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&orwich Bulletin and Qoufied 123 YEARS OLD ':“-'I-lfilfllzl-ll‘-lll. wciod sian il Tolepdzas Calls. Sulleiin Businew Office 480, Bullets Vditorial Rooms Bulleti i the Fostoffics at Narsich, Cosn, s 85.3. n Joo Offies 35.2. Wltimantic Offics 23 Chureh St Telephone 105. MEMBSER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Do domugid Fup b guietnn st ® the use for'republication of All bewr Cemaich- w credited Lo i1 or rot otberwise crediied ln D e - local rews published n. All rights of republication of srecial desmpated- @ berein are also reserved. CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING NOV. 1st, 1919 10,332 PROTECTING CONSUMERS. The very stand that was to be ex- pected is that which is taken by the government relative to the order for- bidding the coal operators from charg- ing over a certain price for their pro- duct. It is to be expected that there will be a drop in the amount of bitu- minous coal mined. It cannot very well be helped with hundreds of thousands of miners quitting, but it is to be real- ized that from amounts on hand and that which is being taken out daily from the mines that are in operation the supply will not be cut off. Be- cause of conditions the demands are heavy. Everyone using soft coal is trying to protect himself against the possibility of empty bins, and it is perfectly evident that a curtailed pro- duction is not going to provide the suppiy. Under such a state of affairs, with more coal being sought than can be produced, the natural thing would be for a rise in price and while the operators might not be the only ones who would get the benefit of boosted prices they would share therein, and there is no telling where the stopping place would be. It therefore time, right at the beginning, that the government should return to its war time policy, even though thé war is not going on, of fix- ing the maximum price at which coal can be'sold. It is to be supposed that this will be fair to all concerned, that it will protect the users and that it will also provide a fair return for the operators, The need of it can be ap- I ated in forestalling the unscrupu- lous operators and the coal scalpers. What the government is doing in connection with this strike is endeav- oring to avoid a protecting the miners who work and seeing that industry, trans- portation and business are not crip- pled, But while it is doing that 1t would be remiss in its duty if it did| zuard against the profiteers who are ready to take advantage of such a OUR AIR SERVICE. are those who are inclined to th alarm the attitude that view wi has been manifested in congress in re- fusing to appropriate s an additional aviation service of This is of course on the nd that we never have been pre- pared as we should have been in the r, that regardless of the efforts made during the war we have not progress- ed to the point where we should be, and without adequate funds to put this service where it belongs we are bound to be seriously handicapped in the protection of the country and the carrying out of any military service we may b# called upon to render. It will be agreed that all of this is true but it will also have to be ad- mitted that we were in a very disad- vantageous position as to airplanes in Europe until our allies came®o our assistance with machines that would meet the requirements. weakness in this respect is the same now as it was then. appropriations have been made 5,000,000 for the country. Big but there is but little to show for them, We have flying fields and trained avi- ators but there is little left with which to provide for the training of many others or for the production and improvement of machines. Much of the work now is devoted to the mak- ing over of the macp'res which havs and which need it But the refusal to mak2 the appro- priation sought for for the air ser- vice does not appear to result from the idea that we are strong endugk in thut direction. No such m e could bo niade Rather does it ‘peir te le econtilered that we have made a iz- gle ¢f aeronautics as ..t present cai- ried on and that there should be a de- partment for that service by itself to establish a proper air service policy, to give the country what it needs in that direction and to properly guard expenditures before any more money | or such a large sum of money, is ap- | propriated for that purpose, w3 GERMANY MUST PAY. When the German warships were sunk in Scapa Flow it was the expec- tation of Germany to deprive the al- lles of the important fleet of warships that it had been forced to surrender. It was a wejl carried out scheme though not so difficult to accomplish under the conditions that existed. It wag as successful as could have been expected and more than a bit humili- ating to the British. Efforts have since resuited in the salvaging of cer- tain of the vessels but by no means all of them, so that the allies stood to lose much of what they had gained without battle. However, had the idea been carried out of sinking the ships it can still be contended