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Jiorwich Bulletin and Goufied 123 YEARS OLD Sumscristion price 126 & week: 506 3 « year. Entered at_the Postoffice at wccnd-class matter. Telephane Calls. etin Business Offic 480. Bulletis ¥diiorial flooms 38. Balletin 330 Offfcs 35-2. astic Office 23 Ciurew St Teiephone 105. JE————————— Norwich, Thursday, July 10, 1919 Norwich. Comn.. as WEMOER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Asociated Press fs exclusire w the use fer republication of ALl hews lespeteh. Tedited to 1t o not oiherwise crediied in roqt4 CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING JULY 5th, 19119 10,076 TAKE THE BSULLETIN ALONG Subscribers and readers of The Bulletin legving the city for the eason, or a vacation, can have he Bulletin sent to their address 5y mail for any specified period at the regular rate by notifying the business department, telephone 480 THE ADDRESS TO CONGRESS. 1 be aroused today President Wilson to f both branches of he will present the peace conference in Frar h the reasons wh: e e document which Versailles should be w of all at has been said n here are reasons to believe itude is pretty thoroughly od will urge speedy c e the document effe n le is likel seek > have the docu- oved as it stands without ons or ch s i Ke- | e. From all indications s that the treaty of peace league of nations is the best bly be ob ned under that it marks a de- comparison with milar character e weifare of the world and e of the future bound up Whether he will have any- ess regarding the and its doings that is wn remains to be scen. been an unusual gath- husiasm of ation of the fully under- opposition to a num- catures of the league of na- ere is a demand that Americanism should come before in- sm and upon that particu- the country will look with erest to see what President for it is to be re- people as well as the 1y concerned over the ich the country will LING SURPLUS SUPPLIES. the material that sition of ated for war purposes remains unused in the the government is by no sk. Tt must be done of the govern- the of cecuring today the market or s large an offset to v s can be secured through e as possible. It is realized prices were paid for tk goods. prices were ab- normal because they had to be had a hurry and to get them speedily essary to pay for it, so that be expected that the gov- will obta he ent of spent for t articles. ognized that 1 have large losses but that doesn’t it should disp of them sonable sacrifices or throw the policy of the > of this war material, v the refusal to nce goods valued at a bil- for a fifth of that motor vehicles and her equipment have been amassed in France can today make good use of reconstruction work. In fact ; are needed and if France doesn't to pay a fair market there are Belgium andother coun- arently care them tries that require them. We can make some allowance for not being obliged g them home. but we could even to do that rather than to dis- pose of them for little better than junk And what is true of those particular goods will likewise be true of the surplus shipbuilding supplies that are to be sold. Just because they are pos- sessed in large quantities we are not obliged to dispose of them as if they possessed no value and had got to be worked over to be used. THE MEAT SITUATION. There was a time not so long ago but what most people can remember, that the government urged everyone to engage in the unpopular and intri- cate task of saving. And among the things that they were urged to bring about a reduction of waste in was the use of meat. People were advised that they could get along with less, that they could make what they had go further and that it was necessary to conserve in order to permit the sup- piy to take care of the unusual de- mands. They responded nobly and the re- sult is that many of them have learn- ed a lesson. They have found that they can continue saving along this very line for their own good and that they are doing 8o to-a large extent is evidenced by the fact that the depart- ment of agriculture is pointing out that the meat supply is very greatly increased but in view of the fact that consumption at home has fallen off, the needs of the army and navy have 50 greatly decreased and foreign de- mands are so much smaller that a large surplus is piling country, and its advice today is not’ to save but fo stop saving meat. ed. | handle orice for| up in this| Well there may be some who will follow this advice just because they are told to. many full consideration to the prices that are being demanded in spite of the| great amount of meat that -is being | u: piled