Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 10, 1919, Page 4

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diorwich Bulietin and Qoufiesd ke sintehes of the l!e With consistent work being carried on from both direetions the headway that is desirable o against the use of narcotics A SANE REMEDY. Few will disagree with the national|girl spends two months at a summer ‘moralizing t te be made| began the young man with 123 YEARS OLD * year. Bntered st the PostoMiee at Norwich. Covn.. s wcodclams matter. fs exclusivery eotiiliet ase for republication of all news despatch- cradite to i or not stbserwise ersdited ln aise the locai mews published produced, part to -unavoidable crease of money and credit and that there has been and unintentional waste, in- considerable timely when the council sets forth is work, save, cooperate, pro- emphasis cannot placed upon the effect that the indu: is having upon condi- CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING OCTOBER 4th 10,293 EXTENDED CONTROL NEEDED. While we have been told by the su- t the fail- life beyond the first of the coming year and give it the au- thority to acquire the needed portion of the sugar crop for next vear when prices were right was detrimental to gar equalization board ure to extend i the interests of the sugar consumer: in this country, it must nevertheless d that the move that is e food administration in presenting a proposed bill and urging upon the senate commitfee investiBat- eral to be continued for an- be appreci made by ti ing the tion that fe control si other proper even though the delay has ady been costly Production and distribution of sugar are far from normal. They will not get back to where they were before the war for a year if they do then, and unless the the control ex board which buys the sugar and *t at a fixed price with the under: ing that it must be sold by whole- saler and retailer at certain prices ere is no te just as soon & ceases. where prices will the existing contro Remove all restrictions the first of nuary and there will be no reduc- tion in the price of sugar. Instead it an be expected to jump ahead by eaps and bounds. intreasing possi- 18 or 20 c s a pound and the chance wide open for those who are simp waiting and planning for it o indulge in profiteering. Most peo- ple will admit that we have had enougth that kind of robbery in the ast few years and even though it is ogr v late it cannot fail to be ated that there is a benefit to even now in maintaining -ontroi over sugar until normal con- ditions again return. The public is en- titled t a the protection they can from the A NATIONAL BUDGET. long time to get a re- 1 calling for a budget aken the b in conne: ss. but it is but sure. The bill as rec- - the special committee in provides for decided changes ng method of making gov- s, and well it hat the moss-cov- has been in vogue abandoned and businesg- like methods adopted i dealing with matters of so much importance. planned under this bill that shall be a bureau of the budget ion of all requests for appropriations_and to cut everything inimum, that there be an in- dependent audit of all.government re- 4 expenditures and that the power of approving apprepriations be vested one house committee of 3 members instead of being handled b: several comm the bill that it has the idea in view of ng zreater economy in govern- expenditure in order to de- taxes off the war debt, rile everyone wants to see the bt removed it is perfectly evi- as been just as much national budget system in t have gone as there will hose that are to come. wever time that the haphaz- of doin; mess under method was stopped and an svstem made to take its place. cities and states find it ad- r guarding expenditures certainly no reason w i 11d not be used in connection he making of appropriations for the FIGHTING DRUG HABIT. In view of the great number Zd- dicted to the use of drugs in this country, the extensive illegal traf- fie in drugs, the efforts that are be- ng made to stop such business and t) work that is being done in behalf of curing the addicts of the habit, it is gratifying to note that a hospital maintained for this purpose New York city has just discharged 300 pa- tien cured after undergoing treat- ment for a period of two months This shows what can be done in the way of striking at the drug habit oth- erwise than through the prosecution of those who smugzle in the dope, sell it flegally and otherwise violate the laws. But more than that it