by Germany that the same end is served though the honor of sending them to the bottom rests with Germany in- stead of the allies. In other words Germany would have to a large ex- tent overcome the effects of the sur- render, even though it was carried out only through a breach of faith. Now the supreme council of the peace conference has reached thg de- cision that Germany must make good for the ships that were sunk. This cannot be done by repiacing ship for ship but the equivalent of the valua- tion will be exacted. This must make e T S—— Norwich, Tussday, Nov. 4, 1919 | o disposition that stood out promi- nently throughout the entire war. Ap- parently thought wasn't given to any consequences that might follow the destructive plan, They didn't look for additional punishment. They didn't anticipate that they might be called upon' to make good. but that {s what has developed. Because of their ea- gerness to get in a parting slap at the allies they are now going to be be made to realize that those who dance must pay the fiddler. It thought it had a sufficient burden before hut ‘it has piled up for itself more trouble just as if it figured that it was get- ting off too easy, and perhaps Ger- many will realize some day that the allies can make better use of the substitute vessels than they could have of their much prized warships. THE RED CROSS, The membership campaign of the Red Cross is underway this week. Norwich is to be covered thoroughly in the effort to see that the present membership is maintained if not ex- ceeded and there are good reasons to believe that the result will be suc- cessful. Even before the war the people of this country were thoroughly in touch and sympathy with the objects for which this great organization was started. But the war, throughout which it played such a prominent part, served to demonstrate as nothing else could how invaluable such an organ- ization is in dealing with suffering hu- manity, With the ehding of the war the American Red Cross cannot fold its tent and quietly disappear until an- other struggle appears. on the hori- zon. 'There was work for it before the war and there will certainly be | greater opportunities for it following ‘the war. Wherever trouble, disaster or famine appears the Red Cross is to be found carrying on its ministrations in the same careful and thorough man- ner that the needs of the situation may be met as far as possible and re* lief extended. To be identified with this organiza- tion even though it is only through membership is an honor. Working for the cause of humanity, it should com- mand the.support of all individuals and whatever the goal- fixed there ought to be no difficulty, following the service demonstrations that it has given in the past several years, in reaching it in every community. Having stood loyally by the Red Cross in the past Norwich can be re- lied upon to manifest its continued keen interest in aiding the work. Keep | the good work going by renewing your membership or joining anew. RESPECTING RULES AND LAWS. ‘When Samuel Gompers came back from Europe not so many weeks ago it wa's realized that there was plenty of work ahead of him. Influences were at work in the American Federation of Labor that were aimed at chang- ing it to a radjcal organization either by getting control or by dominating it through the passiveness of the conser- vative element. And since reaching this country Mr. Gompers has found troubles piling up in all direc- s, some with his sanction and some ! without it. What this has developed into is shown by the statement of an investi- gator of labor disputes in which it is declared that of the 300 strikes in this country at the present time fully 90 per cent. of them are outlaw walkouts. That means that they are without the sanction of the national body and in many cases a defiance of advice and jorders received therefrom. Many of these strikes have taken place re- gardless of existing contracts and even though they zre threatened with ex- pulsion from the national body, or have been expelled in some ‘instances, there continues the same disregard for authority as there is manifested the determination not to obey law and or- der. With the I. W. W. and other radical influences boring from within, the American Federation, disregarding the principles of the organization and threatening to sap its vitality, it is a strange attitude that is taken by Mr. Gompers when he declares that he would efure to advice the federation members to obey certain lagvs even af- ter they were passed and had been declare@ constitutional by the sun- preme court of the country. This would seem to be playing into the hands of those who are at the present time defying the laws of the Ameri- can federation. EDITORIAL NOTES. With prohibition in effect the de- mand for cloves ought to undergo a tremendous slump. One thing is certain, more.attention will be given to setting out and culti- vating apple trees in the future. The man on the corner says: Consi- der how many campaigns of education there are and then how many grad- uates. With the