Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 17, 1919, Page 4

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123 YEARS OLD o s i & ks e o Datemt u f Posefin w1 Norwicn. . Comn. Totephems Canta. Sctems Omes 2. ‘Eatortal 7 5.3 708 Omestase2. ENmentis Offics 3 Churen St Telsbese 185 Norwich, Wednesday, Sept. 17, 1919 CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING SEPT. 13th 10,256 CONSTITUTION DAY. One hundred and thirty-two vears| ago today (S 17.) the constitution, @f the United States was passed by the fedéral convention sitting in In- dependence Hall in Philadelphia. This, Gonvention had been work smcel] the preceding May in drafting the denstitution, which when compieted. Was signed by all but three members of the convention. The work was)| dene By a lirge proportion of the the new nation, men who the destinies of the col- h the struggles w the mether country and their efforts tablish the nation under the of confederation. 1eaders Our forefathers were not attempt-i ing to d= all organized govern- ment, as the Bolshevists of today selfish the personal idea advance- thearies who them was would Hew na- wers not dotng. Thes of vision i sacrifice we might] to hold to- with their diverse interasts e generati place in which to live free from and despotis Ther were e statesmen directing their protect and establish firmly set forth in the Dee- 23 the re- 1 document nchanged for ie exception of ne wise. principles | ed States forty- and | a ziven to the ependence, to the h of our nation, the so BURKE COCHRAN ON LEAGU a ringing speech the freedom of Ireland. made at New London laet| THE Sundas . Burke Coch-| ran expressed earnest conviction that the tions which is| advocated ident Wilsen will never pass the senate. whose spirit and patriotism and Americanism the| orator commended in unmeasured terms He brought the subject close Bome to New olndon when he recog- nized the ripe iudsment of Conmecti- cut's senior senator and said: Citizens should Be proud the t that a man of the type of Senator Brandegee represents vom. He is a man who sm and American- e spirit, I believe, that cause the League of Nations to be cast to the winds. He has-opposed the league times and with ail of his many resources. It was he who said “No matter what the conse- quences to me are, I never will stand for allowi: = an abominable | BES == tiac kaiciie o5 1 BB the consequences that will result from|! its adoption Much of the Irish orator's address| was devoted to m of President | Wilson's e league, the course of h Mr. Cochran de- clared that he had been one of those| to congratulate the president upon his declarstion of principles when he lsunched this country into war but Bbe had sincerely deplored the presi- dent's going adroad and now he felt that four distinguished gentlemen had in =4t @own at a long table to plan out *He ruling of the world Finally it was determmined that four was a super- fueus number and one member was “You ail know who that Cochran signifi- camiy. Shantung is an abominatien in whith we are asked to join. Does the treaty hold out a word of hope for nations that are languishing in chdins and determined to break them? the speaker asked. Far from that. it cre-| #tes new spoflations and makes us a| Pasty to them. without whom ft is dogbtful if these spoilations could be- come effective. President Wilson, he continued, was wicttm of the Eurcean confidence men. He had gone to Paris with the 14 poimts in Bis pocket and had been fiesced by the confidence men, who peints out of his pocket here without them. gtve him a cheek andnow he asks us to hon- because no doubt, it break his heart to have it be- Xmown that he had been swin- Wilson saye that the Jeagus will give us advantages. Yes, it wil give us advantages but at the cost of justice. Shall we and do we pimce advantage above justice? Shall we trample upon our constitution ‘which is founded and buflt up through justice, for a paltry advantage or for seweral paitrs adventages? All down through its history, the States has never done an un- act. Bat the president says| i agency of the| friends to ride. I beliéve in sharing my | Bilbark. AMmighty God, it will not be. In his comeliding xrgumient for the independenceé of Ireland, without which, he said, peace is not to be es- ftablished, he declared that the frish ople will never submit to a war en- forced upon them, even a thous- and_leagues of mations. League of Nations its¢lf s an abomination, an attempt to use the conscfefics of Christendom to confer jarisdiction to