Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 9, 1919, Page 4

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Florwich Bulietin nnd @oufied J I23 YEARS OLD Sosseristion priee (25 & weeki S0e & menth: $8.00 * year. Entered st the Postoffice 41 Nerwich, Comn.. a» weond-class matter. Tetepnoae Cails. Bulleus Business Office 480. Bulletin ¥elltortal Rooms 35.3. Balletin J>p Office 35-2. Willlmantic Office 23 Churel St Telephone 105. [ w2 _Wednesday, 1919 July 9, Norwich, WEMBER OF THE ASSGCIATED PRESS, The Amocisted Press s exclusively entitieet o the use for republichlion of ail pews dertch- i cradited to I or ot ctherwise credited in s paver and also ihe loeai news publisied Serein. A0l mights of republicarion of special dematcd o berein zre alsn eserved. CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING JULY 5th, 19119 10,076 TAKE THE 3ULLETIN ALONG Subscribers and readers of The Bulletin leaving the city for the seaSon, or a vacation, can have The Bulletin sent to their address by mail for any specified period at the reguiar rate by notifying the business department, telephone 480 e ——————— —_— TIME FOR REFORMS. With particular interest will the people of this city follow the progress in the several matters brought before its the court of common council at Tuly meeting relative to the use of the city owned automobiles, the revis- on of the traffic rules and the appeal cheaper ice. for For some time now the number of | motor vehicles owned by the city has inc ing. Most of the depart- s have one or more and in look- after city work as well as else- where the value of them is not to be regarded But such machines are! acquired and intended solely for the| purpose of carrying on the city’'s bus- iness. They are not intended to serve as pleasure cars for the heads or em- ployes of departments, they are not intended to take the place of private cars or to be used for other business purposes and in view of the fact that such uses are being made of them it is time that a prompt stop was put to it. Not oniy is there the initial expense of the cars to be censidered, but there is the cost of the fuel and the upkeep of the card that all comes back on the city, from which the city ts no benefit but from which it suf- fers through wear and tear. And rile rules are being formulated for the use of city cars they should be made to apply ments. In fact the people ought to know to what use the cars théy own and maintain are “beirg put. With 1he growth of motor vehicles auite n-tural that there shcu'd e need of revisings the traffic rules nd the changing of exi%ing regula- ons in regard to parking. eets are for the most part too nar- row but what there is of them to large extent taken up in the center by machires drawn up at rusing congestion and in- is of the city the curb ing trouble. Whether a hirg can Ye lume reo zarding cheaper ice cught to be read- | nined by an investization th et forth the would ast to at the let al situation is. eturn of Pre:- n place, on / has tak ere is no reason to believe other- he is glad.to get away bus work of the peace back to his duties in country, although he cannot re- d it exactly irn from a va- ation or the of one. The fact of the matte that he faces a period of much hard work in settling do to the tasks that have piled up his countrr. Many mat- ters that require the attention of the chief executive have been adminis tered from across thé Atlantic. Othe have had to wait and the country endeavoring to zet uaderway the ex- tensive readjustments that are needed to get the business and industrial ac- tivity of the country < from war to peace basis. Theugh the war has been stopped for a iod of eight s we are still working under tion in many direciions, and i mportant that the head of the| nation should be here to do what is required of him in bringing about the; necessary chan That the president doesn’t consider that he has completed his work in connection with the peace delibera- tions is indicated by the fact that he planning to teur the country on a =peaking trip for the purpose of try- ing to convince the people of the nec- essity of ratifying the treaty without servations. There can be no ques- ion but what he will be heard with interest but if he doesn’t give any more enlightenment on the working of the league of nations than he ald on his previous tour it can hardly be ex- pected that it will accomplish much. EASILY SATISFIED. In these days of readjustments when demands are