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o+ Qlorwich nlletin and Goufied 123 YEARS OLD " Samerigtion pries 120 & werk: 500 & month; §5.00 o yoar. ntered st the Postoftice at Norwich, Comn.. . mpoend-class matter. " Telpbens Calts. P pbetn *Daftots]_ Booms 35-3. Bufletta Job Offics 33-2 “ioeWillimantie Offies 23 Church St. Telcphone 103. Norwich, Saturday, May 31, 1919. WEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Assoclated Press 13 exelusirely entitied {1o Lhe use tor republication of ail acws dematch- o credited to It or ot ctherwie in This paper and also tbe local news published of republieation of spectal despated- s herein are also eserved. CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING MAY 24. ounctimen. ARD CROOKS, X ROZYCK tOZOLVO PERRY ARENCE ¥. BARBER. Veor Tax Collector, MAS A ROBINSON. Fer City 'Treasurer, i TEPHEN H TEEVES For City Clerk, {ISBIE For City Sherifin, 5 W. ROUSE, F RLES RAYNES, For Water Commissiener ALBERT 8. COMSTOCK. LLIAM i GET TO POLLS, DO YOUR DUTY. months it has been the common ry r streets are in a deplora- b condition. Demand after demand en made for their improvement For Vhat | honor to Poland are open to the charge of being prejudiced, and it cannot be maintained that all who have been murdered were bolshevik leaders or followers. ™ It is not to be denied that they are Jews among the bolsheviki but that might be sald of not a few of any races. Poland has been the object of much sympathy and no small amount of as- sistance in its_ struggle to throw off the yoke of oppression. The aliied na- tions have been fighting for the rights of those people and it is most unfor- tunate that when they are about to enter upon a much brighter future under their own guldance that there should be such conduct permitted against the Jews. . Tt would be far more to the credit of Poland and the Polish government if it would set forth its determina- tion to put an end to the pogroms, to see that those who are responsible for them within its boundaries are prop- erly and promptly suppressed that all law abiding citizens may receive fair treatment. That seems to be one of the great duties of that country at ths present time. OUR CITY TAX RATE. Our city tax has grown from nine mills in 1910 to 15 3-4 mills the past vear which included a number of spe- cial appropriations. For the coming fiscal year we are asked for 15 S- mills for the necessary expenses, and if the extras asked for are voted it will mean an 1§ 1-2 mill tax, or more than double what it was in 1910. insist upon efficient go to the polls next to secure it? SATURDAY, MAY 31, NORWICH, BULLETIN, 1919 THE MAN WHO TALKS ‘What is the. use of saying there is 2 . no such thing as laek? The ~unex-| American genius for business organ-, pected has been happening ever since |ization, which . saved Poland from the days of Adam, and the unex- pected is luck according to its good or bad character. A clergyman told & man he heard cursing his luck, that there was no such thing as hard lucl:.I and the wicked man came back with thi: ‘T've been trying to strike ile on this place for the last five year: and have only struck water; but my next door neighbor today tried to strike water and struck ile! What do you call it?” In this case it was| . not” the result of industry or efficiency, | faP2 but what our forbears used to call “a | happenstanc: It. has been said: luck is a very good word if you put P before it.” But then it has ceased to be luck! How often we quote in our optim- istic moments “Everything comes to him who waits!™ ‘Does it? Not on your life, unless he hopes for it and works for it. There are conditions affixed to everything acquirable in life. The Lord did not pass out the manna to the children of Isreal, for they had to walk a long ways to get to it, and then had ‘to gather it up: Nature shows up nothing in commen- dation of idleness. Idleness abides next @oor to Inertia, or death; and what death paralyees, Nature stokes her fires with to put “go” igto new life! What will not work in one way is compelled to work in another. “Get there!” is written all over the heaven and the earth, and energy is recog- nized as the souree of suecess Do not let fear