demon- strates the eorrectness of what has been long contended that inasmuch as the habit has gotten such a hold upon the good sized army of users the need of setting about the curing of those who were not masters of them- selves ought to be seriously under- taken. The shutting off of the drugs from those who had become accus- tomed to them left the users of dope in a serious plight in their efforts to appease their appetites and they mads business good for the pocket peddlers But with 8o many successfully tak- ing the hospital treatment it should lend encouragement to others who would like to throw off the drug shackles, but even with this encour- agement in the treatment of addicts it is periectly evident that the same amount of attention must be given to the prosecution of the drug law vio- lators in order to curb this traffic and s prevent more people from being tary slacker deavoring to get a reduction cost of living. is realized is of are encouraged, responsible them, the worse fhe situation is going to become and all the time it is con- :: E E tributing to the boosting of that very | 3 aat, Sneareonie whin you b “Pooh!” the girl with the dimples ! With | opjected. “There weren't but three the advice of the council properiy fol-!men there. escept married ones. and lowed these conditions would be over-|if you think all of us girls spent our It is a common sense remedy. cost of living—that ev- ing so much about. BEAUTIFYING WITH TREES. city has an interest understands a continuance of by the sugar the property owners while they are under t den or board. Out in Indianapolis where the prop-| 211 the people who pay taxes and those erty owners have been guardians and| who do not, i caretakers of the trees in the stree this responsibility the park board must be realized that there is bound to| cooperation owners can still in con- which the property teresting feature the powers places it in ¢ the pur- pose of that ci with the trees that add so much to attractiveness or the sake | lation it may be safer tol them appearances in mere cities. EDITORIAL NOTES. ‘With more respect for law and or-| people who have good salaries, but to Ger there would be less call for the!the wage earner the paying of taxes is enforcement of martial law. is always pessible to tell from|* the actions of a fan whether his team| S of 2 di@ whnat he insisted it would. New York ma France about to make purchases from Germany what others will be doing in a brief The man on the corner says: peopie who ciaim to be justice are often the worst trouble When Holland wants borrow it is not surprising. ~That is The Shantung Province of China. what other and bigger mations have| Mr. Editor: There is so much talk fiying about today regarding Shan- ! been deing for a long time. with me now you are back from vour summer at the lake! Every time a defense council when it declares that|resort she acauires a brand new set the nation’s produetive powers have]df methods for the treatment and not been fully used since the armis- |Subjugation of the s mase—and tice. that too few goods, notably nec- essities of life have been that the high cost of living s due in| ples. “You conceited thing! = Domt ;.‘JZ}:"&..;.;":‘JJ"“;‘{}‘S,'&" b g you are try- I'm a trifie mervous hat did *ou learn up there, anyhow, Dorina?” ‘H'm” said the girl with the dim- young man. “Of course a girl's prin- be| think about? And at a summer re- sort all they do is practice on and ex- till it dawned on me that the Phipps girl was making eves-at me in order to reduce Griggins, the other v 4 nz man, to ashes of jealowsy and that PUpPY paws at a mew tov. The pret- readjustments |ty widow invited me so often to come take some time. but it is now almost a|to sec her solely because she needed a vear since the fighting stopped and vet ustries that were going before and war are idle. course more than one reason for this|ier fath situation but it would séem to be time|to his ¢ to grasp the fact that the longer suchi method whether | home 2 sadder but more intellectual for | young man. Of course the fresh crop fourth at her bridge table and. while 1 was puffed up at being asked to the Cutlers so0 frequently, it wasn't Dalsy I war experiences and his of raising ducks. T came of youths each vear has to go through the same process and I expect you did you suppose girls ever have a thought in their heads except in regard to cap- inten- | turing a man? Why. we just forgot profiteering. | they existed.” 