being made in all directions for higher wages and less heurs, it is a decidedly interesting and unusual case in the hands of the au- thorities at Sing Sing prison, where a prisoner sentenced to from two to four years, who has proved a model in all respects, refuses to leave the institution or tG take any steps that would make it possible for him to get free from its walls thouzh he is en- titled to do so. It is a new experience at Sing Sing. Ordinarily the prisoners cannot get out too quick. Too often is it the case that they take French leave in order to shake prison life, but never before have they refused to take ad- vantage of the time they have earned for good behavior to have it apply on their parole. He has been in prison over two years and seven months ago to those of all depart-| Our | i we ought and | | ple aliiance in w that he will serve his entire term of four years. They like him and he seems to like the place. He knows that he is go- ing to get his meals regularly and he doesn’t have to do any worrying about where he is going to lay his head or get his next suit of clothes. All that- responsibility is done away with. He leaves that entirely to oth- ers realizing that as long as he be- haves those things are off of his mind, and as far as entertainment goes he is probably one of those who doesn't find it hard to entertain themselves. It speaks well also for the institu- tion for if they didn't use him well he would not be so anxious to linger. It wasn’t just the kind of a job that he previously cared for or he wouldn't have gotten there, but after having tried it he appears to be in love with what most people would -consider the irksome and distasteful job of being a prisoner. A BENEFIT FROM PROTECTION. While attention is being directed to the necessity of giving proper protec- tion to industries that have been stimi- ulated in this country as the result of the war, we cannot overlook the fact that the manufacturers of tin plate in Wales are coming to this country for the purpose of investigating’ the man- ner in which we carry on that busi- ness. Only about a decade ago this coun- try was breaking into the tinplate bys- iness. Previous to that time we did not produce such goods. Then we were importing at the rate of a million other countries thing off of the business that they did here. The situation was much the by Germany previous to the war. It required a year or two for the! tinplate business to get a start here but within a couple of years we were | making three million pounds a year, which made some inroads into our im- portations, but how it has grown is conclusively shown by the fact that today we are not importing a pound and are producing at the rate of three and a half billion pounds a year. It is of course a gratifying increase. ;u means a large Industry has been established where none existed before and even though we do not produce the pig tin, but are obliged to import it, we are nevertheless able to produce tinplate on such a large scale that we are exporting large quantities of it, even to the countries from which we import the pig tin. The reason for this is that twenty vears ago we established a protective tariff for this industry. We have long been getting the benefit of it and it will be the same in other lines if prop- erly attended to. CANNOT BE SIDETRACKED. It will be most unfortunat> if it] proves to be that the plan for the adoption of a national budget system | has been blocked by those iwho ate against it at all costs. This was in- | cluded as one of the importani cbjects for which this congress was to and even though it is to be realized that there are matters of the great- t importance to the nation before that body at the present time and re- quiring attention as early 1s it can be given consistent with good judgment, it seems to be a mistake to sidetraci the budget idea in such a way : mean that it will" be kept submer,ed indefinitely. 