Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 13, 1919, Page 4

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them, and it seems probable that the settlement of the situation in south- eastern Europe will be one of the first corrective operations for the supreme council in bringing the restless Ru- manians to reason and obedience. THOSE GERMAN PRISONERS. » nd Goudied R BARS OED | =i St & ScmLc 6 War =, 123 Y R :ant now ol;I_.hn-n' ‘the Army Subseristion prics 12e & week: 500 a menth; $6.09 | and Navy Journal how sly the elped by g it my operatit “were et Gare "matiar. = - Com. % |ywo mysterious prisoners. brought to this country on July 21. The cold military facts have a way not different from other cold facts of dissipating much of the glamor “with which these two Germans had been ednesda: 19, - ) | surrounded. = y, Aug. 19, 1919 | *“Firet rports credited them - with giving information that was a turn- ing point in General Pershing’s whole final campaign.. But the war depart- ment disposes of that -belief when. it e shows their rank precluded any such ALl rights of republication of secial despateh. || possibility. One was a lance cor- S Sale S A poral, captured on 'Sept. 2. 1918, and CIRCULATION 10,174 Jlorwich galluye' the other a pilot aviator. However,| the information that they d&id give was of great value. What one told was utilized in the St. Mihiel drive, for he had such peculiar ability to carry details in his head and sketch them from memory that he enabled the American troops to capture four of the most troublesome batteries in the St. Mihiel offensive. The other gave informatfon of a more general nature. > Bearing in mind the readiness with which Gefman prisoners were talk- ing, especially towards the end of the war when they sensed the col- lapse that was to come, these two men were doing nothing unusual, and they alone should be transported back to this country leads to the suspic- ion that we have not heard the full story of their revelations. The war department will act as its own censor in deciding just when it will tell the whole story of these two mysterious Germans. TAKE THE BULLETIN ALONG - bers and readers The leaving the city fer the season, o a vacation, fam have The Builetin sant ta theiz address by mail for any speciSed period at the regular rata by netifying the businesz despariment, telepkone 480 e ——— BROTHERHOODS BACK UP. It took no great time for Glenn H. Piumb and the ‘brotherhood officlals to hear from the public. They got an Mstant referendum vote that spoke volumes and sent the brotherhood heads in haste to explaining that it was far from their intention to use force to compel congress and the country to accede to the plan of n YELCOW STREAK CITIZENS. If there were no one to offer bribes, it is evident there would be no bribes accepted, so that a share of guilt lies on both sides of the transaction. Sen- tences of from one to twelve. years tionalizing the rallroads. The voice|imprisonment have just been given to of public opinion and the press|four commissioned officers and three quickly told Mr. Plumb and the rall-|petty officers of the navy for provid- road men where they were going to get off in their blustering proposal to compel legislation for the benefit of a two epr cent. minority in = nation of & hundred million. We want nothing of Russian soviet practices applied in this country and Mr. Plumb unconsciously revealed that his leanings were all that way, when he fell into a trap prepared for him by the interstate commerce com- mittee of the house. When sections out of the constitution of the Russian soviet republic were read to him, without telling him beforehand what they were, he gave ready assent to the doctrines they subscribed to, while his whole testimony served to show how much he was permgated with the doctrines of Karl Marx." If anything more were needed to damn the Plumb it has not vet been suggested, ing “bomb proof” jobs for naval re- servists, who were able to hold out the lure of money and social favors. The investigation of this sort of value-received favoritism throughout the countrywwill be made widespread it is stated. But while we are pun- ishing the bribed. why ought we let the bribers go unscathed? They at least could be put in the plllory of public opinion if their coun- ‘trymen were given their names and these cheab young citizens with their vellow streaks covered up under offi- elal favor and gold braid could be kept in their