Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 3, 1919, Page 4

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i SEPTEMBER 3, 1919 Ferwich Bulletin -“d, Gourier 123 YEARS OLD Sevscristion priee (26 & week: 3% a menth: 38.00 Frieied st the Postomice - cias matier. Tetephone Catls. Salietin Dusiness Office 480. Bulledn Taitorial at Norwich, Comn.. s Rooms 33.3. Bulletin J>0 Office 38-2. Whltmantic Oice 3 Churea St Teicohage 105. Neorwich, Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1919 = — — MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Aswoclated Press 1 exclusiery entitim (o the use for republication of all news despcich- v credited to 1t or rot sirwie credied in e Daer and also the locai mews Dublished CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING AUG. 30 TAKE THE BULLETIN ALONG Subscribers and Bulletin leaving the city for the season, or a vacation, can have The Builetin seat to their address by mail Por any specified period at the regular ratz by notifying the business rcment, telephone 480 readers of The SOUND ADVICE. What cannot fail to be regarded as a proposition that should make a strong appeal to these to whom it is presented is the statement made by the branch of the Federation of Labor n New York state when it declares revailing conditions are all that all the people of the should unite in bringing about a change that unless this is done it will in disaster unparalleled rong. nd result nistory The committee of this in New elieves suspen- period of six to be on the basis conditions, that the execu- tive comm should be made the judge of the necesstty of strikes, that thers should be an in pro- on by methods simi- me and that the efforts to living should be in order to get a stable basis. This shows a recognition of the fact that the high cost living is due to the high cost of production as well as a decrease in production. To continue the calling of strikes means to fur- a 1 be a for a of existir increase intensive t decrease production and to con- to add to the cost of production means the con ance of the ty that already exi The ommittee has made a most val- uable on which should receive hearty endorsement. It is in keeping with the attitude of some of the na- tional labor leaders and it will be through the adoption of such sane suggestions and the living up to them that the desired improvement and re- ef will be obtained. It is time that ommon sense rather than hysteria USING GOVERNMENT FUNDS. How little attention is paid to the expenditure of government funds whether at the time of approving es- timates or after the actual operations have been sta is pretty clearly shown the dis that are be- ng oney used oading plant at the nitrate plant Tennessee does cost-plus hen the lo plar nd a gquarter to a millio would be suffcient to a et theugh un eted_when the ng stopped cost ten times 2t much and still more funds were eing seught. 1If expenditures in ~onnection with the p were made | n the same way that the salaries were boested. it being remembered hat the larger the cost of the plan he greater the profit to the contrac- rs whe received a cert percentage on the eest price, there can be little surprise that the plant's cost ran up to = was apparently no estimate and money vas the situation regard- e plant at Mussel shoals 1st January . )0 had been ed and $14.000,000 additional for water power and an agree- is said to exist between the promoters an government that ong been realized ziven to it appears that caused them to be dealt that ojects more freely than ever with the emergeney as the excuse. Naturaily there will be speculation as to how many more of these cases of excessive nd. expenditure will be fou MINING MORE COAL. is gratifying to fote according to report from the department of the interior that there is a consider- able inerease shown i the produc- tion of ceal during the week ending August 23 over the previous week. This holds true both as to bituminous and anthracite. This in keeping with the showing that has been made since the first of July when gains were started. and is important since it is bound to result in the cutting down of the shortage which we havi been told the country was threatened with. In one week a gain of over 17 per cent. in the mining of bituminous ooal is shown but in spite ef this it is to be noted that while this gain is en- couraging the output for the week was two million tons less than it was in the corresponding week of last year when operations were being rushed. The gain is attributed to increased It the i it little | spending | ble, but it ‘cannot help being felt that if coal preduction had been main- tained during the early part of the year instead of being allowed to slump that there would not be the shortage that there is today. And what is true of soft coal is equally