Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 31, 1919, Page 4

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e et = RO = BREEDD THEATRE ‘ ~—~TODAY— | FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN | perience shown port " trom the figures Mr. Storrs s, it is exactly this itable Milln‘m ::?t the jitne away from - leys dm. ‘the cities where the|your wife a fortune.” G trolley line maintains long lines of| “Just let 'em try it,* said the Wood- | time she might have to. [ 4 track with considerable less riding the |lawn man, bétween set teeth. “Ji “When I came nights I had to jitney competition is but little felt. [once! Why, I'd even pay them to do|swim in through a ‘sea of im: : it Us the matter with you, any- | jiterature. That woman had all tl TO DISCUSS MARRIAGE LAWS. |b . | pamphlets that. the bond houses insisted the Hyde Park man, | could d?t : ear? ‘pray hard that nobody will leave |year? o pay the grocery “TODAY ONLY GEORGE . LARKIN _and \piis ‘a8 action tive ‘of the need - c % ‘authority e Y hcien. he g who turned ‘this dangerous | - COMPSON inmate, who'is ing time for mur- L r, [00se is said to have made a mis- ¢ . In the Five Part Westsrn Dram. take. Another mistake will be made| - i ¢ want to float a $1,000,- if that n is not also paroled | " Subssristien pries 123 & wek: 5 & meats; sise | Women physicians &:fi -other 0 ‘:’:’c she had letters fror 4..¢""m.i’.';";‘f.‘-‘ héuer safeguards in and b = yoar. prominent women from i w. cigar et, etts 4 m - mortgage agents whe|the way of rules established —Bristo} ¥ Butems w2 e Postofis ot Nerwwh, Coma. ® [nations of the world have been in-|awful stingy days or else yuTe [ sent ner listelof mortgages beginning | Press. . e When th, Sarvice BEVERLY BAYNE ""“‘_. ___ vited to meet in September in New | ome 6f thesé nutty reformers. ks |at $7,800 and running up to $20,000. The d; 4 Pona, Brains it T lves A'nh-l E 6 York where they are to discuss re-!|—don't care if I do—got a match? My |She explained that she wanted to ou"'m' mc-:‘d&‘ a2 nfp‘;'eleven gh ntal ‘:'mrzg l'?u .nd order —elN— 3 Bast ieves, Beiers e fooms forms in the marriage Y Bulletia Jeb Omes 332 |jaws, < The invitation to the confer- and divores | woe arises from the fact that Imo-{atudy investments and find out what gene recan;fir inh!:llbflh a !ortu;leflrrxm ‘'was worth "hlle‘ bc!o‘r‘v‘ she mde':z Wit omcs T Chn St Teesbooe 108 Cla aunt who hoarded her|her mind. Also in polite = - rine Bannats. Davia f tha Wrabs ob ony . instead of spending it|showed me where I Was quite mistaken Norwich, Thureday, July 31, 1910 |cooe) vmtane. Pockefellor Founde. |Fiotously s she” should have done.|in my remarks about 5 per cent. She s 3 social hygiene, When I say fortune I'mean to say that | had one awfully niee letter from a man tion, who upon her return from - siX|i¢ aets like a fortune. You might not|with a gold mine and she would draw months in Europe on a tour of in-|think $500 was enough to make any |15 per cent a quarter right away, when spection declares that the world has | fuss about— he 'got the mine started. Aftér I had been shaken up but not shaken down.| “Man, man from |led her attention carefuily away from Besides the marriage and divorce | Woodlawn. 100ks | the gold mifie, much 48 you would dis- ib! eh is graphically porc trayed in this exciting drama ef Texan border life. /‘GOD’'S OUTLAW” A POWERFUL FIVE-ACT METRO DRAMA PEGGY HYLAND —iN— ‘“MISS ADVENTURE" agal z of teaching youngsters to ability to swim does not safeguard against drowning but it makes sich tragediss less likely o ppen. summer. B Engiand an uncomtoriably large num- ber of drownings of people who go out in boats or canoes lacking a knowledge of swimming. The Boy Scout camp absolutely WEWSER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, groaned his frien In these days 3504 cespates.. WEEK ENDING JULY 26TH 10,108 TAKE THE BULLETIN ALONG Subscribers and readefs of The Bulletin leaving the city for the season, or a vacation, can have the regular rate by notifying the business department, telephone 480 e i) “~ BLINDING THE ARMY’S EYES. laws, attention will be paid to the status of children of separated par- ents. It is the desire of Dr. Davis to have uniformit of such laws throughout the civilized world. A group of French women is advo- cating that children take their na- tionality from their mothers. will be combated in this country be- causemany American soldiers -have brought French wives home with them and childreg born in