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NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1919 Setmrtstion pries 132 & wek; 0% & mesth; S0 « war. Biset ui (e Pestefics st Nerwich Cmn. w ot i maciar Telphens Calte. Salects Busteem Ofice @L Wulietis Baftorial Reoms 955 H Bulletin Job Ofies 832 WiNmeste Ofice I3 Chmeh St Telpbeoe 15 —_—_— Norwich, Friday, Sept. 5, 1819 ————— CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING AUG. 10,365 TAKE THE SULLETIN ALONG Subscribers and readers of The Bulletin leaving the city for the seaSon, or 2 vacation, can have The Bulletin sent to their address by mail for any speciSed peried at the regular rats by notifying the business depariment, telsphone 430 — e THE PRESIDENT'S TRI P. P & want this country to resume all interrupted relations, e work. There is & certain amount of| T said to her, and_hufried out . who went to school with Tommy and trip around t a journ catisfaction in knowing that sufficient| “Yesterday T called upon T. J. Mc- me. But when I told John thé joke 10,600 m occupy confidence i= placed in us to swing it| Amble again. and again he was out.|he didn't laugh. Very far from it! of the month. Not because t e Callied mations in Europe are|The secretary didn't kAow when he _“‘Jame’ he said, solemnly, ‘T. J slack time a: Washington or able 1o assume tho responsibility and|would be in: he might leave town in- | McAmble isn't Tommy. He's the| there are mot sumcient problems o]l bls {0 AEUme Hhe KN ihe log. |definitely without returning to the of- | queerest, horridest old curmudgeon occupy the a 6 §h enm]DonE at Berupes Geor 9% |fice. Very well. T remarked. T would possible. and his_wifos a rfect S & ¢ fal but|ical thing that one of those countries| wrije a note and leave it for him. The match for him. Our T. J. McAmbie nal capital buti,. .;) of them united should meet thesecretary politely bresented me with isn't married and he's been in San _the opposition| aiion. But until that is deter-|pencil and paper, but T had ecspied a | Franciseo for tife last five years."— anifested toward Va-| .04 it weuld simply be aiding andldoor bearing the tempting legend of 'Chicago News. troaty With|abcting massacres to abandon Ar- o o P i i s dition. e e would be more to Mr. Rooney's credit who are calling | amendments as g that hould be re- as he 4 the people’s the people to go over the representatives nemselves in influence the senators. of the New York branch of ic oing to be the outcome of|, . tegeration mot only repudiates the e where the seatiment L Xnemg|revort of the committes that he we- %o be in keeping with the attitade]iccted but declares that he is unal- S By sy senators® What | [Srably _opposed to the recommenda- % @oing 16 be the emect of this trip|tion= that it made Hibh e prehiden 4 relative tn| It was this committee that urged! » e candidate for a third tepms|tne sanctioning of a truce for a pe- These things w oures a1t be re.|Tiod of six months relative to strikes, vealed i b expecied|that the executive committee of the * e ihe hrecr | federation determine the necessity for O ihe presi-| irikes in that period and that every cudiences and | L e made in that time by labo S mimenearac |to do its part in bringing down the T A e e e[ prevailing high costs by increasing - Pxecniiee 1+ the speaker |Production. The recommendations A . S e T | were in fact in keeping with the ap- € tour of the cbubtry a that had been made by President eided unon ruiher then | Wilson. and in accord with the recom- e farie ot ! mendations of the heads of the rail- foi state- | ros therhoods. Instead of con- . Veshingion white|tributifie 1o the viclous circle. thel beoysin, The | purpose was o bring about an im- | : ©lprovement. and the strange thing| 4 recepcions | about the repudiation is that it comes| aiwave show | from the ve who must have had | entiment on important ques.|confidence in the committee members . | would never have appointed { THE TUBERCULAR REJECTS. Iy undersiood that when a . e takes piace It has A detrimen- | i Sup affect upon production. Continued | : o%is| irikes or acditional omes will stmply.