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it has been bolshevik army that . was the gates of the city was giving up cities and £ that had fallen under its What the result -of given by the cou remains to be seen. -No & 5 any reversal of the policy. ofithe as- Glorwich Bulletin and Goufied . 123 YEARS OLD o sear. to help those that are figh! Entered at the Fostoffiee at Norwich, Comn.. as | holsheviki, although the Bri ccad-das matier. f ‘Tetehone Sulle. has been _successfully 2 Sallets Businem Office 480. against the fleet in the gulf of, $5-3. Bullstin 15 Office 35-2. Frevenied’ Bi* Willimantic Office 33 ChureR St Telephone 105 yrabaiy - Ren S SCHOOLHOUSE . FIRES. * Fin; ime. given®to the planning of, and the safe- The Amoclated Press to e use for e credited o li or Dol olherwie credited In By baper 484 is ihe’ loesl sows pubilshed seretn 7 AD rignts of hepublication of epectal despatch- e berein_ate sjen reserved. ly set forth at a convention of the Na- tional Educational there are on an average of 200 fires a month in the schoolhouses of the —_— e ClRC‘uLAnoN It was not"many years ago that the whele country was aroused by a WEEK ENDING JULY 5th, 19119 | “choolhouse fire in the middle west in 10,076 which many lives were lost because in -}l the rush to get out the pupils had crowded against the door in such a mass that it was impossible to open it. It was one of the doors. that open- - ed inward. Since that time widespread TAKE THE BULLETIN ALONG ||efforts have been made throughout the Subscribers and readers of The || country to institute fire drills in the i schools and to see that the doors of :‘;‘!‘::"erl‘ '!"V'L.’ZEZH "’Z,"’",.:C: | schools and all public bulldings s well - A 2 are made to open out. Much the same The Bulletin sent to their address }| o1t of effort has been put forward in by mail for any specified period at l,chalf of fire escapes, but when it is the regular rate by notifying the | realized that there are fires in schools business department, telephone 480 in as large numbers as reported it is plainly evident that while much has been done to aid in the escape of chil- dren less progr is being made in WITHOUT INFORMATION. hout any doubt looked tn |PENAIt of fre prevention in” those WhAt they expected o And It s W1s-'& unatiar) thit (et oy tement made before the senate 2% (he treaty of peace by Pres. | (hOroush consideration for it is plain- Iy evident that with the proper amount Wilson. While devoting his at- Fras n chiefiy to the leagus of ma.|Of care in the building of schools and \nd deciaring that i was the | the use of the buildings, together with hope for mankind he failed to the heating ‘apparatus. the most im- touch upon the very peints therein |POTLAnt part of the danger can be over which there is uncertzinty in the | Sliminated. s should_be Jeept. to minds of the peoples He dealt swith |the minimum in schoolbuildings and e matier In a most general | city or district should be ratisfied way. much the rame as he did {until it has taken all the necessary Jrevious trip to this country | Precautions in behalf of fire preven- hrought the drgft of the cove. | ion. The monthly average through- He said a whola lot then and |©ut the country is too high. ut the advisability the o =% = part it will play in the CSOURTESY. Qidn't Stlightn our] It fsn't possible to tell the QNSRS s where courtesy is going to hit the was not to be expected | PUllseye end: hring a reward. and it 4 > is well that it ism't for it is plainly wonld up it it was necessary to re- some substantial means ev- ery manifestation of it it would get to to.be as bad as the habit of measur- ing service by the amount of the tip received or expected. Tt is the purpose of certain railroads {evident told - he senate that he them any and all there 3 he can was | e s A xpect that g would set|if not all that thelr emploves should fe Afaross el Sasons wny | e urteous. Many are when it is impossible to evidence of it. but equal- not int de- p Sies et mach = frecuent is it that employes fice . by the OniEa ve to be urzed to do what by s = A {nature and their bringing up is part jof their conduct. They simply Yegn carefully Y c Ze'éen Rule inothis as well de resorted to A ny enlight- in othé¥lréspects and “they don’t s realized vihin% by it though there are previous | times when even courtesy fails to get was not what was expected, | 4 