this coun- try are Americans, according to the law. What view will be taken of children born to French mothers and American fathers in France remains to be seen. There has been agitation in Germany in favor of giving unmar- ried mothers the title of frau, and of their marriage and divorce laws in order to make them more flexible. The leading social agitation in England just now is for more rigid laws to prevent the spread of social diseases. as big as a mountain.” “You are merely quoting Imogene " interrupted " the Hyde Park man. *“ realize now that what I should have done,at the start was to say to Imo- gene! ‘Just tuck your 3500 into your mesh bag and run downtown:and it. Buy a dress and maybe a face small sum you couldn’t spludge and got a hat, too, but we must resign our- selves to the high -cost of living. Or you might invest in two pairs of shoes, a silk petticoat afid a nut sundae. 1 think your wad would carry you about that far.’ ‘But, no, I had to nod my head ap- provingly ‘when Imogene, with shin- ing eves, said she/would mot think of spending that much money, but woulld invest it and when we were old and to know what she should invest it in. She wanted something perfectly, ab- solutely safe, that could return her about 25 per cent, I believe and her estimate of my business ability fell.a foot when I assured her. that _she tract a child from a rattlesmak e. Imo- gene said she uv‘von-der‘d if_it would mot be a_good thi monds. were a spendid investment pawn them in an one always could emergency. ’ “Ske woike me up at 1 o'clock that This | veil. I know that on such a miserably | night to tell me she had decided to in- in a bond and what At 4 vest her money kind of a bond was safest? o'clock she shook m Wwhether a first morigage on something would not be better. “She put salt in my coffee cup in the as_abstractedly it would not be %! best to let -the money just remaim In When 1 left she had figured up to the age of 8. when the bank total would be some morning while she ‘wondering whether the bank and compou was 92. tell you I am her investment socks, she's so busy e awake to nd. nearly gray headed with that woman,_and her money and Dlans. doesn't even have time Why figuring. she- to darn my 1 hope to put $500 into dia- She had rcad that diamends because ! of Waterbyry bovs at Mt. Tom has an ‘excellent le which forbids the use of boats to all boys who cannot swim. Every boy and every girl should be taught the art. Tt is vigorot health- ful exercise and has fine merits asidé from its value as a life protector, nl would be fine of the recreation com- ‘mission in this city ultimately made available bathing places with compe- tent swimming instructors for the children and grown-ups. KFulton park offers promising _possibilities ng that ltne—Waterbury Republican. Aceording to the Hartford Times the tate had to pay pretty peuny for ex ert testimony in the recent trials of rs. Amy E/ Gilligan for poisoning aged persons. One physician received $12,105_and another $10,300. Several other physicians received sums which high. They do these things much bet- ter in Europe, and it may be mention- ed that there is much more respect for expert testimony there than in this country. As a matter of fact, expert the 44 heur week is nea: mote. If itis near, it is & waste of en- ergy to oppose it. a w: undeniable that ma: e ——— , or it s re- It it is remote, it is te of energy to strike for it. It is of the people and A CAPTIVATING AND THR!LL-{ ING PLAY WITH SETTINGS THAT HAVE ALL THE CHARM | OF THE OCEAN IN THE 7th EPISODE OF The Lure of the Circus NEW SHOW TOMORROW Harold Lloyd Comedy EX-CROWN PRINCE AUDITORIUM T PEGGY HYLAND IN'6 PART FOX FEATURE “CAUGHT IN THE ACT” ::‘ oo it gl ""’d"“: this already has been accomplished. | o0 o™y e M ionanticssiy serevd | o an Bos, Tunt oa 1o the age | cat¥ied the total for expert testimony |ed within o comparatively short period. ST mail for any specified period at || Scandinavian g g e e L - 4B to more than $30,000. % s secms to he an intelligept ME, ey e e ar She wanted fof 170, She had an uncle once who|™Fg 0, Ol ments are altogether too | method of getting at rosults. Either KEYSTONE COMEDY FORD WEEKLY Majestic Roof those practical measures which they strongly demand can, be obthined by them. There is no resisting & géneral and ' (horeughly organized _public opinion. Present strikes are a measure, in part, of the geartity. of labor, and the | greater scareity which is to be antici- pated. They are in part