| . e g -iher lowering of production Sulbbrin - e STAle] ng an increase In the cost of goods. | Seeie ris S nd wholnder such conditions it would never| h i oihe recent |, " ossible 10 get back to a normal o a o enit boards | Btate of affairs. The committee’s plan | e shown th ST oaras !l would have changed that and made an wen s e ehe | effort to better conditions in the way | sietcen to ? no wer®lof living costs. It deserved endorse- | g MARY | et rather than repudiation. Presi- | S 6 p - Molland's attitude obstructs| war of knowing w many there | “ther O e N i g g EDITORIAL NOTES. . ae ihe| St Swithin has rubbed it in enough rotestio . of ihe com-|and it certainly is time that he let up. hould be tought| The man the corner says treatment that is| | -annot be placed | getting the | tention in | To | he e to do much ng the plague even outside of important act that there oubt needing commission can give 1 outside of its institutio the impression that the commission is undertaking a + worthw service especially when 3 réalized that 80 per cent. of the incipient cases chould be restored through proper care to health and vi- hat to create RESTORING SHANTUNG. Tt is interesting to note just at this time that Yosuke Matsuoka, secretary the foreign department of Japan, and a member of the Japanese peace delegation, sets forth his belief that it will be only a few weeks before his country will undertake the restitution of Shantung to China and thus carry out the promises made in connection with the peace treaty terms by which Shantung is to be given to Japan with the understanding that it will event- wally be restored to China. Maeh opposition has arisen to this provision because there is nething definite in the promise, and because of the attitmde which Japan has man- ifested toward China. It was this part of the treaty which made China re- fuse to sign and upon which the opin- fons of the American peace delega- tion differed as to whether Japan would have signed or net had it been otherwise. There can be little question but what Japan can if it will do much to clear up the unmcertainty upon this point. China dees not place its trust in Ja- pan’s promise and it fears the en- croachment of that nation. The friends ©f China take a similar view. But if Japan will. as one of its peace dele- Eates who is heré just now on his WAy bome, indicates that it is going to, | Weather 1= the mest glorious example | fure. with September snubbing them unmercifully. Down in Maryland a couple eloped from a poor heuse, which only zoes to prove the oft repeated saving that love will find a way. come out with a definite statement relative to the policy it intends to follow and disclose when and how it is going to do it much would be done to clarify the situation. A settlement that will satisty everybody is what is wanted. That is not what is as- sured by the treaty provision, a fact which must be perfectly apparent to Japan from the opposition that is be- ing manifested to it in this country to say nothing of China. MUST NOT BE ABANDONED. If the announcement to the effect that Great Britain was preparing to withdraw its troops from Armenia, thus leaving those people at the mer- ¢y of the many elements in that sec- tion who are ready to descend upon and massacre them, was intended to change the attitude in this country regarding the acceptance of the man- date for that region it failed to suc- ceed. It is the obvieus duty of Great Britain, which country conducted the campaign in that section and which has its troops still on the ground, to sec that those it has rescued should be properly protected, and that pro- tection should be maintained untfl such arrangements are made for a permanent pelieing of Armenia and other portiens of Turkey. It is there- fore a welcome announcement which comes by way of Paris to the effect that though the announcement had been made the British forces are not to he withdrawn. What a ridiculous situation there would have been presented had the British, who weat into Turkey for the purpose of striking at tme enemy but also to give relief to the oppressed people under Turkish rule, retired from the country with the task com- pleted as far as subduing Turkey but with the job only partially finished relative to the safeguarding of the Armenians and Syrians. Europe may to undertake that THE WRONG ATTITUDE, In view of the recognized need for bringing down the cost of living, the appeals that have been made and the efforts under way, it will be with no little surprise that President Holland the la- on determin om the way in which it has open- September certainly must do some it it intends to square itself hustling ¥hen profiteers and food hoarders | are put in jail for law violations they ought to he made to maintain them- seives. It has heen-an unusually short sea-| son for the straw hat and the summer La Tollette spoke