possess your soul. Fear makes co;vards of gen ang an& gels of none. - It upsets the mind am Rag o breeds confusion. It may he of use D R foodstufls in minute doses like poisonous drugs, | JA¥® o1 R but taken wholesale it is killing. If ““_%fij"'r‘le;';\ggn m-:’vfmu any’ one talle yoste; fear Fod it fons offered by tha port of Danziz time to laugh. Only ignorance fears e o e God—all should love Him. He hasn't e % and its rapid distribution under execu- tives of the American relief adminis- tration, of which Herbert Hoover is di- rector general, is described in an arti- cle by Major James W. Webb of the American army. who been i {charge of the administration activities b |in Danzig since the signing of armistice. ¥Frank Baackes and .three en-|in men, reached Danzig about the, the foodstuffs and supplies United States ships were bringing to|in the port of Danzig. Within fite day The first three ships carrying car- goes of wheat fiour arrived in Danzig| on February 17th, { flour, had passed the frontier at Illowa. Before the 22d of| the same month all three cargoes and|a for new cargoes. In his report Major Webb writes “Since February 17th twenth-three cargo boats have been discharged at their cargoes totalling 74 WILL HE SEEK A THIRD TERM? For some time there has been a desire to know whether the president is ambi- tious to run for a third term. Prece- dent is of course against such a thing but President Wilson has shown his disregard for precedents. In fact he has seemed to take delight in not fol- lowing them as is shown by many of the things that he has done. In connection with the remarks at the dinner in s of elected president said that he was plew own presidency not ahead of him, thero are nclined to feel that he was expression to attitude re- garding a third term. It is, however, one of those cases which can be tur ed in either directio: He doubtless :s glad that the pa x vears are not again confronting him, but he doesn’t necessarily decla; hat he would not be willing or is not anxious to continue in the presidency for four| | more years after present time. | | President Wilson is a great handler of ‘[wmx as has been recognized on | many occasions and it is to be noted that he did not flatly declare that he would adhere to the precedent that Washington set or that he would be glad when the fourth of March 1921 arrives that he may step down and out of the presidency. We must await a further statement before there can the result has been everyone The streets still continue to be same delapidated shape | hat they have been, a discredit to the ajty and the cause for complaint by }everyone who uses them. The citizens have seen how appro ations for road improvement havej 1 turned to the purchasing of an tomobile, have witnessed the result the replacement of a competent and gxperienced wovi 1a street commissioner by a 15 a reward for political work witnessing at the present time to place the superintendency 10 water works back in the same the community's interests idetracked for the benefit of | kers regardless of qualifica- ¥ 1at And the same tendenty that n shown in these departments been indicated in other: t is to be done zbout nds of the medy lfes in the It is time that the voters of made up their minds to go olls and insist upon the best ling of city en achie 1dmitted affairs. Su This w all regardless It s, ther that the stra- | ve been receiving cannot be 1 The ripe for a 1 the e of the people not heeded otherwise should hrough the ot by time is city gov- ers of the republi- | e elected mnext| d to govern- [ i city men As businessmen a dire nicrested therein and weir election will mean the giving of 1 er to the running of city ff demanded. [ € smould insist on tting the poll and doing his duty i MEMORIAL DAY INTEREST. : roads time is making in the he Grand Army, the boys S0 bly and v antly If century ago for the Union, d more emphasized every he ranks ave being deplet- there has been more or less con- | on their part lest Memorial day © future should be gradually neg- ted. To them as well others norial s one of unusual sig it can be appreciated 3 deeply interested in the attention it will receive m the days to come But it is thou day nd quite