manifesta- tions ‘of the ynrest which the war brought to the entire civilized world. testimony, so-called, is seriously dis- credited here, not only by juries, but by judges and lawyers who find it necessary to employ them. The cost of the.Gilligan trial was high, and of necessity so because of this bad system of using experts. But in the end justice prevailed and the woman who traded in old age death to make a living goes to prison for the rest of her life. Only Conmnecticut’s Present indications are that thirty- six women physicians, representing England, France, Italy, Switzerland, Holland, Belgium, the Scandinavian countries, Russia, Japan and South America, will attend the New York conference, as well as women physi- cians from this country. Germany will not be officially represented at the hearings on the international couldn’t get over 5 to save her life. She wanted to be told what was the use of haying money if it didn't bring you in anything? e per cent was utterly silly, and how did I suppose she IN THE DAY’S NEWS Lendon Tower, Where Ex-Kaiser May you never have a like misfortune in Your family.” “Huh!™ said the Woodlawn man. 'd just eat up that sort of trouble! You lucky dog!—Chicago News. Congress is putting itself into the position of being willing to blind the ®yes of the army and navy when it proposes to cut in two the appropri- ations asked for in the army and _mavy bills for the development of avi- Ftion. At immense expense, we have re- cruited a force of trained fiyers, who " Special For Today and Tomeirow Feature Pictures 1 7 c and Dancing DANCING FREE the Mayor of London is the only out- side person supposed to know it. This| custom is a relic of the time when] are now beins sent back into civil ’ Téwer was primarily a fortress. rhers sav The demands of labor ought to be lfe. and while it is truo that the|Problems but Dr. egnxx:mug;:d = o PrA"v;-'* n'd:"'~sugsmm Like the Bastile. London Tewetr,g':cl""‘e Sbwpiog woman saved Mee| ey and. ineeliigently Agpt to be P ————— 3 B8 cait & ;- |many German women w) wi The Tow London, as| Tower has been stormed. Desperate BEASrere Dost. vi . s United States can afford to go slow o rine Yowar of fonjen, suxgpstsy =i perate | with the purpose of speedy settlements efforts nave heen made to steal the royal relics kept there, which include the ancient amnointing epoon' and 4nd early resumption of work. Hawley, .- 1t is aBparent thata the president at least by any she - under enough to Incidentally Dr. Davis abroad and feels that stands present them. lplate in exchange 1n 1917 The value of the tinplate 1in 1318 is estimated atL abo Iy, for a vear or two at least, in the might be held pending his trial, is ds matter of expenditures for national & Yotlowsn trom their views well 8 canmot have his way. Tt is very true, as-Mr. of . scribed in the) following bulletin from processes known to the framers of the| the Bridgeport Manufacturers’ 4 defense, is a question whether the the Natiomal Geographic Society: ko b g alt 1] O + 2 .. 2t e belinves that the' womusn: physiclan: te] 8 v Queen Elizabeth’s salt cellar. One fa-| contstitution. They never coniem- | sociation savs, that shorter hours and e e Tunths air serviee is the place to begin with | TS [ ering « greater sphere of |, TAlAce and prison. once noted forlmous effort, in which Col. Blood. dia-| iated that the executive would undec-| higher wagee will incretse prices. OF i T e ConBaaL A TuA . extreme retrenchment. etuiness and. she . predicia . eyes | its menagerie dnd its pageantry, hirth- Suised as i clergyman. nearly made | {ake to override the natusl judament| this lator 1gaders are as certain as Mr. production n 191§ was app ~ Aviation in other countries is mak- place and death house of monarchs,|away with the bejewelled crown, 18| of the legistative by bringing outsils| Hawley is. But prices do rise and for Iy $70,000, and a + ing steady progress and we cannot|MOTe Aactivity on the part of women|scene of hairbreadth escapes and re- | thought by some fo have.been inkpired| pressure of an - emotional charioior|the present nobody knows of apy oth- | produced “in 1918 was about 30 ford to lag behind after having at- | 20CtOTS- z puted hidden treasure, ghastly in its;bv Charles IT becausc he needdd the| upon it. Tt is-at this, point that ‘ho|er way of meeting conditions exéept to jots more e iy e . e oae tained the position we have reached in == O mpories of tortyrés enf killiggs and [snoney the rare gems would-bri opportunity is_offered .him of h take part in a continuqus revolution in ~{per pound 4 B e et e DOBBIN STAYS WITH U acred for its martyrs, the Tower of| “One of the less well known. but|"POrianity, 16, OBeral R OF o | R wages -chase prices s a cat 1814, "ine market value o army or the navs without this auxil.