eciation, or a thank you. and in view of tRe import- | Such however was not the experi- ance he subject it was not what ce of the conductor - on the FErie desired. railroad who has ‘Just received ‘a leg- resident has not shown a de- |acy of $£15.000 “as a mark of appre- |ciation, for his kindly treatment of enate into his con- e negotiations, and{me and other passengers when he had failed to get any in-!no personal interest in us beyond his hi- public utterances. |official duties”” There was a_ case - where courtesy was appareatly ! -dis- | AUTO STEALING. persed as part of his emplovment. Not One can appreciate without greatly jall who are attentive to the welfare of stretching the imagination the feelings | railrcad passengers are so well re- of a bridegroom who was stopped | membered, and if we are to judge by while on his honeymoon and relieved | the statement regarding the legacy, it of his automobile under the claim that|was not a case of being courteous to v i stolen brop ¥. and | those who might reward but to all, and articula s0 when he has bought|out of it has come a remembrance e o n =o0d faith and -ecured a|that was undoubtedly a surprise but i of sale. Such was the experience | unquestionably deserved. of a burgh young man in Phila- | Courte always a good invest- shise it pointed out to|ment and it seldom fails to pay good the engine number had |dividends, even though legacies are een filed out and new ones made and | Fare: where the car was taken from him. T e He iwas the innocent victim of auto EDITORIAL NOTES. | It hasn't been reported as vet that the old time barroom talk is te found around the soda fountains: carrying on an or- ess throughout the coun- =0 much so that there is no teil- & where the owner of the car will be located or If it will be possible to lo- m at all with any degree of cer- The man on the corner says: It looks as if the hog was going to clear the with the car in its present form, |moon by a greater distance than the i: nerefore in keeping with ’vo\”' s cases and the report of the theft g mans care that states are enact.| Germany should fully realige that £ lawe that will deal with cuen | threats are bad things with which to hieves as they should be dealt with |hope to build up a badly depleted for- There has just been approved by the |€isn trade. or of Massachusetts a bill for rears the maximum pen- Up in Boston the fish proiteers have been fined and sentenced to jail. It is gov making ten Ity for stealinz or receiving stolen : = a fine start but the good work ought and as can be appreciated the < be stopped there. is none oo severe for those Bot tesbe 2 involved therein when such a| |n view of the elaborate prepara- : with them. Like- e the dealing in second hand cars be subjected to the closest for it is through just such ions that the thief obtains the benefit of his act. With a determined effort made to up the stealing of autos, and h all statés adopting laws to deal with such a practice as it requires it ought not to be difficult to make it as tions that were.made, it is only natu- ral that a lot of thought turned cellarward these da; With the fishermen goinz on strike {it looks as if they want=d to heip Ahe wholesalers get a big prize for the big quantity of seafood in cold storage. It is a great time for iurope to’ be looking to the United States for ‘coal | unpopular as the stealing of horses.|when this country isn't produéing Tntil such legislation prevails. how- |enough to take care of its own needs. ever, it can be expected that the rich —_— With an offer of $125,000 to meet the winner of another ring contst. Dempsey is getting a vision of the dividends that go with the champion- ship. ng of the thieves will continue. OPPOSING THE BOLSHEVIKI. The situation in Russia has for a long time been getting much atten- tion. This is due not only to the in- creased interest that has been aroused in the Omsk government umder Kol- chak and the reign of térror through- out other sections of that big country by the bolsheviki but by the fact that | The president has found so much { work before him in Washington that lit is said he may postpone his speak- ing tour. The business of the coun- try certainly should come first. 