Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 28, 1919, Page 4

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also other similar instances where the bodies were sent to the wrong place. There were comparatively few sol- diers who were sent to northern Rus- sia in comparison with those sent to France, If there has been such con- fusion in the return of those bodies from Russia it may be a lesson that will, call for greater care in sending home the others. It is not improbable, however, that . ed their art in this confusion, which JB Pessifics & Nerwich. Cma. | would of course be more emphasized e in the case of the dead in France, and i‘ it is possible that the experience of : 8.8, those families in the middle west will 3 4 omes -2 | cause others to decide to let the bod- Difics 13 Cwwh & Towhme 108 | jog of their loved ones rest in France. USING WAR PLANTS, Just what is going to become of the shipyards that came up like mush- rooms in order to meet the demands of thig country for ships is a question that has ‘been bothering many sec- tions. Whemy large 'industrial plants are standing idle, when the production of more g0ods is what the cpuntry needs it is only natural that there should be uncertainty as to the future of shipyards, particularly those in their infaney for it ean be expected that the well established plants will find plenty of business for a long time to come. In this connection it is interesting to note that ome of the shipyards, a war product, up in New Hampshire has been acquired by a dye and chem- ical concern at which point this bus- iness will be established and develop- ed, and it is declared that the officials of the emergency fleet corporation will endeavor to get Philadelphia to pre- vent the big shipbuilding plant at Hog Island from going to the scrap heap, but the claim is that it must be disposed of by mext August or it will be necessaky to put it under the ham- mer. This shipyard is a larger proposition }T_N! FUEL DIRECTOR'S OFFER. om the statement of Fuel Direc- toF Garfleld to the bituminous coal ners it is the intention of the gov- emment to do justice to all concerned, and in dealing out justice it is not a Qulestion of sympathy or sentiment. Fairness in accord with the facts is sought and that is what has led to the government's belief that the min- ers should receive an increpse of 1t Per cent. in their wages. That indi- Ghtes that the previous offer made by! e operators w gsenerous butlcost the government $66,000,000 to g ised upon the idea 'that|iyila ard should it be Sold at a price Ry ease in the sell-1 .. oqhonding to that for which the #ag orice of coal in order to make it 000, il Glty S ME Nitro, West e Wi« ‘ Virginia, went only about $8,000,000 B lsviae con by SoVErNMENt| could be expected from it. Whether| ng consideration to pubite.t S X o tofore it has been ok dmiet | i SN R o ronos he demands not it ig mot belfeved that and look to the consumer | 1! 3 ity 9 make it-ap. ‘This course is not go. | 71!} 50 10 decay. There will be those! igg to in this instanee,|Who will see opportunities there for €ontrol of fuel by the governmen: | ©0Me use even though it can be ex- | hich iy |Peoted , that ehipbuilding operations an according to his statemen: tuat| Wil be greatly reduced. The utiliza- : Prices will not be per. | 107 Of the many plants made nec by the war will come even though itions are embarrassing such at| wresent time, Be roposes is to come gandy ets of the operators It 58 his julgme; memboers of ity of the operatc pock T the ; - LYNCHING IN ALABAMA. ; the week information- has de warrant the cutting them | come from Alabama to the effect t sdfficient to mcet th to the|® dozen men charged with participa-| miners. In the gove belief | t the lynching of a white man,| flom the statistics ae presented by|Who was taken from the jall by force both sides the miners are 8ntitied tolund shot. have pleaded guilty to the more moner. That has beén agreea- | indictment and been fined from $100 U8 16 the operators, but it has be to $300. which fineg were of course © ‘question &s to how much it would|{paid. This attracts attentfon for two b and who it would come from. ) one. because it is an Instance Garfleld points out where the adjust-|where the authorities were inclined to} ment should be and what it and he %akes into con fact that the consumer: PA¥ing enough