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. NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1918 3 Telepbzas Oua. s Pullecin Job Offies 38:2. Wiimestic Office 13 Chuwh 5t Teiephone 105 Norwich, Saturday, Nov. 1, 1919 ———— WEMBER OF TNE ASSOCIATED PRES3, The Amociien Press s exchusivesy eatile 7| =t ew for republication 5t all cows Cemateh- | ot nat cimerwis credited in ) CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING OCT. 25th, 1919 Postoffice at Norwich, Comn, w ently been waged so persistently that it has won out. It means that the warships are going to be used for the purposes' that they were built, though operated by different hands and in view of the fact that any of the na- tions that may secure the vessels are sooner or later going to build more ships there is no good reason Why these vessels should not be utilized for such service as they are available. It is a wise prevention of waste if i goes through. THE LATEST STRIKE. The government shows every indica- tion that it is alive to the situation that is faced by the strike of soft coal miners and that it i prepared to deal with it in a manner that will permit those who desire and are willing to rk to do so, see that production is ept up and guard against any undue advantage being taken of the condi- tions to jump the price of coal, The laws and machinery necessary for dealing with the situation are ailable. As an evidence of its at- titude the senate has pledged its sup- port to anything the administration may Jo to avert loss and suffering. !The acting head of the miners de- claves that the strike will not last lonz as if he believed that they had as good as won the fight already but while it may not last long and should not, there are no prospects of seeing | the demands of the miners granted. Big claims are being made by the e s TR0 LONG, strike leaders regarding the number Vg the sug sation is|that will go out but it is to be re- pE= by telegram sent {0 Sena- | mombered that the strike has not been RRgE BEcX sugar equalization | cgjieq the result of the Miners’ R vas prepared 10| vote and the deflant attitude of the ind up tivi was ) get suff nuanc This come ate i some continuance regardless of t nothing that am been ere t become price that no great amc ad today at a r ‘uba rises trouble the board WORKING OUT WELL. The adv - Sater Of the wor d effect it the commander ments case to quel ble. thr matter passed upor v weil displayed not « troops moved o G that within a ernor of Tenness: to maintain order in F soldi auty. The outbre brought s *he dela Sot the ng troops for federal assistar state tr what he is tal g military a ular pass upon st nedessary ree n ey conditic the prevail the service 1o render jj ance that when and not THE GERMAN SHIPS. Bver since the Germ were turned ing the signing of has been 2 hard Fart of Great Bri ¥ai men in this co wessels taken out in sunk. This plan gardless of the depri was advocated re- tion of sugar from of leaders may not be accepted by such arge numbers as anticipated. There are those who can be driven about like a lot of sheep and there are others who cannot Whether this will prove the climax to a number of strikes in which con- t have been treated as scraps of remains to be seen. The lead- \ave insisted upon having every- their own way regardless of the effect it will have upon the people and business of the entire nation. Public sentiment runs strongly against the course that has been taken by the miners but it is in full sympathy with the action that the government is prepared to take to meet it feeling that it is time to eurb such & group of men which is responsible for the ex- situation. pape ers thin; THE BAY STATE CONTEST. han the usual amount of in- tached to the gubernator tion in Massachusetts next 1side from the political rivairy. rnor Coolidge is up for reelection is opposed by Richard H. Long democratic candidate, but the t is being waged not as might sposed along political lines but conduct of the governor in tion with the recent strike of policemén in Boston, opponent shouid seek to 1 issue of that affair is beyond terstanding. Governor Coolidge cd the seriousness of the it- le or conne the ¢ recognized what was at i demanded that there be zid respect for the law and that the honor and dignity of the common- L wealth be upheld. it was a courage- ' ous stand but as-might have been ex- e d i ho had sh inte hurt the feelings