enforce wrorig which mefality and justice condefnn: and although judg- ment and g60d semss may have de- parted from quarters whereé we had a right to expect to find tBem, yet we fesl confident that here in this body the wisdom of the fathers will be vin- dicated by such an exercise of Wwis- dom. such a dispiay of patriotism, such an exercise of vigilance as will insure to this people the rights to which they were, born. the rights - which some of ub who have come Here have acquiréa ‘fHrough the operation of our constitutional system: and by maintaining, this constitatior intact, kindle and keep trimmed before thé eyes of all mem the lamp whickh will zuide thair footsteps to freedom, to justice, and 'to an unending proper- ity. MEXICO'S PUBLICITY AGENTS& Téstimony fakenn by a senaté com- mittee inquiring inte relations be- tween the Unfted States and Mexico brought out the fact that an orgap- jed propagands eoffort still fs active here in behalf of the Carranza gov ernment. This i< not especially sur- prising. Even undér Porfirio Diaz the work was.going on, aithough at that time it was fer the legitimate pur- of inducing settlement and in< for the deveiopment of the resources the revolu- tion begun to develop its difierent as- pects. each of the contending groups t up its press bureau, and none was more active than that which made sil- very s of the spotlight on Venus- tiana Carfanza. It is unfortanaté, perhaps. fhat the goods delivered were not equal 6 the sample, but it freé- quently so turns out. After the re- Cent cxperience with the German pub- agents, not te. speak, of the Mexicans, Americans are likely to give scruting to the attempt of any ers to build up sentiment in r 'of anything not distinctly com- with home affairs. Mexico is in ecaf¥ying on campaign the minds of the people ted rone ne not a to influence sust mow. for the FMipinos. the Chi- he Japanese, the Koreans, and ethers who Haveé axes to grind are using tont of paper and ‘ink in pro- moting_iheir private interests. It fs one mréar sanve, wnd as yet no limit has appeared. KEEP FIRM: HAND. < evident that for a long time the allies must keep a4 Aom . hand Over. Germany. The ltest exhibition . of subtériegs and squirming in an at- tempt (0 avoid compliance with the| plain terms of the treaty of Versailles indicates that it is not in the German nature obey premptly and with Thev could be certain that the allies would insist upon’ the climination from the -new German constitution the provision that ailows Austria represéntation in the Gérmani Reichsrath, but they prefer to quibble ind dodge. From the armistice nego- tiations down, this has been indicated 311 the negotiations with them and rer have only themselves to blame for the cstimate that the world puts upon their character. They have made themselves. EDITORIAL NOTES. An umbrsia is necessary as‘a con- stant companion thess days. says: The is before The man on the cornes ime to settle a strike starts. The frst strike to discourage unions, has happened. It is in the Paris mar- riage license Bureau. the Prince of Wales has thirty seven trunks, it's a sure bet he doesn’t pack them himself. The combination of poet and seldier in D'Annunsio makes a‘troublesome compound for Italy and Fiume. The former kaiser's fame as a wood sawver will be in a different class from Lincolm’s as a rail splitter. Those German ships sunk in Seapa ow are being restored to a life on ocean Wave. Fiffeen have been raised A bucking-broncho at a wild west show in Canada had no terrors.for the Prince of Wales, who rode him in the most approved styte. Army tractors that had toured the Somme battiefield got 10st when they tried to navigate the streets of Brook- Iyn aftef Pershing day. One of the men detafled to investi- gate extravagance in War expendi- tures is being paid 330 a day. He might begin on himseif. President Wilson says the lesson of the Boston poltosthen’s strike should be burned in. No. doubt that would happen if the firemen should strike. Gas masks browght from France were just the thing when soldiers act- ing as volunteer firemen donned them at an ammonia plant fire in Brooklyn, A California revenue oollector re- pOrts that they have discovered a way to turn the bumper wine crop into wine that will meet the requirements of the government. i, - 2o DL T Uncle John Schell, Kentucky's 131- vear-old citizén, Nas just had hie first airplane ride. “It sure makes 2 fellow feel like he is drunk but it is all right at that” was his comment on land- ing. ; While the New York police commis. sioner had the commanding heads of the poli mrx detective departments “on the burglars improved the Lime by x daylight robbery at a Bronx an A Roman paper is worried over how we will get along witheut the sons of “Sunny It” who are sailing for Iiciey homelana with their savings. They will be missed. but how aboui the DAY datm thav thasmselues weill aaten? could be filled every “When I Have an ‘alffoniobile;” said the young man with the long-neck, “I shall be generous -and take- ‘all , my all means,” coming your on the , man Wwith the w tie, “but 7""_ o % 4 friends to ride a 3 yo Benighted youth! The sane man with a car will maintain a perfectly stany and impregnable demeanor, toward his triends and turn around ' the . block when he sees them coming, if he values their friendship. -It is because hé knows when he begins to ask them they will be overcome with ‘enthusi- astic _gratitude and go around the neighborhood shouting his praises and making speeches about his generosity and then if he missés them a few tintes they seét up an indignant howl and say what a pity it'is that Milk- water has been so spotled by prosper: ty. “Besides, scarcely -any man . can stand the strain of having a carload of people on his hands when it is time for lunch or dinner. “And then suppose that Dillpose and Mrs. Dillpgst ask the Milkwaters and the Bilbarkk to take a week-end tour with them. Dutch treat. ‘All of them agree if it is-Dutch -treat every ome will feel so much more free and inde- pendent and unhamperéd by constant- Iy remembering that 4 host and host- ess are among _them.. ‘Lef's eat’ Dilpost begins. There is a dandy Ht- tle hotel in the next 'town. | was there last year and Had a corking good Iunch. ““Eat!’ cries Mrs. Dillpost. ‘T never saw. any ome like you George. Here we all ate that perfectly tremendous breakfast so_we wouldn’t have to stop for lunch. Nobedy has exercised any to get hungry, and I couldn’t eat a thing. myself. Of course, if the rest “ “Food doesn't appeal to me,’ says Mrs. Milkwater promptly. ' 1 couldn’t eat. « ‘Believe me,’ says Milkwater, T'm with Dillpost! This fresh air gives a_fellow an appetite and I could just i about get away with a whole fried chicken. Go oh to vour hotel, Dillpost, and don't listen to ‘em!’ “ ‘Well. 1 can eat all right’ says Bilbark, ‘but why get a big hotel lunch? There must be some little place we'll run across where we can set a few samdwichies and some ginger ale—t5 . 2 : = -Oh, my ' goodness: “Mrs. ‘The sandwiches one gets in those places—fake buiter and dry bread—if we are going to eat, let's go to a geod places Maybe we can find a farmhouse—" Bilbark interrupts. ‘T'd like to know Laura, whether you ever in your lifé had to eat at an ordimary farmhouse? I know what the story books say, but those women fry ev- erything they dom’t boil and their idea of a salad is something to feed to the chickens. 1 agree with Isabel and Laura, only my doctor told me it was the worst possible thing for me to omit luncheon. - "That hotel is really a very nice one,’ says Dilpost hopefully, speeding up the . ‘Guess we’d better ‘go there, Seeing it’s the nearest.” “ WHyY-not run on to Pink lake while you're about it and get lunch at the inn? asks Bilbark with inspira- tion. ‘Three years age I had the finest broiled fish right out of the water.— “ ‘I hate fish,’ says Mrs. Bilbark, ‘and you kfiow it, Arthur. I should think geu'd consider somebody besides yeurself onee in a whil “ June Smith had a perfectly dread- fu} breaking out on her face from eat- ing tod much fish last summer,” says Mrs. Dillpost. “For Pete’s sake!® water, Tlet’s go somewhere. I want food. ' Not a full meal, but just some tasty’ sandwiches and——' = I've told you what you'll get in thes sandwich line,’ says Mrs. Milkwa- ted with that deadly patience warrdnt- ed_to cow the bravest. I think Pink lake—-" “ 'Oh_stop—ihere’s a nice looking farmhouse and see the garden in the back. srowls Milk- Me for that hotel.’ “ ‘Oh. I wish you men would think about someting besidés your tummie: Nobody wants to stop, George! * “Why I'm hollow clear through and I'm not ashamed to mention it, only I dom’t like the idea of that hotel— - “Say no more!” begged the voung man with the long neck, feverishly. “For the firsi time | see why a kind Providence has spared me from ing the owner of an automobile."— Exchange. LETTERS TOiTHE EDITOR Wants Club Retained. Norwich, September. 16. Editor, The Norwich' Bulletin: Dear Sir:— Anyone who has worked among the boys from the Submarine Base. and realized to what a degres fhey have apprecikted the Army and Navy Club, can readily sympathize with the lusty howl of dis cal which is going up from_ them. hint that these ho: pitable rooms in the near future. An average of two' hundred sailors be closed visit the Club every® week to avail themselves of its comforts, to read, write letters, smoke and talk togeth- er, and@ some of them cote, just for the home-atmiosphere which is so pleasant und omni-present. n fact. as one sailor confided to the house moth- er sofe time ago. “thie Army and Navy club is the only home T have!” Were the @Ormitory twenty tines larger it Saturday night, for the rare luxury of sleeping in. a real bed, and as for the success of the Saturday pight supper. evervbody knows how popular they are! With five thousand more young men now heing assighed to the Submurine Base this month. fogether with the Self evident fact that the fellows' pre- fer Norwich to New London hospital- ity. it _certaiply seems a crying shame that the local Club.should hé entirely discontinued. Aside from the friendly reasons for Thaintaining such a house for these sailor visitors to Norwich there is the economic side of the mat- ter. and one can not help. wondering why these rooms fitted out in such an artistic, comfortable ~way should be dismantled & summarily, or why they should have ‘been fitted up at ail? Likewise, why paint and oempletely dn over a building. (as, has been the case recently) if such buildisg must De vacated? Tt would seem n nseless ex- penditure of money, to the uninitiated. THey boys themgelves dre so dis- tressed over the proposed closing of the Club that they are writing to head- quarters for a delay, and doing all they can to postpome the evil day. ‘While not personally fatiliar with the Girls' Club, T can readily sympath- ize with their indignation, as any fair minedd -person will. A club numbering 650 girls, represents something worth while in our community, and such a Dody deserves recognitfon and a right to_its rooms. There must be ways and means of retaining in our city a suitable club for the sailors who come here in such numbers, as well as pléasant quarters for the young women 'who are justly proud of their good wrk, and. anxious to maintain their classes and social evenings. Tt's high time that Norwich shook of some of its &6b-webs ‘and awoke to the present emergency, remember- ing that it is rather a wise policv to hold--on to what has proved to be a £ood thing—and. if the Community Clubs must be closed. at least. to pro- vide some sort of substitute for them. “INTERESTED.” IN THE DAY’S NEWS Greece’s New Place. “Greece, whose classic ideals st constitute one of the most potent forces in werld cuiture, is about to emerge to a more influential place among modern nations as the result of peace adjustments,” says a bulletin from ‘the National €eographich So- clety. X The bulletin, quoting_ from a_com- munieation of George. Higgins Moses, describes- contemporary Greece as fol- lows: “The - established religion of _the land is. of course, - Orthodox Greek. The clergy. headed by the Metropol- itan of Cetinje, are a splendid lot of men in physique and character. The Cathelics, numbering some 13,000 have their own archbishop at Antivari. and the few Mohammedans possess - a Grand Muftl. “Tn- many: ways ‘Greek Tife Femains unchanged from its classic aspects. Modern Athens; before the, war, was a Drilliant capital .well wogth_ its title: “The_Paris ‘of the Levant” Less than a century ago it passed finally from Turkish po ,and it was then a small coll n mere Hovels hud- dled beneath the Acropolis. s “Tn 1914 & city o fwide and gay_ streets. dotted with small parks public bufldings., most of them the giffs of rich sGreeks ‘who have de- lighted to spend in the mother coun- LACO CASTILE SOAP 1t soothes lndmlgelll okins, iy the fortunes they have carned abroad. “Fo such generosity .Athens the noble group of buildings which comprise the university, the national library, and the fine classic reproduc- tion iwhich houses the . academy . of science, and above all and to my mind the most interesting, the nobile sta dium, built upon the old foundations and.'along the old lines and ingen- iously carrying in its fabric every fragment of the old structure which couid be found. “In the midst of all this modernity stand the remnants of the golden days of Athens /sedulously preserved. and open to inspection and study with a freedam nowhere equalled. The fo- cus, of course is the Acropolis—m- comparable even in its ruins—i cliffs and grottos still the home of legend and of fable. “As of. old, thé Greeks swarm the| seas. Refore the war the Piraeus was one of the husiest of Meditérraneans ports, indeed, it was the center of| transhipment for all the East—while the Corinthian Canal, after many fin- ancial vicissitude, notw secms to be in the way of becominz ecach year a more and more useful route between | the Tonian and the Aegean Seas, “The" Greeks are a (own people. One- tenth of ‘the population is to be foundl which owes R say on this subject: “The manufacturers | dreaatul Counterfeits. d what one of the GREATEST NEWSPAPERS IN AMERICA has to Doctor Tells How to Detect Harmful Effects of Tobacco Try These SIMPLE TESTS smoke, walk up three fi: hts of stairs at a regular pace, then stop. If you find that yvou are out of breath, your heart beat is forced. trembling or ir- regular. you may be a vietim of func- tional er organic heart trouble. If you feel that you must smoke, chew or snuff to quiet your nerves, you are a slave to the tobacco habit, and are positively poisoming yoursel? with the deadly drug nicotine. In either case you_have just two alternatives—keep on with the self-poisoning process jr- Tespective of the dangers and suffer the sequences, or give up the habit and escape the dangers. You can over- come the craving and stop the habit in a very short time by using the follow- ing_inexpensive formula: Go to_any drug store and ask for Nicoto) tablets. fake ome fablet affer each meal, and in < comparatively short time you will have no desire for tobaceo, the eraving will have left you. With the nicotine poispn out of vour systém your gemeral B th will quickly improve. Note-When asked about Niestol tablets, ome of oue leading druggists e ts truly & won- Gerful_remeds for the tobcer Babii: sway dhead of “angthing we Tieve over sold before. are ‘aa- ihorisea by (he mamulacturers o refund the menes o evers atssatisfied customer, and we would moc permit (he use of our, Doscensed umusoel merit " T inls_eity usder an tron- by all up-ta-dste drupgets. Oegood. ‘Andrew Mclaughlin: and J. New York: Doctor Connor, formerly of Jonne Hopkins hospital, says: Many men who smoke, chew Or snuff incess- antly and who are seemingly healthy are sufforing from prokressive organic ailments. Thousands of them. would never have been affiicted had it not been for the use of tobacco, and thou- sands would soom et well 17 they oula omiy stop the use of tobaceo, The chief habit forming principle of tobacco s nicotine, @ ¥ poison. which. when absorbed by tiie system. slowly affects the nerves, membranes, tissues and vital organs of the bodw. The harmful effect of tobaccé varies and depends on _circumstances. One will be afflicted with general debility. others with catarrh of the throat. indi- gestion constipation, extreme nervous- Tess. sleeplessness, 1085 of memory, Tack" of will power, mental coniusion. stc. Others mAy suiter from heart ais. case, bronchial trouble hardening of the arteries. tuberculcsis, biindness ‘ot even cancer or the common affliction known as tobacco heart. If you .use fobacco in any form vou can casily tect the harmful efects by making the fotiowing wimpie test: Read aioud ore fuil page from a book. If, in the tourse of reading, vour voice becomes muf- flea hoarse and indistinct and ' you must Trequently clear your throat the chances are that your throat is aftected by catatrh and it may be the beginning of more seribue trouhle. _Next. in the | s mornins. beferc taXing your usumil® -back guar- inctuding Tee A" Morgan. makes for opposite Impresstons but it is frankly in a mood net to risk the independence and sovereignty of this republic upon the strength of a vision o rthe eloquence of a voice in the air whose origin cannet be traced. It is by getting this act clearly in mind, and letting it rest there, that one will be able to follow the debate in the senate without confusion. The people of the country have turned a deaf ear to the identification of the critical senators as contemptible quitters be- cause it has added nothing to an un- derstanding of the treaty. They may now turn 4 deaf ear to ail personal allusions that may be made by indig- nant senators to the president’s treat- glen( of them.—New Haven Journal- ou in Athens and the Piraeus. The drain if emigration from the rural dstriets is enormous. In the words of a Cabinet Minister, it comstitutes ‘a grave national hemorrhage.’ Indeed, in some villages in the Peloponnesus there remain scarcely enough men to fill the offices. “In a land of muc hsunshine, as Greece is, life is followed much in the open. The oven is almost imvar- iably found in the courtvard. and it is heated with dried twigs, almost the only fuel in the country, which are brought in huge piles upon the backs of the patient little donffeys, who vie with the gogts in being the most use- ful members of the honsehold. At Megara the native costume ap- pears at its best. It is rarely seen! anywhere nowadays, and has almost | wholly disappeared from the cities But for the Evzonés, or household troops. the fustanella fould be as fare a sight in Athens as the classic garb, which is worn only by Americans. OTHER VIEW POINTS It is to this theme that tbe senmate| committee has now made answer inj its finding and sport. The theme up- on whigkh the committee proceeds is this: “To preservc American inde- pendence and American sovereign and thereby best serve the welfare of mankind, the committee propose tl':rex’e amendments and reservation g | Lot TRl committee has undertaken to subject | 5iuation | = complete, despotic, merel s by " 2 les: ination by the favored ele the visions which have filled Mr. W - | ment. or else chaos. The rinciple son's mind, and the oices in the airy which is bP;nK foushl‘ out at Bpostonp( S which have so successfully appealed |}y it "G {0 Tag arisen in. all to his judgment, to a matter of fact | quis NERRST V4N, MR FRISCR T ] scrutiny. It assumes that-this iz al (NS WOt of Tafclal o ve hu n business: that very hu- o man ambitions, passions and preju- It evident enough that both the dices brought on the war and that the|stock market and the steel radé are war has not eliminated them from the [incredulous as to th& probabili of se- minds of men and nations. It is in|rious meaning in the threat of the no mood to deny that the war, with its! unions for a steel strikeé begihning on costs in lives and. treasure, Sept. 22. Nobody seridusly its demonsgated unfitness as a means that the unions have any sort of determining world conditlons nr!nr foothold in thé TUnited States Steel even domestic conditions, its barbaric| Corposstion. Trade advices from revelations of latent deviltries, may | Piitsburgh have been revorting not not have left &n impression which total absence of the measures, in When the policeman affiliates him- celf with one element of the commu- nity he announces, in cffect, that while continuing to draw pay for complete protéction he will fumish only partial protection. It does not matter what element he affiliates himself with the American Fedération of ' Labor, the Manufacturers Association, the re- publican party or the underworld, the principal is _exactly the same. He is giving the favored element jmmunits to do what it chooses with the rést of the community from which he is drawing pay on a Sworn promise of unlimited and _uneconditional protec- tion. The inevitable result of such a of Castoria have been compelled to spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to familiarize the public with the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. This has been necessitated by reason of pirates counterfeiting the Castoria trade- mark. This counterfeiting is a crime not only against the proprietors.of Castoria, but-against the growing generation. Castoria bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, if they would All persons should be careful to see that guard the health of their chifiren. Parents, and mothers in particular, ought to carefully examine the Castoria advertisements which have been appearing in this paper, and to re- member that the wrapper of every bottle of genuine Castoria bears the fac-simile signaturé of Chas. H. Fletcher, under whose supervision it has been manufactured continuously for over thirty years."-Philadelphia Bulletin. Children Cry For. . B8 Net Contents 15 inid Draoin / f JoT NARGOTIS, o Bringing Up Baby. _When Adam ate the Apple we heard nothing about fts effect on , hig Stomach, but we do know, or ought t0 know, about the affect of all eatables given our children. Thi‘a Eknowledge is. necessary to all mothers, and the deaths among infants indicate that much informas .tion along this line is needed.. . On this subject many works have been published, but most of them 8o technical and complicated as to be unintelligible to the lay mind. Food, hygiene and proper clothing must be learned by all mothers*—they must study them, knéw them. Do you? Around every bottle of Fletcher’s Castoria is a booklet in plain, everyday language that all can understand, put there by the advice and of physicians. Will you read it? Castoria has been in use so many years that ft is a - waste of words to praise it, but because of the many substitutes and imitations we endeavor wo profect the babies by keeping before the public mzum of Chas. H. Fletcher and a copy of the wrapper. _ It is your only safeguard. . GENUINE CASTORIA ALwavs Bear}sv'thg Signature of (4 THE cxnTaLs co! - NOTICE! To The Patrons Of The Davis Theatre Owing to the crowded houses at all performances of Hall Caine’s masterpicture, “The Woman Thou Gavest Me”’, many of this phenomenal production and the ed with the Famous Players Film tfin:gispiaureforonemorednylndilwiflbe.hm both afternoon and evening (today) im conjunction with the regular show advertised just below, Gavest Me” will be presented in the afterncon at 3:18, evening at 7:45. The regular show will begin at the usual time, matinee 2:15, evening 6:45. Don’t fail to take advantage of this, your last oppor- tunity to see the greatest of all screen classics ever shown in this city. our patrons have not been able to witness have tion to re- “The Woman Thou D Blackmai| mance. by was unanimo er United State: this regard hands, the p ed, orthern fornia_ Fruit cern shipped will_total $37,500,000. So ar 0’ handle. in& 25 duct this of table v $150 a ton. A golden t présent owne: Union. tion of guppiies, ew York Evening CALIFORNIA GRAPE CROI | 1S WORTH $75,000,000 California’s season is cording to announcement by the Cali- per cent ear than in rieties ranging from $30 to VANVA | THEATRE Wednesday and Thursday H. B. WARNER in “For a Woman’s Honor” A 5 Part Thrilling trite Don’t Miss This Picturs. INTERNATIONAL NEWS VOD-A-VIL MOVIES Presenting 4 Big Time Acts EDDIE POLO In the Fourteenth Episode The Lure of the Circus TEMPORARY ALIMONY A Side Splitting Comedy the way of producfion and accumula- which would surely be adopted if the managers looked for interruption by a stril been laid on the fact that thé request superintendents for the continue working during albor DAy agreed to. source of appréhension s the possi- bility of a sympathetic strike in oth- steel _plants usly the; s Steel it is not yet the attitude of the men would be, and the further curious . whether, in case production by the in- dependent steel mills were to be slop- ed by order of the unions, that would | not -‘throw into the steéel corpofation” at whom arty largel worth Distrib 16,358 from northern California last year, but this season’s contrac 000 {_is the grape crop this sea- son that three times the table variety will be shipped East, and if Congress decides favorably upon the shipment of wine grapes there are 15,000 éarloads more of that Grape growers are receiv- more for their The pear and plum shipment recerd was also broken this shipments approximatéd 2,000 carloads, | with a value of $4,40,000 and pear ship- | menis total 5,000 cars, worth $6,000,000 | | Throne At a Bargain. hroné It is no crime to be poor unless the THEN word is applied to singers. pastern %a;‘x‘;.ouau CquaiTte The Buic Rilr e v rioads, the sultain of Turkey.| It was once a Persian throné and has historic associations, Nibs needs the money. BreeD THEATRE ] Today and Thursday TWO STAR FEATURES EMMY WEHLEN o A Favor to a Friend A Five Aot Metro Romantic Comedy Dram GEORGE WALSH —AN— PUTTING ONE OVER You'll Laugh, Gasp, Applaud and Wonder How It Will End HAROLD LLOYD N At the Old Stage Door AUDITORIUM TODAY LYONS MUSICAL COMEDY CO. 20—PEOPLE—20 Mostly Girls THE MYSTERIOUS MR. BROWNING In Six Parts FORD WEEKLY Concert Orchestra Drama but stresshas men _to The one those of the Corporation. In clear what n question arisés the blow increased busi- Post. . 1 grape 002,900, crop ac puiors. This con- arloads of grapes show shipments | valued at the quantity of | STATEFAIR BERLIN Bigger and Better Than Ever Before. September 22-27 Days Only variety 0- 1818, the price year. The plum is for sale by it but Hi# Turkish — Manchestsr 15 _we MAVertising medium s Grand Fall Opening WEDNESDAY, BIG MARDI GRAS SPECIAL DECORATIONS Rowland’s Augmented Jazz Band DANCING EVERY WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 17, T. A. B. HALL. SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS SURPRISE FOR EVERYONE ERY of any or all prepar 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 transpo tion and delivery delays of next winter are upon us. THE EDWARD CHAPPELL COMPANY Quality—Quantity— Quickness We have a complete stock and can make PROMPT DELIV- ed rta- Telephone 24

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