true of anthracite. There the gain made in the week's report is not as large but it is appreciable amount- ing to about 200,000 tons, so that comparing it with a normal yvear there seems to be little reason for believing that it will be imipossible to supply the oduntry’'s needs if transporta- tion is not too badiy handicapped by having it restricted to a few rather than a number of menths. PEACE TIME CASUALTIES. We are appalled by the reports that show the large number of cas- ualties connected with any war be- cause all eves are centered upen such confiicts, and casualty reports usually contain large numbers, but we seldom stop to give consideration to the number of casualties that are caused at the same time throughout this country in peaceful pursuits. | "This ie strikingly illustrated by the |statement from the National Safety council to the effect that the easual- lties from accidents in this country ! during the 19 months that this coun- liry was participating in the war in | Europe were mere than twice as sreat las the casuaities among the American iroops. Tais seems incredible be- cause we see sueh facts set forth in| H at manner frequentiy but it can- not fail to bring about the realization of the fact that while there is need| lof preventing war and all that goes| !with it there is likewise equally press- ing need of doing our utmest for thec ecking of accidents. And this is particularly true when it realized that a large proportion of accidents are preventable and| When we stop to consider there were approximately 70,000 killed in accidents in this last year, with about 50.000 the streets and homes and and an in- the needless. that persons | country { killed in 120,000 in the industries vestigation shows that 50,000 eof the deaths were avoidable it makes one shudder but at the same timeit becomes evident that regardless of what is be- ing done to improve such conditions there still remains much to be done. And it is not solely organizations working to that ead, these in charge industries and those delegated to enforce the laws alone who should shoulder this responsibility but each and every individual. With all work- ing for greater safety results would be | different. WHERE LAWLESSNESS LEADS. How the lawlessness that is fos- tered by the sanctioning of lynch law results in the development of more bitter feeling between the whites and | blacks and even paves the way for race riots is shown by, the outcome of the determination of the Knox county mob in Tennessee o take the life of a suspected Negro. So insistent was the mob, that it be given the human beinz who was in the | hands of the auth@rities awaiting the | hearing and trial to which he was fully entitled, that it completely lost | control of itself and in its blinded fury didn't hesitate to damage public prop- ert set loose those who were serv- ing jail sentences and clash with the {state militia until there was a list of {about a dozen fatalities and nearly twice as many more seriously wound- ed. It was a most discreditable dem- onstration of hot headedness in {which any idea of respecting law and |order was cast to the winds. Hav- ing set their minds upon the com- mission of crime in an effort to pen- alize a colored man because he was] suspected of committing another there is little surprise that the heathen hold up their hands and wonder why this' | country sends missionaries amongst| |them. It shows that those who are incensed at the commission of ime try and do likewise are in | as t | much the same class as those they cry iout against, That the authorities in Tennessee are not disposed to overlook the se- riousness of what has taken place is| shown by the arrests that have been | made of those known to be responsi- ble for starting the trouble or par- ticipating in it. That is a course that is too seldom pursued but one | that is needed in order to teach such | people, and others of their kind. that| jthe law for dealing with such people | |as well as others exists and will be | enforced. i e e P T } EDITORIAL NOTES. It would be a happy find if a to- | boggan slide could be located on the peak of high prices. It is a proionged and disereet si- lence that has been maintained by Villa in the past few weel Judge lLovett of the Union Pacific declares that the Plumb plan would Russianize the railroads. That or worse. The president is impressed with the importance of his swing around the| circle, but the people cannot see the need of it. Traffic rules being perfected for those up in the air mighst well be pon- dered over by some of those who! Mever leave the ground. The man on the corner saye: Some- or other good temper never seems able to get classed except |among the big shortages. | how | Weurecosnize the new president of Peru who stepped into office through a revolution, but we withheld