class and out of the so- clety of real men. EDITORIAL NOTES. France miszes the American doughboys’ ready cash. this hot day?” inquired the man had just finished his breakfast and take a drink of water and you've “So, Joseph, don’t open your mouth like a fish, because we have indeed come to that. We can’'t afford to pay any one the salary of a_captain of industry to cook our food and what is more, we can’t afford to buy the food. Nobody can afford to buy food any more and I for one am going to abandon the custom and be ible. It is merely a matter of habit any-. how. If we don’'t have any real food we won't need any dishes or glass- ware and won't have to mortgage things to buy them. “That woman who came in to help when T had my club here at luncheon smashed glasses when she washed them with the abandon of a multimillionaire. She acted as though there never had been a war. Maybe if I go with out several dresses I can buy _enough glasses to serve lemonade on the front porch and conceal our poverty from the geighbors. I tried to match the teacups and the store just smiled sad- ly at me. Didn’t T know they weren't importing those goods now? Besides, the factory that had made that set was blown up three years ago, but here was a very nice new set that might suit me at-$6,010. Maybe I have the figures wrong, but they sounded like that. “And we won't have *to have any linen to set the dishes on. Lines you've heard of it, haven't you? It is a cloth people used to have a few years ago. Nowadavs they keep it in wall safes and only bring it out when a customer shows his bank book and three guardnties from responsible citizens. When they extract all the cannon balls from the flax fields and sew flax and harvest“it and let it lie two vears, as they have to, and weave it and ship it and sell it, then wel'll have linen again. Oh, yes, when T am tion they say that hordes and - les | of are g to demand milk to. drht“‘:nd Memwon't be any to make] dream unless s Teves e = |ana’ inca) any w som. . leas fortune and you get reckless and blow | S22 Incabable of it in all at once. We can’t have any|ns men accuse preserves anyhow, so yom wouldn’t en-| showing. Of course, poy your toast any more. Why, I ean| epudiating later the bonds issued for not to be — considered. buy a whole crate of luscious StFRW-|-That is an idea of revolutionists only. But the suggestion that the pay of always maintained at the point where it now its equity.— recall grocerymen beseeching me t0|ihe roads is berries for one-seventy-five and now when there are berries in a store they put them in the window and a mob gathers “”t r;cgect!\flly. Th‘; m canners o out and buy up rtford Couran field, and there are m&e{g e % presuming populace. - The federal ent ‘And if there is no food of the old|the high cost of living. the railroad men shall be is robs the scheme of and that means no dinner- clothes—|duction in the price of bread. clothes are these day: nice into when one is in a hurry. and it is|mills would continue to only $250. Of course, if madam de-|the basic price of $2. sires something really good——' But 1|guaranteed pay 6 ‘bush to suffer what I have endured. millers ‘a set amount—say, $1 a bush “Yes, if we don't need to buy any)—making payment from the $1,000,000, clothes or table linen or dishes or food | 000 fund that was provid: those food tables. well spent, Joseph—don't you?” Her husband grinned. “Say,” he|correspondingly low. Cheaper to have for dinner tonight, Susie? “Oh!” sighed the pretty lady hope- lessly. asparagus and pie—but, don’t I wish those food tables were on|at which the baker must the market? What I'm going down- its licensing system, would set 1l brea [ can find one that isn't gold plated.”|by miller, flour retailer. baker —Exchange. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Human Nature and the Strike. Mr. Editor:—Human nature seems to be the same the world over, doesn’t it? And Germany. doesn’t seem’ to have a complete monopoly of that commod- ity. We are getting a sample of it ight here in Norwich. The trolleymen seem to he fighting for “a’ place in the sun.” They want to extend their “Kulture” throughout the entire community. Of course we recognize that such a kultured class of persons, who have to go through such an extensive course of study for their high position, cannot be satisfied with the paltry income from twenty-five or thirty thousand dollars a vear. When one " goes through grammar, high school,, and college; and then either has to study at theological school in order to learn courtesy to travelers, or a medical schoo! in order to learn to treat those they run over, or a law school so as to be able to settle all disputes with passengers, or a business college t6 learn to add to their individual incomie. or an engineering schogl in order to really understand the mechaninsm of the at the mills. The machinery for hand gressive cities are noticed it will be|ing all this is for the most part al and for' heaven's sake‘let us wake up |checking-up branch of the and show that we are alive and awake. | ment’s licensing PROGRESS. |Democrat. Norwich, Conn., Aug. 12, 1919. 