3 There are those who don' like to move scrward and those who neve: like to make a change, ecially when it may have zome efvat upon their authority, but having been sent to Washington to look after the bast| interests of the country it cannot fail to be recognized that the adoption of a budget system for the national gov- ernment is inclided therein. If it isn't to know why. The value of a budget system is generally understood in connection town or state governments, even ihough there may be cases where the application of it is not all that might Dbe desired, but regardless of the acknowledged benefit of such a system for municipalities the nation’s business’continues to be carried along in a haphazard sort of a way with a reluctance to bring about the long needed reform. The longer the delay, however, the greater is going to be the insistence upen the shifting from the precent loose way of doing business to a more businesslike method, Put- ting the budget system aside will not satisfy the demand for its adoption. EDITORIAL NOTES No one will very question the assertion that Summer with all its variations has arrived. There are many streets that would be more hady if greater atiention was | given to planting trees. The man on the corner says: It doesn't take the auto owaers long to! get onto the wrinkles of the new no light law. Is it the league of nations or the tri- ich France places its faith to preserve it from Prussianism in the future If it were only possible to can a bit of heat that July has thus far yielded it woul? be a great help to the fur- nace tender next January. Senator Brandegee continues to find that the position he has taken on the preservation of Americanism -appeals pounds a vear and manufacturers in| were making a bigl same as the dvestuft monopoly <held {with a serving 1 Th “I never saw you look so sad be- fore,” declared the fraternity man as he and the pretty sorority girl settled themselves in the farthest corner of the much occupied reception room. “Dark indigo has nothing on me,” she confessed and sighed deeply. “The weightiest. solemnest women's dean on the campus cornered me today and inquired about my future. I had no idea g future was such an—" “It isn’t,” the fraternity man said eagerly. “As I have pointed out to tested the pretty sororit not talkicg about that kind of future. T've got to have a purpose in Jife after 1 graduate. Otherwise I will drift and be a vezetable or a parasite.” “I like that!” the fraternity man said hotly. td she dare to com- pare you to a vegetable? - Now, if she had mentioned roses. or something like that! Anyhow, Evangeline, it is all waste time for you to turn pale worrying about vour future. I am the best little fortune teller in town and I see a dark, handsome young man, star member of the Eta Beta Pi fraternity, leaving his _handsome flat mornings to catch the $:10 to the city, with you waving good-by from the window and wondering whether to hav# Dbeefsteak or fried egss for dinne: “I Joathe fried eggs,” said the pret- ty irl vehemently. “All this is not helping meé decide on my life work, Arthur. And this education of mine must not go to waste. And I am so terribly well educated that I can’t do Jjust any old thing g T'a.die if I had to lead a meetin; *I should not at all like to have you lead a meeting,” objected the fra- ternity man, frowninz. “A woman who leads meetings loses all the up- ward curves of her mouth. She is apt to interrupt her husbands merry prat- tle at the dinner table by banging spoon under the im- pression that it is a gavel. Can't you embroider doilies or—or some- thing like that?" “Doilies!” shrieked the pretty “It would look well when they wrote my obituary to have it stated that during her lifetime the deceased em- broidered 109,607 doilies, ‘wouldn't it? Any idiot can embroider doilies, Ar- thur! Ne! I want to do something girl. unusual and helptal to the world ¥ uess I'll go to India and—="_ B Wny Inaim? asked - e * man, querulously. man’ wants to do something final and desperate she always picks on Indial I should think the teeming . multi- tudes would get so tired of, (h i stant uplift that they'd just lie. down and dje through sheer dlpcoux:age, ment.” “I think yowd better say g0 and run_on home, Arthur,” lhe girl said_caldly. = “This is ro matiter. You may not realize il “I_should say. it was no jok‘& agreed the voung man promptly.. oIt is not at all my idea of humor, {0 find my plans for our future knock- ed into a cocked hat by the plans for | your future. If I'm perfectly satisfied with what_you have accomplished .in the world, Evanggline, I don't see why you should be disturbed and set on stirring up things by doing something else. Doggone that dean!” “If that isn’t jusc like a selfish man!