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- S e vy o ; NORWICH, BULLETIN, TUESDAY, MAY 27, 1919 . = 5 : 2 e ] b ble to drive back the forces of WASHINGTON AIRS 4 een able to driv K o o - Lenine and Trotzky but who has set AFF, A DAY OF TROUBLES Auditofi“m i T!l tf NOTHING %’Afé{ BUT THE . up a government which appears to (Spjecial to The Bulletin.) ea e MON., TUES., WED. 3 A have a solid foundation and which| Washington, D. C, May 26.— “Our| “Sometimes I think it is absolutely| then, he snapped. - ~ - W“h u”ekn promises to be one under which the|Soldiers ought to be srought home as|useless to try to keep up with every-| * ‘Maybe,’ I said, briefly. “What's A SUCCESS ON BROADWAY A TREAT HERE best interests of Russia will be taken | 5097 as possible if anything like fricnd- | thing™ sighcd the woman in blue. the matter? by y relations are to be preserved be-| “It does se = ! 4 | :em that way,” agreed the| “ ‘Matter? Hear the woman! Noth- “WIVES OF MEN ” s:fif“(,g'r;'gr;';;::dl:l“\t‘" n(l;mflr,‘kvrrmf\om with the dangly earbobs, “but what ing’s the matter except that the blank- e o8 s % a s Jo . Tilson o Triitar brad . : e B : > 3 123 YEARS OLD Ing their grip is indicated by the pros|New Haven today.: Col. Tilson has just| " * ‘Brana’ T TRey oniatmen iha the s TP STARRING FLORENCE REED 3 gress that Is heing made by the Finns, ;eYlurm-d from an official visit * 0, gther woman. -“Everything that hap- | save my life! Sce if you can, and be J A Remarkable Photodrama In Seven Parts, Direct: From the Casine by General Denikine in the Don re-|France with the house committee onipened yesterday was a.special kind|darned quic Theatre, N. Y. gion, by the Esthonians and other cle- |Military affairs. “While war was £0-ianq ail the same and Goufied That the bolsheviki are steadily los- - - ¥ B w arzac ity !’ i id. ‘Tl help you » yoar. “®ling on and the American soldiers 2 5 nd Hoity, toity!” I said. Tl ¥ ALL WIVED UP THE KINOGRAM Moterd st the Pestofics a1 Norich, Comn. s |Ments that are tightening the string{y8 on, AT (e Simeriean soldiers and| “In the first place, I got up late. 1!as oon as I get my pumps tied on. CHRISTIE GOMEDY The Nasssat: Naresi B meund-clam matter. in several directions around the bol-|was all right, but now it is abont likel 124 10 50 to one of those lectures that Well, that made him hotter than il lows_Res| ENRE T x:\ = two families with different tastes, dit-| gt “r2 0% e 10 hear, dm:r";flyvu know, e &‘.ex "fi”"?"‘h he W';‘;flfl;ot £ EXTRA—ADDED = ATTRACTION—EXTRA Bulletin Businem Ofice 430. 4 Iy vik ai a iffere! ’ r be considered queer. s one was |to the 1. said he would. e ask- at the bolshevik leaders realize|ferent aims and a different viewpoint; o) & ! = a{m Bl o e 7o bies 3.2 | tha¥ the tide is turning against them|Of life trying to live together. Mixing;S:Ven at the home of Mrs. DeCrem-|ed heaven, earth and all that was MR. FRANCIS C. U e oM 38 T O e | e e A e o | up the soldiers from difterent countries| Ple: and was really the last word in | under the earth how a man could go FAMOUS FRENCH OPERATIC TENOR. o e Y ot mmnition s | Wwass all right when (here was a com- |COrrectness. I wouldn't have missed it |to a ball \kth no collar. —- oy = a 2ha to e for a good deal. “By that time I had my pumps tied Nerwich, Tuesday, May 27, 1919. | plies in Petrograd, and by the appeal|mon danger io be shared, but to keep at time y | K ppeallthom together now is & bad thing. “rom there I was persuaded to gojon. I told William to come to me and which they have made to Kolchak for|There is thus far no official break, but| 0 luncheon, and the place was crowd-|I'd fix his old eollar. I seized the but- €n OF THE ASSOCIATEM PRESS, || the declaration of an armistice. The|there is a tremendous amount of ill-|€d. and we spent 2 hours there. After|ton hook and had the thing fastened fae Amociated Press is exclusively encities | | T0COZition of the Kolchak govern-|feeling. They don't pull {ogether and|that I had to have my hair marcell_|in no time. The se for republication of all mews dematch- || ment by the council of four would be|bad blood