1t the Ommmdl country are to succe ifight to force govern Just how dependent we are on the|their proposed plan of sharinz profi railroads is demonstrated every time there is threatened trouble, as present. truck traffic, we still must look to the|believe that they also have intere railroad workers of with nt ownersh into us. The railroad unions realize|the benmefit of the use it with an iron hand. inot, on their part. very much willing- nags to arbitrate their demands. Back T every demand is the threat of im- mediate strike and back of the threat of immediate strike istarvation or discrzanization for the|Waterbury Republican. territory affected. The public is get- ting heartily sick or naving this pis- 5 tol pointed ‘at its head. - Some more | the meat question. Who gets effective system of arbitration, that|mMoney that the people pay for eat? can cut It can be sort there will be no dinner parties,|done at one blow—by forcing a Tr;; and I hardly need remind you what|money with which to do it is al- ‘Yes, says the|ready in the hands of the govern- languid gownmaker, I have a vurry|ment grain corporation. Here is how little thing here, _easy to slip|the subsidy would work out: Flour farmers by the government. The will go no further. i do not want you|grain corporation would refund to the by con- or pay a cook, all for finding a box of |gress for guaranteeing the price of I must say I shall|wheat. Wheat. would thus cost the consider a day's shopping in the heat|miller only $1.25 a bushel and flour would come from the mill at a price our burst out, “what are we really going|would result in cheaper bread. The grain corporation, by an exienllnn!:t o “Steak and strawberries and|new price at which the miller must “The entrance to the Rock City is believe me,|sell flour. It would also set the price In order that the publie reap full ad- town for is to stalk that beefsteak if|vantage of the subsidy, prices chArl'eg an. bread seller must be reduced in exact| Of clay. proportion to the cut in wheat price found that it is done in those places,|ready in existence In the auditing and govern- system.—Waterbury the their of the railroads, it should not be under with the railroad workers. The mil- ton at|lions of Americans who do not earn Despite the growth of motor | their living by working on railroads railroads for the great bulk of our|that should be protected and it will transportation and in tie-ups we learn;be hard to convince them that the our lesson—indeed, we get it rubbed |railroads should be run primarily for railroad workers. their power in this respect, and they | Combining their demands upon Con-| * There is| gress with a strike that threatens to starve the rest of the country un- less wages go to figures tMat suit them makes a bad argument for the type of government ownership that is the threat of |the railroad workers are demanding.— There is a good deal of mystery on the their The packers claim that they IN THE SCREEN VERSION OF THE FAMOUS NOVEL BRI o s b i S Today and Thursday THE MAGNETIC <HALE HAMILTON “NHIS BROTHER'S PLACE” A METRO COMEDY DRAMA OF MANY TWISTS AND LIGHT- NING SURPRISES ALBERT RAY WITH ELINOR FAIR —AN— “WORDS AND MUSIC BY” A HEART INTEREST STORY OF TWO AMERICANS ‘By LARRY EVAN ' 6 Part Picture With a Punch M TIONAL NEWS Pathe Colored Revue EDDIE POLO IN_THE NINTH EPISODE OF The Lure of the Circus VOD-A-VIL MOVIES 4 BIG TIM!