5 There can be no question but what| “Yes, you did—not,” said the twinkly there is need for the production of | ¥ : : cipal concern is men, ¢ more goods and the advice is certainly | 305 dany Jt. 1¢ ihere et n ' s ] hanging around wor Srribly that the remedy for the existing sit-| and if she has on:hgr t:':”:;e h'“::‘r‘:ei Jjust as muech about how to get rid of them. What else is there for a girl to! YOU Won out temporarily vou breathed periment with the few helpless’ and : e | Suffering young men who mistakenly tions and has had for a long time. We| JUUSUNE YOURE men who m know what was thought of the mili- in trying to avoid his| “I wenmt to a summer resort once duty and we have reached the point| when 1 was young and trusting and where we cannot fail to take the same| was having a perfectly entrancing attitude toward the industrial slacker.|time. discovering how popujar I was Regardless as to what the conditions were during the war they are simply being made worse by the under pro- this when we are en-|ipe Dates twins were so young they in the! had seized uncn me much as a playful Cutler who wanted me for herself, but | who found 1 would listen | “What I'm interested in knowing,~|time fighting over those three—why, twinkl- ing eves, “ what you are going to do ‘we went up there to rest and be free from the strain of making ourselves popular with the men. We go through that here in town all winter. If a girl isn't popular she might as well die, so we have to work twenty-four hours a day at the job. You can easily see how we welcome the chance to relax and Do ourselves anéd sleep and sul Zudice and read novels and not have to both- er over men at all.” “You needn’t tell me.” her caller in- Ing to give tho impression that the ! poor forlorn things had to spend their time kicking their heels at the. end of the pier while you girls marched by unseeing. What really hapened was that there was a regular hair-pulling match going on all the while. the three young men dartigg to and fro wildly, much as mice would do trring to es- cape the cat’s paws. When one of fire at the other girls, and when they yanked him_away from you eventually you gloomed around planning fresh onslanghts. “Naturally, because you wera S0 busy, you totally 1 sight of the emo- tions of the young men themselves ang when one of them informed you if you didn’t marry him he was headed for the prussic acid bottle you were simply surprised to death and zot off that old one about never dreaming he was serious. Most girls are hard hearted and never waver, but you have a tender nature and T hope you will_steel yourseif to resist his pleas.” “There isn't any declared the girl with the dimpies. ou are per- fectly foolish! There wasn't a single soul paid any attention to me.” “You are a beautiful little fibber, said the twinkly young man, wish youwd fib some mor: comforts me. 1 hope it's so, Dorin: because I've been on nettles all sum mer. with vou away. thinking some other chap was going to smatch you. I'm never, never going te let you go away again—unless I'm with you. and that's flat! “Well.” said the girl with the dim- ples. “I missed vou. too. Harve. T suess maybe that’s why I couldn’t tell vou what color eyes any of those three had."—Exchange. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR I oo | The Junior High School Should Wait. importance of having them| o icn are trying to make both ends 4 Regulations | ncet in their living who have not.had flerent cities regarding the| their wages increased since the war caring for the trees, even those in the| started and that makes certain cities in others "c‘"" of a tree war-| |, ¢ the only way to reduce the high! Mr. Editor: Hundreds of people in them strug- to| gle for existence on a dollar worth about 40 cents in the marts of trade. Students political eeonomy claim cost of living, and that .is the goal of to economize. And it though a good wav ‘to would Seem as been shifted | begin is to keep down the tax rate of it | the town and not allow ourselves to buy what we cannot affgrd or to tr out any new fads that ay be a de- All who want to see this town keep up with the times know that the rate of taxation must be Kept down. for it s twice as high as it was a dozen ears ago, and the people are not for the Yantic pumper and for more light at Bean Hill in the streets, and more light is what we all need just at It is to be expected ‘ g care of the removal of dead trees. but| make a total tax in Norwich of about look after the trimming | of the trees in the streets