| The ascendency of the automobile|London amply warrants description as|most spectacular incidents, was thelihe controversy by discussing the|chases its tail and never overtakes it. T’ formes koW FHIES of Gor 7\?‘."9‘3‘0 o s g = t it -5 as the modern means of transporta- | (1€ most ancient and most poetic pile | escape of two priests by & ruse that| uestion of reservations with tne| -if tre vicious eircle is to be broken mer . 3 ] . _the aqus fary branch at its call was at an im- | 3f 5k in Europe. would have done credit to Monte Cris- | {008 P 9. TG CNG - Chicit, and | labor’and capital must join in finding | ManY in civilian attive japproximately three-fourths mense disadvantage In the face of an|!iOn Over the roads gives rise to fre-| ".William the Conqueror gave Lon-|10. One of .them. having been strung | SSMate leaders In a friendly spirit and} B7oF ARG o e M orices, in which | —- corsumed in the world enemy, and we should meglect no|QUent Temarks upen the “passing of | don a charter but bullt the White Taw.- | up by the hands for davs and then|3f (hecsame time entertng tho Trague| S, G0 TUNIAE Such remedies as 3 o —_— measures to insure that an American |i0€ horse” Yet faithful Dobbin is farler to show the peoble how little that | Put ina rack while his wrists still were e T e e hasc| price fixing. improved disteibution,|than 50 per cent. and as & result! \yind Blows Taste Into Water arme would be amply equipped in|from extinction. although so many | charter might mean. Like the - | swollen. without making him betray his| 28 CFEIEEC AR (POU Rt 2 e | and above all, means by fhich pro-|our share of the world's output can| 3 its air sery: = i cities see =o little of him, compara- | lish congtitution the rambling London | faith. wrote in oranse juice to friends TeleTation ference, but we d> net|duction may be increased. i ters * o The city of Milwaukée ha. e S tively SReie straet a alth Tower of today is a product of cenm-|outside. for a light rope. with a weight | %2 nte Srmonea. B The fact of material prosperity is|0OW Dbe sately stated at, approxi-|greatjy bothered with a peculiar Within 2 few weeks all our trained | IVOI™: O (helt streets and althoush| S 2na ot one, but many tawers,|at oge end. He also asked that a boat| Understand that he has met thom, with|, TS S 81 TOH Tl P Thinge pro- | mately. 75 per cent. % its drinking water. The wat have returned ‘to civilian | 18 aPProaching a rarity in some| oy are scattered over some 13 acres.| be brought to the river below Cradie | Critical opnosition =~We are at ther- | (08 qpaiily oL USRS SUIES BCCE e h (g tncrease in our own out- | tained from & lake and is chiorina he terms of the an " | districts, even on the country roads.| The site had been a fortress since Ro- | Tower on a certain night. On that; ¥ to conclude that he still orefers overty, no matter Wwhat the | petore gistribution. At first B the s | e tnteh (A B fhe o AmATs ] B P nizht he made his way to ‘his fellow | Iiis own opinion. If he would wrastle| O, PO, " MENla T wages, | DUt during the war period coupled|{yougnt that the chiort r e Mexican border there|tries bcard go to reassure us that the o the Middle Tower Elizabeth|Prisoners room. The two flung the| °5% 0 1% Wit W QCte I om0 Pie| A Targe heap of cominodities means|ith the decline in production in thé(he taste, but a series of testy pre as e all At s tme o hn mer® | lime ‘o say &neilve (o the hotse js|came back a queen five years after her | Weighted end of the rope to tneir|ed offense. the pride of conviction he| oty ana more (hings o enjos | other tinplate manutacturing coun- [ed that this was nol the ou <nt that the difficulties of the coun- |SPite of the enormous shipments of| Richard ITI hired three assassins to|the boat safely and made their es.