‘__AG.IO‘I_N"PJCTUR!B WISE WIVES LYONS-MORAN COMEDY Matinee 2:15 Evening 6:45-8:45 story carries us back to the dawn of human history. “In the days of the Nabatheans, Petra became the central point to which the caravans from the interior of Arabia, Persia and India came laden with all the precious commodi- ties of the east, and from which these el | commodities were distributed through Egypt, Palestine, Syria and all the countries bordering on the Mediterra- el| nean, for even Tyre and Sidon de- rived many of their precious wares and dyes from Petra. “The Rock City was always to these regions and peoples what Rome was to the Romans and Jerusalem to the Jews. Horites, Edomites, Nabatheans and Romans have all rejoiced ~and boasted in 'the possession of this unique stronghold and most remark- able city of antiquity. DANCE -TONIGHT ASHLAND CASINO JEWETT CITY Up-to-Date Music Casino Not Open If Stormy the most striking gateway to any city d.| on our:planet. It is a narrow rift or defile, bisecting a mountain of man: hued sandstone, winding through the rock as though it was the most plastic This sik or deflle is nearly iwo miles long. Its general contour is a wide semi-circular swing from the right to the left, with innumerable short bends, having sharp curves and corners in its general course. “The width of the sik varies from 12 feet at its narrowest point to 35 or 40 feet at other places Where the gloomy walls actually overhang the roadway and almost shut out the blue iP| ribbon of sky it seems narrower, and perhaps at mdny points above the ts| stream the walls do come closer than 12 feet. The heights of thg perpendic- ular side cliffs have been estimated at from 200 to 1000 feet. Helghts, like distances, in this clear desert air are deceptive, but after many tests and observations we are prevared to say that at vplaces they are almost sheer for 300 to 400 feet. een at morning, at middav, or at midnight, the sik, thls matchless en- trance to a hidden city, is unguestion- ably one of the great glories of an- cient Petra. Along its cool, gloomy zorge file the caravans of antiquitv=>— from Damascus and the east, from the desert, from Egynt and the heart of|gyaranteed method of becoming thin Africa. Kings, queens and conquerorsiNo gelt-starving; you become slender have all marveled at its beautles and | gracerully, vivacious, mentally and its strangeness. Wealth untold went | oiiocany’ alert—al you're alive! in and out of it for centuries, and noW | equcticn guaranteed 10 to 60 pounds. for over thirteen hundred years it has been eilent and deserted. “Carved in the face of the cliff, half revealed, half concealed in the growin shadows, is one of the largest, mo perfect and most beautiful monument of antiquity—FPharaoh’s Treasury.' Al- most as perfect as the day it came from beneath the sculptor’s chisel, fif teen hundred or two thousand year ago: colored with the natural hues of the brilliant sandstone, which added an indescribable element to the archi- tectural beauty; flanked and su mounteed. by the cliffs, which had been carved and tinted in turn by the pow ers of nature; approached by the my: terfouis defile—it is almost overpower- ing in its effect.” Eat Candy Reduce Weight If you wish to reduce steadily, vet eat candy, ice cream, etc., get a small box of oil of keroin at the druggist's. Follow the directions. Absolutely safe, cars , or a will guarantee the nation’s security is teacher’s college in order to.call the it is well understood that Rus- needed.—Bridgeport Post. Olive oil has jumped into popular: receive a profit so tiny that you can i e e il ol R T e stations understandingly; and then on| Bridgeport's bis shipyard—the Hou- | NaTaly notice it—one duarter of & centl “niiag = e top of all this has to devote days and s 3 - |a pound, or something like that. e cal to everything upon which Ameri-| Why not offer the trainmen half the | months to the practical work of learn- z;‘a“;"‘t‘c‘.,';::,,’“,?,‘l’,‘t’"’m‘,’":f,“‘;e';‘;m"',‘" men who raise the cattle say that the ean institutions are founded. i i i 3 s & | price thev receive is hardiy more than £ goods they haul, in lieu of higher|ing the intricacies of operation of mo. pric 3 3 e The public quickly came to the|wages? tors and hand remisters—one needs| ', that it will be turned over to the |a living wage for the work Involved. . e conclusion that the Plumb plan was S millions in payment. (N. B—They| s yndersea salvage ship. In . the|And finally the retailers say that they = i ‘ y too visionary for their acceptance |- The rocking chair brigade is now|Say that many of the Providence trol-|meantime. because Bridgeport's ship- | 256 MOt STowing rich. but that on the s L¥ e, . 