both for the | high water mark for any city in New protection of tke traveling public as|®: well as for the sake of appearances. That is what most every city expectS| ;" ine building business with the| to do now but the idea of authorizing [ pyilding rates looked upon as pro- the board to set out new trees, which | hibitive even in the great metropols mean replacing dead ones wita|of New York. It would seem to be new omes wherever advisable, setting|a good time to defer 2 certain number along various highways each year, or placing here and there for the improvement of is ome that ought 10 be| oyl add at least 4 mills to the tax It is beauti-| rate and then we would have the rate fication work of high order and lasting | of a western mining town. No one mills. I think that would be the Thus it would look as though it is a good time to refrain from going in- the building of a junior high school until we get back to the level of a hundred cent d lar, when it might he possible to buill a new school. The running of it will be harmed if the project is post- poned until we get the war matters adjusted. High taxes may not do harm to something of a burden. 3 Tt is hard to discuss this jumior high school matter as there is so little that poitive nature to be gained from those who even claim to be *up in the matter. 1t is said there are none in this state, and Hartford. the With thousands of laundries closed| J2iC " 1" in New FEngland, gets people cught tol ajong with its old school districts and new i{mpression of wash day. no junior high school. . The superin tendent of the school in a big cit The appearance of Jack Frost means| says such a school should be only lo- ed business for the iceman ana| cated where tme chil@ren could go to the taijng of the winter's coal sup-| dinner and the school is still in an experimental stage. *¥rom another state educator comes the word that there is no recognized definition of a Iar&e | junior high school. only | * A prominent superintendent in this state says a junior high school is not; necessary. The fact that the taxpavers of this wouldn't be possible to enjoy all| hjghly taxed town cannot afford to try s get frosty mornings about this out a junior.high school ought to set- tle the matter and many people can- not see why the new styvle of school will not harm the Free Academy, and ite introduction might cause the peo- Some | ple to shift the aid from the Free looking for| Academy to the junior high school. Tt seems strange that though the matter has not been voted upon we see plans of the building inside and out. and if this is so what has become Von der Goltz is said to have joined| of the doctrine of the open covenant the bolsheviki, and Belgium can cer- | openly arrived at or keeping the world tainly testify that that is right where| safe for democracy. he belongs. A CrTTZEN. Norwich, Oct. 9, 1919, tung that it seems to me a plain e: position of the facts in the case, dis. Those radicals down in West Vir-| r.carging the feelings of the politci- ginia who -were made to kiss the flag | .t and those bigoted persons to whom probably took care to see that the| the mention of the words, England or kisses were placed on the red stripes.| Japan. is akin to the waving of the e No explanation is given for the ac- : 2 sons who have not delved any further tion of the former kaiser in the an-| into the question than mayn -of our rouncement that he has stovped saw- | so_called “big politicians.® Possibly be. felt that he| The Shantung province is about the might get overtrained. red flag in the face of a savage bull, would prove interesting to many per- size of the state of lowa, contdining some fifty-six thousand uare miles of territory. Tt supports nearly forty Just because it has banished yellow ! D . sk = million people and this in epite of the fever from the-worid it isn't to be sup- | face “hat loss than Raif of its 16 under posed that sanitasy sCiemcs is goimg to| cuitivation. lowa has a population of halt in the great fight that it is mak- | hut about forty persons too the square ing in other directions. mile, while the population of Shan- tung is nearly seven hundred in the If the whole of the Unit- W same space. Vhen the Pepneylvania state police! Z5™g TPI5CL W T densely populated insist that all meetings in the strike| o ‘Spantung province, instead of a area must be addressed in the English| jittle more.than a hundred million we ianguage -it-is @ move In beha¥ of| should have about two thousand mil- safety