5 | the opposition that | regardless of all { When President' Wilson talks the Lenine and Trotsky forces have,.,ou: the people having looked %00 been receiving from all directions|ych on the ground. can it be that he they still retain control and at times | o 0 Op 0 BT e fhat are able to make some progress| ,ung advice, Watch your step? against their opponents, even though these do not offset some of the crush- ing defeats they have been obliged to suffer. But in addition to the conditions in European Russia new interest is cre- ated by the declaration to the effect that the council of five at Paris has ziven approval to the campaign that has been planned by the Esthonians and Finns against Petrograd. Some time 2go it was considered that that city was due to fall but the bolsheviki | couldn’t have done anything that apparently were able to rally their [would have given him a higher stand- forces in sweh numbers that the ad-|ing among his men. Jf Wezshungton wants to start some- thing to o1 tdistance the welcome nctre to the president, let it arrange a dem- onstration over the fact that Poet- master General Burleson has not re- signed. The rear admiral who jumred aver- board to save one of his men showed that he wasn't afraid to do what would have been expected of others. He and L “places Zight and Joif wi'lil escape z the pains - and perils of “living ig. - Pay val | strict attention to e be | stomach and your n is | sefence. Sobeeristion pries 125 & week: 5es s month: 38.00 | SOCiated powers about sanfim‘bo:‘;;: " can keep you . fleet | serving law. ting land, but the full meaning of it will |On as we please, and pay the price That too great attention cannot be ty devices for, schoolhouses was plain- association when what will be regarded as a surprising statement was made to the effect that be! = . g B 2 X There was a preacher who sai the best creed!” In other words, live targets - twelve obsolete” battleship. proteting | marks the passing of a fleet of vessels ing Con- |iong identified with many of the most 'lfl_‘igut riends and e e °Ur | glorious achievements of the new Am- iven as to whether there has been [0 N olS A T O en ey | erican mavy. They wrote many bright | sub-conscious warnings abuke and self-delusion. - Which we canno 1 disclose the law of your, being more | pages Into this country’s naval history | fully than’ doctors’ books, ahd they|guring their yi of service and g.,u,{ s health Pre_ | of them.have participated actively in; we' disregard the | two years. The doomed ships, includ- | inst’ self- | ing the famous old Spanish-American | S cah B war Squadien consisting: of theOre- gon, Iowa, Indiana and Massachusetts our offences, .©5- land the more modern but hardly less; cape. = famous Kentucky, Kearsarge, Alaba- | The liquor that talks mighty loud | ma, Illinois, Wisconsin, Ohio, Missouri [Fhen it gots out of the jug has been land Maine, composed one of the most, | barred; atd the drink which . “firet if _not the most, powerful battleship dims, then darkens, then deadens and | fleet in the world more than 15 years then damns” a man, has been: prohib- | ago. ited by law; and the drinkers must| Foremost among” the achievements nOWw resort to near beer or patent med- {of these famous old fighting craft is icines. From this drastic act oOf.{ the part-they plaved in the Spanish- the government many men may. dis- | American war. The Oregon, which had cover that the outside of the saloon|been commissioned at San Francisco is the best side; an@ that the soda |in July, 1896, was at Mars Island navy | fountain in its resourcefulness is a|yard in 1898 when the message was (vonder worker: The criticisms of the | flashed to her commander that the| law by the freqdenters of saloons. are |United States was at war with Spain.| not half as surprising as the utter- | On Margh 6, 1598, the famous old- ship | ances in_ their favor by a vast. army |cleared the Golden Gate, bound for of péople who fnever rken . their | the West Indies, on what proved to doors. Those who profit by the sa-|be the most epoch making- battleship loon form a larger force than it takes | voyaze ever undertaken. With-decks to run them. 2 . Btripped for action and gun crews at Few people know how to make the |their stations the Oregon plowed most of a vacation, and many, by |around Cape Horn, up the east'coast their indulgence in unlawful pleasure. | f South America and arrived at Key! become afflicted~with lawful pain. It|West on May 26, ready for action, hav. is just as necessary to know how to |ing made the 14,000 mile voyage in 68 deal with pieasyre as it is to know | cruising days. Captain C. E. Clark, how to handle a gun, for “when pleas- | the Oregon’s commanding officer, was ure violates ’tis ~then. a . vice—and |ordered to take his ship to Santiago} vengeance, too!”