® declared the young woman. ‘WBut you wouldn't be satisfied with me long if I were merely a cabbage sort of person, Arthur! ‘Women have to accomplish things to hold their place in the world.” “I'll tell you, said the young man leaning closes, accomplish some licking good baking powder bis- ¢uits and applie pie and doughnuts and_roast beef and - things, I'll say u're a wonder, Evangeline. Maybe you can strike out on some new line too, in the arrangement of ‘living room furniture or window draperies— who knows? I've known women to get their pictures "in the paper for less than that. Your name may be on every tongue when they print your life history because you have the most artistic front porch on the street or because your husband’s socks are al- ways darned. Say, they're putting up a swell little flat, six blocks from here—— “Oh, that one with the darling sun {%INHSBHL Lydia E Pinkham'sVegeta tried-ig- have-no pains, backache or dizzy srell Ev I tell them to use Ve, makes ma: “feat well and look well. MARTHA STA] WsKki, 624 Penn St., Ferth Aoy 15, For fo: Vegetable ing such serious-conditions as duplue- ments, mflamm:flon, uleeration, 1 nh.ntles, periodic pains, backache, du— ziness, women, and is now considered the staf- dard remed: The Girls From Huyler’s IN THE MUSICAL COMEDY “THE SPRINGS” . Refined and Pleasing BESSIE BARRISCALE ULD NOT WAI.I( nd a pain in ruy side most of the time. 1 d diszy svells and llwas often so fewnt I could ol walk across t . The doc- i tor said ! would have [to have ai operation, read shovt Lydia Pinkvam's Vege: - ubln Compourn iri | § - ~ - y newspianer, mld .+ ~TODAY -AND: FTHURSDAY / In the Five Part Comedy Drama ~THE SHERIFF’S SON International News The Latest Current Events The Lure of the Circus With EDDIE POLO EXPERT ELOPER LYONS & MORAN COMEDY oD Al .' the Latest World N-wu Am-mem' nght Thuuday 'very one tells me hnw well I look, and E. Pinkham’s — that is wh; to my sister and she 1t-how. *“You can use this letter Yyou wish, for it'is :‘enaml gre! 1 edy for o woman's il's o g, table | years-Lydia B. Pinkham ompound has been overcom: Husband. and nervous ostration of ch for il parlors and . vou? “Hush!" said the pretty girl others will hear 1" don't able to plan any - kind_of fut do 1. Anyhow, I guess I dom’t want | to."—Exchange. B el 1 Gleaned from Foreign Ex. changes It was stated in an official quarter that the Germans were. still attack- ing the that they are-concentrating armoured cars and other war material-on’that front they evidently intend to oceupy all the Isthonian Baltic provinces. Marshal Foch Has issiied a- direction to the Germans, plemented by an order from General & them to withdraw imediately south of the line already 1 The new Loan, to. the down. ‘when its subscrip- all records and make the loans of an earlier day seem insignificant in size. But in speed it may-have to go “oll out” to rival the Loyalty Loan of 1796. loan of £18,000,000 for. carrying on the war with France was fully sub- scribed in exactly 15 hours and 20 min- utes from the opening of its lists. The present appeal to the sporting stinct is something - new in British ans, but added inducements to invest once common in them.- A, fav- ourite form was a small annuity for a term of years in adition to the perma- nent interest. The Crimea War, for instance, saw the issue of a 3 percent. loan with an annuity of 1l4s. 64 per cent. for 30 years. Friday, the thirteenth day of the month, in the eyes of the superstitious, must be a doubly unlucky day on which to essay any great task. We wonder whether this was not the une derlying cause of the first' postpone- ment of the Allies’ reply to the Germax ounter-proposals, which was to hava | been delicvered yesterday. No such notion seems to have tener- e the heads of those who are respon- ic for the issue of the great Vi tory Loan. nor is it at all likely to g | pause to the Transatlantic flie ing for a favouring wind. ders, however W the s Newfoundland think of it. 'There is no | belief more firmly rooted in the minds | of those who “do’ business in great waters” than that a Friday sailing is simply asking for trouble. And Fri-| thonians, and from ilie fact ! ! the Strand? ! moved to trip up a ough, INstructing | os heen sold by the British govern- | tion list is opened, will probably beat | | tae Falace of Versaille day the 13th! amendment that_we We said that the Me- n Southampton Docks, whicn is the case. But it is not the Ling yacht, schooner rigged vessel, | this name which belonged to the | but the Meteor of the Ham- | burg-America Line, which used to! take passenzers to the Scnadinavian fiords and to the Mediterranean. The ex-Kaiser's yacht wae, of course, the Hohenzollern. i ~ General Sir Philip Chetwode, who ucceeds