for their tempt appears to | fake an unde d were able wse to the Iy ticipant cher: in s P hy coal. No been made + rved offer even th case of lynching I done - to - the ty n e coal situwtion is r rties.. The coroper's jury sits and | k. In fact vith the idea bein lares that it has no knowledgo as! @0 justice partiali ould have d that ends part. fied hecau - - who i$ LIFTING EMBAKGOES. In order way and because what- ovinion or the better to upon the whe ve a regulati class may be nothing country there| have been embargoes both ‘o im. { urther is done. ports and exports. This was a “u"\ in this. case, however, It was a measure. We were called uvon not|Vhile man instead of a Negro who only to look out for our own needs|WaS Iyrched. Tt apparently made a but to feed a large part of Europe,|diference and because of that differs meanfiig therefore sreater demands|CNCe it was possible to, ferret out than ever upon OWF production, ana|lhose Who were responsible and . to profidtion hias been gréatly helped a¢| 'iNE them before the court. But so roughly does the crime of lynching times by the severe, curtailments tb ronte o (mments 0} oo to be accepted in that part of the which the people of this country have had4e rélorh country thut though n fellow being But seonditions have chan, We|had been killed, deliberately murdered are plentitolly supplied with whens| " 01d blood, the punishment that was thought fitting for those who partici- pated was a small fine. Human life { must be held pretty cheap in Alabama, {as must also respect for law and or- | der when a court is willing to order the taking of money for the breaking of the law through the eommission of deliberate murder. It is true that it and other wheat growing sections of the world are through the release to shipping occasioned by the end of the war eontributing to-the world's relief. And yet we are still op under the, embargoes which prevent the brigging in of wheat or the exporting Of Jt except under certain conditions But e proclamation ending these | 1S More than is done in most cases of embargoss has been issued by (hellynching but this seems to be so only 3 | because it was a white man who was president and will become effect, 8 cve the | iitled rather than a black man. middle of next month at which time| it eah be expocied that prices for wheat here will become mere nearly those of the rest of the world, or at least based more nearly upon those of the world's market. But even the lifting of the embar- goes will no: remove the price of §2.2¢ & Bushel that has been fixed for the farmers of this country. Until that agreement is completed it can be ex- pected that the full bemefit of the Hfting of the embargoes will not be felt. That will serve to influence the prises in this country and do very lit- tle foward increasing the amount of thig grain upon which a higher price bas been fixed than can be command- ed o the world market. The chief significance of the embar- go Mifting Will be that we are moving towara the time when different grain and prices can be expected even h “that has not exactly arrived. ly it ought not to be that more Bread can be bought for ten cents in England than here. EDITORIAL NOTES. The man on the corner says: speech is all right until it gets tree Free too Even those who strike at Ellis Isl- and must realize that a prisoners’ pen has its limitations. How times do change. Hindenburg is now being acclatmed as the next president of Germany. It has been evident for a long time that there are those who.are tryigg to live within their income, It ig easier to make a holiday seem like Sunday than it is to make Sun- day seem like a holiday. And judges continue to maintain that the war time prohibition act is constitutional and unconstitutional. Seemingly there are those in the country who are as willing to work for bolshevik money as anything else. TRANSPORTING THE DEAD. Try @3 this country has it has been unable to get any definite assurance from Prance that there will be any chanee of an garly return of the bod- fes of those soldiers who are buried in Prance. Though we have been told that the bospital dead, meaning in- stances of death far back of the lines, eoull be brought back soon it has impessible to get any encourage- it will be possible to bring others before 1922. In fact has been made that the of the dead will not be per- untll the