is very much in evidence.fed. When I left the beauty shop it W it ot net stherwise credited in The boys ought te be brought home|was past 5. “ ‘Great Scott - P P e e gl - of much benefit and would doubtless Scot deroin, i 7, 3 WiWlliam almost T Lt : s s ave soing (o a very exclusive | blasted thing. ‘Take it oft! government which stepped into poWerisng e ought to get the American|ball in the Amethyst room at the Bur-| - “What cotlar will you wear? I ask_ and continued to stay there through a|atmy home and end the whole thing,” leigh that_nig hence the excess \'Ei(’fl, TODAY and TOMORROW D. W. GRIFFITH'S MASTER reign of terror. ad({s‘dll"n Tilson emphatically. doiling up. 1 wasn't the only one who| * ‘None, woman, none!’ he shouted. PICTURE While in Turope, Col. Tilsan follow-|had to look pretty, though, and it was| I had a vision of m stayi : o vhi oo <h, £ yself staying at LOIS- WEBER, PRODUCER OF - STATE BOARD OF EDUCATION. |°d a.i‘fax as poss blr_ HVN‘ALIOU“h which|not until I'was haif way home that I|home from that ball after I had all but e “WHERE ARE' MY CHILDREN" CIRCULAT]ON Without \donbe : It of thellhe 26th division covered, He also{remembered William's dress suit. It|begged for an invitation. So I told | Vithout doubt as the result of theimade a trip through the Rhine valley!had (o be pressed, and there were his|him he wouldn't choke to death in| AND STHE (PRICK ;OE A GOOD); WEEK ENDING MAY 24. criticisms that have been indulged in gn& }ed all lthf‘_bl;““(;?'lj_al Puttle-| hest studs to put into his new shirt. | the short time we would be at the ball | TIME,” PRESENTS during the past several/months re-{fields. It was Rorribly reary. espe {owever, I called up the tailor, and {and that if he would only keep his! | 10 0 9 | garding the state board of education ;101! ; :omnm ‘;g}:‘(:;\;l b ) “_)]M‘jp; he came and_ the clothes and re-|mind off of it he wouldn’t notice it. of a > 124 5 4 and state school matters in geferal,| puterer ine i And whole villages| turned them inside of an hour. He is|I did feel sorry for him though, for I Irs. ariie ap but particularly as the result of thel ol ad I o tes Daty Mrcal I very obliging and he surely saved my/|the flesh of his neck actually rose up ! legislative act changing the size and|saw the battlefield of Waterloo and it} 1'® that time, ior | had been warned |and peered over the edge of that col- method of making up the state organi- |looked like a toy battlefield in com- have those clothes pressed, if Illar, but T would have felt much sor- Nation g : ; SuTIRos itk Thee O The EroRt et ecied my husband Lo escort me 1o rier for myself if 1 had to stay at B ed Cl th 4 zation, Governor Holcomb has created ; : . |ihat ball. | ome. 50 T blufteq him into thinking = 5 Orrow otnes iR e 1 | Commenting on the thrift and recu-| “As luck would have it, of course,|he was all rights Founded On Thomas Dixon's Play ||}, o0y o 4 einL WHO According to the law every county |Perative power of the Irench, Col. T -‘\\'m am was detained at the office half| “And he Qidn’t choke to death?”’ “THE CLANSMAN" | s % e % ¥ son said that although the long line of | an hour beyond the usual time, but we | asked the wi i ® dangiy SOUGHT SHELTER IN A HOUSE in the state is represented with one 5 2 TRnLS . SeIa il 3 ? asked the woman with the dangiy | iEibes ARTieaT Rt AR T e tv::n(hes‘ wera Jn_nx.\f i (‘L»‘o ere| hurried through dinner and rushed up- | bobs A ENLARGED ORCHESTRA OF GLASS. Ithe nine, and in his selections the |halt hidden by fields of waving Srain.| i his vlotme reais aacd I getting| “No, but you should have seen him | NO ADVANCE IN PRICES | governor has named men Of recoR. | The Hreen Thv lst no thmecin sen: | 2L bis clothes ready, und I was glad. | when ‘we came home. He was searce- 4 this important task. From this coun- |Shells plowed the ground into deepfgeir’ But | w: Sy 40y clawing at that collar. Ivening 7:45, 28¢, 22c, i7¢ and 11c §: mistaken. “ 1 can't unbutton this darned col- which can never be wied out, | *“uy piE, L WAS ty Henry A. Tirrell, principal of the|furrow: oW d neglected to fix |1ar, } led. ‘For Pete's ke, take First Time at These Prices Roann’ Two Pll’t )] od | lar,” he gurg] . 