government watching the operators even as it is the minars the interests of the public are getting fre attention they deserve. Both branches of congress are standing solidly back of the president first, last and all the time in the fight st the coal strike leaders. From.all accounts those who claim to be hurt the most by the prohibi- tion enforcement bill are doing a more profitable business than ever. Twelve million more is being asked for the Mussel Shoals nitrate plant and it hasn't begun to produce as yet though the original estimate is far ex- ceeded. Not even the government by its in- Junction claims that a man cannot quit his job, but it is equally perti- nent that every man who wants to | work should have that privilege. There are those whc claim ther- 1sa’t enough money in circulation. but ‘"¢ s trouble seems to he that it takes all ond sometimes a little more than the income to meet the outgo. Now it seems that Consul Jenkins gave a note for his own ransom. Im- mediate demands should be made upon Carranza not only for the full amount but for the running down of the ban- dit gang. Over a hundred colored men in Ar- kansas have been indicted by white Juries for conspiring to resist vio- Germany realize that it would have \been for its own interest had it been ‘Bhle to curb ifs disposition o destray, l lence. Those conspiring to cause the violence, wher the colored men are the intended victims, only get ap- - i e e i o e AFFAIRS (Special to The Bulletin), ‘Washington, D. C,, Nov. 3.—The city is still gay :‘ig: :hwa and stripes intermingled e Belgium flags of red, yellow and black, for the com- ing of the King and Queen of Belgium roused all Washington to a piteh of enthusiasm. In no other city of the country has the war, and itd con- sequent war work, been so much ‘to the front as here. The whole city has been in intimate touch with details of the war from the moment the United Statés enered into it, so little Belgium, and its tragic effort to stem the tide of blood has been in its foremost thought more keenly than elsewhere, The declaration of war by congress; the framing and putting into effect of the first man to be drafted were the draft law; the drawing of the name things we saw and heard not merely things we read about. One hundred thousand war workers came to the city in one year to take up the added work of government departments. The president, and his cabinet, Pershing and March are familiar figures here; until the armistice was signed Wash- ington streets were filled with soldiers and sailors in our own khaki and blue, and in the uniforms of all the allied nations. Here came Gen. Joffre and the French mission, Balfour and the English mission, closely followed by similar missions from other allied na- tions. Here the peace treaty and lea- gue of nations is being officially dis- cussed and here it will be either ratifi- ed or rejected; "Here is the Red Cross headquarters, and a gréat military hos- pital where thousands of wounded sol- diers are. still under treatment and whose armelss, legless and blind pati- ents are seen daily on the streets in the uniform of the United States army. So when the King and Queen reached ‘Washington the whole city rose to weicome them with perhaps a closer sympathy and warmer personal regard than would have been possible else- where, New England figured largely in the reception to the King and Queen. Speaker Giilett, Senator Lodge, Con- gressman Rogers of Massechusetts, in their official positions of speaker and chairman of the two foreign relations committegs attended all the state functions and it was Gillett who wel- comed the King to the house of rep- resentatives. The ladies of their fami- lies, together with Mrs. McLean, wife of Senator McLean of Connecticut were included in the receptions given for the queen, including dinners and luncheons of the most elaborate nature, The queen speaks English with great fluency and with scarcely a trace of foreign accent, but that of the king bears many foreign ear marks. Com- menting on the state dinner given by the vice president Congressman Rogers told of a number of little intimate happen- ings which throw added light on the democratic attitude in which the royal guests bore themselves, It was a case of “when in. Rome do as the Romans do” and so instead of receiving the guests presented to them by a formal bow both the king and the queen grasped each guest by the hand in a good old fashioned cordial American handshake, much to the astonishment of those who, earlier in the day, had seen men and women of the diplomatic corps bow low before them and kiss the hand of the queen. After dinner an officer of the king suite said to Mr. Rogers “the only things we Belgians do not understand about Americans is I their insatiable desire for speeches,” adding that the king had been called upon to speak from the rear end of trains, at banquets, dinners and all sorts of occasions, not excepting the dinner just concluded. The queen showed her appreciation of what Am- erican children had done for the little children of Belguim by