in the senate for sixteen hours but that is Of course enly a watming up period for the sen- ator from Wisdensin. The wounding f an American avia- tor by A Mexican aleng the Border 24ds a vew incident to the complica tions already existing. Those who picked the first week in September for the holding of fairs certainly failed to get the favorable cooperation: of the weatherman. With the discovery of two comets in three days by a Harvard man, some- one ought to tell us what effect this is hound to have upon the treaty of peace. . All that is needed is a few more revelations as to how government funds were used under the cost-plus basis to bury that idea so deep it will never be resurrected. With Mexican ssldiers taking pot| shots at our aviators it is giving Car- ran another opportunity to expostu- late on the magnificent protection he provides along the border. We are now getting back to that The representatives of the National Coal association declare that coal shortage is due to car shortage while Director Gemeral Hines declares it is not so. Somecone must be wrong. A LONG CHANCE “T. J. McAmble, Private, and I made : TAKING “It isn't safe to take anything for % q granted” mourned the girl at home |for that door without being invited. I for a visit thought it would be fun to write N, At 1 Tommy—from his own official sanc- her hostess: “the obvious too often |tum. But turns out the unexpected. But what| She collapsed weakly, = up- | pressive hands. has forced this stage conclusion up- Prissive hands. =~ I __exhorted her said the visitor. settling | hostess. The visitor giggied and qon- back in the hammock. “you know, of | tinued her story. ¥ course, that since I've been home. “In that private office” she observed, I've heen trying to see as many of | “Sat the severest looking woman you the old crowd as poesible. And one|can imagine. She was writing at what of the boys. T most wanted to have |l took to be T. J.'s desk. and there was 2 Zo0d ialk with was Tommy Mc- | Something unmistakably proprietary Ambie. You remember Tommy?' | about her attitude. I suddenly remem- “Not so well as vou must,” return- | bered hearing something about Tom- ed her hostess calmly. *T remember | my’s having married, and I nearly what inseparables you were until Jim | fainted, buf I made up my mind that surpassed poor Tom in your royal fa- | no woman like that was going to scare vor. Well, did vou see him?" me. So, when the secretary, flustered - not,” replied the visiter, “but but still patient. expiained that T to hegin at thde beginning. T, wished to leave a note for Mr. Me- sympathetically agreed ’ waving ex- —well, crcost German : oman e iradk (o Tommy Ay |Ambie I nodded gayly, sat down at|With such violence that the noise of Rt A Tamily broke up soon |the desk and wrote a fote that the | the cannonade was heard all over s 4 ? | haushty Mrs. McAmble wouldn't enjoy | Parls. e L et e : ¢ This offensive was noteworthy on| ing him up In the directory. a ‘T. J. McAmbie’ who had archi- she would read as soon as I had gone. fects’ offices downtown, and of course In the note, incidentally, T said that T T remembered that Tommy always could be found any time at the old was crazy about building. So one place and that I was dving to sec him. day last week. when T was downtowrs Then I vanished. shopping, T decided to call upon him. z o — T didn’t telephone. beeause T wanted “This morning. because 1 really | wanted to see Tommy, I tried again. to mive him a surprise.” “And did you?" queried her hostess. Again Mr. McAmble was out, again cretary pretended to | the diznified bé uncertain as to his whereabouts or moyements. “Did you give him my note.” I ask- ea “There was a surprise. but it came later.”” the visitor admitted. _“The first phase of it was to find T. J. Mc- Amble's offices so grand. A tele- phone operator who might have step- pefl from a French fashion plate chal- lenged me just inside the door. vouchsafed the information that Mr. McAmble was not in, and pasced me T gave him your note, madam,’ he secretary answered, distincily, ‘and he said he'd never heard of you: that if vou calied again I was to detain you lonz _enough to call the police.’ on to his dignified, not to say refrig-| “Wasn't that like Tommy? He al- erative, secretars. When the last | ways did love practical jokes, you named lady asked me my name and know, and he alwavs was so disap- business - the spirit of mischief rose pointed if they failed to work. So 1 high within me—perhans called up by | pretended to be frightened and scut- | tied out of the office. | " “All the way down in the elevator T 014 laughed to think how Tommy would think he'd fooled me. I was laughing when I met John Stumpit. memory of the high jinks Tommy and T used to have together. “‘“Tell Mr. McAmble his sweetheart, Jane, is in town and ready LETTERS TO THE EDITOR What Prohibitien is Deing. Mr. Editor: In one of the issues of your paper last week your Danielson correspondent mentioned the fact that the “wet” forces were preparing for a contest this fall upon the license question, and it was intimated that they felt confident of securing quite a large vote. The same paper informed us that the statistics from half a dozen of the large cities of Massachusetts showed that during the month of July the ar- rests for drunkenness were only just about one-third of what they were for the” figures for August would show a the ligures for Aufust would show a still larger contrast. In your paper this morning figures given showing that the arrests in for intoxication in the than his denunciations of Mr. Perkine. ONE OF THE PUBLIC Norwich, Sept. 4, 1919. Bolshevism Here. Mr. Editor: Boishevism seems to have reached Norwich at last. landing at the cemetery Tuesday night. A very brave act was committed there, it seems, when oniy about ten or twelve men were courageous enough to attack three men who were totally unpre- pared for the inexcusabie and mal cious assault made upon them. It seems that the extremc and contempt of the public is desired by the trolleymen. or their sympath ers. when they stoop so low as to re- sort to mob violence: The public would not be allowed to ride at all if some others had their your own eity way. month of July, 1915, were omly 9| We have seen enough of this strike. whereas in July one vear ago they|and let us hope the cars will continue were 91. That is, under the operation| (o run without the former employes of wartime prohibition your city had|raturning. for they are mot . needed one case of drunkenness where a ¥ear | even though they might deem. {hem- ago it had ten. selves a necessity to the company The Hartford Courant is authority|” The trolley committee made a state- for the statement that the arrests for|'ment about the commany officials rid- drunkenness in that city were just{ine around in touring ears that the about one-sixth as larze In July of this| public has to pay for. They forsot to Year as they were In July, 1918. The|state that this same public has to pay Bridgeport Post says the first fouryfer any wage increase which the trol- days of July there was but one arrest|jeymen might et or perh they for drunkenness, where in years past| thought the public would =iadly pay there would have been at least 40 or| increased fares for ihis smeril poad 0. [ pose. even though they continued to In Paltimore the last “wet” Satur-|receive thhe same wages as hefore this day night the number of arrests was| trouble breeding strike took effe 37: first “dry” Saturday night the | A TROLLEY PATROXN. arrests were only 30, and but three of{ Norwich, Sept. 3, 1919 these were for intoxication. ize Hoyt of the city court of New | I Haven says: “Drunkenness in New Haven has fallen off materially since | wartime prohibition became effective on July Ist. Thére were no cases of drunkenness in the New Haven court for the first 12 days of July.” The “If the auestion of Abandoning the dry policy were submitted today, only those who tried by their vote to keep | Richmond wet in 1314, the preposition | would be overwhelmingly defeated.” Hundreds of rities ail the way from | Boston (o San Francisco report a vast | improvement sinte wartimé prohibi- tion became effective. Governors who formerly opposed prohibition and voted | against it mavors of large cities, edi- mayor of Richmond, Va. recently said: | | ors of Ifading papers and judges of © courts are uniting in saving that prohibition. which they once opposed, is proving itself a graat blessing. Wil- | limantic, Putnam, Norwich and New | London all report a great decrease in drunkenness since July 1st. A vear ato ihe voters aof the state ING can make were being advised to like a milion dollars upon their jails and penal institutions, but alréady since July 1si the number of prisoners in our jails has decreased to such an ent ‘as to cause men to question whether all of these Institutions need to be maintained end something COAL before And yet at the very time when | states and clties and towns, without