'or Pete's sake, Free Academy, has been sclected and | {16y have planted and sown Ihe Same);y ney pumps until this last hour, and | it off! Its killing me!’ When 1 seized { g s 1 | this cannot fail to win the approval| thece was cuch complete. dessruction|] Was struggling with an embroidery |a pair of shears and started toward . ALSO A FUNNY | Sunshine Comedy of everyone who is interested in|that one shattered concrote wall was|Stiletto and a piece of silk thread, | him his eye school betterment, He possesses the[the only thing left standing. Here we|When the door was flung open and in | his neck. JYONS & MORAN COMEDY aualification and expericnce that win|{ound an oli French woman and afcame William both hinds at his! ' Youre never going to cut iti he P! | Make him & valuable member of the|small child making a good living by hroat and his facc. the color of a|gasped. “Why vou'll ruin by new col- 3 Donrd and alonk with mim have becw|posing for motion pictures and passing|Cooked lobster. S e oD AREE e tourists. All along the roadsides as we For pity's sake!’ I cried. ‘What is| “I didn't wait to argue, but slashed | hydrophobia retain full control of their REPUBLICAN CITY TICKET. named such well known educators as|went from battlefield to battlefield we|the matter e 3 : ~ 2 2 and his poor neck almost pop- o] 2 ciliti et Dean Jones of Yale, President Shank-|saw fox holes. There has not much “ ‘Look here!' William sputtered, |ped, it was so glad to get out of jail. m‘;lel'l’;:c(u\ill'léd;l\i}llllda For Aldermen, lin of Wesleyan, Principal Ames cf|been said or written about th: holes,j “‘Who in time bought this collar Willi the back of their dog licenses, where bulged almost as much as PATHE NEWS SHRINERS' NOTICE V] iam wasn't a bit graceful, though, CHARLES F. WHLLS, the Brown school, Hartford, Principal|but they have saved the lives of hun-| * You did,' I said and he never will get over my spoil- | the symptoms associ < % CLAUDIUS V. PENDLETON. Hood of the Gilbert school, Winsted,[dreds of thousands of men, and the| * I must have been drunk or crazy,!ing that new collar—Chicagd News. | murrence o fai)iaf":i?'l “nhfutl?;- de- P‘LFRIMAGE TO WESTERLY, M1 Vor Counclimen, while Attorney Torrey of Putnam is|oUtc along which the troops marched| g TatedeThe Tonhion i, | Special Car leaves Franklin Square at EDWARD CROO/ MARTIN ROZYCK ROZOLVO C. PERR CLARENCE E. BARBER, For Tax Cellector, THOMAS A. ROBINSON. { Fer City Treasurer, a capable legal representative, and J.\marched by night, silently and inu 5 5 330 p. m. today. Be sure and get there. C. Talcott of Talcottville, C. D. Rice of |darkness, but when daylight was Gleaned from Foreign Ex-1 inside nockets and a tightly buttoned ; OTHER VIEW PO R Hartford and J. W. Curtiss of Green-to break they stopped by the roadside coat. For loose cash the trouser pock- W POINTS | = 3 et is - 2 -i Pomona zrange, over in New Haven tion to make unreasomable demands AL AR , s g A h Sl changes L is probably safest. The modern wo. grange, over in New en’ to e 5 wich are well known in the business ":“{') ‘11”n=d "‘?;‘i‘le({”;‘p'1‘5\,:"\?’““523,}“ e ¥ g y ma disdains pockets and relies on the! county, voied down by a single vote a'#nd insist upon them and the same life of the state. fimtn and e e o Mecapmen, et We notice some rather timely spec- | vanity bag, easily opened and easily;resolution asking the repeal of day- Obstinacy in refusing to consider ever Governor Holcomb has chosen well| 1" had fo dig his own fox hole with ulations as to the future of the great|looted, Women's pockets, when they light saving. That's close, but it shows Jle sugsestions in the way of STBPHEN H. REEVES. in making up the board and there is|could they o it> said the colonel, re. | houses of London. There are not now| existed, were th despair of the clever|one organization of agriculturalists =7 Lol Gl il Fer City Clerk, reason to believe that it will give the |peating my question. ‘Why. they juct| yory Mmany. There is Devonshirel thieves: which is not surprising for|Who apprecate the pleasant saved Iorce will be met with force, and no- WHC e SRR belle L peating my question. ‘Why, Just! House which, it seems is not to be sold.