and Americanization. z lion people to feed B Tt was back in 1308 that a murder of It may be as Attorney Genmeral Pal-| two German missionaries in the Shan- mer says that the eost of living has been reduced 15 per cent. in spots, but Fy = . owes the present prominefice it is en- a feeling that this will be off-| j,vino in world politics. The murder set by increases, or actions that tend| which took place early in the 2 t increase, in other spots. -8 4 twng province occurred amd it is to this far reaching event, Shantung “t¢ked such a storm that in triment and a great expense in the| near future. and that we may be left| to work out ourselves after the advo- | the| cates have gome to another and bet- which | ter field arge of this work is that it is given power to plant trees along such streets as it may indicate. plain that - is to make it more| cetting as much for their money. streets| ¢ the tax asked by the selectmen| and the school board is voted and the | and giving au-| money for the Otis Library, the $17 to a board to go ahead with|500 for the Free Academy, and money ch work instead of leaving it to this. that or the other fellow to suggest or do as he sees fit. i and in Kiochou which is just across the bay from the capital. They bullt roads and paved streets; thev estab- lished a Forest Garden which covers two hundred and seventy acres and a reforestation tract of three thousand stupendous effort a thing that makes every thoughtful man almost tremble when he thinks of it. We must not forget that every fourth man on this earth is a China- man: that they hanz together like no other peovle on the ziobe: that they are the geniuses of the world: that a| thousand vears ago. they were the| greatest inventors in the world andi may be again for thev have it in them: that they have never been war- ! riors but always lovers of peace. Could! the Chinese have been turned from | to war and under the yoke of| @erman militarism, they could havei rocked the very earth like a cradle. Napoleon Bonaparte, and he, one of the greatest military geniuses that ever lived. after a long study of China, said, “Yonder sleeps a mighty giant that when wakened will make the world tremble.” peace | i that year Germany demanded and se- cured for ninety-nine years an iron- clad lease of Kiaochou bay with ad- joining' territory of two hundred square miles. To be more exact. this territory consisted of thirty-three townships and has a population of{ 192.000. Around this leased territory is a neutral zome of twenty-five thousand square miles In area. - Tt should be understood at this point that the territory in question todayv which is the cause of all the trouble is not the whole of the Shantunz province, which is as said previously, about fifty-six thousand square miles, but only this small territory held by the Germans with the railroad lines they were allowed to build and such like. In this. some of the opponents of the League of Nations are trying to muddle and befog the minds of the people by making them beiieve that the whole of the Shantung prov- ince of China is involved. The capital of the German colony of Kiaochou is Tsing-tao. On taking possession the Germans hegan & mighty work of improvement along every line. Tt is estimated that the: spent one hundred million dollars ii fortifications and improvements A vier four miles long was built in the harbor. Tmprovements of all kinds were made in the city or Tsing-tao cres more. Then the Germans began a _most to militarize China, No thinking man who visited China before the outbreak of the war doubts for a moment that Germany was at tempting to militarize that count, Gvery time a Chinese soldier was seen. you saw a German gun. of ourse it would take a generation or two to accomplish the result aimed at, the turning of this great nation from peace to war, but Germany started in to. do that very thing. thinKing no doubt that with the Chinese nation she could enslave and rule the world. thus accomplishing her dream of ‘World Empire. It should not be for- cotten that the plans of Germany were laid for generations-unborn and that this late war was but the beginning of a world conquest to Jast for ail time. Japan, naturally, angry that Ger- manyv had secured a foothold in Chi- na began at once a silent and far- reaching plan to outwit the kaiser. The great Kitchener vigited Japan and was entertained like a kine. The good fellowship between England and Japan was cemented by an alliance and cel- ebrated b vthe great British-Japanese Exposition in London held af Shep- herds Bush. which, according to those who attended it. was wonderful, to say the least. Then came those August days of five vears ago, pregnant with the teg- ror about to burst forth upon the earth. QGerman armies started across Belgium and Pngland entered the war. Japan had not been sleeping. and though the inducements offered to Japan to remain neutral were great, <he refused them and sent her ulti- matum for the withdrawal of all Ger- man warships from Chinese and Jap- THAT CHANGE IN Mys. Godden Tells How It ‘Fremont, O.