of- some more consideration for ts than for the welfs nlea governor i fily appreci end f5m B rpor 1. ed the the comn democra- Long for gov- This patriotic action of the gov nor’'s should never have been drag- into politics and probably would t have heen had thete beeri any oth- er possible means of attack, but inas- nuch as it has been the good common » of the Bay Btate voters can be relied upon regardless of narty to pile i the bigger majority for the man not afraid to stand back of neiples- that so vitally affected te, on the ticket in bolting Mr, ernor. ¥ho W EDITORIAL NOTES. o seems o be able to turn as bad steamship disasters s any vort in the country. It is always a fact that the news of 1|en increase in prices always travels r than when t s a decided T miner: declaration of war plaimiy indi that those who gave |4 © had 1o experiencos in the It reflects no credit upon a union cader to ciaim that his organization onsible for the calling out of no telling where the out- pieces of property are » be found the morning after Hallow Undoubtedly the M n bandits announcing that the big increase nsom demands is due ‘o the aigh of living. It doesn't make much differerce whether the government is robbed or |just wastes the money, it certainly °ts away with a lot of 1t. The man on the corner says: It is ather hard to tell avhich' of the hot erta o the allied nations or vessels which | 1475 15 Indian summer, but it is easy B aai8 use to advar xven | €10UEH to tell which are not. this mn“,y S comstbnad its D—n;wmw the operators for the strike just as if % o flact the operators had anything to do with Mlon of a division of the flect would | (%, miners' determination to break be decidedly small. When the German a eeeded in sending the fleet sue- their contract. : the bot-| mhe trouble with the miners seems tom in Scapa Flow it was considered |{, pe (pat if they don't get the six- that the ideas of the British had been carried out though in an way, in an unsatisfactory by the wrong parties wessels were saved and others have Deen ralsed by salvage crews and in formation now comes to the effect that Great Britain and this ntry are Wbout to consent to the divi gemalning German ships in earrying out the policy of d “them. From the very first Frafice was op- to the British plan.and it re- the support of Italy. These na- contended that the be divided among. the und spot and on of the tead allied ble |4 Certain of the of warships “"""":fii‘i‘i'-‘f"”:'; hour day and the five days a week v won't have so much time to run { their automobiles. Norwich having been asked to par- ticipate in the opening of the new highway bridge at New London will have to invite New London here for the, opening of West Thames street, but no ptans can be made yet. Bolsheviki are not made by standing for right, the respecting of contracts, mainienance of iaw and order and a square deal. They spring up where common sense has been _eliminated, making room fer red influences to tako root. y v § | | 1 | any bird lurge THE MAN WHO TALKS T These are times when we are com- pelled to notice the truth of Swif’s declaration that “laws are like cob- webs, which may catch emall fiies, but let wasps and hornets break through.” We have seen Germans red-handed in crime given a féw months in camps of detention because there was no law to fit the™ cases; and we have seen American_citizens who declined to be vaccinated (violated military disci- pline) sent to a government prison for 18 years. In the face of such cond- tions it is mot strange that it can be sai@ ‘There is nothing sure about law but the expense!” The heathen Chinee has laws which punish crime and re- ward _virtue; and we civilized folks have laws which fit little offences and let the virtues take care of them- selves. Ism't it true that the law which is unjust murders reason? It is not so many ages ago that it was a bad boy who laughed in meet- ing! There was nothing bad in the laugh, for a laugh long ago was ap- praised as worth “a Hiindred groans in any market!” The laugh in meeting was simply a laugh out of order. No one should do more than smile in church, although both a laugh and a smile are said to add something of value to this fragment of life.” It is more than probable that boys are guilty of laughing in meeting today, as they always have been; but they are not and never have been guilty of laughing at anything divine. Their el- ders are often guilty