|!0’a treaty of neace and a league of T in 1918 sent the product of our tin-|ity of the faste = tho o nations, but seek simply the protec- tion of the American people. Tt i Monest differenée of opinion at bot:om however much nartisan heat may dic- plate factories to more than 50 coun-|the wind, and finally the tries and colonies scattered over the!trouble wWas 10Cu.e« ¥ entire world. To Iurope, the other|one three mi tinplate producer 6f the world e leight miles away cape.” STORIES OF THE WAR horses abroad for use during the war, there were 21,500,000 still in the United States. In addition to this there were 5.000,000 muies in this murder his nephews in Bloody Tower. Not until years later were their-bones found sudiaken: to Westniinater Ab: Y. iry fo be traversed make the aviation arm particularly adaptable fcr scout service and for border patrol here- United States Production of Tinplate. The Welsh. tinplate manufacturers en route to this country to study our | “which tofore in the hands of the cavairy. e % Tl fate am unfortunate expression of it ; 2 Tea e o ety e urth as many as the human popula. | 2Nd the death of ‘a malefactor: was|p (COITesPONOCRce ol ToL ATCCN] Germany could have had a _ better | Of the tinplate of the world, while 20 | 142,000,00, to' North America. other avo might show instantly where s beheaded in London ~Tower. Henry | Press). peace in 1817 than (hat she had to|vears ago she produced nane. Mean- |thaw the United States, 155,00,000, to| many ways trying to save the vessels sunk in the war by German sub- marines. One of the most perilous in- cidents of this service was that of a navy commander who cut away the nose of a live torpedo that had be- time our imports have fallen from 1.- | 000,000 pounds in the vear in which our industry was inaugurated to practically nothinz last year. Produc- tion. which made its first record in 1891, amounted in that year to about Oceania nearly 4,000,000 and to. Afrigal over 2.000,009 pounds. Cosiderable quantities of this tin- plate exported went back to the very spot from which we drew the pig tin from which it was manufactured, for| a mistake had been made in crippling the immediate foture of our avia- tion corp VUI waited to hear a gun fired from White Tower, signal of the execution of Anne Boleyn, so he might marry Jane Seymour next day. Henry's min- ister, Thomas Cromwell. sent hosts of enemies to London Tower to be tion of the country, and yet the ave- rage person sees hundreds of human beings every day for every horse that is seen on the streets or roads. | Prevailing prices for horses are ai- content herself with a vear later. Of that there is no doubt and so whether| or not there is any fruth in the varn that both France and England offered peace to the Germans and the tender was refused nevertheless in a sense it LICENSING THE PACKERS. * However much we may think some|so of exceptipnal interest. A one-year- | butchered until he helned pick Anne of {come jammed in the deck of a des- | 7T iy D 3.000,000 pounds. reached 1,000.000 in!.ii of the tin used in our produttion | watehful eve and restraining hand | o ot - A one-vear- | Cleves for his much married monareh, | trover. So dangerous -was the task | Might readily be a fact. = Before theliy;s'", 500500000 1n 1012, 3,387,000, | ot (ompiote ba dran Trom ornos patts s d|01d, according. to price averages is Cleves for bis much marri ToR | thar the maval suthorities towed the | UDited States became a figure in the| 1% L . W2 3387080 lof tinplate is dra P ought to be kept over the packers, it bui en Henry saw this prospective great war and when both France and|000 in 1917. and approximfately & like |of the world. Our importation of pig tatistically listed as worth $42. An|yiig M pc® O SO LU RO ers | destrover three miles out to sea before quantity in 1818, 1in which amounted to $33,000,000 in is 2 question whether we Ensgland thought our share would bhe are willing|average two-year-old is worth $%6. g 2 they would Z 3 2 3 permit the attempt. 2 v re n > ¢ becribe roduced by [and young horses more than two! Taw (rnd.off Went Cromwells head | oy Ko R ok has advanced very | lieht the neople of France and of| -This rapid growth in our domestic |value in 1917 was drawn chiefly from | Semater Kenyon for ihe M-} h . i : g England were facing years more of theiproduction only comfortably supplied |the Stralts Setlemen the Dutch years old are listed as being weorth ‘Relieving such stories of royal eru-|hapidly and become very jprofitable. i e | our domestic requirements until within | 3as: ind Great Britain, Hongkong. ng of the packers. Carfied to its g : ; & | Sbmersible 1ifting divices never be- | War. and were worrying over the rate | ou es n su indies, Great Britain, ghong, 5 pa 3108 cach. Young mules more than|elty are the immortal ‘last words' of 3 n cent years, for it was not until 1800 | Ay ¥na Cni also limited conclusion, it might well re- he brave fore