asking that the kiddies she had seen on the floor of the house during the king's visit there, should be presented to her in the speaker's room immediately after- wards. These included a dozen or more children of members of congress, brought there that they might tell of the occasion in later years. She cud- dled the babies, and took the little curly headed youngsters on her lap to their great delight. The children for whom the queen had especially asked were those of Congressman John Q. Tilson of the Third Connecticut dis- trict, and when Col. Tilson . brought them to her she took them in her lap, kissed them and talked to them for several minutes. In the meantine Col. Tilson chatted with the young crown prince, whom he met while in France and Belgium with the military affairs committee of the house last spring.. When the king personaily received the members of congress who filed before him, it wis noticable that the queen remained standing in the presi- dent’s gallery until the reception was over, which took perhaps 20 minutesor more. Many persons in other galleries sat down again after rising to applaud the king at the close of his address, but the queen remaind standing, as of course did the half dozen ladies with her, including Mrs. Marshall and sev- eral members of the diplomatic corps. The queen has a most charming per- sonality and the king who is straight as an arrow, tall and good looking, was greeted by Speaker (illet as “The most manly of kings and the mest kingly of men” while the senators and representatives Who met him at recep- tions and dinners described him as “a mighty good fellow.” And apparently both terms fitted him to the dot. The republicans and democrats who oppose the treaty in its present form, led by Senator Lodge chariman of the foreign relations committee, are ready to fix the time for a final vote, apd urge that it shall be not later than November 10th. But the administra- tion spokesman, Senator Hitcheock, democrat, is holding it back. It seems to be generally understood that Hitch- cock is afraid to assume the responsi- bility of permitting the treaty to come to a final vote until the president ad- vises him to do so. The treaty, with the stiff reservations which will be- come a part of it, is certain to be in a form which the president said some- time ago would not be.acceptable to him. After him insistent demand that neither the crossing of a “t” mor the dotting of an ‘T’ should be changed Just how he will regard the document as it comes from the Senate is a mat- ter of conjecture. And unless he makes his attitude known, or instructs Mr, Hitchcock what course to take, the final vote may be delayed some time by administration obstructionists. ‘As heretofore it develops on Senator Brandegeeto represent the “last ditch. ers” for Americanism, and he is doing so without fear or favor. Mr. Brande- gee voices their views with vigor and eloquence, in the hope that when it is ratified no subtle infringement of Am- erican rights will remain in the “fore- ign contrivance” as he calls the league. With the exception of Senator Mc- Lean, who is still closely tied to im- portant hearings before the banking and currency committee of which he is chairman, Senator Brandegee, as second ranking member of the foreign relations committee, and Congressman Merriett, who is on the interstate com- For Superfl‘ wous Hair U<« DELATONE The Leading Seller for 10 Years QUICK — SURE — SAFE—RELIABLE Use Fresh as Wanted Ask Your Dealer — He Knows b il e A sl SRBY 5E When Bangpost opened the front|ashcan romance. Every little movie door the usual fragrances of dinner in | Star who ca prepiration failed to greet his nostrils. Furthermore, his alarm was completed by the sight of Mrs. Bangpost with | rupted with flushed face and hair awry, seated at| know anything about the strain of the desk amid a swirl of scribbled pa- pers. and lpw.ntlgiunaware of the existence of her husband. “What's the matter?” gasped Bang- ost. x P “H'm?” hemmed the wife of his bosom absently. Then her eyes fo- cused upon him. “Oh!” she said, “we’ll have to go out to dinner tonight—I'm writing a moving picture scenario for which T shall zet $10,000. I haven’'t had time to cook dinner.” “Jumping Jasper!” cried Bangpost, sitting down. *“You never wrote more than a two-page letter in your life. How—why—" “Well, the newspaper said that the Cataclysm company wanted scenarios for its star, Ivy Ilde, and the success- ful ones would be paid for at the rate of thousands of dollars apiece. And seeing somebody. is going to get the money, I decided it might just as well be me. They don’t care whether one can write classic English. What they want is ideas.” “Oh—only that?” asked Bangpost with the elaborate irony of a hungry man. “You needn’t be horrid,” said Mrs. Bangpost. feverishly sorting and col- lecting sheets of paper. “I guess I have as many ldeas as anyone. Why, you've always said I let my imagina- tion run away with me. The minute T read the notice my head just whirled with ideas.” “Well. well!” said her “How many have you written? “I've started