same . privilege is 10 _the French. s only this month that the f those who gave up their northern Russia were brought t was in complance with the the relatives of the dead but burial #ervices in several Indiana, Wisconsin and Mi- it was found that the body of Indlana soldier had been sent to ‘Wiseonsin and the Wisconsin soldier's Somehow without the hilltops being lighted with burning barrels it didn’t seem quite like Thanksgiving night. The American Legion members are making it certain that Americanism is not going to be shunted off onto a sid- ing. The value of the idea gets almest daily endorsement by the planting of memorial trees for the soldier and sailor dead. ‘When the crown prince says he is coming back it ig evident that royalty likes to Le treated in the good old fashioned American way. sl It is getting to be quite a puzzle in these days, which should be days of thrift, to find the fellow who hasn't cashed in and thus sacrificed on his Liberty bonds. Judge Cropeey tola a New York jury in a murder case that they had been had been forwarded to another|hoodwinked into acquitting the ac- Lo FHT 5§ o handie than many of the othérs. It} the sentiment| in Indiana, or a mixup that was| cused by lylng witnesses, all of which distorbing and meaning that the|goes to show how well the interests g relatives must go through|or criminals are served in courts to- burial services again. . There are|day. - L - e “What a perfectly sténning boche helmet,” said mother's ; friend, Mrs. Layton, when she was at our house last evening. “I do hope my daughter gflll bring home one as interesting as “By staying over for ithe recon- struction work Madge will have all kinds of opportunities for gathering trophies.” I replied, but 1 smiled in- wardly as 1 recalled how negrly that helmet had come to being Madge's property. Madge had said a number of times to me whén I met her at dances over there that she was simp- ly perishing to see the Verdun front] and I had told her it could be done easily. “What do you mean—easliy?” she inquired. “Mr. Horton has téld me that it's next to impossible to get transportation.” “You musn't depend on welfare men to get you anywhere,” I laughed. “You must, be popular with the office: “But, Lucfle,” she protested, “you know Wwe are particularly instructed not to go about with the officers too much.” “But, my dear girl, one trip up tof the front wouldn't be going about with | the officers much.” | “It was only a few days after this conversation that Capt. Baltman, the| C. O. of the company that Madge Was with ,came Into my hut at regimental headquarters, I told the French wo-| man who made chocolate for me to make some richer than usual and she prepared 5 delicious enough - beverage to warm anyone's heart on a raw day | in France, 1 found it much better to| have a servant make chocolate than| to make it myself, for I did not feel | that I joined the A. E. T. to do menial | work. | “What perfectly delectable choco- | late” saig Capt. Baltman. “Yow must| be an expert cook.” | “Oh, I don't know about that, bu t nothing but the best is good enough| for my soldiers. I'm sure, though, Madge Layton makes it good?” “Yes, but it isn't the same smooth s this.” “I think you just imagine that” T| said generously. “Madge is a Do you know that she has never beén up to the front? I do think she] ought to see the tle fields around | Verdun. Don't y: “Why, ves, I do, 11 Horton that s arrange to £0 1 wered. “Ill Tolida morrow if | an; te! and we c FROM LUCILLE'S DIARY | but when I told our' escorts that 'I assotiate worker that I would not. be at the hut much the next day. She sald that she thought she could get 218ng; as she was becoming quite used to running both the library and the cantéen without. me. 1 was sound asleep the next mofn- ing whea I heard a ‘loud rap on my billet door. I was surprised wher I heard Madge Layton's voice, Becduse I was 50 sleepy that I had forgotte about our expedition. 3 v “What are you doing hero so ear-| 1y?” T asked. 1 “It's not early. ‘and Im “here of course to go to the front, as you and Capt._Baltman planned yesterday., He| and Lieut. Fangler and I have been waiting at the hut for you for more than an heur.” . “What a shame. Well, Il jumip into my clothes in a hufry.” 