up. but there are a great others who will stop and give That is going to be the stumbling block, and even the agri- cultural department recognizes that it will be, when itiis set forth that retail prices have not dropped in accord with wholesale prices. With meat prides skyhigh and the purchasing power of the dollar about a half of what it was it cannot beé expected that the people are going to plunge into meat buying just to pile up the profits for somebody else. BRING THE FACTS TO LIGHT. Among the chirges that are being brought and revelations that are be- ing made in connection with the way the government expended money in connection with the war is the asser- tion that there has been a scandalous conduct of the war picture business that has been carried on for different purposes. The chargés are made by a committes of the house which has been looking into these matters and it is held that employes of the gov- rnment have profited out of the pic- ure business carried on by the zov- crnment to the extent of hundreds of thousands of dollars. It is very frequentl somebody else’s money i¢ involved, and this is particularly true in con- nection with municipal. state and fed- eral affairs, that there are those who are always looking for the chance to cecure some personal benefit there- from in addition to the salaries which they secure for doing such work. There are those who think that because they | handle such work and see a chance to profit from it on the side that they have a right to do so, under the im- | there will be no way of detecting them. ' Sooner or later such dealings usual- ly come to light, and that appears to be the case in regard to the charges that are made relative to the alleged film graft. Inasmuch as a house com- mittee has received sufficient facts to warrant the making of the charges that it has, there appears®o be suffi- cient grounds for probing the matter to the bottom. It certainly should not | be allowed to stop where it is. 1If! the case where there has been wholesale graft ihose who are responsible should be sought ! out and puniched, and if there has| kind, or n be nothing of e complained of plained that opportunity = should given. Whatever the outcome matter should be thorough HEADED WRONG WAY. been charges the | Mexico is long on promises but short on accomplishment: Even though we have been told that the border situation was to be taken care; of so that the rights of Americans would be adequately protected such has not been done, as the recent at- tack on Juarez by, Villa plainly show- And yet Aguilar, the representa- tive of Carranza, declares afresh that “The Mexican government expects to the border troubles to the sat- isfaction of the American people.” It would be better for Mexico, and more faith would be placed in such asser- tions, if it did more to show its good intentions and did less talking. The country is getting to the point where it feels as if it was from Missouri re- garding Mexico. Aguilar seems to carry the impres- sion that all the trouble is located along the border, but he must be fully aware that such is not the case. The dozen or more Americans who have been killed in Mexico recently have not lost their lives along the border, and the proverty acquired by Ameri- cans in a legal manner which Mexico is'trying to take away from them is not border land. The best demonstration that Mexico can give of its desire and purpose to satisfy the American people will be to see that the lives and property of Americans are safeguarded, that their rights are not ignored and that there is not a disposition to make tae re-| lations of the country unfriendly rath- er than friendly. Mexico has faced its problem for a long time. It doesn’t appear to have made much headway and in fact doesn’t seem to show a disposition to do anything but stub. bornly stand in its own light. C: tainly it is moving in the wrong d rection to cultivate American appro- val. EDITORIAL NOTES. The man on the corner says: Wars can be started by the devil, but mak- ing peace is a man’s job. Isn't it about time for -the Nobel peace prize commission to begin look- ing over the eligible list? The summer is certainly nioving along rapidly. They are already be- ginning to talk about the fall fash- ions. Keeping the R-34 from going up in the air requires much work, but that is also the case with a lot of individ- uals. Burleson denies the report that he has resigned the postmaster general- ship. He never was very keen for sat- isfying public demands. What government operation does is again demonstrated by the report that Canada faces a heavy deficit as the result of its running