thought of have been devised and | that it nrogressed and the seeming|recent vears (or % s i PO S, e sion, it might well re-{{wo years old are, on the averaxze |the brave men and women whe laid 2 &! s . i - that our exportations reached as much | quatities of tin ore from onut South ractica! goternment their heads on the axeman’s block. put into successful operation. Dangers | Impossiblity of — making ~ headway 2 26 10 8- 4 government opera- |more valuable than young horses, for | tBS aod to :m m’ “Km "h o g any | brom gases due to Gucaving grain rars |AaEainst the Huns. They may have sug-|as 1000000 pounds. advancing to 2. | American neighbor. Bolivia thouzh by flon of packing houses, stock yards|iney are listed as being worth $143.- [ o 507 (0PI Lhe FNE Sl e ndey | moes have been eliminated Ly scienti- | Sested peace to the Kaiser then or|000.080 pounds in 1910 and 106.000,000 i rar (he largest quantity was from and dezslers in dairy products and |3, laumhed Sir Thomas Moore when (o | fio. research. . Diving appliances have | have ziven him his chance to bring the|Pounds in 1314, the vear preceding the | Siraits Settlements and: the Dutch Smultry. Government- ownership of that Henry VIII had ‘mercifully’ con- | been greatly improved. thing to an end. Germany was flushed | War. Then they jumped to 012“0“»0001 Cast Indies. To the Straits Settle-| the raiflroads and the telegraphs and EDITORIAL: NOTES, sented to let him be beheaded instead| The cutiing of stcel plates under| %ith thoushis of vietory in 1917 for|pounds in 1018 530.090.000 10 1f18, and iments we sent in 1917 in exchango ielephones has been marked by no| Some of these one-pisce bathing|Of hanged. and. to the executioner. as |water is now only a dentail and the | She had already eliminated Russia and| % (e Deeal SEA% 000 Jotindn Xt the | Ton, e, TN (n | shout ASOULEES gesch slittering benefits as (o encour- | yiee are mighty small things to com- | he moved his beard aside ‘Pity that|construction of the standard patch to|SOUld mass her armies upo Ta| beginning of the war our preduction of | ast Indies 31,000,000 pounds, to further extensions of complete | 1. apout. should be cut that has not committed |cover holes in hulls has reached the o =¥ Neem =ee Nt inplate formed approximately two- || 22,000,000, Australia 15 ver: t operation of big business. | o 5 treason.’ . oint where it is now merely a part of | this an easy victory and the same| .t v v FROEkong 26,000,909 1o ANACTALRAS.” | igovernment operation of big % . e Connit B et e it rere part Sntnens that she had met in the eact | thirds of that of the world but with the | 000,000, to China 30.000.00,0 to ling 3 Senator Kenvon's bill would require| Farm wages $5 a day—Agricultural | reraing Go tne hesl Hianopury, proudly s work of the salvage men. | py¢“the Yankees came. the aspect|fall Off in production in the other tin-|land over 16.000,00 pounds. to Bo- 1l persons engaged in the business|report. How 3y’ goin’ to keep ’em|because she had committed no wronz. - - of the war changed fnd when next|Diate producing countries, Great Brit-!jiviy from which we now draw ibout P e sentoine 1 ke 7 - I RE. [ Four Million Destitute In Poland. % o int he|ain, Germany. France and Beigium. |s15 000,000 worth a year of tin ore slaughtering livestock or preparing |down on the farm? so that, says an observer. apologizing e the opportunity . came to make rmany. France and Belgium. |$10,000000 worth a year ;i ivestock products for sale to sell their for the excontioner. e was concirains | (Correspondence of The Associated| peacc ~Germany had to accept ihe|OUr production af the present tme we'sent about 300,000 pounds of wn stockyards within two years; would| The aerial mail strike didn’t last|ed to fetch it off siovenly | Press). It is estimated that there| share of the beaten foe. It is mush hel-| [0THS A5COR0 NE 0 In SRURLLE DY D08 no for a have h2ea an jare 4,000,000 destitute persons in Po- land, ‘including 2,000 000 mothers and children. ‘For five years the struggling ter for the world that thers wa: peace for Germany in 1917 peace then would only ““If you strike me twice, I cannet promise vou not to stir’ warned Mon- mouth. Asked to raise his head a bit about three-fourths of the output of the world. Fhe tinplate production of the world long enough for them to appoint their iprevent the packers from engaging in first fiying delegate. Sany ather business or in the sale or warfare. I'rom the Smanbfacture of any other fogd pro- e o o, ? 