1 retired into | my tiny dressing room, and.in a little while she asked impatieatly if I wasn't| almost ready. { “Yes, but I have to mend the skirt | hem on my old uniform. Before 1 was quite ready the.officers | came to see what the delay was, and Lieut. Fangler said he thought it! would be too late to go to Verdun to! lunch. Madge was disappoinged, but would scramble some eggs they didn't geem to mind. " As it turned out, I went Into the hut kitchen and - had Germaine do it, for T didn’t think it wise to get overheated before going out on a cold drive. In the very first dugout we went in- Madge picked’ up a camouflaged he helmet with a shrapnel holg in to boc it . “I wouldn’t lug that around all the afternoon,” I advised her. -“There are lots of them everywhere.® She reluct- antly threw it down and went on with Lieut, Fangler to see an old German lookout high ‘in the trees. As I had been over that particular ground be- fore, I said 1 would wait in the car until they came back, and Capt. Balt- man waited with me. I asked him to ang me the helmet afier I got into car, for 1 wished to look at it ht aiter dark, when I was de ited at my billet, I found I had hered up the helmet with my rugs wraps. & o next timt T saw Madge ghe said | ghe should never cease to regret that| she had discarded th: wonderful ca- i mouflaged helmet for in the whole| she bad not) found another realiy* almost childish about it/*—Clhicago News. th dear, | That ni e Gleaned from Foreign Ex|! changes 1 A study of the greal book center, | Leipzig, is very interesting, writes a | German correspondent Never, -1 am | have books and pamphicts 1ced in such quantities. | The ponderous volumes now being 1ed by the prominent figures: under me—Ludendorft, Tirpits nd otk though somewhat @ pensive the German, less expengive n similar sized volumes published E and—say, for example. Lord recent work. Cheap editions sured, cen pro the in Jellicoe 1 flow from the printing presses in al- mos} undiminished fioods, and ° the number of pamphlets is simply extra- rdinary. Pamphlebeering on political and cconomic sublects is zoing on to an extent never betore known in any country, 'and the amount of excelleht paper available is enormous. Regarding the man fleet in Ho! “seizure” of the Ger- 1d._the Dutch have e to tife ris conferer they had from Germany. an these could not be taken by ne the of the ssupiteme counefl les the protest and demands that German fleet in Dutch vorts be surrendered This is the story of the Alsatian telegraphist’s heart cry. As readers will have observed, the Daily Chroni- | cle’s well known speci pondent, | Mr. Donehoe, is now in Strasbourz. A long cable from him was handed in af the office window last night. and as a footnote, in the familiar black iype- writinz on blue tape, was' the follow- ng addition—not necessarily for publi- ation: 1 y a kekes w de mauy comme vs voyez mieux ke moj Remembering that in Strasbourg is anglais they speak a patois into which Ger man enters, one translates “kekes” as the French “quelgues” “w” as an a hreviation for the and “ke” as the French “que” giving us, in English, “There are some' words bad Englishi. as you see better than German ‘“worter 13, The spectaelé of our friend and col- league Mr: Donohoe arzuing -the ques- tion of his “bad English” with-a Str: bourg telegraphist is one of the things we should like to see at the cinema. Kubelik, the famous violinist, was due to play at Oxford on the 1Sth, but he has sent a message saving he is “unable to leave the country. He is in his native I'})d of Bohemia, and aparently cannot get the necessary permit to come to England. - Before the war he purchased a fine estate out of his great earnings on the public platform, but he has not been heard of lately, and now it is uniikely that he will be here for some time. Admiral Sir Montague E. Browning; who has just been promoted to full rank, provides one of those instances where the son of a soldier has not only chosen the sea a profession but has succeeded in passing his father's army rank. A good deal of the credit for the record gunriery of our navy was dué to Admiral Browning's work as inspector of target practice, it being the proud boast of our warships that they could knock the mast out of a fishing smack when it was almost out of sight. This remarkable marksmanship proved useful in the war, not only as big fights like Jutland, where the Ger- man ships were hit when they resem- bled a sixvence on edge, hut in the