Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 15, 1919, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

3 eareer on thé third step. He in the kitcheh door, turned dround six times rapidly in the middle of the linoleum.and plunged 4t me Wwith the abandon and joy of a frisky ym'mi 8. :o‘?" had “t"l‘y mle\ hf.llrl:flf 0 the yeMow dog went I1itdo a perféect dgliprium of joy. He knocked down .knockable ifi that kitchen 1in five and was off through the house likeé a whirlwind. < called frantieally to be ng. In her £OOfM, prosifate with that the measles, entirely antl- igiously shunned by my- , she an excesdingly acheful and quiet life, when the gu burst' in. Medicine ~bottles. cfas e£ lémonade jugs shattered, cou drgz; -Lm;zrld the air and onto the h,g unh wu‘rn,lmn. % - “Gladly he ki mmm’- ace and ‘hands. snd wildly shrieked B till 1 tore in and rescued her. i ‘efiticized particular yellow 1 am con’ PUP Dbefore me ,“fiz:u- telling - you about peérched on The base: \ se, 1 ehooed him back t's | ment window- sill- beneath our dining n whére he fondly en- fly | room during the ni tm.wmuwym face. which | dawn began to hewl plaintively. en | Al s he back ed into the L | corner of the nd | house al s 4 smaller | otherwisé stating that hé had no de- | There is room for both you and a hu- _the. se, from which { sire for may society. Yet if I left he|man family in no houss’ and I en- 2th the pi [: fly second to | howled lonesomely. deavored to put him out. { ‘m m;m n-n.n;;vu-tm n: t:‘zm‘:n kl;.. ‘This nice, kind "“J:‘ 3 and cracki and was greet: Ves me, is merely playing,’ sal b £ m - t;; with yowls. When I "n“mdmmh:"t FQ. u;g double cvil:eual ‘mmn my sundfy ncern- &nd - stri; safe distance, however, dos, 78- 1 feet. . Falling over him I inadvertent = ing ‘the rehabflttation ~Woik: foF ~the ] only when | iy & large puppy, fell inte the 1ood | Kicked Him down the back steps ang, soldiers 18 ifi accord with the facts| i ddent 18 there in person. but|face first. P around the corner|rather ashamed, withdrew into the AKE THE BULLETIN ALONG ||that certainly is timely action. Soa) Tag B be fite the “yerto e e e B ottt Aot rato d Y yellow pup had beéén dis-| bittered, further disilluzioned yellow Subscribers &nd readers of The Maintathing that the restricting of | pose,, f t iflusionized as to thé Human raceé and|pup going to sit on Somebody else’s Builetin leaving the city for the ||the funds would not only cripple the | and< r to | was off it for life. To see youth em-| window sill and howl. season, or a vacatish, can have || Work of restofing the disabled sol- all meeording to his personal | bittered by kicks always is painful and Presently 1 opened the door a crack “The Bullstin sept t5 thbir add diers and sailors to €ivil life. but that 3 : . sad and all that, so 1 remonstrated|and that darned dog nearly got in, by, Bkl f0F ARy ."‘"“ ‘of the. great w;:fi ll}x'e p“&ht‘ ‘;x::nm:tn l‘: mt-n that | wagging his t?’il frantically. His feel. specified peri Sageant while he m m brief | ings weren't hurt at all. I led him he regular rats by notifying the o a8 | Career with rebuffs, not to. say blows, | into the alley and closed the gate, and businéds department, tslephone 480 5 SB HAGNG, SO “in: Tact | 31 manking wes not of st AP, | when I xot back to my steps I saw v > cdn furnish a | He cea grow! UL N at a small boy with bBuck testh had - 3 ward the back &teps. With one|picked him u carryi WL crEal REah ot Decessary chaniges. rofs e tumbling rush the yéllow pup was upon | away. The e Wi trenstercis nis . holds up 3 e, s isses to his face, X i = t ® fhere Mave buad miany municipal |Measure that invblves over Ahvee- certain in ‘At last’ he most evidently said.]he transferred xmg’é’wa"ééfi&‘ x;e;; i+ Some have worked out|fifths of a billion. # k committee | 1 believe I have found a kickléss man.| Any news in the paper?” --' umwhna i Madh mot be said| There can be no questioh as 16 what|r sat lined up against|He is g0od, he 18 tru€, he really loves!