of saying things funny, or saying things grotesquely. It was Greville who asks ‘“because man was the only creature that laugh- ed, does he not deserve to be laughed ati® From the way things move nowa- days who would think “nromptness is the soul of business.” \ve are told a treaty is a scrap of paper, and we are aware that a promise may he siretch- ed like a piece of pure rubber. You and I know the man who goes and Qoes a thing tho moment he reslizes it ought to be done is not a common man, but a wonder! The At-once- men in real life are the ones who do things in industry, business and go ernment. Too many people are fol- lowing that will-o'-wisn of Averice to “get something for nothing!” So in- fatuated do they become with this idea that they do not notice that those who are furnishing “something for nothing” have become multimillion- aires. No wonder keen business men come to recognize that ten suckers are born every minute. Who ‘looks for wisdom in trade? Who looks for promptness in industry? Isn't every- body looking for a rake-off? Bird lovers who talk about bird shoula not be careless in their tz s i about t , for a sparrow, a junco, and a bluejay are all finchy The finches include a v riety of large and small birds clas: fied according io the form of their bills for cracking hard shelleq seeds or nuts. In a reputable book by an able writer upon nature “the finches” were spoken of, and no one could tell wheth- referred to_snow birds or cow- ¥ one er he Dirds. talking of goldfinches an allusion to them as would be correct enough, but since finch is not an individual or varietal mame, “the finches” means | or smali from the fox- to the Evening Grosveak. The finch is-a linnet. Mind your £parTO step! The family that cannot talk without raising issues and resorting to argu- Home ment talk ful s are indeed unfortunate. should be with neighborheod zossip. left out. It was Montague who in ta i declared he preferred the pleasant and the witty before the learned and grave, in which he differed somewhat from Martin Luther. The subjects for conversation are glories, our griefs and hes and pains. In the matter of talk there is a great deal of ficiency: and because of it much | brought to ours: well | It It takes time—a century or more— to beautify that which was rcgarded in its day as beautiful, and in = later{ day as hideous. Anq since Colonel Theodore Roosevelt was only sixty- one years old when he died, not enough time has elapsed to soften the shock produced when one goes to the Roosevelt birthplace ang gazes on the furniture which has been reassembled, writes F. L. Garside in the Kansas City Star. We go prepared “How quaint!” ~and find ourselves saying “How funny!” The Woman's Roosevelt Memorial Association has purchased his birth- place, a fourtieth brownstone front 38 Hast Twentieth street, New York city. This house, while not old enough to be a landmark, is of a style that is rapidly becoming so rare that it is approaching that periog when people would go out of the way to look at.it, rgeardless of the fame given it by our beloved Roosevelt. There are 12 rooms in the house, narrow halls, flat-chested closets and a small bal- cony in the back overlooking a hand- kerchief-size yard. The price pald was $40,000. The association has put the furni- ture in this house in place, finding much of it in a good state of preser- vation in the various family attics. The original furnishings, family por- traits and other heirlooms have been given by the Roosevelt family, which is co-operating with “the a p.ociation in maRing thg interior ns § ich like it was in the days when Koosevelt was LPEtS than in anything else it works on. a child as can be. 2 But this was not enough; The place) would become merely a Roosevelt museum were there not some mean’ provided for carrying out the-Roose- velt ideas and preserving the Roose- velt ideals. To meet this need the association also purchased the house next door, in which an uncle of the youthful Theodore lived, paying $45, 00 for it. With the addition of this building— the uniting of the two properties be- ing worked out harmoniously in the architecutral gesign—there is room for those things which the Woman's Roosevelt Memorial Association be- lieves will form a memorial to the| Roosevelt natwnal personality. ' There is, for instance, a free circulating brary containing not only the writings of Colonel Roosevelt, but many copies of the