numberless little contests where the only target was the periscope of a submarine, The first of the war leaders to take his seat in the house of lords will be Earl Beatty, who makes his maiden appearance in the legislature this af- ternoon, and thus gives parliamentary representation once more to the sailors on the board of admiralty. The first sea lord will be followed in his presen- tation to the lord chancellor by two of the western front commanders, Lord Rawlinson and Lord Byng, Every newly created peer has to be introduced by two old members of the same degree, who conduct him to his seat after he has had the oaths admin- istered to him and delivered his writ to the clerk of the house. Lord Beatty adles 11 conside When Lady Astor takes her seat ‘n | house of commons (to which she ' iready been elected by populal red “the best in the | has rcolamation) she will, as the first| woman member, bé privileged to create those pretedents which are often inger than the written law. an odd anomaly, members wedr 3 ts in the house when seated, nd uncover when they rise. It is ob-| vious that millinery cannot be subject- | ed to t treatment, so Lady Astor; will have to decide the hat question for herself. She must do so when she is intreduced. No member, unless he be a Jew, has ever taken the oath hattedy and none has ever been nresented to the speaker except uncovered. The problem, of course, might be evaded by T Astor 2 one of those flims: nfec- which suggest merely a halr or- nament, but then the prospective mem- ber for Plymouth is not fond of eva- sions.—London Chronicle. IN THE DAY’S NEWS . Persia. “That exceedinglly ill wind the World War, blew much good to ono nation, Persia, for the higher price of silver has doubled her capital made her raw materials sought after by the world and removed her from comparative isolation to a place among commercial nations of high importance.” says « bulletin from the National® Geographic_Society. The bulletin, based on a communi- cation from Eilla C. Sykes, continues: | “Persia is one of the oldest em- pi in existence. It has been af kingdom for 25 centuries—ever since | Cyrus the Great, about 550 B. Ci conquered Media and - united ~that country to his under the name of It has had many glorious ep- its long history; has pro- the great teacher Zoroaste d famous poets as Firdawsi, m, Saadi and Hafiz, and such great soldiers and rulers . as Darius I Shaupr 1 and Shah Abbas. Again and again the empire has been a prey:to anarchy’ again® and again conquering hosts “have swept through the country, Alexander tho Great having many a successor, ths most destructive conqueror being Genghis Khan with his hordes of savage Mongols—a leader who boasted that he had slain thirteen millions of his_fellow-creatures! “The center of the country is a great plateau, rising from 2,000 to 6,000 feet and crossed by frequent chains of mountains wkile a lofty mountain barrfer bounds it on the north and south. “In the whole Persian Empire there} were 1910 only six miles of railway, and of roads only four, their total length amounting to fewer than $00 miles. There is only one navigable river, the Karun, that flows into the head of the.Persian Gulf, and on this sea the so-called ports are merely open roadsteds at which cargo can- not be landed in stormy weather, “The merchandise. of Persia practically carried on the backs of camels, mules, and donkeys, a Slow and expensive mode of transport, and the traveler usually rides through the country following the tracks made by the passage of caravans during the centuries. “The Persian is of Aryan stock, and has thé same words as ourSelves for father, .mother, brother and daughter (pidar madar, bradar -and dukhtar), and the construction of his language is like that of English, “He is a handsome well built man, with refgular features and fine black eyes, his complextion being no darker than that of an Italian. In manner he is most courteous; he Is. quick alert, fond of conversation and discus- sion, and has rightly been civled the Frenchman of the East. “Persia_has been a Mohammedan country from the time of its conquest by the Arabs in 641; but some thou- sands of Zoroastrians, the old " fires worshippers, still remain in the land, and have been much persecuted. “Many Persiaris' have no home life In the usual sense of the word. A i3 Persian house is divided into the