2 and they revolted alike at the man-|in full swing, as it were, on the beach|!eYmen can neither read nor write.) yard has stopped. one needn’t suppose | SOMTATY, [hE. Featy mace more money - - mer in which it was presented. THRIFT TIMELY YET. Under the stress of bending every energy to the win-the-war campaign, America embarked upon a thrift eampaign which was in marked con- trast to the easy-come, easy-go hab- its of thousands who had never saved a cent before. But the uses of thrift cottage porches. We get small satisfaction from knowing that it cost more to live in 1719 than today. About all the Plumb plan needs the government in on managing the rail- roads is in case of deficits. o L v So far we have heard of no great hav ¢ irely i said that thrift in the government have heard talk of investigations be- and with the individual must be a|-oTC fdctor for a long time’ vet in return- ing to normal conditions. The continuing sale of thrift and war saving stamps and treasury cer- tificates is only part of a much broad- er movement growing out of the con- ditions which menace the economic future of this country and the wel- How have the mighty fallen when a Hapsburg archduke’s trousers are stolen to keep him from attending a conference. D Broadway, New York, is reported to have dropped its camouflage and to be passing the ‘real stuff” right over fare of its inhabitants. Immediate|the mahogany. practical returns to the government —_— @re really secondary to the import-| The Balkan habit of pillage crops out at the first opportunity from all we can judge of the actions of Ru- mania in Hungary. ance of the need of overcoming the extravagance of the people and of di- verting the waste into capital, though it is true that the treasury department ‘depends partly upon the stamps and icertificates for the payment of the in- fterest on the huge war debt. This ‘will be a problem for years to come. more independent. Frequently, the people who. invest in worthless securities are those who have previously stored their capital in podketbooks, cupboards, bureau draw- ers’ and stockings, where it earns no dnterest and is likely to be stolen. It %s the hope of the treasuty department %o induce such people to ‘take their money out of the bureau drawers and put it into banks, endowment policies, government securities or any other €6od investment. It is no time yet to desert the val- uable habit of thrift and no safer place for the savings of the people can be found than to put their money in-|says there is no shortage of sugar. to the hands of a government which|They evidently haven't been obliged to for 133 years has redeemed everyone|puy any from the groceryman lately. of its securities at par. it v S iy —_— The final straw will be that look UNRULY RUMANIA, of superiority with which New Lon- The Rumanians, arising, like the|doners and Montvillians will regard phenix, from the ashes of their na-|us as they point to their trolley cars tional humiiiation when the German running. and Austrian armies swept over | their country like a devastatihg fire,| The man on the corner says: In have sent their reorganized armyother words, Bernhardi voices the marching Into Budapest in defiance of |German hope of some day declaring the wish of the supreme. council atithe Versailies treaty just a “scrap of Paris. They are not inclined to leave|paper” too. to the council the remaking of that| part of southeastern Europe in which they are particularly interested and in|to It may be worth while to watch how Great Britain resumes conirol of bacon, ham and lard and fixes prices on these essentials. If New Orleans opens its munici- pal grbceries in fire stations, one thing the populace will not stand for will be false alarms. Lenine undermined by strikes and Kolchak by lack of support from the allies promise vet further tumault in the Russian cauldron. Mayor Hylan of New TYork added to his other spectacular performances by jumping into a traMc jam and helping out the overworked bluecoat. The federal sugar equalizing board A woman who walked from Seattle New York siept by the roadside which they now find themselves the|until she was east of Chicago when strongest power. she found it unsafe. And we talk of In return for what they have|the wild west. : 5 R AL MR O dong x", overthrowing nhe_ brief What a hard looking lot our finan- Bolshevik rule of Bela Kun in| ;) men once must have been when Hungary, they cannot be, al-!the editor of the London Nation says: lawed to cash in with a free hand in. taking what they believe belongs io them and setting at nought the whole effort to remake Europe accord- fng to a scientific plan. The pro- cesses of the supreme council at Paris may seem too slow for the Ruman- ians, flushed with the sense of their new-born nfition and its strength, but they cannot be ailowed to override the orderly arrangements intended to make for the ultimate peace of the yerld. Transylvania, the prize for which _shay ecniered the WaX Dow. lies s e “The.new type of American banker is serious, and differs widely in per- sonal habit and outlook from the hard-living stock of gamblers = that preceded him Poor relations have some feelings fhat must be respected as an impe- cunieus nepkew proposes. to show Charlie Schwab by suing him for $500,000 for slander because the steel man said he'd give a million dol- lars to throw said relative out of the window alter making bhim several|d But how to get those millions? Ave. there's_the rub. Of cource, while Mr. Plant lived he supported both *them and the traveling public on chari But Mr. Plant is dead and Eastern Connecticut has no other citizen rich enough and foolish enough to support all his fellow citizens in Ask anv chauffeur.. which is easier to drive. a trolley or an automobile. Ask any farmer, who “vorks longer hours, a farmer or a trollevman. Rut—the trolleyman has a union: the' unian has a leader—a sort of un- crowned kaiser; and this leader wants the earth. So he sends his willing slaves into the battle and tells them that “might makes right,” no matter if the stockholders are not getting any dividends. The trolleymen want more money. If Mr. Plant isn’t here to give it to them, they are going to get it from anyone they can. And they are going to use all the “frizhtfulness” they can, meanwhile, upon the citizens of Norwich. No matter if they wreck the trolley lines in Eastern Connecti- cut and destroy the business in this part of the state. What does the lead- er care? He doesn’t live here and his minions blindly do his bidding. Why not tear up the tracks and pull down the factories—as they have done in Russia. They simply carry things to greater extremes there because they are more ignorant. The spirit is the same. - Can we not see 0ld Benedict Arnold turning over-in his grave and smiling and saying to_himself, “Ho! for com- rades now. My native city will at last send me company. CALEB CHURCH. Iiuminate. Mr. Editor: Have the merchants and storekeepers of the city of Norwich stopped to think of the beneficial re- sults to be obtained by lighting their store windows nights, say from 7 to 10, or even 8 to 10 in the evening? Did they ever stop to consider that the non-lighting of their store windows perhaps kept people off of the streets of Norwich nights. I have in mind the nights that the stores are not open. I have noticed the few store win- dows lighted, and I have also noticed people standing in front of those stores looking at the wares displayed, and wondered if their looking at those wares did not mean that perhaps the next day a sale would be made at that store because the -people had become interested in the goods in the window. Of course, if one is oblized to go to the store and turn on the lights, and then go again and turn them off, it means a lot of trouble, but even at that I think it would be good adver- tising, and make the city look wide- awake. On the other hand, time clocks for throwing store window lights on and off can be purchased and installed I believe for not aver 330 or Fram a point of clvic pride it should bew done. From a standpoint of profit it should be done I believe if pro- LOOK WHAT 12¢ WILL BRING YOU A rosy complexion, a cure for bun- ions, dandruff, falling halr, painful feet, wrinkles, sagging skin, obesity. tobacco, indigestion. constipation. spe- cffy any one of above ills and I will send vou the cure of same for only 12c in stamps: no bunk or fake: no mira- cle; remedies to sell and_ satisfaction is guaranteed. Address Professor W. ntl.lzao. 3038 Princeton Ave ica- idle luxury.| for a minute that Uncle Sam. master shipbuilder has zone out of business. Not at alll Two of the American ships now projected are to be 1,000 feet each in length—the largest ships jever built. And th will e owned by Uncle Sa The Emergency Fleet | Corporation is turning out ships in fine style. Un to the middle of July it had-delivered 1096 vessels totalling 6.068.739 deadweight tons. Tt had launched at the same time 1524 ves- Isels with a deadweight tonnage of &.- 1020.288 and had laid the keels of 2081 vessels with a deidweight tonnage of 11,421,111, The deliveries for the first six and a half months almost equal the total for 1918 —Bridgeport Stand- ard Telegram. -Smoke up, men. great deal less and people bought mo: of it. button. have the new onme, of who's got the button?” meat?” Certainl. in Congress will furnish a Bridegport Post. IN THE DAY’S NEWS HISTORIC SPOTS IN TURKEY. “Though Turkey will be dismembe ed and pushed out of Europe, the O If you don't there may come a day when the law won't let you that is, if certain zealots and fanatics of both sexes have their way about it. Now that John Barleycorn ihas been laid away for the long sleep, the amti-tobacco mob is coming out into the open and saying in no uncer- tain terms that the weed which Sir Waiter Raleigh was base enough to discover must die the death.—Meriden Journal. The suggestion of the railroad men that the government take over railroads. bonds, and leave the operation to a|tions—Semitic, Greek, Roman, mixed board that shall fix rates and|tion, Mohammedan = and do all the rest except that wages shall not be. lowered, is inter- esting. It has some points of attrac- tivene Those who believe in co- in control of some of the shrines and meost precious spots’ of Asia.” says a bulletin fro: the National Geographic society. of Petra, known as the ‘safe depo of caravans en route ware: contains ‘Pharaol’s Treasury.’ " The bulletin quotes from a describing Petra as follows: Chri: nomadic life, which have work out that attractive notion. sticking point is right here.—If ev- one of the strangest, most beautif: ation, why should wages be pegged|earth—the Rock City of Petra. I YOU GET RESULTS . AT : \ JEWETT BUSINESS SCHOOL Personal instruction and supervision. Students placed in responsible and well-paying positions. Public- Stenographic work a feature. COME IN AND TALK IT OVER JEWETT BUSINESS SCHOOL Business Office Room 308, Thayer Bidg. Norwich, Conn. Telephone 1311 STORAGE BATTERY ~ Repairs—Renewals—Rentals Phone674wewillbl.'in;youurenhllndmhrgeym 49 ! BATTERY o { e The Norwich Electric Co. 42 FRANKLIN STREET Free Service In place df the old game of “Button, we “Who's got the householder’s good cash, pald out for someone must get it. Tler- haps the investization now under way clue.— ooman empire probably will continue sacred history “For example, there is the Rock City with precious to Tyre and Sidon—which also com- munication by Franklin E. Heskins “The highlands east of the Jordan the | river are strewn with ruins marking pay for them in government|the rise and fall of successive civiliza Crusader. present | These ruins have been preserved for the modern explorer by the tides of swept up from the Arabian desert; but at the operation may see in this a chance to| southern end of this no-man’s ‘land, The | deep in the mountains of Edom, lies erything clse is to be subject to va-|and most enchanting spots upon this re WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 13TH STEAKS | SHOULDERS SIRLOIN ARMOUR'’S PORTERHOUSE LEAN ROUND SMOKED 1b. 26¢ 1b. 28¢ I .tI PRIME RIB ROAST, Ib. ......veeeeeeeenoonn.. 25¢ r- t- PRIME CHUCK ROAST, lb. .................. 22¢ LEAN POT ROAST, Ib. ..........c0c000000000 166 FRESH CUT HAMBURG, Ib. .................. 24c FRESH CUT BEEF LIVER, Ib. ............... 12}5c SUGAR CURED BACON, Ib. .................. 38¢c SUGAR CURED COR.NED BEEF 91 ib. 122(3 SWIFT’S SPRING LAMB Short Cut Legs, Ib. ... 30c Forequarters, Ib. ..... 20c LoinstoRoast ........ 25 Loin Chops, Ib. ...... 40c Shoulder Chops, Ib. .. 25¢ Stewing, Ib. ........: 16¢c ARy .. 30c .. 22¢ LEAN PLATE LEAN FLANKS FANCY BRISKET NAVAL CUTS NATIVE VEAL Short Legs, b. ...... 25¢c Rumps Roast, Ib. .... 25¢c Shoulders, 1b. ....... 20c Chops, 1b. AP Stewing, b. ........ 16¢c ROYAL LUNCH CRACKERS, bb. ........ CLEAN BROKEN RICE, 31bs, .......... HIRE’S ROOTBEER EXTRACT, bottle. . . SUNBEAM SALAD DRESSING, bottle . . .. N.B.C. GENTRY JUMBLES, Ib. .............. LARGE JUICY LEMONS, dezen ............... 33¢ YELLOW ONIONS, 2 1bs. ............. 19¢ LARGE BANANAS, dozen ................... 37c GREEN CORN, doZen. . :.....cocovcerrnncias.. 23 ARMOUR'’S JELLY, 5 Ib. crock ..... MOHICAN CREAMERY FRESH SELECTED BaTER. B ....... 60c | EGGS, dozen ...... ROUND EELS ROUND CLAMS [HALIBUT Ib. ........ 25c]pint ....... 23¢|STEAK, Ib. MOHICAN. BEST BREAD, loaf . RAISIN BREAD, loaf ...,.... JELLY ROLLS, each ........ COFFEE.BUNS, dozen ...... UNITED STATES WHEAP DIRECTORS' LICE) ul ts R T SE 005

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