books which - interested him, those books on travel, natural his- tory and biography which had potent influence in shaping his career and his opinions. Classes will be held in this house for the teaching of English, the one lang- uage for all Americans foreign birth and to those who chance had to leave school before they acquireq a working mastry of the language. the nation, the state and the.city will be given to stimulate interest in good government, and a large assembly hall has been provided. The houses are only u block from Gramercy Park, which remains to th day exclusive residence di e but within this block, on both sides of Roosevelt no across the street and in the factoriey _are encroaching. Commerce has swalow up the homes m its march uptow! ciation mught not yet have ound brick of tlie two houses left standing had the members delayed ac- tion a year longer. It will be remem- membered, however, that the associ- ation was formed, ang the mohey be- n pouring in the day after the ex- President was buried. ‘The goal of the ociation is $1,- 000,000; there no ufdt the amount will be oversubseribed.. At the very first meeting $25,000 poured in, and to date the fund is between $75,000 and $85,000 with the work of appealing for funds not fairly begun. This associa- tion is working independently of the Men's National Memorial Association, which has started out to roll up $10,- 000,000, with which to erect two me- 1 upon others, is quite to zood v fine 1 plays e and pa to our d n eye will tell what is thought of you plainer t speech. Avarice, offense and love may be dis- covered looking out of this window of the soul; and the eye has been the rapid-firing pistol of the heart for countless ages. It can look as cold as an iceberg, or as hot as fire; and every nceivable look between. It is the organ to which confustion of tongues was no barrle The eye which warns or weicomes is readily recognized by all peoples. We are told the heart's hushed secret is often disclosed by a soft, dark eye! Fortunate is the man who can find in misfortune a moral tonic! Man and misery may have been born twins but that is ne reason why misfortune should be allowed to put him down nd out. Despair usually disappears s coming around the cor- you make your bed o you " say some, but the bold and arise and make the bed over. Some people are always looking for misfortunc, hence the maxim “The hardest misfortune is the one that never happens!” What seems to be a s the school of experience ing us a lesson upon our own weak- ness or folly, just to wake us up. It puts only the dunce to sleep. It was a woman who declared over a quarter of a century ago that “God s the great Emancipafor of man; not Lincoln, not the Czar. God has writ- ten the. emancipation proclamation of man in lightning on the walls of heaven!” It is also a fact that man will have to honor this proclamation, and when any man is scheming to op- press his fellow-man in_his own in- tefest for selfish purposes, and en- dowing hospitais and churches with money wruag frem the poor and de- serving, hell is just yawning for him, ver mind how loud or how often he What a burlesque man makes of life and power; and how little he heeds the Divine ' promises! Many people have wondersd why young forest trees will not grow by the seaside or upon bleak open spots, and their failure is no uncommon thing. The why of it could not be told until a farmer disclosed that their re- lation to Natuzg had been made un- natural. He'told a man who had fail- ed to make forest trees grow to make a blue mark on the north side of the tree before he tookK it up, and then to put the blue-side toward the north. “The bark on that side is thick- est to protect it,” said he, “and it will resi\ the frost!” This was done and rees have been thriving now for y quarter of a century. Nature always warning us to mind our step; and when we do We profit by it. When the blue jays come to the feed box all the small birds flee! Even the small birds seem to realize that bad company corrupts good manners—that royal dress is no evidence of a good character. 