread is two dollars a spool. derclothing cost fifteen doll The cheapest pair of shoes and for a suit of shoddy material is asked. Wool cloth 3 The American Red Cross Commission to Rumania is totally unable to meet the demand for clothing. Colonel H. Gideon Wells, of the American Red > ing with the War | Orphan Society, appealed to Am_-' erican schoolchildren to sort out their old cloths and old shoes for eventual] shipment to their needy litle Aliies in far-off Rumania. Kueen Marie and Prince Carol off Rumania are intensely interested in| the work being done by the American; ted Cross for the r orphans of! Rumania. Prince Carol is actively co- operating with the Red Cross which| has distributed tens of thousands of cans of condensed milk to the babies. ‘American doctors are having a hard overcome the epidemic of| smallpox which has broken out in all parts of Rumania and which s taking heavy toll of the children. The war orphans are being vaccinated whole- sale. war; A Doughboy’s Remarks. Standing amid the glories of the| royal past of France, in the park at! iles, an American doughboy| burst into this apostrophe: | “Say, pal, where do you get eats| around these diggin's? American, fighting men in leave part-| jes led by trained guides from the| Paris headquarters of the Young Men's Christian Association War Work Coun-| cil may be seen everywhere in Paris| and its environs, enjoying the monu-| ments of the old regime and of the Empire in a truly American fashion, which does not prevent the association | of the great palace of Louis XIV and! “Looks like a decaved church” was the deliberate estimate of another boy| in khaki as he stood before the _Ho_lPl;‘ des Invalides. Then he went inside cause it was so “white” and hadn’t a} flaw. One of them emerged from the In- valides and grew almost poetic about the yellow light coming through the stained glass windows above po- Jeon’s casket. Then he caught himself, and almost blushed. z In the next breath he called the Court des Invalides the “souvenir par- lar of the armies of France. When he saw Guynemer's airplane] and learned what it was, he maintained! a revenential silance of more than als minute before he began to determine its “make.” P 3 Perhaps the reactions from Versail-| les are the most illuminating, Halting at the Fountain of Neptuna,; a doughboy cast his eye appralsingly| down the vista of the park. | “Gee,” he said. “there must be two miles of fountains.” | Best of all, apparently, the soldiers' The ' War| experienced prison official. The - nt warcden 50 condemms the i : Il cells provided.,on the theor ke to nd sit on the banks of sisoners should haye somethin: e aiching the river traf-| a place so small that it c. 3 ! into it. he one-fourth size Statue of Liberty| 1 es (s warder possible Drosented fo Paris by the American|i; scparate the good from the viclous colonies waiches over them, here. But, ould be provided to u even it is the subject’ of Mok 1 improvement.— o Waterbury tiuh,” =aid one of the don’t look as good asthe old girl will; When the time for the summer when we steam into New York har-|vacation comes, and the time for) bor.” making plans for that vacation S here now in spite of the vagaries of " OTHER VIEW POINTS The state park feels much the { us do about the great desirabil ha ing a place on the Connecticut shore where the people of Connec an play. But when the comm: find how little of that valuable front $300,000 wi ; it is likely experience a sinking sensation that does’t come from getting in too deen bathing water.—Britol Pre; It now. sems likely that there will be a big fight upon the guestion of the participation of labor in politics at the convention of the American Fede- ration of labor at Atlantic City begin- ing June 9. - It is intimated that those who advocate it will advocate it will try to have Arthur Henderson, the ted British or lead who. is coming to thi country oon, ad- dress the convention in favor of an American labor pai Such an at- tempt will be bitterly ented by the mpers adherents This conven- sn_of the A, F. of L. promise be a stormy one—Waterbury Repub- lican. Warden McClaughry of the Con- necticut State Prison urges a recrea- Anne exclaimed. . “T! I'd so, JACK CORBETT and His Dream Girls PRESENTING MUSICAL COMEDIES TOM MIX —IN— “TWISTED TRAILS® Concert Orchestra v nen What i in would like to. de, is to promote a breathig space he women we have hert Th ard whe sun enough to grew gra ly need a| {little sunlight 4 ! This_statement coming from a pri- on official of much experience shows need which makes a appeal to | the weather, there is going to be some {attention giten to tours by automo- Ibile by people who can't afford to travel long distances and who want to see something of their own state. Perhaps some of these will make up minds to make the tour of the > parks 15 in number, comprising | me 3150 acres. The state register| gives the list, but does not include | | Wheaton park, near Wallingford, the | latest _addition fo the system, to which“the New Haven would natural- ly go first of all. .. Th par the state and n has been admired advantages of this state, are practic- all unknown to the majority At all of the larger parks the camper is welcome, and can come in, pitch his tent, build his campfre, and stay as long as he wishes, as long of course as he respects the rights of others and behaves himself. Here isald i und all over the Hampshire or any- a$ good as those’ of ere else t¥ie camper who thinks he! to have woods, and scenery and | discomforts, wants. It is not strange | Ithat both the tour and the camping |sites are recieving attention from scattered about | tem which ; ¥ re | that he is a Prohibitionist. be no more than near-great. lected the right time to make a repu- tation.—Toledo Blade: BreeD THEATRE —TODAY— Viola Dana —IN— False Evidence Adapted From the Famous Nevel “Madelon” By Mary E. Wilkin JUNE ELVIDGE —iN=s The Love Defender The Story of a Young Married Couple To!d in an Exttemely En- tertaining and Interesting Manner. B N — FORD EDUCATIONAL WEEKLY oung gentlemen and their fathers and mothers,.too, as to thelr adapt- ability as ing Jul y and Register. - summer vacation spots dur- August.—New Haven Accounting for Burleson. Postmaster General Burleson denies Still, thdt him. = oesn’t entirely count for Springfield Republican. 1 Wouldn’t Be So Much. “Were he alive now Alexander would He se- Gold Medal . This coal and gas range with two ovens’ is a wonder for cooking family Af i’aough Tess than four feet long it can do every kind of, cooking for any ordinary Y gas in warm weather or by coal or woed when the kitchen ne heating, When in a hurry both ovens can be used at the same time—one for roasting and the other for pastry baking. It eertainly does “Make Cooking Easy” tng 20 , 2 .hkea & l?fu_rke : AT Main QF . Ny Z AN AUALL AN ANDIIANNS AW 1 | RIS C. 0. Murphy 2R9 Contral Avn Norwich

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