General Davies as Mil- retary at the War Office, be- fongs to a family which can trace its history back to before the Conquest. He was one of the leaders of the Brit- ish Cavalry in the fateful days of Au- gust. 1914, and to him and his troopers fell the duty of covering the retreat of Sir H. Smith-Dorrien’s army, dur- ing which they completely routed an enemy mounted column near Cherisy. Dorothy Britons who have spent part of their Whitsun hsiiGay toiling through torrid heat in a futile “hunt for beer” can reflect sadly that the present week brought “the time of their lives” to our bibulous ancestors. At this season were held the “Whit. sun Ales” or “Church Ales” when beer brewed with malt cellected or sold to_the faithful laity, and the pro- ceeds devoted to church purposes or the 1ei? of the poor. The beer was drunk in the tithe- bar. or some suitable place, and the festivities—corruptio optimi pessima! —often degenerated into drunken or- gies, which caused the custom to be an e most strongly and sensibly to Amer- icans. With Nebraska, as it is claimed, buying automobiles at the rate of 300 a day, it must be determined that Kansas with its big wheat crop doesn’t get ahead of i From the way in which the danger- ous eclement refrained from throwing bombs and the like on the Fourth it looks as if the appeal of Mooney had reached them all. There are many places to go on a vacation, but there is the same trou- ble with them all; it's necessary first to get the vacation and accompany it with a nice fat roll of bank notes. Germany will whine of course over the bill that will be presented to it for the warships that it scuttled, but pos- sibly it will be willing to pay for what it believed certain of the allies would never have been able to accom- plish. The belief is expressed in Washing- ton that along with the reduction in first class postage that the zone rates could have applied for parole. He re- fused to do so. Even now after his minimum sentence has been served he mto‘tmpmlemuchm on second cla®s matter should be re- moved. It is certainly right and the rates ought never to have been adopted. sun—:essed after the Evangelical re- vival. It has been revealed that old cinema films are used to make “stiffenings” for the toe-caps of boots and shoes. Use Cocoanut Oil For Washing Hair If you want to keep your hair in good co_n:ition. be careful what you wash it with. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkali. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and is very harmful. Mulsified cocoanut oil shampoo (which is pure and entirely greaseless), is much better than any- thing else you can use for shampooing, as_this can't possibly injure the hair. Simply moisten your hair with water and rub it in. One or two teaspoonfuls will make an abundance of rich, creamy lather, and cleanses the hair and scalp thoroughly. The lather rinses out easily, and removes every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and ex- cessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves it fine and silky, ht, fluffy and easy to manage. ou’ can get Mulsified cocoanut oil shampoo at most any drug store. It is very cheap, and a few ounces is enough to last everyone in the - for months. A { madman of i the Magna Carta and the Declaration | and enthralling than any stage piece The idea seems to have endless pos- sibilities—and dangers. Suppose a piece of a Charlie Chap- lin film forms part of my boot (writes | a perturbed correspondent), can I be| sure that it will not suddenly break out into the Charlie Chaplin shufile in And if 1 am suddenly | policeman, can 1] court that the! little bit of | ed successtully plead in cheery influence of the film led me astray? The news that the island of Herm | ¢ ment to Guernsey is of chief interest to boys and girls. The ! fascination of islands was instinet in voungsters before even Daniel Defoe was, and please Heaven, will -endure | for all- time. “Islands that were- the Hesperides"—Longfellow owned ne monopoly in boy: dreams. H There is not co however to make much better with valleys and rocky rece: alluring of all is, perhap: Island, in Poole Harbor, with life and dark . thickets and anclent | buildings, steeped in piratical history. Lundy, hard as iron, - and . ten miles| long, was priced a number.of years ago | at £25,000 pounds. Sark could have been bought soon after .for. £20,000. Herm’s price today was £15,00 —The‘. London Chronicle. in IN THE DAY’S NEWS Versailles. If one