1 partially filled the box with cracked corn to attract the jays, and the black-throated sparrows came and they tossed the corn “overboard,” as the patriots did English tea in Bos- ton harbor, to keep the blue jays where they belonged: and their scheme worked all right—there was nothing left to lure the blue jays to their place of refreshment. The blue jay wears fine clothes, but-be isn't zoed cem-| HOUSE WHERE ROOSEVELT WAS BORN to say | to people of per-| Lecturas on the history of} {in any way attractive jlife ‘of another great American, who xg:riau: in Washington and jn Oyster Y. ‘There were 200 women at the first meeting; there are now more than 1,000 foundation members. “I feel,” 62id the secretary, “that the women owe more to Roosevelt than to any| other man of recent times.. Just one thing alepe t'4t he did has made fltul\tl?s women contented ~im their homes.’ 53 And that- was rural mail delivery! The Panama Canal closes up in in- significande ‘when combpared with what the 1 mail delivery means. to men and wdmen, especially weomen, in the isolated regions. g But 'to go back to the interior ol the birthplace of this great American. If you have a relative who furnished her parlor some fifty-oq years :\o, and has never done anythung to it but 'to.give it semi-annual cleanings since, You_Have rome i of how you are bifted in 1M 3 when you enter th parior of-the Rocsevelt house. Perhaps 1t w.gu. v catied the Mid- Victorian style. The name dvesn’t sound at all bad unless you have kin whose parlor haq made you previously acquainted with it. The carpets are of floral design; great bunches of blue roses and pink lilied with green of the greenest shade, all surrounded with broad sprawling frames of scar- let dividing one bunch from the one in_the mext strip. They are not pgetty. ' Time is slow- er_in its work of subduing these car- vt Siesie ~|'will speak in the W. C. T. U. Hall, 3¢ You lift your cxes fo.the wall for ni Torty PRince of Uster: DOne| g cer st. Sunday, & p. m. Sub- xe"el;, and o )'9“"“7‘1"“’{‘“‘“!'5"”«"- Monaghan, Tyrone, Fermaugh and Ca- |jeet, "Will _Rome Rule America?” Rig, pa. your, gandingtiel s ctugar . are th o - |What says the Bible about it? Al e T B R T pprer these colors screaming at you, YOU| ~ Cavan—Sinn Fein won both seats|swered. : oy Eit down on the soft, hoping to hut without -contest. Unionists, nomes [°= %o Yyour eyes and forgzet them. e b e ——— You slide off to the flogr, for the furni-| Untonister vore vy 4107 o Biene = : FOUR SHOWS TODAY ture is of haircloth and it is the same| ists, 30,041 against. here are not willing to assoclate them. 1:303-6: 15—8: {set on which the child Theodofe used| “Monaghan—Two seats. Unionists Tost, | S€1es With us in this government and . to scratch his bare legs. Of tourse,! Vote was 4479 for and 21,497 agamey| (0 becomd American citizens, they had June Caprlce there is a chandelier, made of long | Unionists. { better stay away, and if they come und prisms of glags; there i§ @ long mit-| Tyrone-Two con by ans | Are deter main al ey ror dn . rold frame in which . the| t1 Untasiste ene iy "ortononsVyne should be removed to some country AND morning glories on the wall are re-{was 30,068 anti, and 24993 Unlonists, | (hat suits, their ideas, whether 1t b} . flected, and tacre .5 (e carved wood-| Fermanagh—Two seats. Unionists| South Affica or Timbuctoo” = Bvery| Cre‘ghton Hale Diece hanging near showing a hunter's|svone one, Sinn Fein one. body will‘say Amen to that sentiment. dog pursuing 'a stag, which used 0| Antrim—Four seats. Unionists four,|{ —W aterbury American. N, worry . the child on his rare visits| Nationalists, one. A Connecticut _teachers’ agency is! to the. parior, 60 afraid was he that| Armagh — Two seats. Unionists |advertising in a Massachuset(s naper uT L Ch t)) e ohth B Nk v NS for teuchers. Teachers are evidently he Love eal he bookcases, (o quote Mr. Roose-| Derry—Trwo seats. Unionists won. |'so searce in the state that it is neces- ([ : : ; velt's awn description, are of “gloomy | Note here that Derry City always eall-|'saky to draw on other parts of the!f!t's a Romantic Comedy-Drama in l:wecmmmyfl' and your kin's parlor|ed “Protestant heart or Protestant Ul-| country for a sufficient supply. Thel|fl Five Delightful Acts of Haunting as some just as gloomy and as re- spectable of course. In the dining room there is a carpet and o wall paper that is lurid, and to “brighten up” this poom there aze! hung many fruit and game piecc the expected giass dish contai June strawberries and October ples in defiance of the difference 3 ap- | in their seasons; fish lying on the bank and hanging by the fins, Besides these hang pletures of the colonel’s hunting trophies of a later day. THe. interior of the house is not Dbeautiful, it