| often the owners had serious difficulty | hours, even though the cows are said budy wiil progress.—Bridgeport Post. . s 3 state the service that is expected of|clawed the dirt like a cat or a dog or a| Grosvenor i Bath s . p 1 J ; pect j clay e d | Grosvenor House, Bath House, Bridge- | in finding their pockets themselves. ~|not to like it and birds ge. all; For City Sheriffs, it. The foundation has certainly been|fox. It was life or death to them. and| i tor Fouse. Lansdawne Honce Cobon uised up about bedtime—Hariford! Q7 _GBORGE W. ROUSE, well lald for a better school system |they dug like animals. They staved| fouse Londonderry House. and a fow The bishop of Winchester, whose' Tima Y terdi STORIES OF THE WAR CHARLES H. RAYNES, (hronghat the Btath motionless and foodless in those holes| 2 \ e A more, but those who expect them all to. Phrase “poor, stamwed, trampled. hu-| disappear have little- ground for heir|miliated Germany,” is exciting some belief. | comment, was a_ keen cricketer long For Water Commissiomer ALBERT S. COMSTOCK. all through the d a s and the next night| t night provis Conscientious Objectors In England. ed by ithe WE DON'T WANT THE JOB. march and n took up the TR P b A L i l:l:fi r)n:‘:"e“f‘?‘\' J;.]:»Llw\m d ¢ \,e‘d The fact is that no one knows whapac:)er he rose to be nhpre}:me. = ot «;"‘1 re Conscientious o;v ctors in In- g Sl Tte he B D-|is going to happen in the season just| n one occasion when he was at the E CdLUGON. | pan wumbers are being releasec EFFICIENCY IN WATER DEP'T. |ing from Europe President Wilson h.si{:mt‘r.\l‘f“jm M-;:“({“L lh,"‘;‘; hfllfig‘fi‘ opening; whether the system of liv-| Wickets the bowling was so wide that!} from nglish but there ar In .connection with the election|let the representatives of the allied|‘ime tney marcaec to ba & ®| ing alme y in restaurants will; he eventually remonstrated = pouisul Sl Aoy . il colonel spoke with stern solemnity. a0 ing out ; 3 4 nations understand that it is entirely K | be’ pushed further or whether there keep the bowling in the b L SIENARS T SR aat LT ‘f°r_g°"e" probable that the United States will| , Commenting on the desolation of | will be a reaction towards.the old and| The next bail struck him plump on: Uit in addition to the election of|Provable that the Unted States WHIlverdun and Soisson, Col. Tilson said the| more dignified manner of entertaining.| the waistband, whereupon the howler y officials there has been referred P AR streets were piled high with debris An«l'1 By the end of July it will be possible' jocularly exclaimed. “I think that's in; to the voters of the city at this time|Stantinople, Armenia or any part ofthat at night the darkness was so in-| (o judge: meanwhile it is well to re-| the diocese, my lord.” wave caused Dy Motrison bili and reo.: i<~ Waierbu : csa wlo are se of i o the question of whether the act con- | Turkey. _ Itense and the pitfal many that ai member that there are still people in] We learn on good authority that the: . LiTomiet pt order applies cerning the superintendent of the v For some time the idea has prevail-|guide was necessary. “At Soisson wel London society who like to receive! position of France and Britain regard- who Nave' served: .sen- ter works of the city cf Norwich shall|®d that such a responsibility would be|saw but ten faint lights in the whole| their friends in their own houses and|ing the crisis is as follows: ting in length two or be repealed. given to this country. Without doub'_l;‘""’“ Ey‘gyi’pl‘n@ e was tot hout the ctions of a cacophon-| After President Wilson's statement Among these =i 0’1‘%‘0"‘5\-‘ s / i\ i = : | Tilson gave 2, ous band of Afri : el onih were Fenner - Two years ago throug action of the|the allied nations would favor such a| ;. cription of salvazing el SRt e ineeoes, oy 2t e S of the Labot legislature a law was passed providing|Plan for this country has mot been at|where thousands of t that the