| “None you'd be interested in” said g v el ean: e the purpose: f dengress’ i SN ncongru- | me—— and ecstatically adopted me|the Woodlawn man, “afier all you've about others but it is an_ interesting purpo! groe. 4 ng "u' ésive. They | On the spot. He gamboled around,|beén through. Lemme read, doggone % proposition that is placed before the|the restoratioh of the disabled sol- 3 the whois | about and over my feet, nearly wreck. | you!"—Chicago News. municipalities of the country by the dlers Ahd saflors. It is dispdsed to itnk e ol . ar department in its plan to dis-|meet its obligations in every possible ® ord pose of its surplus stock of food sup- afid now is the time upon : the favérite \combina- entirely official communication from [might be spared by a protess of in- ‘them , with | Speaker to speaker and it was written | trospection. 'When have the people es through such agencies. 16 incltide aving ,ff',‘,m, to_aceept the offed ¢ “beaded méecasins and | in the third person. of this town had a high school prin- little or no réasén to believe But what ibre: ¢ipal whom they did like? For the the packers for the goods which t E 1 s ~ most part 1 found Mr. Kutséher well mere secured from them. the war de-|if It Is fodnd ‘that tAc pinc SINEC by Inte two heavy piaits| LETTERS TO THE EDITOR |licea ana respected, the. oriticioms partment has fixed a price whereby, the president: is well ‘founed that t With gay ripbon or yarn. = coming from those who had selfish it hopes to distribute the goods to|there will not only be a quiék cHange| Gre of the rhén was especially notice- | The Tourtellotte High Scheel. |mstives or lacked the power to com- the people through city governthents,|in the provisions but the bill inlaple with & meeKlace of brilliant blue| Mr. Editor:—I have read the article | preiend just what he was doing for § «r to public institutions. amended form will bé hufriéd throush| beads, great Sflvér hoob earrings, [about the Tourtellotte Hign school in|them. I feel sure that the expendi- $ 7 Although it was during the war|both branches of congréss. CeFtain- | long coal Black hair bralded into twd |the July 10 issue of your paper, and | ture of so much money rankles with- § period that they were bought and|ly the clause referred to calls for | Pig {4118 each {i6d with a whole skein | like the people of Thompson, I am|in some citizéns, thus causing a little :'hm was the expense that goes with | Close serutiny and a Pprompt réiiedy of Searlét yarn, fringed out | “stirred up” not so much about the|internal revolution, the blame for i - e that the real oBject of the proviste 3 Over gray trousers and | adverse report as about the way it{which is laid on an inmbcent man. 1 B i o seéused. vest of chamois | has been handled. It 'is Mr. Kuts-|sincerely hope the people of Thomp- “Pbsed that the war department laid in|in question may é 3 son will 1090 il WHols etiet this stock at a lower figure, in view TR to make any statements concerning(in & fair manner without son of the aquantity iAvolved, than anyone WHAT FRANGE PROPOSES. $at pérfectiy silent and immovable [ the report itself, and therefore, I wfll| feeling, and take steps to re?:;dy ?: else could have purchased it for, and| This country is not the only one the éommittee | not attempt to say agything about| Without hurting their own interests. it is now willing to dispose of it at{that is havihg its troubles with the| *00FESSeA him by & long and almost | that, but I do wish to say a few words| I'would Iike (o finish by correcting a lozs of 20 per cent. provided it Is|food profiteers. The fact is that they ufipfonedifcablé name, when he | about Mr.- Kutscher, and also make a[One or two gross mis-statements con- _igaken in carload lots and sold to the|are disposed to operate wherever they il""‘ '”‘2,{',‘,‘,‘: W g ey - IR e Wil Shhien )0 S| ohed in Your aticle I cannst see o S b e M! stion in excellent [ to Be the trouble. It seems that this| what the changing of superintendents get a chance, whether they have it| B FeSumed his it an ® 3 pirenlodg i R seat and |feport and the comment of the‘corre-|of the grade schools has to do with! _bash and bacén, all in tins varying o‘ltérletfl to- therh of are forced to cre- | lap: ifte solid silence. ;lpnndenl p;acea .’ gmc deal of the|the A)pm:ll of the high school by the ate it. % 3 . | blame on the principie. & state, unléss someone is sore bec trom one to twelve pounds, With the| S®me progress i Being made here )y wm’."ifl;: Jurmish plen- | P4 ent to North Grosvenordale last|the siate system has been busted And Aerception of some of the bacon|in bringing to light such Pople and | Just Before Ris marrhge to sire cayi | Décember to teach in the Taurtellotte | takes this method of criticism ak a | ch iz in crates, are offeréd to mmu-{punishment that varies from fnes (6| Presideni Wilson gave an interview. to | 180 SChool, and remained there until|means of revenge. At any rate it Simuiar offerings of veg-|imprisonment s belng ifmpescd, | Little Man and Brain-IN-Good, who | the- school closed in dJune. =During|would do no harm to investigate this| o Mo expeored AR e H e o Do rolied ol iney | with afi | Interpreter had come’'from|(his time I lived at Mr. Kutschers|pdssibllity. The state money com- o et ri Oklatioma o Jook after covrain Tang|Pome, and in my daily associatonsin& to the school does not depend upon t e Interesting to note how|are being madeé to suffer to no such | L /298 500 with him both at home and at the!Mfr. Snyder's report. This may ci cities thers are that are in-|degree as these Who aré gouged by | sepans o Cgniidered by the |school I fownd him to b a. very fair,|up the question. some. The schost to look to the needs of»thelihair operations. he had three wives and thought ot | @Pen mifnded and energetic man. He|Will get the aid as usual sufficiently to undertake the While we have been taking care of| taking another soon, and he was much | KNOWS the Science of teaching thor- Of the report ftself I have no com- on of onme or more carloads|wool and fish profiteers in this coun- | interested when told of the president’s|SUEhlY, Raving been in the profession|ment to make. Mr. Kutscher I know | - e goods as & means of combat-try, France has Been EIVIRE attention|approatBing mdrriage. - Airayed in|{pr twentv years, andl .the positions|can answer 1t very effectively it he| Uns the present high cost of such|to those who have bsén engaged in| full regalia of their tribe, his small | that he has filled in all cases to the ;oaahme.‘ I only wish to state that| “Fbodstufts, and whether the people |illicit spéculation in sugat with tha|but effective delegation made the pres- | SAtisfaction of all connected with the|I do mot believe any man is qualified will be interested in stocking Up for|resal: Inat. fout have peen seht to]|ldential ofice 6ok like a wigwam. Litcle [ S6hools, make it seem entirely out of) on the basis of one day spent in a = R R % e ¥ i Man uttered a few. grunts. and grows | Place for the people of Thompson.or;8Chool, to criticise on the basis he has. #geir own benefit. Such goods qught|15 months imprisonment and 1ined | which the interpreter unraveled and |the state inspector to lay. blame for|He has not looked into things thor. -i® move quickly all things consid-|100,000° francs, but Francé appéirs 10| ipld the president were congratula- |the condition of the Bchool on him. bughly enough. Nor do I believe that | ared provided the consumer reallylbe thoroughly aroused over ths re®-|tions on thé approaching wedding. | A8 an educator, I found Mr. Kutséher,|he can judge a teacher nor a class by | Ems a chance to get them but it re-|eclations that are being Made there to| Héreupoh the president shook hands | différing from many others who have|spending from two to five minutes in “gmains to be seen how the experiment|such an extent that a bill has heen|a@ain all around and said he thanked | Deen in the profession so long, inas-)a class room as he did In sume cases.