is not even quaint, nor . if one goes to look for such things. Kut it is trne to life, which is much better. The visitor to the Roosevelt house forgets all this in th very precious privilege of standing, sitting or movinz Theodore Roosevelt stocd, sat moved, of seeing the household articls, which he used from infancy to man- hocd, and thus perpetuating in a spir- itual sense the contaét and comrade- ship which he manifested toward all his countrymen. It is recalled that a woman, Miss Pamela Cunningham, of South Caro- lina, started the movement among wo- men which culminated in the acqui mnt and restoration of Mount Ver- non. In like manner the women of todiy are perpetuating the intimate in his aims and in his achievements, comes a. little ncarer, perhaps, than any other man of modern time to cm- bodying the popular concept of ‘he vigorous, resourceful, fearless and un- compromising American. - pany, hence thig aloofnes birds seem to have ir an mee The small pons that are trusied v o rifle will carry and thickness of armor plate a .can- non will pierce must be known b men will go with them into batt.e. No weapon has been more severely tasted than the Bible. With the' Word of God in his hand, Jeremiah took his stand against King Jeholakim and won in the fight. And from that day to this the powerful of the earth have often been overgome by the feeble who have fought with the “sword of the. Spirit.” Not only against outward foes _has this divine weapon been victorfous; it has many a time beaten back the horis of temptation that war against the soul. The Saviour triumphed with it in the wilderness, and no followers of his who uses it can ever finally be beaten. The weapon of God's Word is power- ful against death itself. Befors it the king of terrors is driven back and de- feated. He cannot prevent the weak- est believer in its promises from mak- ing his way into the land of perfect and never ending joy. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Horses vs. Autos. Mr. Editor: May I use a portion: of your valuable space for a matter that I think deserves some consideration in view of the present high-cost of liv- ing, and one of the principal causes, of the same, namely, the automobile. The motor car is proving itself to be a real machine, of destruction, but particularly of human life, From the earliest dawn of civiliza- tion until the present day the. horse has been the most useful animal known to man. Whether in the van- guard, on the field of battle, or peace- fully turning the furrow for the farm- er; whether mounted for the race or hunt, or employed more humbly as the motive power for the bulk of all over- land transportation, th horse has al- ways been ital factor in the com- fort, convenience and pleasure of mankind. In song and saga, in pictures ‘and sculptuve, in history and in romance the horse has been recognized as the boon companion, and the proud, but faithful, servitor of the human race. Did you ever see a statue of on au- tomobile? Whether a national hero has been sculptured in bronze or mar- ble how often is he portrayed in com- pany with man’s most noble and use- ful companion, the horse! What oth- er animal is so signally honored? Did_you ever read a poem about the village garage? You remember, course, the many beautiful son; as the one heginning: “The farrier's daughter stands at the door Watching the sparks from the anvil| yresin fave pour.” You remember Longfellow's “Villaz Blacksmith” a charming poem of noble industry, ones. The romance of the horse is inter- woven with the tapestry of human history. What a_world of romance is involved in the history of the horse? The “rides” of “Lochinvar.” Paul Re- vere, and Sheridan! Carrying ' the news “from Ghent to Alix!™ “When Salvitor Won!” “The Charge’ of the iLight Brigade,” and the “Heavy. Brig- ade!” “he mocketh at fear and is not affrighted. - He smelleth the battle! afar off.” “For want of a horse (for and many other similar of | ¢ gs such | must still be depended upon fof the ®| any hundred-million-doilar avalanche 2| of sales publicity. the gene: ifterature | of n the battle was lost.” All full of the achievements plus the horse—from biblical down to the taming of the west- prafries. As a tribute - to fulne: nder the Great u , Alex treated his favorite Steed, Bucephalus, “like a princ in_an emergency, offe Richard the Third, was only too glad to a “Kingdom for a Horse. Wil the horse