were to complete a list of the seven historic spots of the world, as compnaion set to the seven wonders, where the ' German delegates signed- - the. peace treaty, would be sure of a place among them,” says a bulletin from the > tional Geographic Society. “There Great Britain first recognized the independence of the United Siates: ere the Third Estate formed a na- onal assembly and gave birth to the rench Revolution; there William I was. crowned emperor of Germany | while Paris was being besieged; and | there representatives of the civilized worid not only made peace with ‘the Curope’ but signed a doc- ument that may rank in history with | obably matter | | st ed ideal. Sark is caves®and littie it of S d | of Independence. i Nor is this mammoth palace, Which once could house a city of 10.060. per- | sons, merely a historic shrine o epochal ceremonies. It vibrates with, echoes of human dramas more vivid Moliere showed there to distract the biaze Louis XIV and his dazzlinz court. “There the unhap. Valliere, the vain-glorious Montespan, and the aus- tere Maintenon successively loved, in- fatuated, and exploited the magnifi cent Louis; there too the brillian Pompadour and the seductive du Bar- ry shome among the galaxy of m tresses: and there some ten thou- sand drunken women from Paris brok through the gates and sent Louis flee- ing to the Tuilleries. Mere chance set Versajlles on a his- eminence. Nature provided on a flat, sandy stretch of cquntry, so arid that the kings never couM get water enough for the magnificent fountains. Louis XIIT chanced to have a hunting | chateau-there. So the next Louis was | attracted there. He planned his r t0 of tori idence on so grandiose a scale that the ' jam and sweek levelling of the land, building of a road sters the wor rors, wheére the first William realized His| ambition to r stwhile liam paid the penalty for his mania td “What scenes those mirrors have Te. flected! ciaimed himself ‘the amond embroidered bloated, ing. with her head and eyes, the recos- i nition due to ¢ am= 110m regal : fauns trees | thi magnificence of They are | surrounded by | depicts, i reer of Louis ensemble was typical of the ostent tion from which France freed herself. Americans’ ahcady “The ehildren j towns in a pitiful ment lagra These or and tening foous, er icans came. o All . their Jeen Since Rumania have not known what it is to play or their live thei- aearts “{ have never see wan, tragic stor: proper food, shelter nor clothing. Many of them have.Jost either one or both parents. The Red Cross gives them American ) ' to Paris.’and construction of an aque- I knew it!' cried the young man,| 0 Paris.’ TODAY ONLY ok o [T e e i e[| CHARLIE CHAPLIN than any career on earth, wouldn't| ¥ L il come sallery of mir- et ihigiinly literally the 'galerie des glaces, |§- bl i " “SUNNYSIDE” le all Germany, that ihe! subjects of the second WH- the-world. AUDITORIUM|Majestic Roof Ropiy Jies- Orchostrs For Dancing Feature Picturss BESSIE BARRISCALE “Within the Cop” A= Shied A Great and Forecful Drama “WITHIN THE COP” | FORD WEEKLY And the Famous Ford' Weekly With All of the World’s News. Today and Thursday Viola Dana b “SOME BRIDE” A Five-Act Metro Comedy of an Innogent Wife Flirt and a Jealous GLADYS BROCKWELL —)N— PITFALLS OF A BIG CITY Depicting the Struggle of a Woman BILL BLAZES, ESQ. 1 HAROLD LLOYD COMEDY Louis who prot | theie: daricicyes; ranii:and melancholy, staie’, with his’di- ) dight.tp. with,a new radiance. They coat and red h@el: Lbgpome children again. THe Americans inches high; ms;she mcm clothing, shoes, stockings. milk-fed successor Who; ae | Thoy- bathe them. The little tots be- ardous exercise was frying pi S | comp real Ruman peinks for his mistress’ breakfast —_— The Doctor-Bird. One of the humming biras of Ja- maica has long been called “doctor- 0 Ihlrd " but, curfously, it Is not the same finally bowing | bird which used to be edlled %o in that headma island. Gorse, whose “Birds of Ja- O O i Lot a setatilaed and ablIghtrn irecious than rubies before work on the natural history of the Is- . red e-ad“l"’nd;‘fm;;@d j land as he observed It halt a century indows: overlook the famous | 0 faYS It was. the small mango hum- scene df roval revelries and | Mer, now known as “plantain guide” omp, where all the sculptors of | because of its preference for the banana ding in: Prance were commandeer- | plossom. He shyk th name was given for- innumigable pieces, where the 1y "1 peaple because of the bellef