apparent that even there had been the fear a few vears ago that interest might wane as the number of Civil war veterans grows rapidly less such need not be the case any longer. Not only are there the Sons of Veterans and the| Spanish War Veterans, but there are the millions who saw service in the army and navy in the recent war who are going to sec, through the Ameri- can Legion, that interest does not lag in this respect. To a great many more people than ever before has Me- morial day taken on a new meaning. The recent war has served to enliven the interest and nothing is more cer- taln that it will receive the interest wnd attention that it so justly de- serves. . THE DUTY OF POLAND. Th keeping with allegations that were made on previous occasions, it is now being claimed that the Poles are not guiity of the massacres of Jews in Poland. Even President Paderewski Is credited with denying their guilt, but-the fact nevertheless remains that be any ascurance regardinz teel- | ings on this. ! RETAINING THE SHIPS. Tirmly holding to the decision that was been reached to retain the Ger- | u ships that were seized in the har- of this country at the declaration of war is wnat the country expected. The idea of turning them into a pool to be distributed among the allied na- tions in accordance with the losses sustained in shipping is no more right than it would be to seelk the pooling of the German property of other char- acter seized in the various countries. There can be no question but what this country is going to realize an ad- vantage as the result of this decision, | but is it any more than it deserves? The United States did not go into the war for what it could get out of it fi-} nancially or territorially. It went in to bring about justice and it will get; only a very slight portion of the losses that it has experienced. The German ships would of course come in handy for the other allied na- tions just as they will for this coun: try, but it should not be expected that just because we have taken an altrul tic stand in all other respects that should be insisted upon in this re spect. We have used no unjust method in getting the ships. In fact it was through the skillful efforts of our workmen, in overcoming the damage done to these ships by the Germans to render them useless, thi:t they were repaired- and made ceible as soon - were. And though the ships the greatest thing in material| value that we will get out of the war, | EDITORIAL NOTES. 1 Lest we forget, Monday i 1 : tion day and there's a du formed. {a bird, but instinct, w they will on a drop in the bucket| !, when it comes to making good the losses we have suffored. : . situation and facilities an evil thought against man, for He St a o asak . is Goodness. We harm ourselves, He i o e ] will not harm us. His will and wish| % POtNt feasen WGE o is for our good, and He Is not sending | y;op wire stokase which surrounds the! us away from Himself. He offers 0| bior o masin with 1o dosks tracks, man every opportunity to get out of | L lh WLt o stockads life the best there is in. it for him-|lengars our doc self, He points the way, and if You|foodsiafie. caeils defensible in oz are not in it you are Josing every day | gjsturban Under the present what he who it has to comfort him.| o affairs in Danzig You have got to be a zood sport fo is unlikely, but not get the best out of life. Being a good | stockade enclosure The| a: and | impossible. patrolled loser as well as a good winner applies| =narded a s 11 volunteer | to us all. First or Jast we all- arc)organization similar to o own Na- compelled to have the loser's exper- et guard, oF ing under the gen- ience. Sometimes more is gained eral kommando of the 17th army corps, losing than by winn V1 H as by the civil police of Dan- thing goes from us which is deplor- | 7ig. ablb it is up to us to see the vacancy | “Within the enclosure there are ex- is not filled with something regret-|cellent warehousing facilities for ten able. Do not acquire s had habit to|to fifteen thousand tons of foodstuff: make matters. worse. No condition | which. ver, would only be used irretrievable unless -one makes it A - p 0. When a good thing goes do not ‘It is possible to