superintendent of the water | War W:;h_ Tu;keyi and it is de“l;’y in-'and ammunition are department should remain in office | terested in the improvement of con- |like cords of wood. The 2 SheliLs ol nremigs A§ie st Wi (s mtend : £ o 3 S Zlds Towe e | that President should postbone pub oct fonty. the T ditions In that country and particular- | munitian cannot be used in our arms| is. how the t i uc- | U ipERthon pUnl R o petency, e MoV belng In | o concerning many of those wha|and is being dumped and exploded. but ¢ in which snow has fallen in| Coton, in the lmE e ot has been an | ¥ O O eppression of Turkish|the alliéd and American arms and mu- | London, the period being progressively| Tent mig ¢ e ?m'; ,‘hi“ o5 besn f'l"a“." ’;“"““‘ Suls okt m,,gx;pperiod ’And again | Nitions are being salvaged and will be lafer. ident thought that the time had ootball for years, an as is the case 2 @ and M. Clemenceau the president in- Junitions| 1t is not often Londoner i A £ unlelons 5 experience, tormed them that he intended to in piles| 2 snowstorm so late in April as the, formed them erman am- | 27th, as was the case yesterday. This|SUe, I oy of Bristol re anx: smiers W t-Labor | other “Ng-conscription” move- of been reached | been reached Understen : o ived, an statement was issued : A returned to each country. He saw but| In 1917 the last snowfall of the early|fived, and the statement was issue o { them with other offices the importance of[it can be appreciated that they would|,no American airplane in the whole| spring occurred on April 12, last year|©D Dis own responsibility. ion e the retaining in office a man of qualifica- | D® Pleased to be relieved of such re-|trip and that was at the army univer-|on April 19, and this year on April 27] M. Clemenceau and Mr. -Lloyd r:ins ied by preseat. — Bridseoort setting ' Standard Telegram, unles there is more to follow. With| George handed to Signor Orlando a but upon a part of the| the temperature above 32 degrees the! Statement before he left Pari: s car-| flakes of vesterdas tions and one who is acquainted with |Sponsibilities as would be involved in|sity at Beaune, where. it was out of the system and the duties is a mat- | 2ssuming such a task. CuLIpSion, il oused g which eannot be overlooked, Itiis| Thers can he no question Lut what|airplane study; Thig university 1ree objectors nine while m prison. e i : i t snowfall were of! forth the French and British points of| Dr. . W. Goodenough, school me the heginning of conseriptior " s iseto undergo a partitioning so |Tied on by Americans and by professors| the large variety, and melted on reach- | View, just as President Wilson's state-|cal inspector, is entirely right in de- there has been considerable asitatior V'\"“‘:'h“”;"flt of good Soyeckment; m:‘ww be left of Ut fecimer|from this country and here the men|ing the ground; ‘it is only when low|ment Set forth America's noint of ik il i In toe press and cRATTEE Al 4 e recent session of the general Hide £ 3 52 L8 Tlean go on With thel OINTEGEG | LeT ires prevail tiat ine frakes! Whether Sigro? Oefamds Wil pu assembly an effort to repeal the law |empire. There are millions of people|t ages or professions, no matter of|are small. {the French and British statement received the approval of the legisla-| Who are going to be freed from Turk-|what nature. Absolutely everything is| Th 2K HisL o a question for his decision. St It e misinstructed civilian would iscnool chiidren to be stripped whi sure taken to punish conscientious gives them the school medical e iecfors. With the signing of ~the mination. \aterbury parents should armistice the friends and supparters of ture but it was left with the people of [ iSh rule who will be in need of guid-|being taught there th bl shs Distillers and wholesale dealers are be glad to ledrn that the ph u . 0. 