| ®il work out ahd whether the mu-lintrodusyd in ine chamber bt depu-|iMem. He dedlined, however to smoke |uch o T Was thoroushly elive to e LW, GABEUMN _#icipalities will respond. ties ocalling ToF oapital puntshment tae pflge of peace which they produc- g:;e ategws ?:i;:?gixr: . alfl_d Bracs Hartford, Connecticut, July 12, 1918. i e aae B merthuhits WG ‘afé convibiel OF| Gealy. he prctiP ot Caplained to | O A e hots of iy, aces IN THE L ek THE THREE GENT STAMPS.. |taking cxcedsive DFofits ot a(teMprifg| that pipe of. pedce smoking whs not| Which have been established suffi- DAY’S NEWS “There can be little wonder that|to co: tire market. the . prevailing custom here und they | Siently to avoid being called fads. WIESBADEN, tpere is widespread complaint over| That seems ke decidedly drastic|must not regard the president’s re- | The Very fact that the suUgZBeStions| yvieshaden, seat of the =2k 1 £ T LATE & £ sgaass ! Eiifia_ il § WEEK ENDING JULY ies, provisional the refusal of the postoffice depart- | thery would SataAaly B i . | Aceepted the Situation calmly and aft- | 81l been suggested by Mr. Kutscher i . féi’!‘éirie‘iif.‘.’,’ir?é’ flo}:-reeea:}fn :usr:;emz:' !l"n‘:'!t) L“ Xe éh‘péel’wfih ‘:;::n‘:l?::. :fi:a te‘v;‘ Eorg atunts sna growls sig- 2;‘:2,“0‘;,52; al!;‘fle s 1 be carrfed’ out E::‘::’&nxm! d“c‘{‘?::mg‘:'on xl:’:aé:g:‘r‘t‘;g first class postage up to the first of |alty than thers would wien fines ana| &yl {ROK 8300, feelie towards the "B% ne aaans un. | OL-iewational Geographic Society: ¥ when the two cent rate went in- | Sentences are imposed that amdunt{ yoom. T aware that improvements were need-{a ‘mild nook of the Rhine V: v, o effect. only to a shap on the wrmt For| by " ed. In fact it seems to me inasmuch|played many parts. Firct et nal® | iSome time ago, not long atter the|thoss 7ho aquickly gather in milions | o There will seon be thousands of post|as ail of Mr. Sayders advocated im- | foriiied outpost of the Tar-nong Bow | e cemt rate became effective, |ANES are no obstagle. Ii 13 MIMMY Alfy‘confirmation and hundreds of o | Loy cTents follow exactly those laid|man empire, later a febrile Monte Car- re was a request that three cent|Case Of paying a high licenso. = Jall{ or presidential nominations which need | aor ma plasea pchers that Mr. Sny-{lo until the government Suppressed her stamps rather than & two and a one|sentences, especially if they ar® WU senate approval fo hecome effective. | Hpht delbevately by nolns s soal|fotorious kames of chance and then| be used, inasmuch ad it meant less|ones and the convicted ars mmade to{ ONly a HANAful of postmasters have | pestions as a basis for the state crit- many. S Al BAink 5. Gt work for the printers of the stamps.|serve them and not given pardons,| PSSR appointed since the president|icism. Had Mr. Snydr meant to be| "With a mormal population less th Tt was a request that the People Ye- o . or France, December 6th, 1918, | fair to Mr. Kutscher, he would &t @ . 5 are likely to have a beneficial effect,] and thousands of men are now i I2ast | that of Richmond, Va. the city ex- sponded to generally. Practically but thepe could be ho question how | Overtime. Thé Plans of th serving have»ngen him credit as the source;panded to the size of ‘Washington, D. all the Brst class mafl dore the three 3 - e president | of his apparent inspiration. {C. when her season was at its height cent stamp and as usual many people bave become overstocked with them, thoroughly ‘profitesring would be [Tor his swing around the circle for| Now. Mr. Editor, if you can spare!in the late spring. She was a vercs e shunned it there bly take him from Washington for a |son should know that the trouble with| WHbse enteriainment was her prinet- @0 much so that they were not able|2d0DPted making death the penalty. number of weeks, and the social p s y . 