joing the dodo in ob- livion? Many pérsons now believe that the horse is slipping into oblivion and that he will soon be as extinct as the dodo or the diplodocns. Mil- lions of dollats are expended month- 1y to persuade the public to buy mo- tor-driven vehicles and machines, and the true situation as to the horse has béen smothered from view by the lavish publicity of the manufacturers of supposed-to-be-substitutes. No- body has any incentive to svend a million a month to advertise the horse; nobody has any horse-factory where he can_turn out 3,000 a day to sell to the public. The horse does not need protee- tion; he needs publicity, Despite the ¢ high publicity carnival of the motor- car manufacturers, the horse is still holding his own in the United States. There ‘are twenty-two million hors- es in the United States. The horse will goon come into his own again when the facts in regard to his po- sition in the general economy of things Becomes known again to ail the peo- ple. When the facts are revealed as to the tragic experience of corpora- tions that have been hood-winked in- to using motor trucks for the usua! “horse-range” delivery it will ser many to thinking, who will return to the more profitable horse-drawn ve- hicle delivery, as many are now do- ing. And that is but one phase of the campaign of education that is to be inaugurated. | Horse facts for people of good horse sense! The automqbile, the motor trick and the tractor are all right in their place, but the nation has gone start, reving auto-crazy—led by the specious claims of the riotouus adver- tising that has been poured out by the automobile manufacturers. Thers are six million automobiles _in the United States, and not over a million families can properiy afford to own one of:them. This orgy of spendthrift prodigality, this wild, auto-intoxica- tlon is speeding the country toward a | crisis. ‘It is time that the facts were known and carefully appraised by all. T am seeking to bring a sane view on the part of the public of the actual situation. 1 do not seek to_displace the motor industry, but it should not be allowed to undermine the economic basis of our country. I have the facts to show that the motor-driven ma- chines can never supplant the horse within a certain range of efficiency, say up to ten or twelye miles at least. will demonstrate that the horse most vital work that is involved in the term “transportation” and in labor on the farm. I will show vou cost fig- r of the horse that can not be gainsaid or buried from view by Lincoln highways are all right, but Dobbin highways arer economic neces- sities. 1 will show the economic erime of building all the new roads for motor traffic, whereas the sensible plan would be to put a strip of highways Children Cry cago, [l have thess, records: with & one horse wago |1y the horse outiits are overloaded 100. here | fs or| designed for the horse-drawu vehicle || :uonfiflde of every fancy motor-roadi Wilson & Co., meat packers, of Chi- Cost of " delivery, average trip, 10 miles: - First year, with a two ton au- to=truck, 35 cemts per owt. First year; 13 3-10 cents per ¢wt. First vear, with a two wagon, 7 8-10 cents per cwt. year, with a four horse wagon, 5. 9-10° cents per cwt. Second year the cos would be so small as to not affect the. truck, due to depreciation and larg- er repairs. Depreciation of _wagoni would be so small as to not effect the figures for the vote cast by the voters: ton— $2,200. Initial cost of two. horse truck, harness and horses, $1,000. Life | of auto not. over 5 years. Life of horse outfit 15 years of good service. Pwo'l teams of mules will do as mueh work( as @ 5-ton truck. Truck costs $6,000.! Mule outfit costs $1,000. No_overioad is safe with the auto-truck. Frequent- FouR SHOWS TODAY 1:30, 3:15, 6:15, 8:16 MAURICE TOURNEUR PREBENTS THE WHITE HEATHER A 6 Part Paramount Artoraft Special CHAS. RAY iN ENID. BENNETT| HAY FOOT IN THE . vEYoops | STEAW RReT THE FIRING ~LINE § Part Paramount ..~ MArteraft. Special A Brilliant" picturiza- tion of Robert W.! _Chamber#’ famaus novel: - - From the World-Fame Stage Success, By Rose Melvitle. 3 A Romance of New Harmony—In the Good Old Summer Time: - per cent. These figures are just,an average of thé common experience. Very smgerly, . HORSE SENSE. POST TRAVELS ~ Norwjch, Oct. 1, 1919, i * THIEF ° Rube Comedy Drama |1opicg oF THE DAY Voo —— 5 Part Drama e e The Vote in Ulster. 