of the railroads. ‘With the bartenders in Philadelphia going on strike and causing the sa- loons to close it looks as if they had joined a league to enforce prohibi- tion. No one will believe it but that re- cent tremor at Washington may have been the shock from the news to the effect that the president was coming home. Now that Von Hindenburg is will- ing to be the goat for the former kai- ser, who will volunteer to fill the| shoes of the ferocious former crown | prince ? i If it is so that the riots in Ttaly: were allowed by the government to; proceed to teach the profiteers a les-| son, it cannot be possible that the idea i} is copyrighted. The temper of the times is -pretty well disclosed by the employes of a Massachusetts manufacturing con- | cern, who, after their demands had ! been met, struck again for a greater | increase and shorter hours and are still out. Ma jestic Roof R ) PRIZE DANCE TONIGHT Feature Pictures BESSIE BARRISCALE “WITHIN THE COP” And the Famous Ford Weekly With Al of the Worid’s News . b things. - < deu‘ Semetw. how. mUCh 18 - onto his shoulders in the bank and left to his judgment theyd be amaz- What sort of a position in the bank does he—" ‘Robert is so absolutely different in 1business hours and whe {me’ said tho prettv givl n't know he was the same man. wcen. m the bank 2na scares you to death and, of course | Nething Like Plain Bitro-Phos Zwell, ‘he is very different with me. I shouldn’t think any one would dare to attempt anything crdoked with Ro- bert around. Only. the other day the| president— concluded the turned from a t out of town and| informed her family that she was en- “But its exactly as big a sur- prln ‘to me, so. we're ‘Well, tell us all about lum*" stut- “You at least owe he 160k like? . “Is he awful rich?’ asked her small| “I hope he's the rlght sort,” hoped her_mother. “Ropert is ~perfectly wonderful!™ tty girl told them, her cheeks| can't imagine ever could have spent. one instant’s | of the men I've known | He is so far beyond them that I can’t belieye they are.the same species at look at him you'd Know— what does he look nke"" re- peated her sister. SHGUI.I] TAKE PHOSPHATE The Girls From Hnyler 3 .in “The Refined Musical in “Within the Cop” t_and_Forecful Drama um her father. he is with ‘You would- | her sister. Put on Iirm, Heaithy Fle Vigor and Nerve! All of the Latest World' Judgzing from the countless prepara- citions and treatments which are contin- ually being advertised for the purpose {of ‘making thin people fleshy, deveélop- rme, neck and bust, and replactny by the soft and beauty, very pink. thought on an; here all my Ii “Is his family nice, dear?” begged ln% al ‘her anxious mother. hollows and anglés Shrved lines of there are evidently thousands of omen who Keenly feel their ex- Cessivo thinnes = Thinness .ana Their daughter sighed. obert’s people are just wonder- “They're _ditfer- Moose Carnival BATTLE GROUNDS ENTIRE WEEK OF JULY 14TH All Attractions Furnished by Royal Exposition Shows FREE BAND CONCERTS—Afternoon and Evenings 10—BIG ATTRACTIONS—10 | “she breathed. ent from almost any family You know some people! 1. wasn't engaged long!- enough to get very well acquainted— “Is. their house—' “The. funiest thing! ty girl rapturously. ‘was going to be engaged to Robert or. where he lived I went by and I liked it right away. ‘it was a premonition or 1f you could see the way Robert has of looking—" ‘What color ,” demanded her sister, “are his. eyes?” b “That is what you first notice abouu him,” said the brid-to-be. X draw you in spite of yourself. jon which is so res The fiancee sighed thollghtm-uy. be just .wild over Robert,” she promised her sister. is the type you most admire but then, my ideas always were different, 1 can't stand 2 man who. is so obviously handsome—like But don't for a minute think Robert| Indeed not stunning and stril . he's tall, then? he isn't w! ever known. “Not . that he| cried the pret- ' “Before I.knew I their heuse | 1. suppose ng looking. something. | hat you'd call tall, you know, presses you so. never ask- Seems to tower and I really You just don’t think of that when you I can't begin to tell you sensation he gi purpose and—and— T'd like to know his business pros- . interrupted er father. is he making, has he a future and is ed his heigh i things lke are with him. markable— “What's his income?” demanded her!, : reproached. hi “Didn’t T just tell you all] strength and was' going away so soon - e Kokeq stupin. ke 1 should think after I have answered all your ‘ques- | tions and explained him so thorough- perfectly ' satistied. | u every single thing about| Iiim “that anybody could possibly