4 3 plans | the school is very largel: 'R o use them up before the change be- SDITORIAL NOVE: 9t Mrs Wilson will be dependent on | fault. Usually Soar s ext £F Toe femi ‘:?.:ifi':’;:f.’i.:““f:‘ b the date of their return. There will be | activities of a community posses a]nooks and cranniés of the hills uhou: came effective. The same was true of the three cent stamped envelo Thise who are living i 2 & Leiy yre brought to bear on | »y i v R > i /mese latter two instances redemption |ralny days. ghanges, but whether or not he will | trouble. This is true in Thompson,|obese who sought relief by het b Py aBiting this month is permitted 2 listen to the plea of "public sentiment | and especially in North Grosvenor-|alkaline springs. ez i 3 demanding it* is not vet even Intimat- | gale. There are two contributing| “Her mumicipal dress was $ay and ees, by permitting the postoffice |the same time is going to make an in-| cles. The week's recess and the big | 3 in his haste to.find fault has over-{& fan-like plan. sumptuous vill teresting contest for seme people. :!.m”!i’nrht:,ly t';;sEmlk! at Allfl;ltlc City. | looked these, one deliberately, and the|[0¥med a jewellad half cirelet about 'embers of congres|other through a lack of ingight. The]Rer. and for plumage she had the' give 2 two and a onme for each tBree or three twos for every two ‘The man on the corner skys: There | ditended, pretty well cleared out the | jown e suffering under.the affiiction|most thickly wooded district, except| D threes is what the peeple canmot ‘tnderstand. Certainly there is as €Pod reason for such a change as there is in the ocase of the stamped envelopes and postals. It| wyiyy g ameoos are so0 many new brews thess @ays| CaPitol until the return of the pres- H , that of Cobl G that "1t is hard o remember te|ident and the address to the senate | O30 T7The rage sehonts Nowhiie s e o et names. e mata e to 1 on a8 been | in this state or New England have I|Mountain has a ruin and a "sumen”vo’fmp Px; e houuk etg;?n:e&li been able to find educators other than | 2®et- German-like, perhaps, morx can Do appreciated that 1t would [, Legion organ-| men in session long hours. Congress. | L1050 directly respensible that they, were in the lana’ of verves mean a little work in handling the g women auxiliaries it :ufln .fimm:: ‘Gljlflvun of Boston, took |5; - Than! g tems’ and taxes Dy having ta pav a amount of loose threes that might be et e Gemouncing the enact- | of & new board of sducation compos. | ™% for Staving there after four davs. presented but there can hardly be so - iy to his taik. "Wher shour. | S0, O Ten Who are themselves edu.|, Weisbaden i five miles morth of y of the purple stamps that this i & > _ | cators, we have a of changing | Mavence, a miles east of the man ¢d Gallivan, “if congress has its way | (" = Mr Hines and hie subordinaies | fabled rock ‘f the siren Lorelei. “would involve any great amount of the men voting for prohib wo! b apén. @i -time or effort. As it is now those make Sodon and Ge‘fl"'x‘*:'u';:fi “‘l’:g e av!:ry::n‘:imont’l::‘z‘:‘u ana b | Dut who possesss the threes and who - cents, it will be s0 dry.” 5 ~{in the history of that region, to which have little or no occasion for using : s Victor Hugo inedlved a ‘providential = n Ruropean destinies, v.hem,'on nn': gtl::n‘ me-::nrnmm . of - a K L ; for it was traversed by Caesar, Atti- ihe benefit of the extra cent, and the | president from the g g Ak ) f ] R e a Nap postoffice department in view of the -futare, which hat X ides for researc] Taults e - ershing won fand it has taken will have. difficulty ¥ elim: its results on the Slaced in t‘)t' 31‘1:& of heroes, iy in i G ity “The V'S 88 attest Its cos- making many ':‘.f:“ otherwise | patted, conditions in ind 3 2 it The agwi mopolitan . appeal. - The Protestant that this was real purpose [ Senator MeLean is again urging the | desire for and ability Marktkirche in Gothic style, with the refusal to redeem. ; Y ©of his Bill giving to members | thought and action, ail i {five towers. are two syna 4 the privilege of the floor | Jearn except by rote.. sogues, Russian and Anglican places MOTOR TRANSPORTS. - 7 He even goes on step | that children entering the. c81of worship, and its Roman Catholic B ik of b L : furner “..