exception. and from one end of the i country to the other. are showing con- | clusively by facts and fgures the ad- | vantages brought in by wartime pro-! hibition, we are told that larze num bers of citizens are ready to work and vole to bring back the conditions which cxisted before nrohibition be- cathe éffective. Thev know that if they are successful drunkennass and erime and poverty and wickednass will Be increaced. Thév can B as sure of it as they can that darkness wifl fol- jow the sétting of the sun. Why, then 1 found reading and which of course I knew | still | disgust | Quality—Quantity— Quickness We have a complete stock and can make PROMPT DELIV- ERY of any or all prepared i sizes of ANTHRACITE coal. Our COAL is fresh mined and as CLEAN as careful SCREEN- NOW is the time to get your tion and delivery delays of next winter are upon us. THE EDWARD CHAPPELL COMPANY Telephone 24 | Gleaned . from Foreign Ex. | changes - Yachting came to us from Holland, and our first yachtsman was the Mer- ry Monarch, though Quecn Bess is be- ilieved to have had some kind of pleas- among us till the Dutch East India Company presented that curious piece | to_the king.” But as an organized branch of sport yachting seems to be of Irish birth, | for the Royal Cork Yacht Club is far | older than our Roval Yacht Squad ron, and next year will be ceiebrating a bicentenary. jaccount of the enemy’s liberal use of {tanks and their chagrin at findinz a |big force of Americans waiting for ithem where they expected to break j the French line and push on to Paris. Yesterday's (July 14) disclosure that Foch knew ‘all about the attack and had prepared an effective counter, | throws a new lizht on the criticisms hurleq at the allied strategy. it is a sign of the times that in the recent schoolboys’ lawn tennis tourna- ment and in the public school matches at Lord’s so many of the lads should be left-handed players. In less cnlightened days any ten- dency on the part of a voungster to use the left-hand for any purpose was | quired in later life only by a great ex- penditurce of pains. One thing to be set to the credi side Had a nice holiday?’ “Splendid! 1 | finished two jumpers.” ure-boat built for her at Cowes. In | suffering from fatal diseases would bc Rl Gy or T1a%E, “Sonn Heertn | in perier miartn today were o ne. | 8l H. B. WARNER writes: sailed. this morning with | for the deadly drug Nicotine. Stoy his Majesty in one of his yachts (or | the habit now Before it's too late. It INS pleasure-boats), vessels not known a Simple process to #1d vourself of the “THE PAGAN GOD” Lo s ncasdibia thet Rheims 4 Th tHe athiiA: T au ! stood in @ semicircic of fire only & - ¢ ¥ Nie- ‘ year ago today. when ome of the|Otol tablets; you will be surprised at ‘THE LADY OF Tiercest German attacks was launchod | the resul RED BUTTE” sternly repressed in the nursery,|bers how desertérs from the forces in where it was regarded as not quite|war time managed to evade the au- respectable. | Vet ambidexterity = is|thorities, even in the partsof France amonz the most useful of accomplish- | which were in the Britist® or allied Tents. anq might with Advantage. be | omce ADMISSION, taught to every voung child. Itis ac-| A man astenished a friend a fow |of the war is the rerival of the Enz-|was 65. the case needed an explana lishwoman's old pre-eminence with | tion, which he gav —— the needle. In the records of our! The sister buried in 1819 was the H {srandmothers nothing played a larger|first of a family of 22 children, and|legally controlled their own property.| part than knitiing and embroidery: |she died in early infancy. The man| They have been fres to buy, sell, or! jmost of us possess some relics ofwas the voungest member of the fam-|alienate it without consulting any| | these neroic labors. The war has re-|ily and was born in 1854, 35 years male relative. This has given them| vived them, and it is no longer fash-|ter his sister—The London Chronicle.| Independence of thought and an in- fonable fo Aol - Gituite Tor the S = fivence in business affairs-that seoms| fart THI wholly inconsistent with their life or | apOne hardiy lkes to estimate the IN E DAY’S NEWS comparitive personal slavery. B |amount .of wool which will have been| TURKEY PIONEER IN SOME “Enter a harem and there you see transformed into jumpers and_other WOMEN’S RIGHTS|a& Circassian beauty, who has been| | sarments before the holidays are fin-| 2 3 newly acquired by the- tall hand |ished, and women are estimating their| _“Some extremely modern young wo- | (%Y SCHISE DY HREL (L Gand olidays in terms of accomplishment.