want | gne Chicago News. 2 bride-to-be, a trifle indignantly . has the best judgment 'and a perfect- ly wonderful ought to hear him talk and you would- nt’ ask such things. about that. TODAY ONLY CHARLES RAY THE SHERIFF’S SON A Regular Ray Picture With All the Punch and Pep You Want and Not a Dull EDDIE POLO IN THE .FOURTH EPISODE OF The Lure of the Circus The Greatest of All Serials EXPERT ELOPERS LYONS. and MORAN COMEDY Why, he ‘kept a interested explaining the finances of Russia and what about it over there. in a bank, you Know, so he knows all you ‘would ‘be [Our bodles —TODAY— Viola Dana — Nt “SOME BRIDE” A Five-Act Metro Comedy of an Innocent Wife Flirt and a Jealous “starved nerves. need more phosphate than is contained 0 . Physicians “claim |there is nothing that will supply this deficiency 50 well as the organic phos. pbate known among druggists as bitro- phosphate, which is inexpensive and is ‘Osgood in Norwich and gists under a guarantee ought to do the magnificeat tains-that surround the capitals of Rio| Janeiro or Santiago de Chile nor such | = bay, or rather land-locked- gulf, as, that of San Francisco, with its spién- passage out to the those are very thete are few in the world. itals go, few indeed, are tageously situated in respect to’hats ural charms LETTERS TO THE EDITOR) A Need of the State Hospital. sold by Leé:. most aH - Aarug satisfaction or -money back. feeding the nerves directly and by sup- plying the body cells with the neces- sary phosphoric food elements. bitro- should produce a welcome tion in the appearance: the frequently being Norwich stafe hospital one day patient in whom 1 ed to_see the library.of the institutfon, and was pleased to note.it re things, of which o advan-| asmmshlng. Increasc in weisht also carries with it a general improvement in the heaith. sleeplessness and lack of nearly always Washington: 1t stands in-a sandy perfectly flat, with here and ¢ lake, ‘and a | sluggish stream meanders through it Parts of the environs have, however, been well planted with trees. and’ this redeems the “city likewise noticed that many were old and i x remarked that have quite i Nervousness, GLADYS BROCKWELL PITFALLS OF A BIG CITY Depicting the Struggle of a Woman to Come Back. BILL BLAZES, ESQ. HAROLD LLOYD COMEDY s patients never reading matter, books, papers, to entirely gratif; | for that sort of thing. Pollock said interested in institution i pany excessive disappear, dull eyes ought to bri and palé cheeks glow with the lof perfect nealth. ton, who was. once thin and frail. orting_her. own “Bitro-Phosp their, liking Gt to some extent. Miss Georgla Hamil- become, through the efforts of the | its own citizens, an the environs can because Nature experience, hate has brought about a magic transformation with me. pounds and never before felt so & — - Although unsurpassed 'ner\nusness sleeplessnéss and seneral it should not. to increase hy anyone who does not desire to )’l\\t zovernment and imposing cit; never be beautiful, s been very ungracious. “Take Petrograd. splendid water front facing its grand with its vast rush of covered with ice in | winter and chilling the air, and seem- the Jandscape in summer reading, and International News Up-to-Date Current Events part of -the. state am persuaded, do much. for the and women The people of this o ;. Petrograd has a bitro-phos- New Show Tomorrow GHAUTAUQUA Academy Campus Thursday, July 10th Afternoon at 3 O’Clock Dr. George Lawrence Parker “Russia’s Death and Resurrection” Concert: The L. O. Company, Soprano, Contralto and Pianist ADMISSION 35 cents rtunate men d river, the.Neva, cold green water, the average uninformed pe: son would be surprised could he kno some of us equipment tions of at least these nervous acd. mental Hundreds of them were reade students back in the better da read a great deal profit to themselves, i . The money ous commendable objecis over, and Norwich and ing to_chill the studious government fair pereentdge of ‘about action. ‘We wonder if the parlor Bolshevists the truth about ing as they hoped it would be? 4 cannot’but know that it is the truth lies which i gulf between Petrograd has.. The country Russia as allul owing to numerol has .no natura immediate four-cornered troops have had their gaudy flaming-striped trousers for the l_.