unload solid car-) h as flour, ay the rate of 800 tlantic steam- ! Under un- favorable conditions, the average dai let Worry and Fret get in, when you have the power to add something as good or better. You can be knock- ed down, but -you can't be -knocked 2 2 i out. unless you: throw up the sponge. |1y dicharge per vessel might be reduc- What is art with us is not art with| S3 to 300 or 400 tons. In addition to the tonnage which can be unloaded at| the docks for transportation by rail- road, arrangements have been made wherby, the month of April, we will be able to transport forty or fifty thou- are told. As is in the infant ¢ nd yef, how it has! contributed to his fame for ability and | brightness by the use of this old| a camouflager ss in nature. and tous by the slarvation by the shipment of Ameri-| ing ont can food through the port of Danzig| the. original the American relief administration in! Newfahwasser. all HOW POLAND WAS SAVED FROM STARVATION EEEN the harbor. Danzig and 27 at the dock Engaged in voluntary act by the Amer! ilroad cars are “To relieve the strain on the rail- iroads as far as possible, an agreement has been entered into with the Ger- mans whereby the River Vistula, and| cailable German eugs and barges well as Polish tugs and barges, arel to be used to transport foodstuffs ar- riving at Danzig into Poland. grain especially lends . itself econom- cally to transportation by this route. far as possible freight will be load ed directly from the enips’ holds into the barges. “By a curious conincidence, at the very hour when the American, Polish and German goverhment representa- tives were affixing tmeir signatures to the Vistula agreement at the Danziger-Hof there was taking place in the square before the hotel : rge anti-Poll wnd the worl natural method of frotection. A robin | came into the yard and saw abunch| the young ; - disorder. 100, right in the open.| Right children in the rear, and menaced by a drunken husband in her front? When we are looking for the truly loyal pa- W] crime. The hatted upper cla: masquerade as poorer folk whenever they go into the streets. Good clothes sometim death. often unrecognized by | how many of these h uncertain ; on to ‘hurches. fe but | dare deny ccience has achiev- | ¢ of truth, but it{ much wickeder and crueler mer sted as poor If you want to attract an extra bit of attention just make the announce- ment that you are going to fly acros the Atlantic. | | The man on the corner says: If vou| can grin and bear what happens “to day you are on your wa row’s happiness. From the way in' which May winding up it is certain that the plans for the son’s bathing suit canmot be ! delayed much longer. | There isn't any doudt but what the German delegates could guess vory closely to what the future boundary of Germany is going to be. | The republicans didn't have as much trouble in organizing congress as the democrats expected they would. Har- mony will do great things Down in South America the spiders ave raising havoc with the wire lines. This is one of the instances where Burleson can plead not guilty. Monday is the day that every voter, who is able, should make up his mind to visit the polls and vote for the im- provement of our city government, It is cheerful to think that the fur- nace is not eating up a small fortune, only to recall that the iceman is tak- ing what the coalman is denied. It isn't to be supposed that the day- the Jews have been killed by the hugdreds, that the Information bear- Ing upon this matter does not comeé through German channels, which be- / sause of the sntagomism of Germany | light saving law hasn't friends or that they are not going to stick by it. It is a case where the greatest good of the greatest number must be taken into consideration. n Kaiser, and that his ambition to crease his power at whatever . cost | 1s 2 great-great-grandfather back of | Man’s desire to rxcel ma respectable by b which he i are filthy and then in- urgeoisie | in n ‘rcom,lm are given under penaity shovel filth Bvery are ordered to clean, their o now men, women and children spades and ordered | imprisonment to = stranger. Th As 2 rule the bourgeoisie have to load our eyes and mifd~, our friends