2 : T : .| Algernon Sidney retorted, ‘Not untfl|armies of Russia and the Central Pow- | armed truce.—Meriden Journal. P Sauct; would take the meat refrigera-| The man on the corrfer says: [t toox | {EeZA0n SidRey reforted. ot umoth) orlies o ol & e Morth. over the . at the beginning of the war octutred of the control of the|a Painter to make the Norwich silent| 'pecdi inquired Sir Walter Raieigh. to| country. Thousands of houses and | In their adjustment with Warner|chiefly in the United States, —Great ; and would subject |Policemen show vellow. keep Up the spirit of his attendant, |buildings were destroyed the matter af the 44 Hour weel, left|Britain Germany France and Bel | the revocation of any | Congressman Berger = frankly ad-|ost theyknow of any plaister to-sef| Now that peace has setiled upon the |, i0q" oy tia Hesision by the natjonal | 258.007400 pounds: Great Briiain. ap- practically in the sole |Mits that he prefers the “I Won't}a man's héead on again when it was cut|rest of the world, Poland is still en- conaltibns. The phrase is not strict.| proximatery 785,000,000, Gcrmlni\' 187.- Work's” to the A. F. of L. ol EaEed g fepnter but it means, no doubt. that the arbi- | 000,000, France approximateiy $0.000.- the secretary of agricul- “Consizned to the Tower for some 13| Baitic to the Carpathians, on a front 6 doubt, 3 ° 0 X “Ruthless severlty” as prison camip | YAars Sir Walter set a fashion which | three times the iength of the former | (TALOFS 2re to eonsider the extent to|000 and Belgium ' about 36000000 Kenyon's bill purports, no 2 i = e : A L e Bt R LR L T R e R E will be pleased to inspect your ¢ Eenvoms Bl DUYPOIS M0 loraers smacks too stronsly of Drus. |MAde & salon out of the palace-prison. |westorn one, the Foles are mobiiized. | Njonted n this cowntry. and the prob- | Countries the product, of course, de- will be please: x 5 s s sianism to cound right to Amorlcan| Vwhig.le was not attending his gardenkven women and girls are performing | apjjity that it must, or will be, adopt- | clined and with us increased more battery at any time and as often dduction of the high cost of living, but | Sian and distilling eseence from plants, he|military service, not as their Krench e i R b g Sgnores the fact that no regulation, wrote his quaint ‘History of the World.' : and American sisters were in hospitals h Stringent as may be, tan be ef- and there too, William Penn wrote ‘No |and ambulances, but on the firing line Our service is the expert kind, e i tnn 3l tomg a2 the price| JusSlng in high finance hit the top | Cross. No Crown, not to mention the | with rifies in their hands. e i batienoy 1N 1NN AL your ieen to the tarmer e |mark in. the Pennsyivania bank that| writings of the Duke of Orleans and| Déspite these ronditions, the new and. ouz \SRpas 4 . will % I~ | was discovered to ts over $2.000,000| Sir John Eliot. Polish government is making a deter- Gispoesl. Should repaics be mecesdary we bushel, and corn by rising from the 0 cents a bushel to and $2-a bushel. it tikes 330 ‘worth of corn instead of $10 to fatten a steer Ser mariet and $50 worth of labor all along the line instead of 325, a cost 1 Tietor 1n iniroduced that no amount|were killed are classed in Bngland as | probably because they once were fed | Soucn menieomcial Who told the Red e You bave heard of this battery and its of - 1 on can eliminate. Until|a “disturbance.” What wguld be ex- | OR rations of meat. form one of the cu- ou are saving a race which has an et *s th iginal Unit e 1le ve branéh of the United |Dected if there had been a recal fight?|riosities for London visitors. —They|struggled for independence for hun- unigue fealres—it's the original Unit- States government can compel the| _ d - N Bears pador goontumes and. . ke ih€|dreds of vears, and arc winning their Seal Battery; extra powerful, easy fo A shipment of $17,000,000 in Ameri- De, Y | everlasting gratitude and friendship. care for and repair. Let us explain its executive branch to stop stufiing high grain costs into, live stock and poul- iry it is useless to expect the high cost of fiving-to come down. ‘When this $2.26 wheat is allowed to foi -called 1 y % ¥ ovtect e g room( summon ‘the. escott of the ki for s mb ol .bide “laws. ' Pecil i 2 L - T A . L o _onfhe market, under the 1aw of| If Mr. Taft wants to change his|made up of ‘beef caters’ and then pro. | imaginary. In Massachusetts cities |} & A 2o Tgteadd Cig The Norwich Electrlc Co sgpply and demand, we shall be tak- |mind, it is