—*‘I was passing th the enfie:l' period og“lih. b“:-‘og E.f";éz flag of Japan was fiy Obseryation Tower o German capital. When the guns ceased their booming the German military envoy., with his staff, presented himseif and | surrendered unconditionally. Of the Japanese forces concerned, 416 men were Killed and 1542 wounded, while the wounded Some -time previous thel kaiser had warned hoth FEurope and!| America of the danger of the Yellow Perril, especially mentiontng Japan in terms’ of hatred. A few weeks later when the first bach of German prison stepped from the train each one| was met by a Japanese lady who pre- | sented him with a chrysanthemum | and gave him a welcome address in| German. Some difference in the Jap-| anese “kulture” of the ladies of the| “Flowery Kingdom” and that ‘kul- tur” displaved by the German men in their treatment toward p oners on their journey through ‘Fatherland” off their way to a pri on_camp. Now in this whole affair Japan never took a single thing from China; she took it from German iron-clad agreement for, ninety-nine vears. Japan says that she will event- ually restore it to China and _ her statesmen indicate that this will be| done in a very short time. But she| asked the peace conferece that she be| allowed the use of the railroads and! placed there by Ger- | all other propert) many until she has back the money| secured from entitled to any of the interned Ger- man steamships or anything eclse we took from Germany. these objectors say that this Is| and should be restored| But stolen propert - WOMAN’S LIFE May be Passed in Safety and Comfort. 5 six years of age bad all the symp- tomsincidenttothat change—heat flash- es, nervousness, % wuin-geun!mn‘ down i 80 it wum for me to . pound was recom- ‘{mended to me as the S b é‘f( best remedy for my troubles, which it surely proved to be. I feel better and stronger in every way since taking'it, and the annoying & toms have p- peared:”” — Mrs. M. GODDEN, 925 Na- poleon St., Fremont, Ohio. Such annoying symptons as heat flashes, pe;qfiuanu;. ‘lgckuhe, head- ache, irritability and ‘‘ the blues,”” may -be speedlly overcome and the system restored to mormal conditions by this famous root and herb remedy Lydia E. Piilfkhcm’n Vegetable Com; complications present them- any 8elves write the Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for suggestions how to overcome them. The result of fol years experience is 2t your service a your letter held in strict confidence. T anese waters and the surrender of the ieased territories of Kiaochou to Japan unconditionally, with a view| to its eventually goin; { A week had been given to the kaiser| comply with the request and the| completion of that period without re- the Japanese government issued | the following: * “We hereby declare war against Germany and we com- mand our army and navy to carry on hostilities against that empire with all| their strength and we also command| all our competent authorities to make very effort in pursuance of their re- ective duties (o attain their ha- tional aim within the limit of the law of nations.” At once the Japanese navy, assist- ed by a small Eng and on Novem English lost 15 and had 61 spent in taking it. She has not tried in any way to interfere with the sovereignty of China and has nothing| to do in any way with any part of Shangtung province except that small portion covered by the lease which she| Germany. If Japan is| entitied to this then we are not once. One very remarkable thing about these very men is that sofne of| them were in the U'nited States sen- ate when Germany took it from Chi- na and they never lifted either finger | or voice to prevent it Some of then is rumored were actually party to letter of congratulation that was sent (o the kaiser at the time, but now that Japan took it from him and asks the use of it for a time, they are raising a_ tempest about it. They say na, but how do they know what