. The time to take|and there join the blockading squadron pleasure is when all other duties, are | Which was awaiting. battle with the done; and the way is to keep moder- | Spanish fleet. ation -in view, for indiscretion in any| In the meantime the Iowa, Massa- direction is perilous. Man- has to work | chusetts and Indiana, sister ships and play, and sleep by law, and " ‘eat. | the Oregon, were attached to the n: 2 and study and pray; for if he over|Atlantic fieet and had already arrived | does in any direction he becomes -.a [Off Cuba, the Massachusetts being part of the famous “flying squadron” under ‘command of Commodore Schle The Oregon, already famous throug] out the world for her glorious and successful voyage to join the American fleet in time for the impending bat. tle, gained greater glory in the action off Santiago de Cuba on Sundey, July 3, 1898 when Spanish sea power was forever humbled and’ the liberation ©f the Philippines and Cuba assured. In ‘that now historic sea flight the Ore- gon ran the Vizcaya, pride of the | Spanish fleet, ashore after riddling the craft with hits from her eight and thirtéeen inch guns and then engag: in a ‘running’ fight with the Coll which surrendered after having been cut off from the open sea by the Ore. gon and forced to head for the beach. A spot at the Colon from one of the Oregon’s thirteen inch guns was the last shot fired during the battle, Both the Indiana and the lowa par- ticipated in the battle at antiago, the Massachusctts having gone to Guan- tanamo io eoal on the day of the en- gagement. The crew of the Massa- jchusetts, much disappointed at ha ing missed the fight, gained revenge the next night when that.vessel and the old battleship, Texas, engaged and sunk the Spanish cruiser Reina Mer- cedes as that vessel attempted to escape from the harbor at Santiago. The Massachusetts was . the Aag- ship of the naval vessel in charge of convoying American troops from Cuba to Porto Rico for the Porto- - Rican | campaign. A few years -ago . the! Texas, later re-named the San Marcos, | was used as a target for the battl ships at Tangier Sound in Chesapeake Y. - After the Spanish American war the Oregon returned to.. the ivest eoastl Where the glorious old ship, then in the height of her fame, was received | with tremendous demonstrations. ~She remained there on duty with the Paci- fic fleet until a decade ago, her u fulness gone, she was placed in reserve commission. The lowa. Massachusetts-and Indiana participated in the homecoming of- the victorious Atlanti fleet after ' the Spanish-American war and remained on duty in home waters for many vears. ~ After the Oregon had been placed in reserve the three sister ship: were fot several vears used as train- ing vessels and_convoyed the midshi victim instead of a success. 3 In nature little creatures comserye their energies by flying stzaight. If it. was not fo? thi: bee-hunter would not so easily’ find the bee-tree with its store of ‘hone: _and man have invented fhe phrase for ways that are straight. The humming birds when thera are no obstacles in the way make straight for their nests, going with such speed they are difficult to follow; arid the wrens shoot from the hole in theirstiny box es like a shot from a gun, and fiy in straight lines from their feeding places 1o theif tree. . The hummipg- bird moth has this same dartinz. straight flight. These litfle creatur- es indulge in no falsé motion, but make every movement tell in their be- | haif. i You are puzzled when you read about the great blessings of life. Don’t you know health is the chief of hless- d that knowledge is next, . fer of knowledge men die? ood appetite and a _good conscience are blessings which aid in. the . develop- ment of man. ‘The evés- which look within as weRZas without, and the will to help and never to hinder are God-sends. . Tt is the easiest thing in the world to have gualities money cannot buy, and comforts riches can- not produce. They may be yours by { recognition and acceptance, and you, like the r of us, are too dull to value or appreciate them. .The best things on earth are free! . Get, them! Fellowship