(hnki.' “f'wear the British B arkings, but the other the old Rus- E shoulder stripes on British cut coats with the Sam brown belt. A startling contrast to the well-un- government 3 < who are brought . to Archangel. they had more drives for vari- this farcial commonwealth Standard Telegram. time enough and a The automo- Paris, again has some 1L striking, fine in the lin naghing nearly of its scenery. as._ the inclose the valley i no such charm as Washingtos Yew London a book and old 2 e for {he state hospital. There should -have been one, and more 2 good while ago. DISCHARGED PATIENT. IN THE DAY’S NEWS Washington. in Washington fu solution will be found. bile law recently amended so is not necessary autos parked light as day, is intent of the lighting law was good, it was enacted i danger of automobiles ‘Washington Russian officers of a still wild forest The Seine, to be compared to The same thing ma e It stands on a.level and the mountains are too distant to come ef- in streets that ur Potomac. illustration. from time Most of them are without any aring their standing by peasant clothes, mixtures of If the rations of the wretched little brook- Manzanares. a story there about a remark streets or country uselessness of insisting on vehicles parked Middletown’s Main street, mple-minded. , the law was there and had to be enforeed to thé letter, i i stances at y The utter called_the They tell | nishes grist for now Waskington, thoroughfare getting unaccustomed publicity on two a bulletin from the 1phic Societ visited Madrid. bridge which He was taken National Geo: “Senator Sherman, to move the capital to some m izens of Washington, talion of former 1afv-making he asked for Evening at 8 O’Clock CHILDREN'S NIGHT t “The Wop” Chautauqua “Pamahasika’s ADMISSION 50 cents e water,:and he in the end.— N Middletown Press. done exooflcnl _work. a national suration, are ici i representation An inventor has hinged a carpenter’s the Junior square and provided |'strip, calibrated in inches and degrees, to be used In connection with the two arms for many purposes. Govesnor Gen- < more than 1 d it with a third ‘Then there Aside from those political the bulletin states, Entertainment: tame coun- boys guilty imprisonment, for visitors as now and those who are coming as wel gone will be interested in the follow- of Washington written by h ambas- | up in an atmosphere of wood covering Yet Nature has done nothing to what she| STUDY WITH US FOR BUSINESS SUCCESS e you both principles and—practice—teach you the essentials Edmund Iron- 1 commande fef, 11 be known as * sador to the United States impossible to ington and not be struck by some pec- res-and some peculiar beau- for London comparable his battalion W able for volume or beauty of surround- pense of the British go cataract in its vicinity as the Great[in8S to your own Falls of the Potomac—a magn piece of scenery which y course, alway r ienna has some picturesque -couri- hills and woods: tance of 25 also has ve softer type but T know of no great city i Constantinople) i its very-en- beautiful scenery Rock Creek y of the woods along the Potomac on the north and also on the south side, with the broad river in the center and richly wooded slopes descending .boldly to it on each lnd show you their relation to practical business. The thing demanded now is Action. JEWETT BUSINESS SCHOOL Secrctarial—Stenographio—Bookkeeping—Typewriting. Franklin Square Phone 1311 OTHER VIEW POINTS The state department has done well in” reminding whoever isurc cnough ch enlightenment, 1 done to Martens tion on the part of STORIES OF THE WAR Abandon Uniforms of Many Colors. (Correspondence of The The khaki British type that by ‘the North s soldiers have now, few exception domen or more varieti itary dress that Asszociated Russia has stealing. to nd rocks within have been sian government for Thayer Building Norwich, Cenn. - pleasing landscape- of ing iliegal at any retal (excepting that has quite were common of the fighting against the | UNBURN Bolsheviki on this front Apply VapoRub lightly—it soothes . the tortured skin. last Septem- This little matter of standardizing have been made to orginize a | Russian army i three units now French Foreign Legion, Russians w You have not a beautiful arm are out of k the sea at your.doors, as has Constan- Almost as Fresh as Though You Caught Them Yourself Fresh Fish Delivered to Us at Express Train Speed From Fi ishing Ports THURSDAY AND FRIDAY SPECIALS BLOCK ISLAND- MACKEREL EASTERN HALIBUT Fresh, b, BLOCK ISLAND SWORDFISH FRESH EASTERN SALMON, bb. . .... BUCK SHAD The Steamer Nelseco I Will Make Sunday Excursion to Ocean Beach every Sun- day during the season, leaving the Railroad dock at foot of Market Street, at 10:30 A. M. and arriving at the Beach at 12 o’clock. . Returning leave Beach at 5 o’clock and reach Norwich at 6:30. This is a2 brand new boat with Deisel Engine and ample accommodations for 600 passengers. FARE 40c EACH WAY. P SALT COD BITS Ib. 18¢ SALT FISH v ol b. 15¢