and ! wrong from ever since tribal {ried S 5 T = ng lest we dis saddest, most r to | faculties we posse for 400 rubles a bottle. o have be mobilized the cemeteri the town. Memory and | ars, annihil e of istula river route. “On the foregoing basis, and ceunt- 24 working days in a month; ogram for the relief of| Poland of 60,000 tors monthl) “Under the direct management of I middle of February to supervise the:the three DPolish delegates, and the uuionding and forwarding to Poland of | general supervision of the American which | mission, there is a clerical force of 16 o;ce at the un- loading of freight from the ships there Lafter Major Webb and his men arrl\'ed% are about 350 freight handler: in Danzig arrangements for dock facil-| work is supervised by 60 ities, raiiroad transportation and labor,| Laborers and clerks engaged in workj "which had been initiated by Captainfdirectl ‘Chauncey McCormick, U. 8. A, and. the foodstuffs througn Danzig are per- the Polish delegates, were completed. | mitted to purchase a fixed weekly ra- tion of flour and fats. “Including So rapidly did the tinned, connected with the transfer of the employes just men and the guards at the docks, men of the American relief adminis- railroad men, harbor men, etc., ther: tration execute their orders that be- are between fore midnight of the next day the first| men direct train of forty cars, bearing 600 tons of| upon the nassage of these German-Polish | through Danzig. With the understanding that it was ten and eleven hundre dependent for the work! supplies; icans the ships had returned to Rotterdam largely in the spirit of a rewar { the cooperation ,of the inhabitants in! the passage of foodstuffs through Dan- zig, Major Webb has arranged for the sale of 500 tons of fats to the city of Danzig for equitable distribuation at cost in Danzig and its suburbs. sealed on .| docks by the railroads, and one seal 13 appiied on behalf of the Americans and | Poles. The German railroad is then re- ponsible- for any lowses in transit to| — 3 : the frontier, where the two seals are = = mined, notation made of ony short- ages, the bill of lading is signed by the tative, and the cars the froitier to Pol- demonstration, for the purposg of pro- testing against the possibility of an- nexation of West Prussia by Poland. S “With the maintenance of the pres- ent rate of speed and smooth progress i the 300,000 ton program for the relief of Poland should be com- pleted considerably in advance of the scheduled ate in July. 2ok i : it is the way of doing things|and carry their own supplies. No one oL ol dried clunkuion ‘yiuess 09, = ack of it is the way of |else will work for them. rellis, and ihe. at . dnce recognizes Work and bus-| Thers is no gasoline for private au- iy ang BEs e i, el i ically done only by |tomobiles and alcohol is used for e e e EILOR R VERNG 6w wven's first law, |fuel. This is stolen by the chauffeurs Clans “f’“} is occupied ‘fl‘:_‘g}aml yet eligious teacher | mixed with water aid soM as vodka Th s ambba H : is not only wickedness, but| Soldiers of the Red Army com- here is embodied -in this plece of|.1gq o worthlessnes mandeer the peasants’ stores of grain work perception. " design and decep- N e 1V jand food, give them ridiculously '“i"“_'»j‘ At small prices in payment and then 3 At dnatine y sell the food at huge profits. Often et ] STORIES OF THE WAR t houses on the pretext of { and each Nature] (Correspondence of The Associated ng for arms, take what valu- | nothing 1o teaches s 4% well | Press.)—Glimpses into the funtastic [ables they can find and sell them in the birds, most that we know S|life in Moscow under bolshevik rule |the streets. They loot. rob and even i P et s o S are given an Armenian engineer | murder anyone daring to say a word We have al\. heard of the horrdrs of|\iho “has arrived at Baku from the |against them. the front trench and the heroes who|a.iita] of coviet Russia. He says the| The slightest offense in the army is went over the top, and given them|pegpie of the city live in terror of the now punished by death but when the their meed of praise; but do we|poishevik Red Guard and that the |Red soldiers are not on duty they give thought enough to the woman