recog- | nition from the president of Costa | Rica. _ The fair price committees will have fo keep busy or they will never be able te keep the prices traveling downward as fast as the consumers desire. | If the president is to make his tour of the country to find eut if he is | wanted for a third term, he shoyld re- alize that he received his answer at the last congressional election. | With sentences of nine months in jail and fines of $100 for the Boston hotel proprietors who violated the) prohibition law. it can hardly be re- garded as lending encouragement to such law breaking. There's no reason for the peace con- ference delogates to get worried over | editor of The Montgomery Advertise: i trenches and transporting stores the declaration frem the Dnited States admiral that no more massa- cres must take place in Turkey. If they had given the same netice no ene ; NOISE IN - THE “This certainly is a noisy neighbor- hood,” sighed the woman who had run across the hall to borrow a spool of thread. “I never want to hear a noisier place, Mrs. Gooseparker.” “I agree with you perfectly,” said the lady addressed. “I said to my hushand only last night that the noise would drive me crazy.” “So many machines go by with the mufflers cut out,” pursued her caller. “And then that pianola across the street!™ “People’s ideas as to what is musle eertainly differ, Mrs. Whatcome." agreed her hostess. “If only folks would pick out pieces that were real| music it would be different. but I haven't heard a real tune yet on that pianola. And the violin next to it!” “Ism’t that violin a fright?” echoed Mrs. Whatcome. “There should be a; law against an amateur's practicing on | the violin in the summer time when it is =0 hard on other folks’ nerves. If he played only mornings now and showed | some consideration for- We sleep late mornings and that would be very annoyving. I think if he would have sense enough to choose early afternoon—" % ‘That is just when T take my nap.” objected Mrs. Whatcome. “It isn't so | much the music as it is the different varieties coming all together—there anust be dozens of different instru- ments all about us. If thex'd just let up once in a while it would be a help. I think something eught to be done about it. Now if a person can really play or sing nobody objects because all of us like beautiful music, ¥ | few performers know good from bad. | And we all endure it because we don't have the courage to speak out nearly against it!" P Perfectly true, Mrs.. Gooseparker agreed heartily. “If folks just would have the courage to speak our nearly every difficulty would be straightened out and we all would be zood friend “That's one thing 1 like about you said the visitor. “¥ou have so much sense. So many women haven't a bit, and get mad at the least thing. i | thinking of running in to see you, Mrs. | starts in on h | boy isn’t going to smother just because “BAYER CROSS” ON GENUINE ASPIRIN NEIGHBORHOOD “Thank heaven, I'm not that way,” said Mrs. Gooseparker. “But I have exactly the same idea about you, Mrs. Whatcome. 1 feel that you have & sense of balance and a judicial mind.” “My goodness!” murmured her pleased caller. “You have awfully keen powrers of observation, haven't you?” “Well, I feel I can judge people pret- ty well” admitted the hostess. “The funny thing was I was just sitting here about—it's being such a noisy neighborhood. I don’t suppose you realize it. but when your sen ,cornet right after din- ner and keeps it up till midnight it is almost more than human nature ea bear. If he could shut. his window—' “In_this hot weather!” cried Mrs. Whatecome indignantly. “I guess my Whatcome. “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” to be gen- ;ine must be marked with the safety Bayer Cross” Always buy an un- broken Bayer package which contains ) { proper direction te safely relieve Head- ache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia. Colds and pain. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets ¢os? but a few cemts at drug stores—large p.ckages also. -Aspirin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylic- acid. oo — surprising statement, nmot of a friend, but of the wealthy Ameriean who was held for ransom by Raisuli in 1904, un- til President Roosevelt sent a fleet of warships and his famous ultimatum, “Perdicaris alive or Raisuli dead,” (o] Alorocco. Ton Perdcaris’ own story of his ad- ventures as the prisoner -of the Mo- roccan Robin Hood” is told in a com- munication sent by him te the Naion- we have fussy neighbers. Why, I'd have you know my John has prizes and medals for his cornet playing and he is 2 fine musician. Anyone with a parti- cle of taste would cowmt it a privilege| vhy, you'd pay money to hear any- one in a_theatre play a cornet like John! What I wanted to say was that T am a nervous woman and when your