Japan will do? While the sympathies of the writer are wholly with China, never- theless, he feels that it would be a thousand times better for Japan te have the territory for the origina\ term of the lease than for Germany to have it for half the time. Japan will not restore it to Chi- EDWARD LAWRENCE. Norwich, Oct. 7, 181 OTHER VIEW POINTS If the six voles Great Britain has to .our one count only as the one against our ome we wonder why it ever occurred to anybody to _grant| them. Wt have never known Lioyd- George to fall asleep at the post be- fore—New' Haven Journal-Courier. King, Albert must be methods of entertainment in a repub- noting that PRICES NO OBJECT LAST WEEK OF SALE Schwartz Millinery Must Go This Week Velvet Hats, trimmed and untrim- med, 29¢c, 97c and $1.97° The Carpenters are waiting to get in to fix the place up for THE PASNIK CO. Sale Is Going On Next Door to the BatheYour Baby i WITH jLACO CASTILE soaP! MADE FROM PURE OLIVE OIL L IN OLD CASTILE, SPAIN 4 oo mmemnsmssmms mmomm camed back to China. | Today and Saturday OLIVE THOMAS : 5 The Spite Bride This picture is simply a knockout. It is the best thing the screen has seen in many moons. It has snap, dash and rest. A human picture of human people presented in a human way. Louis Bennison And an All Star Cast Headed by KATHERINE MACDONALD, Who scored a decisive personal House triumph in “The Woman Thou Gavest Me.” . proceed- | the white | above the! HIGH POCKETS A compelling story and lightning who had it in an| vacht previously Wanamaker's personal and busi-| S SO0 ness friends andvmade jolly with one; jhippeq out to the farms? Afterall the brass band of firemen and another of { sPPEC OUL 10 CAT TREMS T, STIEN street_cleanets which play alternately| (o O FPCORTINON Brabanconne” and the musical| PeOR AORET B0, A o terpieces of George M. Cohan—|1% DAL tAe o0 tford Times. “Take your horses with you, the men will need them for the spring plow-| ing” In some such words Grant spoke| | to Lee at Appomate there the work of making a new nation; most of it farther south from of America. The great captain or|border. He is bheginning Union armies throught not of red| some respect for the war powers of tape but of the instant need of things. édneiflay, Oct. 15th CLOSE-UP OF A TIRED BUSINESS MaN " UNDER THE HAPPY INFLUENCE e/ W ARTHUR HAMMERSTEINS HULARRIOUS aMfi/(/iFw- ‘s Y MUSICAL PLAY ~— DIFFERENT Boox ALONZO PRICE ™ & lpics by RAN D MONTHS /o PIUSIC by ANTONIO BAFINNG ' Ny )'fl)‘:Pk / AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA ENTRANCING. ENSEMBLE OF GORGEOUS GIRLS PRICES—50c, $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00—War Tax Extra Seat Sale Monday—Mail Orders Accepted Ncw. THEATRE Production Huff N Plenty of Real Comedy. BRYANT WASHBURN BN A Five Part Comedy SpN— insure the all-vound suc- cess of this feature. TONIGHT : e PATHE NEWS i T g the army. Why couldn't the are’going to have such { they have seen Paree” have | Garter {(and other articrl’vgd) Arx;:vnc‘ddfly as Grant treated the remnants of turns him over to one Rodman Wan-| . ;s pz & 7 1 i e thin gray ne And the trueks amaker, who takes him for a spin on| the thin sTay line? = And o loaded with 300 of s wrangles and while congr: and Villa is Learning. and began right| planning to get Carranza but his Uncle Sam. — Raleigh N of the sales of army mules, | Observer. MILLER LIGHTING > FIXTURES Artistic designs of the Adam period harmon- ize with any scheme of home furnishing. OUR SPECIAL PRICES .ON THESE BRACKETS ARE:— Anbigue Gald . .. .. L. oav e by . SID2S Colonial Silver .................. $12.50 5 Light Chandelier, Antique Gold. ... $24.00 Colonial Silver .................. $28.59 SEE THEM IN OUR . DISPLAY ROOM The Norwich Electric Company 42 Franklin Street SR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY An Emerson-Loose New OH, YOU WOMEN With Ernest Truex and Louis A Five Part Paramount Picture of Girls and War Herces With PUTTING IT OVER From George Weston's Popular Story “The Village Cut-Up.” A Roof Garden Rough Two Part Rainbow Comedy DANCING = PICKETT'S ORCHESTRAL er somewhat from those pre-|artillery horses and other animale by in the more formal monarchies. When England would be limiting him to the precise recreations tendered by King George, surrounded by beef cat- Life Guardsmen, Knights of the} 2 hard | staying down on the farm “now treated as well by the sovernment to- uldn’t they have Villa is catching on. He is st

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