in|former bourgeoisic have very ~few |seem to be abie to do as they like the front trench, handicapped By six|privileges. To be well dressed is awith impunity. Most of the civilians into triots and brave we do not always!er furs bring down upon them the cry | against the Bolsheviki. need look to the hattlefield. These| o " One word of protest| There is no protection for foreign- uls are not even a rarity; but they!,r of ion to the ruling|ers. A decree was recently published i L S e e e ) S e : marked by o heroism that suffers by | {ionarer That forth would be deemed - THEATRE 1 with no other; and these! ‘rmorin 1d have to submit to Bol- Paper money to the face £ 0.0/ ‘oles is printed —_ _— 1r]1 con;'mun life come to kiow and °‘|' hot. |daily. Onl twcqunerv‘;sl‘mpe:; :nr:tlper- TODAY that the purple hills in crowns of gold . now almitted to be published. The Soviet . A. . HALL - A e us Goa ks with us as He| court.’s Where the|News and the Soldfer's-Truth. 1:30, 3, 6:15, Bfls alked of old tried and condemned | Human scienze has ion or alleged | an {LETTERS TO THE EDITOR | | e power that bles oved. | Norwich - Visitors in San Francisco. i T LM DGE ence is often thin. He| 5 = — A A is able to | iface of the earth| priso eath of | Mr. Editor:—San Francisco was . on which d is always|the Emperor and his family, | Visited by two d s of Norwich, | dear ones, of the long ago and now. 169-170ths short of reaching the cen-|{they prayed in secrét for the dea two week: They came and went| These being times as the boys —iN— and a number of trillions of miles| Some of the theatres are still open.;and left ng memories of ikeir|are daily coming back from war like ow the stars he loves to talk ahout; | The great imperial theatre is used for | brief nd many recollections of {those revered heroes of our school Th N M @ he has to magnify germs from one| Bolshevik meetings but in the eve- assed away Norwich times—The [days. The Grand Army who came e INCW oon to ten thousand times to see them'nings operz and ballet continve. The Nellie and M o] , on|back before g. They: With the Liman jeyefandithen he t.1 et Rave their way north from Diego to lare coming b: greeted us of their dangerous character, when it | Breme Washington. They were! lcomed by whole families, while he cannot tell vou of the 'da {here from Tuesday until Saturda | ne hacl 0 be welcomed by H B wal&all : Who “cin |their many friends at home T ¥ -ino one except ic | of the 57 varieties enry b. cap of facts, ; McCloud is rezaining her|of official weicon. ss, some to find | truth 6 one! i idly on the road to|mew loved ones. born since they went —IN— = would i renuous activi- at the United States ¥ are come back wounded and b d eaching’ man too| Sams ne | Hospital remerton. Like all child- | viped out by the influenza, and | Modern Hus ands e not £0. - Yet month may but |ren of Norwich, who eat and sleep} for life, with long years of | scien -ment upon the one has »pilclsm\hcre, we talked in fos \l;al\iug‘ anead of x‘hr»mw 'udgirlmz old mytholog: 116 60! par cent. of his com- | hours of and lived in the Rose of New |t v ‘n the If there has been a greater toblbun ] Sion for Shisiaing 1t |England. We walked up Washington | tumult and shouting dies, will they be PATHE NEWS since the world was created for man| It is dangerous to employ ¢ ser- | Street and down 1) radway, we crossed | forgo wn”hke those of 3 and '98? to soive than the permanent and|vants—a sure sign of bourg | the bridge to Laurel Hill, visited Pres- ! Are they? 3 amicable settlement of aff: among | Servants are in some c retained | ton and the West Side and journeyed to | NIE TARRANT KELLY. men today, we are not ‘aw: of. it |secretly. But on the paper showing [Norwich Town and Vantic. 0, May 25, '19. History di there e been | the number of people in 1 se the | We called to mind many who were | spered fow words of greei- their gentle sleep | at either confines is the kindest, ting of all obliterates nd brings to - wouk\‘ L4 still be exceeded by a wide margin. o ¥ it st JEROME and HERBERT © HAane an Aty at Danzig for the American relief administration and :s urain corporation,’ des the naval personnel of about the eight under the U. S. naval port officer, | Captain Hanrahan, and the personnel Major Webb describes now he, with!of the U. S. warship which is usually whose checkiers. the! Bulk Hotel the army are discontented and are await- ing the first oportunity turning make theft and murd Virtue knows no dark ¥ defensible. 