seems to be one of the great essentials of -life. Haven't: you noticed that no man. desifes to go %o the devil alone. The erring _ones| {usually invite.company, and get it! Man doesn’t like to be salome. As Coleridge puts it in .the Ancient:Ma= riner, there is no fun in being “Alone, alone—all, all alone: alone on a wide, wide sea!” Tt was Isaak Walton who declared “good company and_good dis course to be -the sinews ' of virtue. Man seems to haye been ‘born for fel- lowship in grief, ~ in misfortune,” in shame; but it has been discovered that he is never alone who is accompan- jled by noble thoughts or who views | Nature's revelations of beauty with reverence. Who can be alone where 7od is? How many people in the' world turn {peir eves and their thoughts in their devotion toward the holy. land ar- ently unmindful of the fact th:’;pthe':';_';l e o Sy ahas - ed Hol; lan represents the - & ' practice cruise. most God-forsiken and unprogressive | Finaily they too were moored to the portion of the earth. Man was com-|d0cks in navy yards, apparently to manded to reveregfibo,lafi:; living truth jTust awa o as demonstrateéd: by JeSus not a hol: e meantime a B A vou neyer;Ships had been launchd to add to the beautifui plant or shrub develop '@ MizZht of American naval power. The garden, and at fast present to; Kearsarge, Kentucky, Illinois, Wiscon- a wondeffui flofver or Juscious | sin. Maine, Missouri and Ohio, launch. . and seem to hear the spirit say:ed between 868 and 1901, formed the “Remove your shoes, for lo.|ncuclus of the mew “steel” navy that standing -upon holy ground!”|was winning the United tates an as- \Vhat God produtes must bedivine— sured place imong’ the great naval ¢ ground in Whit ries are | powers. These ships, then unsur- {operative must be holy. - Holiness " i3] pussed in the world. carried. the expressed by~ Hfe much as by Vir- [erican flag into the ports of the world § the thifigs swhich " live: for many years and in 1907, when the that must ratse us up! {mighty Uhited States fleet left New have often wondéred why. our| York for the historic cruise around the schools are not based upon the idea of ; 0%wrld to demonstrate in all lands the showing every man is a sovereign citfi- Might and power of the American navy’ zen by producing’ sovereign citizens. | they held their places with their more \:» alre about to speng {nllllogs gn,mm:?r ers l&roughout ithat mem- Americanize aliens: -and aliens do not orable vovage. Greeted with rémark. fnd the job of ovietising our citizens able demonstrations in South America, difficult. " Sovereign citizens in fact as|ihe¢ west coast of the United States. well as in name could nét be fed into: Australia, New Zealand, the isl.xn?s of the paths which Tead to revolution and | the Pacafic, far castern ports and anarchy as readily as’they be if ohr} : cherished and’ dffirmed idea of man- | hood was produced as a_practical re- | sult of our tearhings. Our sovereign | citizens should know more about gov- | ernment and .mechanics and 4 thou- | I sand and one other things to make the "One of the saddest thoughts that| xlv;’d) |(::al more capa;)lonandoéihepflldabla.g;:gfl‘éhll'kghcvenllng !.\nudoh - on <5 an the citizens of ‘anv: other. coun. | ristian’s heart, is the fear o try. Can demfocracy produce sovereign :::ringbgnno‘usg to his Lord ut.;la' Mas- | citizens? E 8 : . v an in shares the same At last someone has' risen to say: [feaT. saying to himself; ‘I am of no ommon sense. 1s.a national asset”|Use In the world now.” May T ask Tt certainly would be an all-the-world ' T oW he ktuwe ey S asset if there was enoush of it to go YOU remember Milton's words: $ round: but orie of the most unicommon | “God doth not need - either man's taings is coniteen.fenpe. JEkak ds com= otk o Flle own sifts, who best bear mon sense? sn’t “pep,” it is a ! . = (B aeg i [ Baimaee for peny- e T rationality. As [His state’is kingly. Thousands at his old Calvin Stowe once said: “Comimon | Pidding speed and post o'er land. and ! e e R Rt rest L They Alio served they be, and *@ein ngs as they 2ifis o3 § ought to be donert: 1t isgnot to el - Will You emphasize one word in_thi t found in a League of Natlons. which Flast-line? It is the word “only.” “Only | would keep man's unrighteousnesses as | Stand and wait.” That is one of the| they be, for it would make all nations ;hardest things to do. The one’ that; free. The past will not be reagly :toWHL™ with a light on his facé and ‘a be forever concreted . until - common SOng in his heart, sense has completely filled its mission.