gilded frogs and ile {hat it ministers to its comrades when play flutes « fhey are ill or injured, but another B e vriteér gives what)is probably the cor- sufre , rect version when he says that it got The mirrors { its name through having a much more sober plumage than others of the same family. At the present day, { however, the name Is applied almost ntively to the beautiful long-tailed va- and hardly ever to its duller | brother. They saw slippers _ four sons with one movement, /Sov- ch one’, headman s blade. the “The Concert: the mou Lecture: Tza stately old do the med in not spacious gallery. works of art and paintings. One series ant scenes, the ca Tables and ch: The | this halkewere i silver. and the emptiness of the yoke Opera “Pinafore” by full GHAUTAUQUA Academy Campus Wednesday, July 9th Afternoon at 3 O'Clock’ Berkeley Sextette Vocal and Instrumental sérgeant Ruth Farnum “Reconstruction of Devastated France” ADMISSION 35 CENTS Evening at 8 O’Clock cast, chorus and orchestra of 38 ADMISSION 75 CENTS s| The New York Sun carries the story have s i The condition of the its. wonderfull® im- | been kable 1 ASHLAND CASINO, entrance. Red Cross workers found the JEWBTT CITY. of a man of that city whose estate, STORIES OF THE WAR |70y Drobated, showed $2.846,630— Carifg for Rumanian Children. |of which $100 wis in Lberty Londs. (Coriespondence of the Associated | 1le was a German. Fie children of Rumania are | e _.|Every Monday, . care of the Amer n Red “WI - are showing Ruman- *cw to care properly for ~aie distributing infants’ A sed milk, soap, taleum that contri- 0"'4‘ ef \\ork the efforts of the! TONIGHT DANCING Wednesday and Friday Evening DANZ JAZZ BAND EIGHT PIECES RICHARD’S GROVE New floor, cool breeze and delightful music. New . London--Norwich cars pass all these war-affected state of impoverish- Many of them were slowly dy starvation. Others had pel- and malignant skin diseases. tde ones are now belng cared .wen nourishment and fat- such as bacon, jam.- tod They have shown woné cvement since the Amdr- | in ASHLAND ORCHESTRA. OASINO NOT OPEN IF STORMY. Liikad vertl, il these children have been und and have nood is. train of war. for TodE eally never knuwn In common with parents, they have borne thi privations and sufferings entered the war théy T e We simplify wark in your office, give you AND Deuv;nv ON TIME. “for facsimile typewritten lette Folding letters, stamping, and mai “ters,'a specialty. laugh. Hunger has robbed them that spirit. The war has blighted f No smiles have come. to feaes, no happiness into, tHeir'{d writers to Rent. They are. like flowers which | the sunshine. efr pinched litfle countenance tell a They have had neither Business Office, Room 308 the things that young- over crave for, dnd MEN AND WOMEN. When you think of the successful mren and- who are doing chmgs— ‘women you know—people worth while—you Wllclp force, vim and energy— the kind that simply bring over when the blood is filled with iron. Nuxated Iron by enriching the blododl n;d creating new red blood cells, st ens the mfil‘s; ‘the weaketied s'and helps to_instill renewed ¥orce and energy into the whole system. Three mufim pcuph use it an- nually as a l‘l’m‘fll and blood-builder. MAKE THIS %E'S'I' find that they See how long you can work of Fow lar walk without becoming tired; next take two fiyé= grain tablets of Nuxated Iron: three times per™” day after meals for.two weels.” Then test your much you have dowmn: Ppéople Gt nd Eaderaice : an ar: simply by taking mm-film foFmL e ¥ She strength again and see how gained. . Numbers dfnmuus,,(un. who were ailing all the_while, have ishingly increased tl _stren; BEHIND KEEN succzssrm‘. noc pouen e at 12 o’clock. Returning reach Norwich at 6:30; - yénfil’ accommodations for 600 passengers. FARE 40c EACH WAY. \ medium better than s of The Bulletin “THAT REMINDS ME” PHDNé 1311 JEWETT BUSINESS SCHOOL, THE MUdIaT‘GRAPH sHoP addr. ng at a nominal charge. Public Stenographers—Office Supplies SATISFACTORY SERVICE, Business Houses furnished with efficient office help free of charge. Type- Wfll Mé Sfi@xf.xcmwn to Ocean Beach every Sun- day dunngfthe -season, leaving the Railroad dock at foot ‘of Market Street, at.10:30 A, M. and arriving at the Beach leave Beach at 5 o’clock and This is a brand new boat with Deisel Engine and ample VL WHEN YOU WANT (o put your bus- befors the public, is ne P there through the ing, sealing, Filling'in on let-

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