three,” said Mrs. Bang- post, with a little frown. “I thought first of having n beautiful girl thrown out on the world by her drunken par- ents and nearly starve to death and have to sell flowers or papers or some- thing—and then have the hero run her down in his limousine. Then when he picked her un her beauty and childlike grace would so charm him that he would take her right home to his aunt, who managed his big home for him, and—* “Splendid!” cried Bangpnost. “T never heard anything so novel. There haven't been more than 10,013 of that style of husband. n wear curls and has long just loves a part like that” ““I didn’t expect any understanding sympathy from you,” his wife inter- coldness. “You don't writing things.” Maybe you'd care more for my mystery scenario. In that one Elijah X. Pipps, the hated hillion- aire, is found dead on his library floor with absolutely no weapon to be found or any clew to the murderer. Every- body in the house has a turn at being accused, and it looks black for all of them, But every one clears and—" “And the bright but poor young chap in love with Elijah's niece solves the mystery and the murder is ‘proved to have been done by the demented cousin of the druggist on the mnext cornen” completed her husband irritably. “The idea!” sniffed Mrs, Bangpost. “No such thing! 1t was a man who came «in' through the roof that Elijah had cheated in the goldfields in their younger days.” 3 “Oh, darling!” groaned her husband, “and are you putting out your pretty eyes and starving me in the bargain putting that stuff down on paper? If \VA | 1 ATR} o, TRENE _,?_AS TLE —TODAY-— A 6 part Artcraft By Rovert W, Chambors " ENID BENNETT N THE VIRTUROUS THIEF 5 Part Paramount Drama e e e . LOUISE FAZENDA —IN— BACK TO THE KITCHEN 2 Part Mack Sennett Comedy Coming Tomorrow MARION DAVIES in “THE DARK STAR"—An Artcraft Special. NAZIMOVA PRESENTATION OF THE GREAT STAGE TRIUMPH THE BRAT SEVEN ACTS OF SUPREME ENTERTAINMENT “BEECH NUTS” ROARING TWO-PART COMEDRY 30 Minutes of Heanty Laughter yowll forget this dream of $10,000 maybe I can scare' up a $50 bill to soothe you—" “I certainly shall not give it up,” cried Mrs. Bangpost indignantly. | “The idea! Throw away $10.000 as! though it was nothing. Just as soon as I can get by the point in my sce- narios where I seem to be stuck I shall be a]l right. T can.get them just so far and then I can't think of anything more to happen. It makes me so mad. If T could only get the right idea!” “You've said it” said Bangpost. “That’s the trouble with most scenario writers. only they don't know it. Why, if the Cataclysm company would pay people to quit writing rotten scenarios it would earn the sohbing tharks of a suffering populace. They=could show | pictures of Ivy Jdle tobogganing down Mount Hood and everybody would be just as happy. Come on ont to dinner.” “Well,” eighed Mrs. Bangpost, “T might as well. T can’t think of a sin- gle other thinz to write and I'm awful- Iv hungry. But you needn't think I'm =oing to ahandon all that money just becawse vou make fun of me.”—Chi- cago News. | | merce committee now framing a rail- road bill, the members of the Connecti- cut delegation are on committees now marking time, and which will have no more urgent measures put before them till the December session, The chaplain was late in reaching the house on Saturday and Speaker Gillett surprised the members by say- ing simply, *“I will ask the house to join in the Lord’s prayer” whereupon by a sharp tap of the gavel he called the house to order and led the prayer. [t was the first time in the history of congress that such a thing has hap- pened but the speaker performed the duty with as much ease and dignity as If he had not broken a century old precedent in order to save the house from embarrassment by a delayed opening of the sessien. The rules call for a morning prayer. IN THE DAY’'S NEW Riga. “He who thinks that vast monopo- lies are modern enterprises, or that chambers of commerce are latter day civic institutions, or that Prussians first strove to implant Kultur with a sword in 1914, will be disillusioned if he reads the history of Riga.” This statement is made in a bulletin from the Wgghington headquarters of the Ni ecgraphic Seciety re- lating e Baltic port where Ger- mans are #aporied to.bé attack- ing the‘L#ltish occupants. “Riga had*to wrest itself free from Prussian control once before, and thereby hangs the story of an early exploit like the attempted subjugation of Belgium and the deportation of its workers,” the bulletin says. “About ile middle of the twelfth century a few German merchants es- tablished settlements about the mouth of the Dvina, which empties into the Gulf of Riga nine miles below the present city of Riga. Whereupon Bish- op Albert, in the role of a mission- ary, sought to colonize the territory in 1201 by building a town where Riga now stands and the following year he founded the Brethren of the Sword. “The new order was well named. It killeq where it could not convert. though slaughter was not the main object after a N\ thold on the prom- ising Baltic porc was obtained. The ‘missionaries’ were satisfied to reduce the native population to serfdom, ap- propriate the land, and build fortified towns and castles to uphold this min- iaturé feudal system in a land thy timed to exploit. 