| one of .the most Do not let anyone v 2 e L2 ist‘;?ndla_m:re-:;_e {:‘W'Y! In the o e that some reader of thesq ijnes Progreas of any valse th: you '";‘f,‘éi_lhas kept Him standing and, waiiing at brains mist be'in 1€ Do fot thigk the 't deor many vears., . . . PA e B | with a mature and experienced beifev B arn, Ao mhsrelonh. dim ler, feeling as if he had been refresh- ruth simply makes a noise if the heart A s i S B s not in it. Too many have O-K-e B - ; | the Lord's prayee grithout over having | Snd. . Your polient walting. for the Of ot it e e :‘fl‘;"! Blessed inspiration to us. You make % - us realize, as no one eise can, how [ 325, 7T¢ 12 st s necessary ‘to watey | Well worth cerving i Jerus Chriat. " | 3 k. sical? , Thus the patience of an invalid, or: your spiritual stageime FouEpRAICAll | o Tudisnt trast of etich @ione ay Bat| {he aged, is a more perfect work than | Gion B {much of the activity of busier. days, | Politics is to be taboo in tlie. new | Trere is more of God and less of ?eu State Bank of North DaKota, acrord-|in i1, and it is God in us that tells, ing to its director general and gen-|Old age may be less active, but it need ! eral manager. " “They probably realize | not be less useful. You may do less, | (o heTrin on bsinass Pebetivest: bat | os Doy, o T et 1 0t 0 in es’ ut | life: on earth, since it is nearest ay - have the bosses so soon 'learned ‘thé | en, must be In the believers life tl‘:le little lesson 2—Springfield Reépublican. | best. Do not murmur, but rejoice that pieh i b v e | God' has given you a place among the Many a man -salts away money in|ranks of %hoee faithful servants whom the brine of.:other’ people's-tdirs...’ | He calls to stand and ‘wait on Him. i i b i 1 er class of Sunday Momins ‘Talk Who Only Stand and W. I | has learned to -do | difficult pieces ~ of | Politics ‘and ‘Banking. { spectively and later were ordered south ‘vaunted proletariat, with such results Guarg who gave as an excuse that he { day. ithe people Wwho have done nothing to jwork what few fields are now under - {Gispensing ic an !c It 'mi “Live truth and thy life shall bé| ' Decision of the navy department to|point in<the Mediterranean, the break up and sell for junk or use for |fleet completéd ‘the most comprehen-. sive eruise ever undertaken by so large a body of ships of war. - On the return of the fleet to this country the older ships were forced into the hackground by the “new” navy and were sent to the back channels of the navy yards-to join the Oregon, Towa, M usetts and Indiana. . . The entrance of the United States into the World War brought a demand for every-ton of sea power the United States could command and again’ the Old Naty was called upon to defend the flag. - All of the 12 old vessels were outfitted, modern fire - -control appli- ances were installed, new coasts of “wvar paint” were applied to their time- scarred sideés and they were called out to join the fleet. 3 The Oregon saw service on the west coast (throughout the war as a coast defense vessel and training ship for enlisted personnel. The Massachu- setts, 16wa, ‘and Indiana were used for a fime as station ships at Newport, R. I, Norfolk, Va. -and New York re- to join the main fighting force which already included the Kearsarge, Ken- tucky and.the other vessels of ancient ne... For the remainder of the war the_historic old ships took part in the operations of the -Atlantic fleet -along the coast and rendered valuable ser- vice as training ships. After the armistice the Jowa, Massa- chusétts and Indiagna were sent to the vavy yard at Philadelphia where their colors were hauled down for the last time @nd they were consigned to the graveyard of ships. The Oregon suf- fered ‘a similar -fate on the Pacific coast. - The other ships of the Old Navy remained temporarily on duty, most of them for Wffe as troop trans- ports. but they too will soon be re- legated to the scrap heap. . The Oregon. has been offered to the State of -Oregon for such use as the state may see fit to make of it as a training ship and naval historical museum, the only condition being that the commonwealth keep the old sea fighter in good condition as befits a time-honored pensioner ‘of glorious