Marie begins on those vocal exercises of hers, bursting out a dozen times a day, T get a start that my heart won't stand. Mrs. Gooseparker. Of course, if Marie could really sing it wouldn't be so bad.” > ” D Marie’; 3 i 5 s ooia® o et | al Geographic Soctety soon after his - s # release. grand opera this minute. Her range|™IGa8% L terest- is simply wonderful and only an ignor- e maware of the|cd and attracted me in spite of all my STORIES OF THE WAR Egyptians Who Fought Under British Flag. Ronald Lindsay, the British embass: a_letter to Grover C. -harge d'affaires of | has made public | Hal associate Montgomery, Ala. in rep to an in- quiry by Mr. Hall as to “how many Egyptian soldiers fought under the| | British flag during the war and what | was the number of casualties suffered | by them?” - | The inquiry, it is said, was prompt- | ed by the brief recently presented by | Joseph W. Folk, former zovernor of| Missouri to the foreign relations com- | mittee of the United Stateg senate. in | which Mr. Folk called tiention ‘!0; the fact that 1.000,000 Egyptian troops fought on the side of the allies.” “The British government.” wrote Mr. Lindsay, who was in Lgypt al through the war, “has carefully avo ed destroying Egyntian soveizn Egyptian soidiers also serve under th | i ! &, | Egyptian and not under the bBritish flag. The Union Jack does not fly i Egypt except over the British military ! establishments in the country, else where the distinctive Egyptian flag displayed. To answer your question literally. no Egyptian the British colors. Of course this is only parti; statement. In February. 19 the Turkish army attacked Lgypt. battery of Egyptian Artillery the British force defendinz the line the Suez canal. The enemy developed just the opposite this tery the members of which ma their zuns in an able manner and as- sisted in the repulse of the enemy. I soldier joined ! . al joined | ¥ aged | | belfeve they iost two killed and half a dozen wounded. o other kgyptian armed forces| were in action during the recent war. | but later on, three or four Egyptian| battalions guarded lines of communi-| cation in Sinai while General Al was conducting his campaign in and an Egyptian detachment wa one time in the Hadjaz. Neither these forces was ever under fire. “In addition to this, 1 rge numbers | of Egypiians were enrolied in Labor | and Transport Corps auxiliary to the| British forces. These men were en-| listed for short terms of three to six | months and did the manual and un- | illed labor for General Allenby’s | forces. As such their services were | of high value, and they released for | the fizhting line men who, otherwise, | would have been engaged in the rear.| “How many of these men passed| through the Labor Corps can b stated, but the total enlistments at one | moment amounted to between £0.000 and 90.000. Of the Labor Corns me some came under fire while digging | ammunition near the front and ualties were suifered. 1 ecannot the fizures authoritatively, but 1 'g- lieve there were altogether about 1.,00 killed and wounded during the four | years of the war.” IN THE DAY’'S NEWS | Jews and the World War. H “If the war does help the Jew, it will indeed be a blessing in dreadful dis- | suise.” s William Howard Taft, in| a communication to the National Geo- | graphic Society. The former’ president reviews part the Jews played in the war predicts some effects the war have on their world struggle for erty as follov “One-half the Jews have had to bear its miseries, its cruelties, its sufferings. They lived in the theater of war hetween Russia and | Germany and Austria. In this region, almost without ceasing, the campaizn | continued. The Russians laid wa the country in order to embar their pursuing enemies. and between the two armies the population, of which the Jews were a large part, suffered untold horrors. “As soon as the war came on, soon as mobilizations were initiated, | Germany and Austria, on the one hand, and Russia, on the other, vied with each other in a cultivation of the g00d-will of the Poles and the Jews. “Russia promised ihat an autonom- ous Poland could be created from all three of the incomplete tribal di tricts of the partitioned kingdom. Some of the leaders of the Austrian government announced an intention of giving autonomy to Galicia. “When the war came to an end, tre- mendous governmental changes oc- curred in the countries where thel Jews are so greatly ctongested. “The dreadful destruction of life, the necessity for rehabilitation of | these countries where the war raged with such violence and destruction, must necessarily give greater econ- omic value to every man who sur-| vives. The loyalty which the Jews have shown to their respective gov-| ernments in these countries under a most trying ordeal ought to impress their governments with the claim that