4 EW EEKL Mr. Bditor: Continuing Ulsterite's|§ BACK TO THE THE MILK cxcellent answer to Mr. Ringland's foolish statment that the other sec-| tions of Ireland seek to dominate Ul- ster, I take the liberty to present’ the figures fo rthe vote cast by the voters of the province of Ulster at the gen- |- eral election in December, 1818, - Ro- member the names of the nine coun- FED VAMP A COMEDY RIOT BILL’S HAT COMEDY KITCHEN _ Mack Sennett Comedy EVANGELIST W. R, UCHTMAN ter,” was won by Sinn Fein, proving his' is not purely a religious question, an that_all creeds are represented ong the champions of Irish free- dom. To sum up these Mr. Ringland & . will notice that of the nine coun- ties of Ulster three voted overwhelm- ingly anti-Unionists, two gave ub- stantial majorities against English rule and four for English rule, with heavy oppesition: Is this an indication of outside domination? Honestly, you cannot fail to con- o from’ these facts and figures that ster desires liberty. Of the twenty- three counties outside of Ulster the Unionists captured only one seat. Here n simple statement of total vetes: fonists won 326 seats, Anti-Union- won 79, Unionists' total vote,l Anti-Unionists’ _vote 1,207,- Only one voter in five voted for rule “Mr. Ringland,” and acts” please note these facts. opinion should prevail—ire- advertisement asks for high school, as well as normal school graduates. This seems to beranother evidence of - the ‘scarcity of teachers in the state when one remembers that not to many years ago a high school education was not considered sufficient equipment for teaching. Waterbury’s board of education s cvidently waking up to the ever in- creasing scarcity of teachers in its recent recommendation that the re- quested increases for Waterbury edu- cators be granted. 4 Teachers are at last coming their own. There used to long waiting lists for positions that school officials and agencies needed scarcely to ®o out of their office for applicants for positions. The great exodus of men and women from poor- ly paid teaching’ positions into other positions is making itself felt. Tt is to be hoped that the board of education will ‘be first in doing every- thing possible and reasonable to keep the -best men and women for the all- important education of future citizens hefore other callings gain them all— ‘Waterbury Republican. Sweetness. What Is a Love Cheat? Surely this handsome young fellow who was madly in love with the millionaire's daughter couldn't be salled a CHEAT; now could he? We'll Leave It To You! LOUIS BENNISON i “SANDY BURKE OF THE U BAR U” PATHE NEWS COMING MON. AND TUES. NAZIMOVA —IN— “THE BRAT” into such Whose land’s voters, or Mr. Ringland’s? SELF DETERMINATION. Norwich, Oet. 1, 1919, OTHER VIEW POINTS The president is’ hithself , gullty “of Qealing in technicalities when hesiys that the suspension of thé war time. prohibition is dependent upon the rati- fication of the peace treaty.—New Haven Journal-Courier. Those who regretted some of Theo- dore Roosevelt’s thoughts and deedsj are among the first to recognize the tremendous value to the country .of aggregate service, of his eareer.. of' character. . To commemorate him. to commemorate an epoch in the development of his and our United States.—Hartford Times. Sunflower stalk pith, which is ahout ten times lighter than cork, is used fn & life-saving apparatus in vented by a Russian. THERE i5 no _advertising medium n Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bul- ietin for business resuits. — e e Central Baptist Church Union Square { EVENING SERVICE AT 7:30 SPECIAL MUSIC BY MISS RUTH STICKNEY In thanking the jury which convict- ed a couple of foreigners of eriminal anarchy for an attack on our govern- ment in n Swedish paper, Justice Weeks of the supreme court in ~New. York city laid down this general prop- VIOLINIST, OF BOSTON St it i A Good Place To Go Sunday Evenings immigration. but if those who come — $48.75 ASALE OF COATS $48.75 Beautiful Winter Coats with Fur collar and lined throughout with figured satin. Everyone is different and an individual model. Not one worth less than $55.00, others in the lot worth $62.50. Materials are Bolivia, Silvertone, Suede, Velour. Colors, Reindeer, Brown, Beaver, Taupe and Cocoa Brown. Other Coats without fur collar, at $35.00. SERGE DRESSES All Wool Serge, prettily embroidered or with braid and button trimmings. 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