bi- has made a pleasing. choice in-select- ing a colleague at the admiraity. the ?rl of Lytton, to assist at his initia- on. This chilly weather seems to be a premature arrival of the cold ‘snap which almost invariably occurs dufing the second week of November, . It usually beging about the 6th and lasts until the 11th or 1%th of the month, Why this cold period so regularly occurs meteorologists seeq unable to explain. It is one of the nine or ten examples of orderliness in our way- ward weather, but becomes doubly un- welcome just now by confirming our present Persian and Arab guests in the unflattering and ratheér undeserved be- lief maintained by most foreign visit- ors about our British climate, which | performed his dail lcans, and, without knowing COUGH ) j C-A'‘BRIGGS CO.Cambridde Mass. ROPS OR SOOTHES AN+ ¢ IRRITATED THROAT AND D@ES IT QUICKLY Bebs%rfi ir THE COME ON IN, THE WATER'S FINE, BUT START EARLY IF YOU EXPECT TO GET IN | “The Big Splash of Joyous tertainment 'MACK SENNETT’S BATHING BEAUTIES REVUE le of -the ie\geem of %creen Beach tunning' Poses, Original Bathing Suit Crea- _Numbers. . In Conjunction With' Mack Sennett’s Comedy Feature “YANKEE . DOODLE IN BERLIN” Three Complete Shows Today 2:15—7:00—8:40 P. M. PRICES: Matinée—20c, 25¢, Night—25¢, 35c, 55¢ Includes War Tax Four Shows Saturday ATF ] Eneqprer PROTECT YOUR EYES Properly fitted glasses relieve the strain on your eyesi They are com- fortable and becoming. You scarcely know you are wearing mounting on your nose or lenses in front of your eyes. RELIABLE EXAMINATION BY OUR REGISTERED OPTOMETRIST E. F. McGOVERN 135-143 MAIN ST. The Plaut-Cadden Co. Established 1872 BREE THEATRE June Caprice and Creighton Hale TODAY AND SATURDAY —IN= “A Damsel In Distress” ADAPTED FROM MR. WODEHOUSE’'S SATURDAY EVENING POST STORY OF THE SAME NAME AND PRESENTED ON THE SCREEN IN FIVE DELICIOUSLY FUNNY ACTS, It's a Scream of Delight From Start to Finish! You'll Absolutely That’s How Funny It Is! “Yell Your Head Off!” A Sure 100 Per Cent. Picture Florence Reed In “Her Game” A Notable Successor to “Her Code of Honer and The Woman Under Oath PATHE NEWS—LATEST NEWS TOPICS NORWICH, CONN. rooni or ‘men's apartments, ‘and the anderoon, or part consecrated to the vomen. A strong door, set in a hizh blank wall gives entrance to a nar- row passage that leads into a square courtyard on which open several rooms. Here the men live, and here they usually entertain their friends, while their women dwell in rooms se around an inner courtyard, the on! entrance to which is through the rooni. “As a Persian is instructed from earliest youth that a woman’s advice |18 of no account.—in fact the priests tell him that he had better do the ex- act opposite of what a woman coun- sels—it can be understood that as a rule he has no exalted opinion of his wife or wives, and seldom turns to them for companionship. “When death approaches, if he has ly prayers, kept tha Fast of Ramazan, visited the mosque on Friday and given alms to the poor, a Persian has no doubts as to his re- ception in the next world and dies 2 happy confidence of attaining, to the paradise promised by the Prophet to all his faithful followers.” STORIES OF THE WAR Saved a British General. (By The Associated Press). Two American women were the means of saving a British general and his aide from “what appeared to be certain death at the hands* of a hostile band of Montenegrins, according to & story told in Albania by the foreign colonies. The women are Miss Eila F.-McGov- ern, ‘of Milwaukee, Wis., and Mrs. Maria Ford, of Indianapolis, Ind., field workers in the service of the American Red Cross. Major-General G. P. Phillips, yirtually military gov- ernor for the British in Albania, and Captain P. T. Farrer, were the officers whose lives were spared by interven- tion of the women. s The British general and his alde were proceeding north through Albania on-a tour of inspection with the Amer- it, had crossed the Montenegrin border. 