's” as (he conscientipus ob- g Gh e - nce and protection, but it has been|led at our home universities. Col. Til-|Probably say that the hip pocket was i ¥ FES ir child S e Norwich to ratify the legislative ac-|an¢ ‘ i et 3 o flated that m wrders had| the safest place in which to carry per. | Unanimous that the trade cannot pos jamination of their children the pu = jectors are r;rorred to qin“ Ea“c‘(‘xl:zh tion. If the electors of the city at|NOjsecret that the United States wants state at 3 Ty ad} onal valuables, but an authority in|SiPlY bear any further taxation with-ilic schools is not a farce—a merely newspapers, became unusually e, the election next Monday by a ma-| 0O Pert therein. Just why there has|been lssued that In Germany no malsl in . Soiic uq™ (hat the pocket book | OUl PAsSing it on to the consumer. That|perfunctory —performance—but is and their efforts to persuade the gov v e . 2 b veen he agi nf a { ¥ S na et | it te ratify ti cti been any encouragement given to the 3 >’|in the hip poeket is e - unfortunate beast of burden, when he!thoro that it will detect any hidden and ernment to release the prisoners have dority vote ratity the action of the| - e el could occupy a bed until every Ameri- | 1 the hip noeket is the casy prey of| 3 ST " on " oxplanation, is supplied unsuspected diseases from which the been unflagging. g legislature the law will stand re-|idea that the United States sought or|can soldier. whether officer or men,|the professignal thief, Iy Saene st about the in-!children may be suffering. The de-i They contend that hostility to con- pealed and Norwich will go back to|Would accept the mandate for Con-|hsd heen provided with a hed. As a| lLondon tibe | wth vague statements a 1 y b E tions at the moment | : - 4 Sitable ' mOmENt| o ease in the price of bottling and dis-|tection of such disease m their in- tinued conscription is rapidly gaining the changing the superintendent of the | Stantinople, Armenia or any other part| result, the Americans along the Rhine| SWArm with the nimble fingered gentry. | Ly tion, cipiency will almost always lead to ground and that the imprisoned water department every time there is|Of Turkey is hard to understand. ey IsInE il ger S mnevioe ay of safety seems to lie in| " nyore e however, a few indisputa- | their chre while their neglect may, “martyrs of opinion” revoke mors a political change in the court of| We have enough to do right here at{cupy the. finest castles and sleep in S.—\Water- sympathy than anger. ¢ e est roomes GEile -tha G i ble facts to be borne in mind. All theimean crippled or ended live : We Care ot Gaymeibletlo, e Mg Roet KOOI e e oF the hotes. wiioh 1id at their| Whiskey now being sold was distilled |bury Republican. | One of the most pr_'om!nonnt(e:lcefl;: the case regardiess of the qualifica- |id€a of any European power accepting| oy "ohocure outbuilding. “But the|request cach day when congress as. | & 16ast three vears ago when prices| The Lawrence strike has been as- B Cudtams who w well known for tions or experience of the one ap-|the mandate for the government of|SionE PINCRTE ( Shl N M rering from|sembled. or the raw material and labor were|sociated with conditions and outbreaks 1% D Tadliie FEG B Bo0 A pointed any country in this hemisphere, should {lack of food seems unfounded,” said he.| Col. Tilson came home a few days| SOmPATatively Jow. ZHe CULY UL B iwhlcl} all sersii Lamles acts were i, e ument advanced. for sffi In behalf of the efficient adminis-|SUch @ step become necessary, and|'l found the Germans fat and sleek.|ago on the Mt. Vernon, which brought| Fon" SNo O 7 3087 00% oont **inder | oy ( HOUh, Sies 8 \NREY, NMCh weeping the C. Os confined is that if the office and the lifting|naturally we are desirous of keeping|Their cities are undespoiled, their in-|over Secretary Danie skey 5 g jmake for anarchy. S common council, and 4s is too often|Dome. tration of . X 4 z e . and about 5000 oo and until the output was con-| Y nmocent to suffer they were released now they would of it from the political plum tree .the|Our hands out of Burepean affal i h{f’n"“g‘“'s"‘“y s ey Feni - frolled, very excellent SPirit was re- \r\‘,lx%g[chtu‘::eifiy It is by long odds the b€ gi"""f““‘ ("?f:‘"' 3""“"]‘“""’ :HO::‘: - 1 £ —_—— g a ergy L D ding a L fe 1s e e ome. “Are vou + % s a @ = 2 o & matter of obtaining empolymen! law should be