4] “But the Livonians are a liberty lov- ing people. They resisted despotism then, and many times later, just as they rebel against Bolshevism today. When their early oppressors became too severe they arose, drove out the ‘missionaries.”’ and went in great num- bers to the Dvina. There they im- mersed themselves again and sent the waters back to Germany to show that they renounced the baptism imposed by the invaders. Later Livonia, and Riga, which became its capital, es- poused the Christian religion; and the Order of the Sword merged with the Teutonic Knights and continued its operations in other quarters, “Though Prussia’s political hold was shaken off Riga. it maintained its eco- nomic ties there, and individual Ger- mans usually have been important factors in its commerce. This phase of German influence was consummated when Riga, in the thirteenth century, became a member of the Hanseatic League, the first great trust which for two centuries controlied practically all | Liver and Iron Tonic, because the trade channels of continental Eu- Pl TRl rope north of the Alps. it is a constitutional remedy. “Riga was conspicuous among the eighty-five cities belonging to this : glant combine at the height of its | power in the latter fourteenth century. Thus Riga attained a commercial im- | portance which it never relinquished, | and evea in 1314 it was accounted sec- | ond only to St. Petersburg (now Pe- trograd) among the Baltic cities in the volume of its trade. “It is hard to realize what tremen- dous impetus the operations of this ROBUST .CHILDREN A child should not look pale, thin orworn. Such condition denotes malnutrition. To of food rich in vitamins. SCOTT'S EMULSION abundant i - i o P e mental food that could well be league of cities attained in the mid- dle ages. It had been formed for the sole purpose of resisting piracy; and it left in its wake such mementoes of its prosperity as Hamburg, Bremen and Lubeck, which retained their rights as free cities within the Ger- man Empire until its downfall. “The third modern aspect of mediae- val Riga is to be found in the famous ‘Blackheads’ It was this body which soon came to have the civic import- ance, and apparently many of the functions, of a chamber of commerce or board of trade today. “Originally it was organized by the young traders who came to Riga as a social club, to afford fellowship in ad- dition to the needful board and lodg- ings during their sojourn. Since the members were mostly young men, pro- gressive. and somewhat assertive, they took tbeir name to distinguish them- selves from their elders, or grey beards. Naturally their table talk tuined o wuys of promoting business, and soon the club became, in effect, an organization for a ‘Bigger. Better and Dusier Riga’ as the modern trade body would phrase it. The Hall of the Blackheads, built in 1330, is one of the oldest landmarks of the city. “A survival of the thirteenth cen- tury is the Cathedral of the Virgin, re- built most recently in 1883, when there was installed one of the largest pipe organs in the world—almost as large as the mammoth instruments at As- bury Park, N. J., and in the town hall of Sydney, Australia. “From the beginning of the World War Riga was an objective of the Central Powers, because of its import- ance as a focal point for the lumber ! from White Russia and Volhynia, the flax from northwestern Russia, and other products from a wide area with which it has rail and water communi- cation. Its recent prosperity is indi- cated by the growth of its population from 102,000 in 1867 to more than 500,- 000 before the war.” (The industries and public buildings of Riga were described in previous National Geographic Society bulle- tins.) STORIES OF THE WAR Only Chance Lies With Kolchak. (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) Colonel John Ward who has just re- turned to London from Siberia, where he commanded a battalion of British troops which helped to overthrow the Bolshevik power there, says, “In ny opinion the only chance for democra- cy in Russia lies in the success of Kolchak. His attitude on the land question shows that he is not tha re- actionary he has been revresentad. He sees clearly that the distribution of big estates among the peasantry can- not be interfered with. “It is proposed that those land own- ers who have survived Bolshevism shall be given compensaation for the land they have Jost but there is no idea of restoring the land to them. Coughks and Colds Are removed by Vinel, our Cod | Here is Proof: Manistee, Mich. — “I was in a weak, run-down condition as the result of a chronic cough and cold so that I often had to stay at home from work. Vino! stopped the cough, broke up my cold and built me up after other mediines had failed.” — MARGARET DALE. It's the beef and cod liver peptor: iron and manganese peptonates and