'Sud- denly, in a section resembling some- what’ Yellowstone Park, a band of 68 Montenegrin soldiers stepned out of a thicket and ordering them to halt, levelled rifles at them. Believing he had reached an active fighting zone, the general directed his chauffeur to turn around. But the Montenegrins re- fused to allow the car to go. The leader of the band ordered the party to walk singie-file to a point where they were in full view of every one of the Montenegrins. who lowered their guns and loaded them. . The American women knew what a price had_been set by the Montene- grins on General Phillips' head for what the Mo unfriendly acts on his part in Albania toward certa forbidden him to enter their countsy. sensed n at once, and, after identifying themselves as representatives of . the American Red Cross, they insisted the English general and his aide also were They Americans. a svord.” skeptical of party, and sent for ‘his chief, who al- though unable to read the ldentifica- tion papers which handed hij “American"' and the red cross, The whole grins changed when they became con- vinced the Cigarettes were exchanged between tha Montenegrins and the British officers, and the party were al- lowed to proceed. OTHER VIEW POINTS Edward of Wales as wires the man charzed with guarding his person while in thjs country: hope to give you' the tlouble of look- ing aftér me again as soon s poss sible."—New The desire to route, York does not arise mantic or sentimental but from the knowleage that such event' will keep Hartford on the main line in every respect. ford to let an opportunity bring an advantage to Hartford that may have tremendous signficance in the future growth of the city.—Hart- the air New ford Post. The coal 8o public a be no. concealmient about government is permitted to publi the income tax returns of the coal 0p- erators it should the opeérators sitting at the confer- ence table have not made as good an The mia- impreéssion ‘as the miners. CASTORIA For Infants and- Childrén InUse For Over 30 Years Always bears 1l the Signature of Miss McGovern admonished the Entlishmen. The leader of the Montenegrins was ntenegring conceived to be in of their tribes, and had the seriousness of the “Keep quiet and don't say the nationality of the the Americans did make out the word attitude of the Montene- | party were Americans. two grateful FRIDAY AND SATURDAY THEY DO MARY MacLAREN, in “Vanity Pool” Do you believe that truth is stranger than fiction? Then' see bewitching Mary MacLaren in “VANITY POOL,” played by the magnificent All Star cast. Mary Maclaren, Franklyn Farnum, Anna Q. Nilsson, Marian Sais, and Virginia Chester. IT ON 8 PER A FUNNY TWO-REEL CCMEDY GAUMONT WEEKLY _ LADIES' SUNDAY: ORCHESTRA CHOOSING A WIFE A Dramatic Presentment of Life’s Greatest Problem. theil that 4 wit. He Rep 5 Haven Journal Courfer. from ro- considerations un We cannot af- slip to controversy has assumed nature that there shewd it. 1 thejlic be done. Thus far| %< to hold up cants for the few scats reached from Durfce hall street through Hign street and dgwn Chapel street to Vanderbilt hall. The oportunity was an excellent one for ticket speculators and was made use of though the ticket speculation this year was not as bad as in some form- er years. make is that the best tween ale and by the c furhered by a differsnt oys r pro-strike stand. the cperators are not now the ublican. The public sale of tickets did not quite hit off the desire all Yale men have that New Haven friends of the university should have their oppor- have Hartford on/|tunity to see Yale football games. between Boston and|On the public-sale day, a file of appi- left on But the point we wish relations sales. Instead of permitting wrong people—and smong them hun- dreds of out-of-town “sports” of the ng sort—to get. tickets, sho Let us be surc trying public—Waterbury ovar Elm be- ers have notably backed down from|there not be some plan devised by which New Haven's tickets could be distributed thréugh a responsibie pub- Weekiy. Oid Saw Reset. an obstreperous boy, migh be burgh Gagzette-Times. A man who gets his pay in advance never works overtime. o the uld Nfiv. 26 o 29 Inc. K. of C. BAZAAR CAKE-WALKS—THE BASS CLEF EXTRA SPECIAL A LIVE WHITE. BABY Given Away to the Person' Holding the Lucky Number, on Friday Evumn. - Ki OF C. BAZAAR EVERY NIGHT A BIG NIGHT—MATINEE THURSDAY - Nov. 26 to 29 Inc. SEVEN BIG NIGHTS STARTING MONDAY " OLYMP " OWLS VICTORY - BAZAAR JAZZ MUSIC, FREE DANCING, FREE VAUDEVILLE Dec. 1st IC HALL SPECIAL EXTRA FEATURE POPULAR VOTING CONTESTS NOMINATE AND VOTE FOR YOUR FAVORITE lic New Haven ag-ncy —Yale Alumni More pay and less work makes Jack the modern version of an old saw.—Pitts-

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