| men, who mistake symptoms for the|, ;. sireet, The air is heavy with| Tobacco Habit Dangerous says Doctor Connor, formerly of Johns Hopkins hospital. Thousands of men TODAY AND TOMORROW 2 GREAT PICTURES tobacco habit in any form. Just zo to any up to-date drug store and ga: =ome Nijcotol tablets; take them as directed and Io! the pernicious habit quickly vanishes. Druggists refund the money if they fail. Be sure (o read lerge and interesting announce- ment by Doctor Connor soon io ap- pear in this paper. It tells of the danger of nicotine poisoning and how A THRILLING STORY OF THE ORIENT IN 5 PARTS OROTHY ALTON —_——— didate for thé speakership a whom he did not know by sight.” It is te be hoped that suceess will meet the efforts of the special mission which is being sent out by the gov- ernment to_the parts of Flanders and orthern Franée which were occu- pied by the Geérmans, to séarch for men who are still reported as “miss- ing.” To have a man “missing,” was one of the most tragic circumstances of the war, but their relatives have contiuued to hope through the years, A 5 PART WESTERN DRAMA TREATING 'EM ROUGH 2 REEL SENNETT COMEDY DANCING man Today and Saturday TWO STAR FEATURES EARLE WILLIAMS A ROGUE’S ROMANCE BESSIE BARRISCALE “THE WOMAN MICHAEL MARRIED” PATHE NEWS and it is quite possible that some of the first Lxpeditiorary Force, who were cut off by thé invading enemy, are still living in thé part of the coun- try which was terra incognita during the war. That such a thing might happen is casily understood iwhen one remem- PULASKI HALL SAT. EVE. 8:30 TO 12.00 FLATFOOT WALTZ CON- TEST OPEN TO ALL Gents 55¢ Ladies 35¢ Music by Feltcorn’s Jazz Band | days ago by saying casually that one of his sisters was buried exactly a hundred vears ago! As his own age AUDITORIUM TODAY BOM BAY GIRLS Big Colored Musical Revue FANNIE WARD —IN— OUR BETTER SELVES PERILS OF THUNDER MOUNTAIN Final Episode independence, sug- causes of woman's £ | Should make a tour of Turkey P S the odor of Easte black eunuch stands by the door to marriage. “In the last attempt to keep the sex 3 : zests a bulletin from the Washington | back o3 e I S - 1 e whanough the prince will find every- | hesdquarters of the Natlonal Geo-| ety herselt o inicny owdercy|in the role assigned to them by the e in Canada proof of the enor- | headauarters of eauty herself is thickly powdered,|lite of ihe harem, vers sirict lamw | mous progress made in the last six- S,_,;:h"e e smoke, have had|[Fith an claborate coiffure erected by ! have been made to prevent all poss S T e e vet pan oo ewtiaes a5 U DL SR, SONHe (AT Dle brostess mong e e Rh St = g 9| vorce is easy. but who—in ali respects Iy Broider e D o v e which attended that of his grand.| YOrcC is casy but whori titally_embroidered negligee, There is| azain forbidding Mohammedan father when he visited the Dominion | VRIS, 12 DS 84 TUKY |, reng|@ lansorous cxpression in mer black|men to attend foreign schools. It in 1860 e ‘toys of the armens'| eyes, as she sits idly smoking a cig-| this emergency they engaged govern e were o be pitied in many wavs, it s g = i rency they engaged go {ooTnen the Roval party approachea| Were 19 be DS In Wany ways [ 2| aretie and sipping Turkisn coffes. | esses. Moxt of these governesses w Ottawa by water, with a_wonderful at- | [Tu¢ But considerabie PRy o7 | wwould you think, to look at her,!alien, and many of the ¥ | tendant procession of 130 bireh bark | Ias heen misdivected Kor examlPle| u¢ when she draws her money from | and bad- moral guides to so large a | ic t first it scemed like a dim|control of their own propepty for | TITTRL, 1080 U0 B ice “with each | system obtained so much influence a { o 2 | hundreds of years wherens the German | beer - vs ined sa much infl [cloud of red colors on the water. but, | JBOT0S GF YRS, WHETSRR, (1€, SOG | otirer; but, as vears have gone by, the| ér a short tme that laws [ Gintei chants of the Canadian hosts | Pation’ under the kaiser, B e s uciea on |men could be heard: and the ' long.