‘m o it computsory oty ume to] church of St.. Bomifaze memoralizes - e on school work. By. amount of traiming at al Stated diye, a session Of Semate and | Lors wall oo s mork" By, dint of ; =0 that they may be consulted | qemands on the tea the in the early eighth century to and questioned by senators and mem- | oy ihe time ther . Braduats compare | SVSTthrow the idols of the heathen fall to be B E personally regardis din; b realized. that the .send-. el (eFarding pending | favorably with other high “Two men of latters are identified e- | the Even instead of always getting | stra: could not hel 2 I'with Wiesbaden. Both lived and died Tiomation Taronts tomer, SoiiinE Areore 1o atvtgae woa motioe thel fiere and are the mubjects of con- Mr. McLean states|gshown in the diffe t _mearly every other nation per- that method and he believes it fluences of the state tem ho : r u:ah:e of the United | are insufficient to u-;”d.luu n:”i;f 45 adept i ewas g g ey A B e G P a lef 8 as on] to ” . " Yo the spoaker | numerous authors to £ind the eritioims | @ Prelific Hair by. Indian’s tives, using | of mill towns in general, which is that| , ~ Recipe, Which He Offers Free they are stagnant. North Grosve After being almost entirely bald a business man came across on 6ld In- dian recipc by which his hair was fully grown. He will mail it free on | adjust their domestic and PoOVern- total vote was only n bot it must be teat that| fusal 48 an act of unrriendliness. They | Sontained in Mr. Snyder's report had|government for the proposed Rhine re i £ - | heap o . apparen £ shows that he Wwas by no means um-| oy p: n her time: Wiesbaden, nestting in|young or middle-aged work B e e T N L the idok at]ed by men high in administration cir- | causes, and it seems that Mr. Smyder]colorful. Her broad streets radiate in] teligent. " protey Seidp: 5 A { the body v S remov v relative hay ever or nronic AUDITORIUM|Majestic Roof | ~ MON. TUES, AND WED. __MONDAY AND TUESDAY Juvenile Follies CCRUGIBLE OF LIFE” Five Reel Foature Pictu 20~PEOPLE~2Z0 s — Dinging From 22 2 Y | KINOGRAM WEEKLY “CRUCIBLE OF LIFE” ‘and Five Reel Feature Picture RowuND’s JAZZ AVIS THEATFREX.Z TODAY AND T_OMDHIOW WM. S. HART in the 6 Part Artcraft Special “THE POPPY GIRL'S HUSBAND” TODAY ONLY LOUISE GLAUM —IN— “WEDLOCK” A Powerful Dramatic Picture of a Wopan Pertecuted By the Unwrit- R Zena Keefe Not a Vampire Play IN THE NEW WORLD PICTURE e s e “Ay AMATEUR WIDOW” BURTON HOLMES TRAVELOGUE | [ >resdnting an Unusual, Interesting NEW FEATURES TOMORROW apl_M4tIEIng Situtioh Including Eddie Pole in the 5th PA“‘IE NEws Episode “The Lure of the Circus” ~—~TODAY-— WILLIAM FARNUM and a Cast of Twe Hundred i | | — I N— The Jungle Trail A REAL FARNUM THRILLER spicuous monuments. Gustav Freytag|ghevik troops. was one of the scant company of Ger-| Mme. Koshnevikoff, ownet of the man novelists known beyond the|most imposing residence in the town former empire's borders, for Germany | was arrested. Her daughter, seeking has had few fiction writers whoselner release, was told that the charge works are widely read in other lands.|against her was a secret. After a After his first successful work, ‘Soll|{month in jail she was released. It de- and Haben,’ had attracted attention!yeloped that all they had against the in 1855 Froytag wrote another _up-. woman Was that on a previous evac- holding Prussia’s ambitions for Ger-|uajon of Biélebei she had served such man domination and thus won a place{a fine meal to the bolsheviki o on the staff of the Prussian crown|some of them harrowly escaped cap prince. He saw the French disaster|ture by the “Whites” because of tarry at Sedan. ing over their dinner. “Weisbaden’s poet, Frederich von| More than eighty hostages were Bodenstedt, wrote a book of oriental{taken when thé bolsheviki evacuated poetry which has been compared to the ‘Omar Khayam' of Edward Fitz- e Gerald, and he also translated shakes-| OTHER VIEW POINTS peare’s plays into German. German In the rush of getting\the news en schelars insisted that the translation E 4 into the German tongue greatly im-|teh wire some of the correspondents neglected to include what Wilgon sald ol el aan o to the cook when he arrived at the - White House, Everybody else was In- STORIES OF THE WAR | cludea—Miadietown Press. 4 When not much building is being Like a Scourge to' the People. |45 the cost of construction rise (Correspondence of The Ag&sociated | pacause the builders have to loaf Press.)