they make to equal treatment. “While it is true that in the past much of the erueity to the Jews has been immediately prompted by popu- lar prejudice, nevertheless it is also true that, with the increase of popu- contrel in all countries, their con- dition has ultimately been much im- A wmar like this, which must a the and will lib- of the world/ as ! Unquestionably the high cost of liv-| ing is a serious problem for the greatthe village green. ‘For hLeaith's s 4 majority of sopie in this country.; was my reply. ‘Indeed? said the OIdl Congress has finally become aware of | Mohammedan. ‘and may I ask how| But people who by reason of [ man: ch daily turns, up and down, | war-time wages or business|it may require to keep a Christian in find themselves possessed of a|zood health'—all afforded matter of o money are not showing much | interest and reflection. sition to conserve it against a| “While standing near Raisulf one day. The summer resorts re-|day on the village green, of which we the unfortunate American phil-| were not allowed the freedom. one of 1y of “Easy come; easy go.'—|his followers came up from Tangier, rbury Republican. almost breathless from his haste. to retirement of Justice Alberto|report the arrival of the two Amer- T sback of North (amaan from|ican squadrons. The man described the bench of the supreme court of|how: the eight frigates had entered the Connecticut the state loses a strong | Pay. one after another. He told of the factor in the spiendid service rendered | AnXious deliberations of tie Moerish \e courts of the state to the cause ! authorities and of the alarm of the uth and justice in the interpreta- native inhabitants. whe feared the tion of the law. No judicial division | town might be bombarded. The man | of any state system ‘of government|declared that the place was ‘mkloub,’ stands higher in the countr: than | or upside down. Connecticut’s. One will hunt in vain|_ “I watched Raisuli with anxiety, in its history for doings which invite | lest apprehending the landing of ma- re criticism. In times past it has!rines with a view to our relief and | alwayvs looked ahead, it h not | his own capture, he might endeavor advar he larzer tion benches. Mass:, ean now congratulat you! husectts alone ranks with it in this| * ‘1 do not understand you, T re- pect. In his long service Judge!plied. Roraback has ever displaved a strong| * ‘I mean’ answered Raisuli, ‘that disposition to associate the interpreta- | the presence of these vessecls will lead tion of the wiih common sense| the authorities at Tangir to make such | and vr essive purposes. Connecti- | representations te the Suitan as may | i cut rightly reciates his efforts and | result in his acceding to my de-| wil it the inexonable law of | mands, and then you will be able 10{! vet in the full vigor of mind, at the| “Raisuli was confronted by the e of 70 vears under the econstitu-|problem as to what disposition he was tional limitation.-—Middietown Press. |to make of the seventy thousand Perhaps it is possible for the af-|Spanish dollars which he demanded flicied 1o derive comfort from the | (here were no iron safes, nor so much | reminiscences of the Rocky Mountain|for our release. Here at Tsarradan New The news is paying the pre-|{as a house with a cellar, while the Vailing vrices for flour, bacon and|thatch of skaff, or dried reeds. the| <uch things, but it remembers a time|Only roofing of the houses. offered but when Denver. desiring hread, had to|Pure security shouid he leave so much pay f 3100 per sack and for! coin stored in a village where he him- ir or bacon 90 cents per pound. Po- | Self was but a transient sojourner. I tatoes were worth their weight in “To the great amusement of Mulai| gold. Perhaps yvou might have bought | Ali, and to my considerable astonish- Ccal at $1 a lump. This was in the (Mment. the solution of this troublesome | period followinz the Civil war. Tth’lUESlinn which Raisuli proposed w H Zovernment was dispensing food to] that ‘La Senora’ as the natives call-| the Denver stores. Cries for relief|ed my wife, should receive the sev- sounded hizh, The future looked dark.|enty thousand deilars from Torres and | OFf course the point to be noted by the | deposit the money to her own eredit | secker after censolation is that some- | in Tangier at the bank where we were how the people pay these prices|accustomed to cash our checks, and | manifest a a com- | ripe offering: the many attempts of the wild people about me to prop tiaie me; their curiosity as to our own man ity in disposition munity.” politics, and they to disintegrate a ners and customs, as when one ve 5 erable inhabitant of the village la¢ OTHER VIEW POINTS | 12 oniy"aie 1o inquire why we walked so energetically up and down | ant and the demand for advanced|to drag us to some more d but it ever has hgeniinaccesslble retreat. What was then ove those reproaches such as the|my surprise when looking up with a country has heard uttered of muny of | bright smile, he said, ‘Well, I think 1] met e retires him while he is|return to vour friends.’ that he Raisuli, might them draw up on Mrs. Perdicaris as occcasion should require. “I however entirely declined to re- quest my wife to accede to this singz- ular proposal, and when I emumeai to Raisuli the suspicions to which such | an arrangement might expose us, he at once said that he would be the last to wish to plaee us in such a po- | sition “The next moraing it was still | dark when our men began loading the and survive.—Hartford Times. Robin Hood. That relentless bandit, laisuli, the la of Morocco, whose present raids aused a political crisis in Spain, another side. T could not bear to hear a child erv, hile on several occasions I noticed his care to avoid allowing the bees collected on his cup to drown,” is the DO YOU SUFFER FROM ' STOMACH OR NERVE TROUBLE? If so read this: Mrs Neeson of 122 High Street, Nor- wich, said: “T have suffered everything with stomach and nerve trouble in the past five years. 1 would have such splitting headaches at the front and tep of my head I couldn’t see. My muscles would twitch and 1 was in a very nerveus condition. 1 couldn’t sieep nights because of this nervous condition. My stomach was also in bad shape. My appetite was enly fair and I would Yioat and beich a great deal because of the gas lodged in my stomach. 1 tried different remedies but got ne re- lief until I started taking Goldine. I have only used one bottle of that medicine, but I feel a great deal better. I am not so nervous as I was and my headaches are not s severe as they were. My stomach is a Iot better and I eat and sleep a lot better han I did. I am going to con- tinue using ths medicine because I know it is Joiping m MRS. NEESSO Moroccan - EASY TO BRrReeD - THEATRE Today and Thursday BERT LYTELL In the Speedy Comedy . _MAKE MONEY Gladys Leslie and Maurice Costello The Gu:f Woman THE STORY OF A GIRL WHO GREW _TO WOMANHOOD OVER NIGHT HAROL[I)N LLOYD HEAP BIG CHIEF JAZZ TREATED DRAMA. THEATRE TODAY AND THURSDAY King W. Vider’s Latest Success “The Other Half” “THE ‘3ROTHERHOOD OF MAN" IN AN APPEALING A STORY OF PATHOS AND HUMOR WITH A TOUCH OF IN 5 ACTS By the Creator of “Better Times” With an All Star Cast Including ZUSU PITTS—FLORENCE VIDOR and the Famous Veteran THOMAS JEFFERSON —_— INTERNATICNAL NEWS VOD-A-VIL HANK MANN COMEDY EDDIE POLO In the 12th Episode of the Lure of the Circus pack mules of the mountain, which us and Tangier, just as Never have [ any here and we reached the crest between | 1 rose. ' t nessed a | } The Greatest of All Serials ! 2 AUDITORIUM S Teston Memi e un Ratira1 “motives Tor disfike. Maisu | scene of ‘more wild *and - fantustic Jou couid Bear ihe. metribees| ¥av k. omse ) Sxasiens and Giemion | ST R whose neaks and ALL THIS WEEK % henrd” (he. foike on the top Aoor| Aherents, whe evidendly idolized their | turrets were now flecked with crim- were zoing to complain to the police of| chieftain, whoee position among them) son o iy ot ;A A HIT! A HIT!- st Lo 2 | seemed that of the head of a High- | by some passing cloud. ==~ = Well!™ cried Gsiter, settiog nptbad clan nthe eiden Snos e bR S SR BAETRS s SURE CURE FOR THE BLUES indignantly. “I see there is no use Ee was guish 19 sec tha humpnug, (oliars, C O aeRsR O taliing to you. Mrs. Gooseparker,|aspect of a_situstion. while his re-|rived. but now luncheon was again about The myuner'in pihigh you add to Dactee was as immediale and (o the, sexved in hanor of Muigl Ahmeds an the neighborhood racket.” point as though he had been born in!Must be partuken of. after which the “Not in the least.” interrupted the|County Galway itseif. In fac[ 1 dis-| b llion was lft\lhu’\tl 1‘nv |uo}xn.l | flushed hoste: “Must you be gofng?|covered to my consternation that Ij ~“Here I was prese inmoned ¥ SEE—Buck and Wing Dancers, Col- T trust T know enough to ignore busy-] was beginning to like the man in spitejand invited to seat my etwneon S Caie WAL Proths " Crosk Bodles - SOCRgE M of my natural resentmeént. T found Raisuli and Mulai Ahmed. while a J ore LR R myself unconsciously accepting his| &roup of the more important ratives, § Chorus. ] contention that he was not & mere|inciuding El Zellal, as well as men e be carried on by the people. increases | brigand or cattle-lifter. but a patriot| from other localities, were ranged §} HEAR—Singing Quartstte, Jazz their ultimate power. 