retained, which means | a¢ter—the-war conditi Tnl a’ good sailor 48 The Bu tailed at 24s. a gallon—or 11s. a gal-lmost unpleasant story of any labor ™ 4 5 passed by the generul assembly| Of course you are going to join the and zet . Germany will outstrip(sreat embha I paid full toll every| 1S now ;""»d for 54s. a gallon, S S conspieionaiby s ateence. (1“ the :335 i it Sl s should be refused. Why make a shirt|crowd next Monday and go to the poils{them in industrial and commercial|day. And if anyone wants to paint the| Oning the new gallon |t settled down to a test of strensth,! ... cocarnment of Formosa s . for the That means|afier conditions as all efforts to get the government as black as possible, |3t 3 here every vear any more than in the | straight republican | © peace is de-|infernal resgion: - o i c 810 lanning the establishment of one et S i il e bl ol i publican| ored, She i ho time nor just let them add that it smells of bilge | an increased profit of and it isfio interfere had failed i Pl e o el e Dheal - depastiment’ £ ngling about how it shall be done.|water down there.” Only the colonel|Obvious that an additional 10s. duty, [t ough to be a lesson to all, but-it Ty " B0 " Capable of supplying She has marked out a stiong policy |used a much shorter word than “infer-| would still leave a handsome marginiyill not be. When differences come 20,000 horsepower and serving the en- - AVIATORS' RESC Of pausas you ‘aik dBBeE . gau e work is alre: vell under|nal regions.” to all converned. 15 FL.er6 Wil be 56 deiie: ai o 00 h THE AVIATORS' RESCUE. machine on. Memorial day that the|may Col Tilsen seterad specibome| b oo S i e SRR e e disposi- tire island. Welcome indesd was the news that|veterans may participate in the pa-|to the German dye industry and added| Senators Brandegee and McLean are: 1. | "t any, "dogs suffer from rabies was sent around the world to the ef-|rade? that as a member of the ways and Biarderieslieas PUANY are mad, as is generally assumed, any fect that Hawker and Grieve had e Ca o eI means committee he should urge im- " ‘and high rank on for-|more than are persons suffering from heen rescued from mid-Atantic and| From the trouble that he is experi- |mediate legislation to protect Ameri judiciars, patonts and|hydrophobia. the name given o e were safe and sound on the other side|°NCing in Russia there can be little|an dy lonpiibedtsiinesine Cor al positions. McLean s| same. disease whan 1t Soodrd 7 2L of the oce t came at e when | Wonder that Trotzky is locking for a i o pranth 8o scacily-pling-up man banking and currency and|man beings. Acute delirium A occan. It came at a time when supplies for immediate distribution af- R T O nter) | and severe spasms of the muscles of practically all hope had peen given up, | Place to go. ter the war is declared at at end Blate commerce. education and laber,| the throat, which cause contortions of when was realized that if they had| 2 Chaplain Petty of New Haven was|and also other good assignment the mouth; but those afflicted with no ee o some passing ship The man on the corner _A cam-| senjor chaplain at San Sulpice, neasri there was no chance of their being|Pi8N to bring about overlapping pay-|Bordeau, and it was a remark e alive days would raise an army of support- | “happenstance” that the day Col. As was realized the Sopwith ma-|FS Over night. son visited the camp Petty was {0 re- eive a decoration from the King of et down. to fielglfum {n[r e}‘(morclmur.\' bravery in 15,000 it will begin to approach the|'he face of the enem ey -was ., g o : chaplain of the old Connecticut Second ?“e of only what Is needed in theljneantry, of which Tilson was lieuten- orm of a police force, ant colonel, and 1 Rhodes, who 5 RSP was to read the ked Tilson With the return of the,German del- o pin on the medal immediately after- o ; egates they are of course that much|wards. It was an impressive moment vessels are for the most part and cer-|nearer to the dotted line, the line(for those two Connecticut men, coming chine had been forced to come down fate appeared {o be against uccess of their undertaking for- ine nevertheless smiled upon them when the small tramp steamer passed their way and rescued them from 3 watery grave. Because ocean going W the Austria arm) THE BIG SAL tainly should be equipped with wire- | where the signature goes. from the same eity and tentmates dur- —AI— less little or no faith had been placed the trouble on the Mexican border, to in their being picked up, but what lit-1 The date of the president’s return|meet in France, the one to receive and tle chance they had of being rescued|to this country is being kept a secret,|the other to @id in bestowing a medal by any other is pretty clearly shown|but he will find on his return that he ;lz‘mdfr“;gu‘r’g;he'd fefviec @u b b by the fact that the Mary did not en-lis not starting on any vacation. Col. Tilson & issiadirenratiin b counter a 1 1 unter another ship to which it might L - _ was not able i0 get detailed informa- convey the good news even by signal-| Well, there's no question but what{yion on labor topics, but as peace has ing, and how remarkable the rescue| Hawker and Grieve will be in England|not been officially declared the visiting was is shown by the fact that {hey|Waiting to receive the Americans|congressmen were not permitted to| Hamilton's Shoe Store were in the water, mere specks on the|When they reach there through thejtalk with the Germans. They were| ° & surface, but an hour and a and | air. |given every opportunity to see condi- e s Mg IVl:dAhr:l:ri:::: tions. but ‘could not ask about them, SDRRaE 05 the ufacs ok At From the time that it took to inform | General Pershing showed them every ; . s E ce oft Massa- |\ "UCHd of their rescue, probably mo|Dossible courtesy and the party slept| 5 .rhusolw and the Azores could not ba|'"°® altn b i ‘h e 21 nights out of 28 in the train ini R, ocated by vessels that were search-|OoN¢ understarn etter than Hawkeriwhich they traveled. On the trip down)| 3 ing for them, and eve just what chances they|the Rhine Col. Tilson took along three| It was certainly a delightful ending| 90K in their flight. Connecticut boys whom he met in that| 48 OBUPAReOUS § fhky Al region. ey were Lieutenant Wolfe| poftgi dE- bl:'; and risky undertaking There can be no question but what|of Waterbury, of the Sixth artillery, dou mean greater safe-| -overnment ownership has been on|Lieut. Donald Hamilton of New Haven, guards I they ever attempt such aliria) put it is likewise true that the|¥ho is In the Marine corps, and Cor- t agai L Srav. New Hav AL patience and pocketbooks of the peo- |POral Grava of New Haven. | will heal your skin Fcr.ycars and ycars Resinol has bean a favorite houscno_!d remedy for eczema and other com- mon skin. It usuaily stops Me itching Final Reductions On All Lots To Close Ort - ; g Congressman Tilson looked at the| atonc i CRUSHING THE BOLSHEVIKI, |Ple have also been tried. {trip through the eyes of a soldier. He, § prescribe it very diacty 1y crupuon. Doctors That it is possible that the council was lieutenant colonel of the Second ey wee . It aiso msked an'ex- With the railroad deficit piling up| i " Con icut the Mexic: of four among the allied nations will| faster than it did last year, and a bil- an(l“i‘lslotus ‘?‘f‘cd fl‘cmng"’i"::“spgg:::f lgmifli_"? :he Kolchak government at|lion and a fifth needed now to take|American war. He has been the ord. gmu is by no means Surprising. | care of the needs of the railroad ad-|nance expert of the military committee Such has appeared to be a possibility | ministration for the past year and a|of the house ever since the beginning for some time and certainly this has|quarter, it’s no wonder the president|Of the war, and cvery day during the been increased by the succéss which| thinks it is necessary to bring about|3CtiVe campaign the wai department has attended the anti-bolshevik ef-|an early adjustment of the railroad|with the lnteat situation elearly moa® forts of Kelchak Who has mot only|problem. M ed, so he might explain it to the mem- cellent dressing for burns, wounds, chaings and sore, irritated places generally. : _contains mothing if used with inpwre the tenderest Al drugg