| . The bulletin quotes from o com-|T7CSAR 00 TOFS, G L ™ they are| fort for menta mina o U e he long | qunication by Mary Milla Patrick, | medan woman, until now they are fort for ments ot | Seenr with thelr. auaint - ornamented| Which gives a vivid picture of the| feady (o enter Wio o Aa e O igor | thematives. and sometimes seen. with. iheir auaint _ornamented | SRR, EVG: rlkitn” Women “betore | day with An “understanding and vigor | themseives. and sometimes prows just turning up above the sur- [ S0, Svar, s follow which the World has never acerediica| from their husbands face of the water. over which thev| ™S4t is a well known fact that Rom-| to them. 12 e Hh e acoom ! e : i a man or a woman was alike a| Mohammedan women have suffered cnC e B e The notion that hobbies tend tol citizen of the Roman world. This met| most under the oppression of the 1 |tongevity is well illustrated by Mr.|he requirements of Mohammedan| thirty vears, especially from the fre-| et s o Baifour. who as a youth of 71 keeps|iife. where no woman ever nécessarlly] quency of divorce. A man couid leg- Horlick’s the Original his birthduy today. " He is an accom-| susiained a lasting relation with any|ally divorce his wife at any minu : . R L s e T L o e o Mttt N lted NIk — Aveid on on the links. ciever tennis| ' “Therefore, during all the centuries|ment of the dowry settled upor™ her serEe : plaver, a deep philosopher, obviously a | of Mohammedan history, women have|by the husbund at the itme of her Imitations & Substitutes Ereat statesman, and an adept in| many sciences, including aviation, in | Which he has put his faith in science o the test temper is perhaps his atest hobby. “I never saw him an- | but once.” said an old 1§ #nd. “and | was when we selected as it. the transporta- sheuld any sane man who loves his country and his fellow mén uee his in- fluence and cast his vote to eontinue this curse? CLARENCE H. BARBER. Danieison, Sept. iat, 1618. What the Public Wants to Knew. Mr. KEditor: Mr. Rooney’'s velumin- ous letter informing the public about the small and imperfect service the trolley cars are giving is all very well —and now that we may assume the publie. with his information and what they themselves know. is sufficiently posted. What the public wants Mr. Rooney to do is to give the names of those whe are commiiiing murderous attacks and otheér Autrages to preduce a rail disaster. The authorities are being at some expense and- vigllance trying to make this discovery, and it might be money in Mr. R6oney's pock- et and an honor to his nameé to make some dieclosures of this kind. 1f he has not ahy inner knowledze of this kind, as director of the strike ! his disapproval of the many acts beine | daily committed on Franklin aquarpl’ CLOSING of Heath PAI We have decided to close is no better paint made. wholesale. Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S ° endless discussion about ceal cars. | EC A S T ORI A WHEN YOU WANT Bulletin Build; But yeur pus. iness before rne pubiic. thére n medium_better’ than Inrough the ade vertisizs wolumas of The Bulletim. Such as we have, last, will be sol for less than we could buy the same today ONE GALLON CANS.......... $3.50 ONE-HALF. GALLON CANS. ... ONE QUART CANS......... The Household Telephone 531-4 OUT SALE & Milligan NTS out this line of Paints. There as long as they $1.75 can- | THE PLAUT-CADDEN COMPANY A good place to Trade Three Days Only, ,F ollowing Fair. pass by. Even if it does usually sew pretty well, is wear out your nerves by using it? p‘r‘CH: an hour’s tired after Honest, now, aren’t you sewing? Let Us Buy That Old Machine See' how much we will allow you for it. Let us sell you, on easy terins, this new and wonderful model, SEWIIG MACHINE g (Invented and Patented by W. C. Free) on which you can sew all day without getting tired. It is guaranteed for life, and is so beautiful you can keep it in the parlor. SEWING MACHINE & Shaded Silk used at this demonstration. 90c 74 Franklin Street of this wonderful sale. Have you? Established 1872 135-143 MAIN STREET I Quality Fumniture NORWICH Fe e, SEWING MACHINE DEMONSTRATION ACT BEFORE SATURDAY Just in time for your Fall sewing. Don’t let this opportunity Sewing Machines will be much higher later on. We are selling them at the same low prices this month. Join the Club now, only $1.00 at the time you join and §1.00 per week places this wonderful machine in your home. Don’t Let Your Old Sewing Machine Make You Old, Too Don’t wear yourself out with that old, gummy, hard running sewing machine. it richt to break down your health and net a musie 1t is The FREE 8ewing Machine). (Ne, this oabinst. is Mr. Wm. C. Ellis, the silk artist, is with us this week. Come in and get a souvenir and see what wonderful work can be done on The Free Sewing Machine. Thousands of people have taken advantage Belding THE PLAUT-CADDEN COMPARNY NORWICH, CONN.