5 dv;flru:zli;\z Io”:f-s(:ur‘ his B‘fir:vl:r foo;vlarmmdh the room. i - J Orchestra, '3ig Song Hits. “If education andf opportunity and|lowers from the tyranny of the cor-| = ‘The silver, said Raisuli. addres: , freedom and equality are extended to|rupt chereefian officials. His charm|ing me. ‘has been counted -twenty | DON'T MISS THIS TREAT them in the nexi generation, the traits|of voice. the natural poise and digni-| thousand dollars, as stipulated, in FEATURE PICTURES to which objection is made will be- |ty of his manner, his seif-contyol| Spanish dollars: but these letters. come less and less conspicuous, and|under provocation, all hetrayed a Su-|showing me as he spoke a check hook LITTLE PRICES Russia’s great domain, which needs| perior character. He is in fact a born| containing eertified checks on the Jeopie of energy, people of keenness.|leader and with a certain statesman- | Comptir q'Escompte, the French bank people of enterprise, people exper-;lke m;al'i He flepl:red Ll}e ('B;:di‘- t Tangier, ‘of the value of these, enced in trad, people of financial gen- | tion o s country the feuds which|which are supposed to represent fif- .. hern e us. will find 4 benefit in the presence separate the tribes, the many deeds|ty thousand dollars. 1 know nothinz. -eauid wnr dosimore Assured me that of the Jews. of violence, and the blood se ueelessly | However. I will accept them on YOur | fuiure. that mot onis he himeelf but “From the East End of New York!shd. personal guarantee, but on that con- | pas of Iahtiost pae e and through centers of population in! “In fact. this stranze appearance | dition only.’ RN e U e e ey et d this country where Jews are asthered,| while in camp with Raisuli at Tsar-| wywpen T had examined the checks | rotiet. ¥ : i by the million and hundreds of thous- | radan began to assure an aspect Of Un-{ .o tified by Torres and by Bl (an. “Thus I left him and pushing on as ands, come the youth of the race who|expected and idyllic charm. The lifel T "\, ‘Siitan's delegate ministor of rapidly as we could we ere soon in soon manifest a spirit of Americanism of the natives: the little touches of} g, nce I gave the required ascurance | the midst of the large armed escort and get on more gentle human _character; —the | erhany, and Ra’suli, leading me to the | which had come from Pangier to see They succeed in trade. they sucreodl v child who offered me fruit. whichi o where I found my horse whit- |us safely bome.” in the prefessions, they succeed in|I at first declined. until I noticed the i ' WICre, 1, (0000 ¥ FOrSC WiET ool s s busin and thex move their homes expression of disappointment and |i. paq jearned to look upon me as a, Women think no more of stealing wded districts and acquire, mortification upon the boy's face. 4nd | frend, and that he hoped I chersihed | hatpins than men do of stealing um- taste and views and fashions|then the radiant and almest ridicu-{ S€ni SN0 that Be Moped T cnersiad | ha o fellow-countrymen. lous satisfaction of the little fellow i Ry hey cultivate little or no solidar- | when I pretended to emjoy his half-! 0 NOW OFFER AT PRE-WAR PRICES A SALE OF ) Handkerchiefs of pure lrish Linen, exclusively at the old price of 25c, 35¢ and ‘ 60c each. This Shop has long bheen famous for «its fine array of Hand- kerchiefs. They come to us direct from Lelfast, Ireland, and the present showing offers an exceptional opportuni to secure handkerch for Chrstmas gifts, which in all likelihood will not be po. later. Ik lioucoucey 342 WASHINGTON STREET Near Backus Hospital. KAKOIKOIKOIKOIKOIKOIK! Zimball's Textile Shop [ [=]oucucic uality—Quantity— Quickness We have a complete stock and can make PROMPT DELIV- ERY of any or all prepared sizes of ANTHRACITE coal. Our COAL is fresh mined and as CLEAN as careful SCREEN- ING can make it. NOW is the time to get your COAL before the transporta- tion and delivery delays of next winter are upon us. THE EDWARD CHAPPELL COMPANY Telephone 24 wholesale. Anywhere and_everywhere peeple are talking of R. C. DRUMMOND, Goldine. Why? Fecause it is one medicine that has Goidine M=n come to Norwich and provem its werth. Some of the best known familles in Norwich are using eur medicine because they have come to realize that Goldine is a remedy with remarkable merit. Goldine No. 1 is the remedy you want if you are a sufferer from stomach or nerve troubl Goldine No. 2 is the remedy for rheumatism or kidney trouble or blood troubles. Ask any of your friends who are using Goldine what they think of this remedy. Ask Mr. Jenks, Norwich's best known milkman, what this rem- edy has done for his rheumatism. I am still here to talk With you a$ ENGLER'S BROADWAY PHARMACY sk B Bulletin Building Telephone 531- Y CLOSING OUT SALE of Heath & Milligan PAINTS We have decided to close out this line of Paints. is no better paint made. Such as we have, as long as they last, will be zcld for less than we could buy the same today ONE GALLON CANS.......... $3.50 ONE-HALF GALLON CANS..... $1.75 ONE QUART CANS............ The Household 74 Franklin Strect €0c There

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