history. . The lowa, Massachuseits and Indiana will probably be broken up in order. that the valuable metal contain- ed in them, particularly copper and brass, may be utilized in the construc tion of more modern vessels. Several of _the other old ships will be used for targets and the rest. junked. _ Three other vessels, famous fore- ever American naval annals, the ‘Olympia, Admiral Dewey’s flagship at Manila Bay, the New York, Rear Ad- miral Sampson’s flagship and _the Brooklyn, Rear Admiral Schley's flag- hip, also saw service during .the World War and are still on active duty in various parts of.the world. It is probable that in a_very few years all of thesc historic ships will be placed out of commission for good. They will never, however, be scrappéd in the opinion of naval officers. s STORIES OF THE WAR Conditions in Budapest. LCorrespondence of The Associated Press.)—Conditions in Budabest and the surrounding country under fantastic ‘zovernment of Bela Kun and his soviet are grotesque. It has just become known -the Countess Rada is scrubbing stairways in one of the city prisons. Count Julius Szechenyi, aged ninety,. formerly master of the king's horse, is .one of those who has incur- red. the -displeasure of the ruling farces. 1n spite of his age, he has been formerly removed from his home and jmprisoned, What - disposition will be made of him s not likely to reach.the public until it has-been or- Gered .and, executed.. P ; ~ Every room in the handsomc marble palace of Count Louis Karolyi, the former Austrian ambassador to Lon- don, is. occupied by some oue of & tie 4s might be expected. Stovepipes stick.from the lace-curtained windows, and the silk-covered walls are smoky, grimy_and greasy. Protective cove! have been torn -from rich divans a handsome chairs to be used for dish- rags. Costly bronzes, chipped ond mutilated, are being used as play things. by the proletarian children. It is. the same in the handsomc re; ence of Count Andrassy nex' door, where squalor and dirt are ranidly r Blacing the magnificence and polish of a happier. da Day oy day comes the news of ir 2. violence on the part of th. are in power. The latest stances, have to do with Ludwiz Nav- v. former president of the Ifunga rliament.. He was seized ai his country .home and while heing taken into Budapest, was taken from ihe train _and shot to death by the Red was {rying to escape. Altogcther the situation in Buda- rest i3 rup'dly _approaching the point where therc will he the customary ap- 1 to .the “great big-hearted Amer- " to feed and clothe the p2ople. v of life and prop: is grow- ing less with every week and the once magnificent city . is rapidly an appearance (o which haye.hitherto been strax Negiect of agriculture j ‘ outsanding features of the situation. s estimated. that fifty . of the tillable soil has not been plowcd parly _due fo the disorganization and demoralization occasioned by an order of the soviet which forced landowners to-raise the wages of farm laborers from five crowns to thirty crowns per and also 1o zive them butter and without. charge and to see that - were properly clothed. appeal 16 the United States for Hielp is expcoted to come chiefly from culfivation and who never had many clothes—or’ felt - the need for them . OTHER VIEW POINTS. Senator Brandegees' great oath never to_vote for the league of na- tion until hell freezes over” was intended to put ' before people the mpossibility of such action. The senator should remember that these are no ordinary times and even hell with a. skim of ice over it may not seem so -~ impossible to a people wvho have seen fire-water bar_rooms cream sodas.—Water- bury Republican. -Cobwebs .are all right for a spider to alavant' about on. but they haven't ch. prestige in 19819 business or on ThE brain. Cobwebs are a symbol of carelessness. Nothing so embarasses 2 housewife as to have her friend dis- over cobwebs in the cormers of the rooms. of. ber home. Cobwebs in busi- ness are a sign of methods and man- Y Franklin Machine Company Union 1857 Founders Machinists . Manufactursrs of HARRIS-COR- - eISS . ENGINES. Brewn Valve Gear- applied to all makes of Cor- liss . Engines, Engine Repairs, Shafting, Hangers, Pulleys, Bear- ings, Couplings, Clutches. . Large stock always on hand. 2 General Mill Repairs. ‘Special machinery of all kinds. Providence, R. 1. Telephones: Union 963 Engineers the | | amendment fi-um From 4 to 12 Years ——t e THE DANGER ZO| Five Reel Feature Picture e e e et KINOGRAM WEEKLY, Today—Feature Pictures and Re- fined Musical Comedy PRESENTED BY THE Majestic Roof ° MONDAY AND TUESDAY “THE DANGER ZONE” Five Reel Feature “KINOGRAM WEEKL TONIGHT FROM 8 TO 11:15 ROWLAND’S JAZZ ORCHESTRA ENTIRE WEEK Moose Carnival BATTLE GROUNDS OF JULY 14TH All Attractions Furnished by Royal Exposition Shows FREE BAND CONCERTS—Afternoon and Evenings 10—BIG ATTRACTIONS—10 BreeD FOUR SHOWS TODAY 1:30—3—86:15—8:15 BESSIE BARRISCALE —IN— TANGLED THREADS A Film That Touches All the Em. tions and Still _ TAYLOR HOLMES = IT’S, A BEAR You Will Laugh When You This Picture PATHE NEWS ‘ FOUR SHOWS TODAY ENID BENNETT PARTNERS THREE 5 PART COMEDY DRAMA SHIRLEY MASON —tN— “THE WINNING GIRL” Five Part Dramatic Preduction BEN TURPIN In the Mack Sennett Comedy No Mother to Guide Her A RIOT OF FUN COMING NEXT MONDAY WILLIAM S. HART IN THE Poppy Girl’s Husband e el ———— ners of doing business that are anti- quated. That are out of date. The: are behind the times. Cobwebs on th brain mean sluggish thinking and ideas that- have long passed their pe- riod of usefulness. Ambition in ~all three cases is the broom that will keep the cobwebs brushed clean from the walls. If your ambition is a bit jaded give it a vacation or a tonic, then go after cobwebs and eclean them .out— and keep them out.—Bridgeport Post. That there should be any misun derstanding between the Werker: association and the police in Water- bury as to just what constitutes the jurisdiction ~ of * law and order is somewhat regretable. It {s sincerely hoped that the status of this new or- ganization will be definitely defined be- fore long. Arkansas courts are making sound decisions in referenee 10 the pro- posed referendum on the federal pro- hibition amendment. In a recent deci- sion it was held that the initiative and referendum clause of the state consti- tution makes provision only for refer- endum voting on acts of the legislature not on resolutions. The constitution is not ratified by an act of the legislature, but by resolution. Referendum voting deals only with state measures. The federal constitu- tion expressly states that the legisla- tures of threc-fourths of the states ap- proving the amendment becomes part of the constitution. The . states may approve by convention, provided con- gress designated the.legislative action and approving action by -legislature will stand as vart of the organic law of the land.—Bridgeport Post. While it is by no manner of means sure that the equal suffrage will meet with the prompt ratification _the - prehibition amgndment did, owing to the south- ern’ states, it is nevertheiess proper that the state of Connecticut shauid at least prepare itself for considering it in the only way it is permitted to do so0 by a thorough discussion of the proposed amendment before the mem- so Rbode Boating, Finest Surf (BATHING F' ), fr the house. Board $12.50 to $15. City ater and electrie light. Also rooms without board, reasonable. Open untll Oct. 1st.’ Write for folder. bers of the geéneral assembly are elected. Damage enough has baen done to the principle of local self gov- erpment already to warrant a deéent delay in continuing the debauch.—New Haven Journai-Courier. Not Many Angry Over It. You are suppesed to be all het up over Senator Borah's discovery that moneyed men contributed to the League of Nation peace funds, in- stead of those without a cent to théir name.—Indianapolis Star. Some men voluntarily join the ranks of the benedicts, and some have to be drafted. VERNON STILES INN BEAUTIFUL THOMPSON, CONN. 38 MILES FROM NORWICH Fried Chicken Dinner Sunday FINE GOL¥ LINKS Spend Your Week-Ends and Ve~ cations Here PHONE, PUTNAM 632-13 Central Baptist Church Union Square EVENING SERVICE AT 7:30 TOPIC OF SERMON: THE BOLDNESS OF JESUS A Good Place to go Sunday Evenings YOUNG PEOPLE You are urged to be present at your meeting. SUBJECT:Our Denominational Principles. meeting will be of great BUSINESS The thing demanded new Franklin Square Phone 1311 STUDY WITH US FOR We give yeu_ beth principles and—practice—teach yeu the essentials .and shew. you their relation to practical business. " JEWETT BUSINESS SCHOOL Secretarial—Stenographie—Baokkeeping—Typewriting. interest to all young people. SUCCESS is Action. Enrell Now. Thayer Building Nerwich, €onn.