not for the president to|ceed ceremoniously to lock the great|like Springfiel Holyoke, they hav = = > i Sty S ) 3 g an effective siep towards the re-|say him nay, having _established | outér sate.The pass word is given | the real thingoand enforced " ioo 5 @uction of e high cost of 1iving. |abundant precedent in his public at- | formally to semtries as the procssion S ot (o Sopns JITNEY COMPETITION. Just how large a part the Jitney competition has to play in the trou- Bl of the trolley roads was shown in @& statement recently made by Lucius . Storrs, president of the Connecticut jpany, when he appeared before Whe federal electric railway commis- mion. Jdn Bridgeport, for example, accerd- short. Secretary Baker puts the date for complete demobilization on Sept. 30, blasting the hopes of the wets that the ban might be lifted by Aug. 15. Riots in Egypt where 800 natives can gold coins that has just reached Buenos Aires was carried in 350 kegs. The American dollar is'at par there | for the first time since the war. terances. Princes have lost much of their popularity in the last few vears. but the Prince of Wawes can be zssured of a warm welcome on nis coming visit to America. The officiul tasters of a TFrench steamship crew declared the wine ra tion Wasn't up te standard and the “About the “main entrance to the Tower was a menagerie until a_ hun- dred vears or so ago because Frederick II of Germany sent Hepry 11T of Eng- land several panthers and Henry did not know what else to -do with thm.| Later James I, who like bear baiting, added, those animals to the. zoo. “The wardens, known as ‘bef eaters’. Keep their ancient costumes, undis- turbed by currents of modern fashion. “Just before midnight the head warden and tke porter, carrying a buch of huge keys, go to the zuard passes. and in conclusion the detail sa- lutes the keys as the porter cries, ‘God. “The wardens known as ‘beef eafars’ months the reigning kinz or queem sends the pass word of the, Tower. to the Constable, sigred and sealed, and mined effort to care for its civilians, relief Red Cross withethe assistance agencies. cine and children’s The American has already sent to Poland a dozen trainloads of supplies, clothing, medi- What this has meant to the new republic is sum- | med up in the statement of a Polish | of allied food. OTHER VIEW POINTS They used tp sneer at Connecticut g]mnin ~and. baseball are criminal. | is" little state of ours has less law. more sense and hetter order than most of ‘them.—Waterbury The story of the release on parole | American: - r 70U e RFANTS nd IVALIDS { ' The Steamer day during the season, leaving -of Market Street, at 10:30 A. M. Will Make Sunday Excursion to Ocean Beach every Sun- Nelseco II | the Railroad dock at foot and arriving at the Beach - stamping, mipke thesi at a mioderate chacge. The “‘EXIBC" Stacling and Lighting Batiery ia the fanous ““glant that Hvesin a bos.” features to you. Take advantage of our free service, “THAT REMINDS ME” PHONE 1311 JEWETT BUSINESS SCHOOL, THE MULTIGRAPH SHOP for facsimile typewritten' lotters. Folding letters, addressing, sealing and mailing ata nominal charg ing in.on let j98 to fgures that President Storrs|“DID's Vovage came to full stop thir- - g at 12 o’clock. Returning leave Beach at 5 o’clock EI55e3T0r S o e riding with: | L5 miiSs O shore uati'a nes Ceuppyy ks sy Malted VAP Horlick’s || reach Norwich at 6:30.- G Public Stenographers—Office Supplics #1 two miles of the center of the city #= handled by the jitneys. Outside of out. We simplify werk i offics, gi SATISFACTORY SERVICE, AND DELIVERY ON TIME. - % you 84 the 2 3-4 mile radius the trolleys had | Quartermaster Genéral Rogers. pu b the business. the blame onto the nationsl cennevs f accommodations for 600 passengers. Buysiness IHouses furnished with efficient office. help free of chargo. Type ““The jitney thus comes in and takes|ussociation for Lringing rressure fo > : writers to Rent. ) the cream of the traffic from the trol- Jey.road. It is on the short hauls in $he thickly populated parts of a com- —thatthe trolley company can|longer needed for the arm: B = . 2 = bear on the war deparime: out from the domestic mar'et 000,000 worth of vcanned =,04s Y. - that held 32 a0 Forlnfants, Invalidsand Growing Children | Rich milk, malted grain ¢ The Original Food-Drink for All Ages|Ne Cooking — Neurishing xtractin Powder FARE 40c EACH WAY. Bunneu Office, Room 308 Thayer Building, Norwich, Conn.

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