3 nor no crooked paths. What is the use. of crying “Police!” to make the “world | SATURDAY right, when nothing but righteousness | can do it. i | Do not flatter yourself that you an original guy for the door was el to individual originality ages ago. Yon | are only one of many whether you are | brilliant, odd or peculiar. It has been | taking all kinds of men and women ? to_make this world more than one| million vears, and so many things| have been said and done by men it i | impossible to discover anything new. From the cradle to the grave condi tions are working upon vou as they have Leen working upon : * every one else for uncounted and uncountable | centuries, to make men worthy of | MAZDA their Creator. Wisdom - revealed o LAMP man that “there is nothing new un- der the sun “long before the Christian era. The most any of us can be is| to be ourselves; and man is guilty of shrinking from honest ' impulses. Man is not original, for he is simply & design to be- improved. « Life was never intended to be lived in any oid way, for if it were those who pay no attention to order or sys- tem would not be able to do twice the work with half the fatigue by fol- lowing an orderly plan. Unless every- thing is kept in order, and things done in order, the worker is badly handi- | capped. It is by svstem that poor and i Bhuildi mottable el - evermetaor 20d 1] Sunlight ilding proved. System makes an end of . worry and waste, useless detail and SPECIAL ONLY SPECIAL $2.75 ONE DAY FOR THE PORCH, SEWING TABLE OR DESK The Norwich Electric Co. 42 Franklin Street pa " skows TobaY A1) 2t D‘fi}{p! S ¢ 4'1:30, 3:15, 6:15 and 8:16 4 " KEITH VAUDEVILLE—PARAMOUNT FEATURE PICTURE TWO CLEVER VERSATILE COMEDIANS IN A RIOT OF FUN Mabel & Johnny Dove | LE POILU ~ THE CAMOUFLAGE PAIR NOVELTY MUSICAL ACT DOROTHY DALTON ‘In the Five-Part Ince Production “HARD BOILED” Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew In the Two-Part Comedy “ROMANCE and RINGS” AUDITORIUM LT FOUR SHOWS TODAY—1:30; 3; ®:15; 8:15 TOM MIX, Popular Western Star In FAME AND FORTUNE A SNAPPY WESTERN PHOTOPLAY A NYMPH OF THE FOOTHILLS VITAGRAPH SPECIAL STARRING GLADYS LESLIE THE KINOGRAM | Pearls of Thunder Mountain WORLD’S BEST NEWS REEL WITH ANTONIO MORENO ‘Grand Opening MAJESTIC ROOF GARDEN FRIDAY, MAY 30—DECORATION DAY Music by the Tango Band—All Special Jazz Artists DANCING 8:30 to 11:30 Come One and All and Enjoy a Good Time. ; GENTLEMEN 35c—LADIJES 15¢ DANCING TODAY —AT— Richards’ Grove Afternoon 3 to 6 Evening 8:15 to 11:15 MUSIC BY WHITE'S FAMOUS ORCHESTRA New London Cars direct to gate. Special Ferry will leave N. Y., N. H. and H. Steamship Dock, Norwich, at 7:30 P. M., arriving at 8:30. Returning, leave Richards’ Grove at 11 P. M,, arrive at Norwich 12 P. M. Tickets Fifty Cents a Round Trip. TONIGHT ROWLAND’S JAZLZ BAND NORMA whoie fam- The Difficulty, “See here, hasn't the pedestrian the Didn’t Call Him Names. right of way over motor-vehicles at Officer—*How is this, Murphy? The' the crossings?” “Yes, the pedestrian sergeant complains that you called him { has the right of way, but the yotoru names.” Private Murphy—*Plaze, | vehicle has more momentum.”~ surr, I never calied him any names at all. Al I said was, ‘Sergeant, says I ; ‘some of you ought to be in the mena- gerie."” Daily Thought. Be wise worldly, but not worldly wise.—Quarles. 4 2 - | : = o E—— i imball’s Testile Shoy § OFFER A SPECIAL SALE OF RAG RUGS at prices much less than we quoted before the war. decidedly artistic and well adapted FOR THE SUM TAGE. Q They are MER COT- We are representatives for the most exclus BASKETS from Jamzica, B. W. I, Baskets for every purpose. from 0 cents to §7.00. Hand woven Palm Fans 50 cents. Bright colored Deads from Jamaica. Shantunz Porch Tables are collapsible, with removable Bamboo Trays. These are very new and practicable. ¢ line of Near Backus Hospitat- 342 WASHINGTON STREET [F]encicucuouonc [=] onononououcionc: y 3