hypophosphites contained in Vinol“thar makes, it such a successful remedy for chronic coughs, colds and bronchitits. It is not a paliative like h syrups, but a remedy of the cause. Try it on our guarantee, 3 Your money back if it fails Engler's Broadway Pharmacy, Nor- wich. Vinol is sold in Danielson by P and druggists Berthiaum. | PATHE NEWS LATEST NEWS TOPICS b ——————— Kolchak stands up for the poor peas- ants against what Lenine has been ca}}ed _the ‘village' of hourgeoisie.” Tt is found that well-to-do peas- ants had murdered many of the land- owners, given a meagreé portion of the poorest land f. the poorest peasants, THE VINEYARD WORKERS and joined the 1)k of the estate t 2 e 1 joi 3 k o e estate to O AL B 5 HURCH their own holdin 4. Kolchak, with the (,K:VTII:“FB!‘I:;':‘DT;;:G advice of representatives of the al- INBOW FAIR lies décided to secure for the poor A TR0 {ma;an(‘%ha fair distribution of = the —IN— and. When this was known the com- R rae paratively wealthy peasants, who had BUSENELLCHAREL secured the biggest share of ‘the land raised the cry that the old state of affairs was to be restored. In' some cases they stirred up the peasants to revolt and caused distrubances which |1F, Li¢tle People, Famey Artieles, had to e put down by foree. Christmax Cards, Aprons, Cake, Candy “To know what Bolshevism is you|dnd Canned Goods. Tem and Ice Cream should have Deen with me at Perm |served any time. when the ice on the river was melting R e ] and the hodies of many who had been murdered by the Bolsheviki were re- \“‘Zled- I myselt, saw fifty of them | and among them w sai ; r P numborg them were the hadies of | men to dig coal or men to move trains one place there was a wash-house With all the soldlers in the world" Mr. build over the river. The Bolshevikil L€ is right. The government has no cut a hole in the floor through which| SUch intention or purpose. No one their victims were dropped into the Wants the army used in that way, an deep waters beneath ' Bolshevise | Mr. Lee understands it perfectly. He means the end of democragy. T am | 40€s not in the least fear such exercise certain that if Russia is 18ft to the Of Power. What he does fear is that Bolsheviki, it will ultimately return to| throush the protection given indepen- autocracy. dent workers will take the places of those who throw up their jobs when OTHER VIEW POINTS they strike. Mr, Lee is rath more than intentionally dishonest if while Congress has been warned that the | railroad firemen will not obey an order , insisting on the right of a man to forbidding a strike. It ought not to strike, which is nothing more than quitting, he denies the equal right of take a minute to decide what action te | tak Middletown Press. another man to take the place that is vacated. It is this right that the sol- diers will see is maintained and re- It is incontestable, however, that the | trolley company must have more ! money. Although it is to be regretted | spected.—Bristol Press. that the company did not make the nigkel basis for its new zone fare sys- | tem, andalthough the attitude of the ! public can hardly be eagerly expectant, the majority of the citizens are un- doubtedly willing to be shown that the company can establish a successful zone fare system that will bring'in the increased revenue needed. The system must not be condemned beforehand and must be given a patient trial when it com ‘Waterbury Republican. The board of aldermen in New York have voted unanimously for a daylight saving period in that city. A bill to the same end is to be introduced at the special session -of the Maine legis- lature soon to open. Towns and cities throughout New England are agitating the proposal. There should be prompt and concerted action in order that the clocks of this section of the country, ! at least may be set uniformly forward next spring. It would be a pity indeed | if we were to go through 1920 on the old davlight wasting schedule of time. TODAY AND TOMORROW, FROM 3 TO 10 P. M. Come and buy Dolls, Toys, Articles says: “The government cannet force Ever see the motio “Live 2ad Let Live,” on the wauils of a butcher shop? Five million people use it to KILL COLDS HILLS CASCARAR= 7 QUININ BROMIDE Standard cold remedy for 20 years —in_tablet form—safe, sure, Do opiates—breaks up a sold in 24 ‘hours—relieves grip in 3 Money_back if it y genuine box has a_Red —Providence Journal. e S W. G. Lee, an organized labor leader, At All Drug Steres Electric Heaters | WE HAVE FOUND THAT THESE HEATERS ARE 1 VERY HARD TO GET. A CONSIGNMENT BOUGHT MONTHS AGO HAS JUST COME IN. Get Yours Today THEY COST ONLY $11.00 AND CONSUME THE SAME AMOUNT OF ELECTRICITY AS A FLAT IRON. PHONE 674 AND WE WILL SEND IT TODAY The Norwich Electric Co. 42 FRANKLIN STREET HAND AND BREAST DRILLS ASK FOR TRADING STAMPS REAMS AND SOCKET WRENCHES KEEN KUTTER POCKET KNIVES SAWS, AXES, HATCHETS AND OTHER TOOLS Don’t Fail to See Our Line of Pure Aluminum Ware | THE HOUSEHOLD Bulletin Building 74 Franklin Street Telephone 531-4 ASK FOR TRADING STAMPS QUALITY ASK. FOR TRADING STAMPS ASK FOR TRADING STAMPS