—The reign of the bolsheviki/much of the time, and when a lot of passed over the people of Biclebei|building is being donc, then the cost Lke a scourge. The bolsheviki oecu- | rises betauge the builders can get it pled Bielebei for =everal month riden Journal. The correspondent of The 50Ci- | Bristo! voted down the proposed ap ated Press visited the town | propriation of $100,000 for s a fortnight after their evacuation.|and sailors' me bullding The people were just beginning to re- | bond issue (o ri mental af] Refugees were than 32,000 resistered voters. The vot turning to view L0 . 459 no. The small vote homi They r 4 indic nt of . for the bileheviki had-occ h as indifference cated - houses a 2 1 th this sort of apyeal or destroyed mos the Coters we ridently An el@erly jud ist burt, | ready to abide by the deei Professor Paul 2 al, long a|ballot but were not positively enough resident of the Unitc who | {n favor_of the approprialion to Vote left upon ach bolshevi of it.—Waterbury American, e with grief over the! Why shouwld the Unmited fate of his native town that he Wept.|“bound” where Great Britain '« Many pers had disappeared and | gents” to go to the aid of Franc it was well known many had | casé of unprovoked s been murdered. The ses of vic- | tion that interes tims are be The cor- } publican. If the § me: Who repreae it would have la" question in_ tr t question would never 1 or h thrown, witk had we been tepresented temp at greater strenglh.——-Wate: The bodies were mostly se of | lican. of a scraggly wood. There unc overhanging bank on the ed gravel pit t were lying, a each the boots and most of thc ri “Ah, waitcr, tell me, are they oyuters clothinz Had b £ e | good 7 1 he ones I a were, mister, but I don't know how you're going to tell | whether or not one oyster is good by eating &another.'—Detroit Free Press. FREE TO should e a law|Lh® league of mations trip will proba- | the space, I think the people of Thomp- | hostess. Coquetiing for the Sanore] . s dressed woman and little | ASTHMA SUFFERERS e pit to get a bet-| he figure of a blond_young Bt uncovered close |4 New Home Jethod That Amyone Can under the <. : Dinc Loss ot The body was perfectly preserved| oot Without Discomfort or Lo by the cold \Wwth arms bare S S6d ana crossed OREN L the i mikht | %S NRTEL R e O ey have been sleepin which | got"Y < was not di | girl rd_ dusl 3 whether it should send for a free method. No _matter in who had come fr a. She was a high school g t town whi ad_been abc y thee bolshevik commisar when U was evacuated s the body of another wo- Close by wa man. When the bolsheviki entered Biele bei the government of the town Wwus taken over by a “Revolutionary Com- : mittee of Communists here’ WaS | SUciy RS AY. hie xpente Lha t formed a “Committee of Investigation™ designed to end all rfie under the presidency of one Velt. a all wheezing. and all these end it t caees hets Lett. One of the fire of A0, L TR committes w . Write mow and the former D 7 4 at ¢ - fend no 1mply mail coupon below. Do ter was ill at a0 time and had to carried ou to his death in a eha Twenty men were shot and in ad tion many Mohammedan priest member of the Investizationg FRONTIE: mittee boasted that he shot one priest || 223X, Ni; because he was too long over his || Buffalo, prayers, while the commiticeman || Sena free t waited to take him. High school bovs and girls and priests were compelled to clean the | Streets. Women of the “Intelligent|§ = secevsveatsoneneenn. ain” were made to clean the floors and walls of barracks occupied by bol- GIRLS WANTED To work in Quilt Miils. Light, pleasant, interesting work; no noise; steady employment; high wages. For Fitchville Mill telephone Norwich 111.4 For Montville Mill telephone Norwich 110-12 . the . people | re B 5 ana not by | there no harm. to realize that some of | Station l-‘.J x;‘? rlt'o::h::'?l; Bwfna:‘ > jiter e x| the. blame which they. are #a jready [ ful hair. growths reported by aumer- | o e gt Sosp T ana a o lgus women and men who mave tried | THE PALMER BROTHERS C0.

Other pages from this issue: