Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 27, 1919, Page 8

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77, 1919 PTEMBER ECHOES FROM THE LODGE ROOMS the Rev. Harris ‘E. Starr of New Ha- ven, chaplain of the Grand lodge of | Connecticut, F. & A. M. All Connec- | ticut Masons and their friends are, invited. I LADIES’ BENEVOLENT ASS'N. | The first meeting, since the summer | recess of the Ladies’ Catholic Benevo- | lent As: tion was held Thursday evening in' the Haile club rooms and | was largely attended. The office; were elected for the coming vear follows: : P ident, - Mrs. R. Powers; | president, Miss' Irene Qui ley: first vice president, Mrs. M. . Donahue; second.vice president, Mrs.| D. T. Shea; recorder, Miss Bridget Bn- right; treasurer, Mrs. C. O. Murphy: financial secretary, Mrs. Thomas Wal- lace: marshail, Mrs. J. R. McNamara; guard, Mrs. Joseph Bach; physician, Dr. D. J. Shahan; chairman of board of trustees,. Mrs. -R. M. Powers. Visiting and social committees are| KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS. The official history of the Knights of Columbus, which has been in course of preparation for the last few months s mow nearing completion The his- tory will be published in two volumes, the first volume in two buoks, ore of which will deal with the origin. growth and fraternal and public, ac- tivities of the K. of C., the other deal- ng with the war work of the Knights. The second volume will be in the na- ture of a memorial of the members of the K. of C.—over fifty thousand— who served the war against the This_comprises. those ed States. Canada, co, etc., who serv- K. of C. pub- nat authors of Fgan is one of the best | B literary addition rnnnc:‘a's‘\lo be appointed by the president at diplom: ng engin- | the next meeting. ! After the election of officers the | meeting was most interestipgly ad- dressed by Mrs. Robert Mdloney of | | Boston, Mass., one of the supreme trustees and the New England repre- ! sentatives of the association. period author ory DEGREE OF POCAHONTAS. Sebequanash council, No. 11, D. of P. met in Buckingham Memorial on! Wednesday evening, with a large num- | ‘ her present. Great Pocahontas Mrs Britain, was | fildred Bandouin, of New i 5 ing the vears: was present in her official capacity.| into war relief Althougl suffering from a very heav ce 1y un- | oold she gave a very interesting and sks. Tt | instructive talk, which was. or ought mainly | to be a great help in the future. Atj ;- Co-! the close of the meeting refreshments ational| were served, consisting of cake, fancy The entertain- work | cookies, and cocoa. for af | nfent committee have plans 200d many pleasant evenings during | the winter months, which will make | the time pass very rapidly for all the members. MOOSEHEART LEGION. the regular business meeting of | Mooseeart legion Thursday night | the resignation of Mrs. Rosina Mc | Donald, junior regent. was read and { accepted. Mrs. Mary Hunter, past re- | zent. installed Mrs. Rose Carter, the. srmer chaplain, as junior regent, and | irs. Grace Walz chaplain for the re- At he ODD FELLOWS. e reg = of Uncas lodge | ) . Mon Herbert F. | mainder of the year | n siding. After| The chapter has voted to send to was taken | Mooseeart to Jam Davis for p dis ddition | a_section in a memoriai window in the | night | House of God, the plans of which are both | in progress now, and when completed | 2 ed to| will be a church for all denominations. | The auditing committee will audit} the books for the quarter ending Sept. | IDEAS, IDEALS AND COMMON SENSE AUTUMN AND WINTER Garments, Millinery and Accessories With ideas, ideals and common sense combined, one has ar- rived at a long desired goal. You have longed for a coat, a suit or a hat combining these essentials. We have achieved them. See our Autumn display. The one you dreamed about is here waiting for you. IN THE. GARMENT SECTION The Suit with the longer coat, and the Coat—a real coat with real sleeves, has arrived. When the dolman came upon the scene, the very fact that it was different commended it. Its difference now condemns it. The real coat, comfortable and snug, cannot be surpassed for the cold winter weather. The breezes cannot penstrate. Jack Frost has to stay outside. But there are novel ideas, clever lines, good materials, and fine workmanship to make these coats what they are. You will need one this winter. in and get it now. The longer lines of the suit coats is another feature which is most attractive, as the long lines well carried out are capable of more artistic effects than the shorter ones. Our display is very effective. AUTUMN MILLINERY Winter hats are always richer in appearance than the lighter ones for summer, the velvets and the silks, the feathers and the ribbons, each adding its note to the richness of the ensemble. Among the hundreds of handsome models will be found the Everyy says that: These Special Values Can’t Be Beaten XMINSTER RUGS, in size inches—SPECIAL. $3.25 TINSTER RUGS. in size 3 R SPECIAL $6.00 $30.00 STER _RUGE size 9 12 feet—8PECIAL..,. $42.50 $1.69 INLAID LINOLEUM- SPECIAL $1.50 $2.00 INLAID LINOLEUM SPECIAL $1.69 $1.00 TAPESTRY _BRUSSELS STAIR CARPET--SPECIAL. 89c $2.50 QUAKER LA URTAINS The genuine Quaker-made Cur tains whaich were intended for Come sale at $2.30 a pair—Special $2.19 IN OUR BASEMENT You Have Been Waiting For These HANDY IRONING BOARD STRETCHERS:. set of will hold the covering on board, and can be easily SHE three which the ironing removed at will. A SET OF THREE FOR 25¢ ALUMINUM SPOONS JUST RE- CEIVED— TEA SPOONS ONLY 10c DESSERT ONLY 12¢ TAELE SPOON ONLY 15c DISPLAY AND SALE OF ORIENTAL 20 Monday night at the recorder’s! s | home, 25 Oneco street | one you have been looking for. Be it big or little, grave or Sy v DIME SAVINGS BAHNAKLi i gay, we have it here, ready for you.. Exclusiveness, charm, RUGS A feature crest for the Masons| (Continued Faar Boae?Erve) | and comformity with the latest demands of fashion make the : d"'“"" F":‘"\" - families who | ! 7 5 nde: the direction of Mr. Peters of nd Masters dav | generally were. 5 | appeal of these Boston Store hats irresistible. Boston we are conducting our Annu ome, Wal-| = Nichoias Tarrart was my fellow di- | Sale of Oriental Rugs. A -very beauti- | rector for many vears, and his famil- | Zutt collection asliofbred (8L {very low T | T A S S YOUR INSPECTION IS INVITED | * ’f the home unit. | ment regarding that and other business ! ' and the roof| were of great value to the bank A It is sad to think of the passin I ave opportunity!so many good friends and \ll;efu! = D;f! Which/ as have gone, but it is the natural| of thel course for men to die. and to dweil | “to| upon its sadness unfits us both for the | O duties and the pleasures of life. | i Germany’s False Theory. | | The bank was organized shortly af-; | ter the end of the Civil war. and most ' of its life "has been passed in a perio. ses will open at|Of Deace, the Spanish war having pro ss of welcome by | duced but little effect on businese, The A ate war has stirred up the world in all departments, socially, governmentally and businesswise. Before the war Ger- | — = many se bnd e b e Boverned best and ideal system, and therefore, | Adr \ large Italian popula-| Dreaaful destruc-|siaute of affairs in which all the labor | S6ems at some times to be more prev- everywhere, municipal government. w. assuming Germany to be strongest, a, tion, : and muc tion o ; se _m;‘ in the country will control jalent and yiolent than at rers. If | well conducted by homest and exmeri| World leadership by Germany was the| the Italian people as part of to me insignificant in comparison With|one great federation, so that there will| the world is to be living in, th officials. The cities and the country | PeSt and ideal arrangement of inter- sh: of the victor’s spoil The pe: the great crime (_h"‘ German V-|be no freedom either for any employ- | Selfishn manifested by any clas districts were alike beautiful. Nowhers| Nétional affairs. ference denied the wishes of the|ernment in systematically ~promoting|er, or any laborer. in attempting to tyrannize ov ¥ feine conid onis Hnd sk s i e Nl cocsiling to eur i, o Suteriie- ans. and awarded the city lo thejanarchy throughout the countries hos-|“ S0 UV L dinate the po- | PEOPIe gemerlly must be checked. | | such conservation and improverment ot | Lional theory was 4 false one, for th h vs. An Iallan agieator. D'|tile to it Such conduct was as fool- |, o "f, GRemEL [0, SOPOTHAne (e PO7 | (he course of history. various tim { natural resources. In the cities the|Seems o be no good reason why the|Annunzio, with a band of mutinous|ish as it was crimin TEs anit i e S but more | Lhére have ‘been tyrannies - jriodern streets and buildinzs, and, in| limitation of individual priivieges oldiers and other volunteers and sup- [ householder on a city stree o inconsistent . with good gove |28, Well as by indiv Rheumatls the country. the eultivation. capecially | he sike of the general good, which is: Ported by the local Italian population, | set fire to the house of his next door| PR Solice. are ha! 15905 | all bad, and « tyranny jOf the forests, were remarkable andjvssential to government in. amy ome|l00% 2nd holds possession of the city|neighvor. His nelghbor's bouse MMEBt ot the for the maintenance ofj “as¥ 'S JuSL A A HOME CURE GIVEN By ovE || D2€2utiful TEverywhere prosperity pre. | countrs, should not «pply to the rela-;in, defiance of the peace conference. |be burmed. but the same fire which ¢e-l,,.,cq order, and must evidently | & Plutocracy. 1y Ry clin | yailed. Such an internal condition! tions of nations with each other. All| - e »ln'-“r!r:trw Okf‘ds 0"“4“;‘; — '_n‘]‘ ‘(‘fy"‘ - "O‘v'm‘"‘ ent diq a1 |be free from any connection with any| The essence of our d Z s suggested excellence in every aspect of | $00d government, all social order js;lain an O R o s . g!‘ meourhgze Bel- | body which mig be a party to or, freedom limited only only =4 the governmental svstem. Unfortu- | based upon the restraint e b e o a2 G Bvax|interested .in either side of any con-|Which means freedom to t F 5 : | nately Germany, in its external rela-| Vidual. Unless each be e e S a s e, to empl hom he pleas | tions, proceeded upon princiles whiah | Within reasonable limits of action. nohunzio's action is extremely popular| ihe legitimate result of its late gov- fifh =~ the “workman o work for whom i zest. The Ge R 2" | rights or privi 5 2 < of ~ | iorces d > Italia 20} i as e 2 L R Wl 2 i + an, as F Dleases | tional :f;ac;r;:‘::Th;}{?arfhfm’,"':r{‘a' | ,,',7; %L.&:.‘Q,‘.!e‘g?mm; ;i?‘ kf’fl‘:’e,fn | there danger that submiss own country. Bolshevism is "u(orny? The disease is characterized by an ag-yUnion man. us he please 3 on had | mon 2 . ! the Italian government to the undemocratic, and is a bloody tyranny vated {o get good things| If our people maintain such free e f ino duty to other nations conflioting | nations arises out of seifishness. I} g B & I . o ver the | Wi e -al. T the Dime Sav bank r 1 ad i i of the peace conference would|by one class of the population over the | without n equivalent for them, dom, th ime Sa . n a | with its own interests. The restriction ®ach individual and each nation were| 4 - Ttaly. s nd by a lack of any sense of personal a long, prosperous and beneficent { of individual rights for the sake of the | Wholly unselfish, there would be| e e 1 P A or regard for the rights of oth-|existence, but i owardice-.or po- | 2ood was a fixed princinle as| neither civil disturbances nor will the peace.conference do?| - Bolsheyism is the extreme,manifes- These symptoms. are but mani- | litical subser i ted, our | amone the citizens of the German na.| As all are more or less selfish, Apparently it can do nothing but take | tation of an evil spirit which is abroad | Tas o St AL that. dF Rl Tead Sishevisnt. Uyt | tion, but had no place as betwean na. | Should ‘be restrained by law. Within| Fiume from the Italians, and thereby |ail over world. This spirit h e S iTe Cihten s taa a1ve ReLE univares] ruby. and - hell- on ons, according to the German theorv,! @ hation this is possible. A law is en- | bring on a war between whatever | been gr promoted by the B o bat iike the infinenea arth b r. Don't §| Amonz nations, each might and ought | acted for the restraint of the individual | forces may support it the Ital-| War is always demoralizing. It is n —vl\ I ex1at, : 3 2 1i1 your name §| to take and keep all =0od things ft<|and if the individual disobeys it he is| ians, or cise ignobly back down, and | cess: brutal; it relaxes ali moral | Vil send it iree B} strencth allowed. “Might makes rieht~| punished. If he refuses to submit to|admit that its orders may be ignored|restraints. In short, as General Sher- "'7,.'7?‘“ 0;'&" was the interratlonal motto. The Ger.| the punishment he is controlled by!by any of the larger nations., and are man said, “War is hell” Few, if any iring _ your || Mans believed themselves the stro | fore Ordinarily the individual sub-|binding on upon those w have | people can go through hell fi with- send " the §i est nation. and that it was possible| mits to the law: without control by |no force to resist {out getting scorched. For years, thej but under- §j and therefore right for them to takepforce. This is because he knows that h conditions before the League|soldiers have made it their ""»\""‘»‘ o fianapsy i the first rank in the world, and make | the force ex Where there is nolwf Nations is fully adopted are not|!¢ do all possible violence to the ene- < St other nations take inferior and | force to compel obedience to the law. |'ingicative of great success-for it ny, and have become accustomed to a| ciier || more or less subject positions. The!it will soon betome ineffective. Law!any « inconsistent with a state of or-| ¢ de- i Germans. T believe, went so far as to; without a sanction amounts to noth- | ce of any effective sy: JpsEaE At peopie b homeihe s i believe that such an This is why every attempt to ir & an nnjustifiable at- | become accustomed to see property | AS A WELL FITTED UP No. 23-F Gur- | would be hest, not on ute a system to prevent wars has on upon another. Ger- | 1ights. which used to cred. | i 3 5 . but for the world generallv. Their, been a failure. There is no policemanto whose theory of international |disregarded. and ove ¢ ‘world politics made a world | arrest the offending nations, and no| hurt nothing but the moral- | from iis normajl us e BEDROOM the strongest matlon the | court with jurisdiction to try inem|i an nation as long as|Ment because of the national emergen- | for their crimes against each other. or | it t acted on, was at liberty. hy | © The emergency being pas: determine the elalms of one againstf putting that utter selfish and | (\:vr:_l;fl“(;“a,; i ;’1“\" nother. wrong theory in practice, to do great | PO remains, and s o 3 Lsanip ek NS, sl wnd. ‘threugh | 10 apply t v No matter how well the rest of the house may be fur ASK FOR An attempt was made to provide an | InCry (o bersuif Tul | X o en e nished, unless the bedroom is cheerful, bright and new AS international tribunal at Tbe Hague,|M°rely the acting on . ds the use o TRADING e s S which so much embitted her enemi e - FECEXE Tk S s - i OF TRADINS Lry. cortain slassss oficases Dt | uinst her her harbarons wis of |Of their employes instead of their! | looking, the effect of a well-ordered house is lost. o use o/ DR duE R e eptas s il DEVCINE. SThe Tinited Staceeuaid mot TRREIRL oo e . - “ 2y . is supported as an effor 0 prevent et - b s 4 B3 = " e i 1 HAND AND B z : World safe for democracy, but to stop | to extiude all but unionized laborers | REAST DRILLS futare wars, but it does mot establish | /10" T 0 U C0 N "Shins and citl- | from the steel industre. it it pre- || wraps on the bed or when company comes to spend the REAMS AND SOCKET WRENCHES KEEN KUTTER POCKET KNIVES QUALITY ) SAWS, AXES, ( Don’t Fail to See Our Line of Pure Aluminum Ware THE HOUSEHOLD Bulletin Building 74 Frankdin Street Telephone 5314 | which means just as selfish. as other a judicial tribunal, 'but rather a non-| " ¢ judicial body controlied by the allies|“"S PV rman submarines. in the late war, who are to arrange the affairs of the world according te their own views. 'The men who con- trol this league will be just as human, men, and their actions will be influ- enced by the interests of the varfous states they represent. There is no prospect of such justice from the league of nations, a body representing particular interests, as might be ex- pected from a court of disinterested judges. If disinterested and wise dcisions would be expected, where will be the power to enforce them? Is it conceivable that the TUnited States will assume the duty.. which would be laid upon it by the adoption of Article X, to become the sheriff of this stranze tribunal and enforce its decrees at any time and in any part of the world, at the expense of this country in lives and in money? And if the United States will assume no such obligation, either because it 1s a dangerous and unwise obMgation, or because it conflicts with the consti- tutional rights of congress to deter- mine when the country shall engage in war, it i8 not to he expected. that. the other allies wil! assume the obligation alone. So the means of enforcing the decrees of the league will be lacking, and the decrees themseives will .be despised. Perding ion on the adoption of the league, {be inefficlency of the con- ference. as it now exists. is belng man- ifested in the matter of Flume. This city on tha esst ccsst af tha H AN IDEAL sheons R L R e WHY NOT "ROVIDENCE FOOD. PRODUCT. iIDENCE BREWING CO R. P | vails, it will be a long step toward a night, isn’t it gratifying to have a well-furnished bedroom —one that contains the right kind of furniture—furniture of quality and taste? i Just such furniture is the kind we handle. Our array of Bedroom Suites should be seen to be appreciated, and the prices are economical, too. We can furnish every room in the home beautifully, tastefully and economically. Our new 1919 Fall stock is now in and includes many strictly new designs in Fur- niture. An excellent line of Ranges, Floor Coverings, Etc., Ftc. SH EA OArTE & BURKE FURNISHE CONN

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