Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 3, 1919, Page 4

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.|meére work in decided contrast diorwich @ulletin and Qoufied 123 YEARS OLD .r.-nnd-nu-m:némxu- J:.um&&nmw. - e, - Ga. Teiepwae 8. 156 office 38-2. W¥ilmantle Offics 23 Charen i Telepbone 105. e e S e T Norwich, Wednesday, Déc. 3, 1918 ufilu OF THE nl.ll-fll PhEes o it or mot unn-wluh:mmn rights of n..m-h- of weelsl GBpaich. veserved. u— P CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING NOV. 28, 1919 10,339 1921 ESTIMATES, The estimates of Secretary Glass whereby it is indicated that it will cest ¢lose to five billion dollars to run this government during the year 1521 make it seem like a dream when a few years ago we were holding up our hands in surprise at’ the fact that we were re-. *quiring a billion dollars to look after our nation’s affairs. But we have got to do business, we must meet the ton- ditions that exist, we must meet our war expenses and we must 4t the same time look after the variods branches of the gevernment in a fit- ting manner. We are out of the war and all but technicall® at peace but We must continue to pay for what we have been througlt. Almost a fourth of the estimates will be required to meet the inter on our war debt of about $59,600,000, 000. There will be a time some day when we will get the benefit of the loans made to other countries, and there will be a time when there will be a reduction in the naval construetion programme a8 well as the completion of the shipping contracts, though from the expenditures for new ships we Bught -to be at least able to balance accourits as they afe sold. What we ¢an expeet in the way of futuire army eéxpenses can best be, determined af- ter the reorganization has been eof« fected. But we cannot fail to realise that annual mates as now put forth are to a large extent the direct fesult of the war, included in which Is over a quarter of a billion fof the purpose of starting o sinking fund with which to meet the war debt as it comes due. The estimates will of course re- ceive careful cénsideration. There will by a siftifiz out of the unnecessary and the authorization of what je ton- sidered necessary, It will be the duty of congrese to kéep éxpenditures down where it cai he done witheut inter- fering With the wroper functions of the government. But with such large stifis asked for there will Fe a4 thost ifsistent call In behalf of effictency.’ THE NEW!!HHV_C—A-SE. The sameé as there always 1s under such eircumstances there will be wide- ¢pread interest in the outcome of the irial of Senater Trufhan H. Newber and the many others who have been indieted with him for political eorrup- tion in the extensive use of money in . securing his victory over Hénry Ford for a place In'the United States sen- ate. That was a memorable - contest and the people of that stite, as well &s those of the country, eannot have failed mahy times to have congratu- lated themselves that he won whether they voted for or against him, in view of the spectaele Mr, Ford made in tes- tifying during a recent lawsuit. It is claled tindér the indictment that both state and federal laws have | been violatéd by the use of money andl fromi every Indication there will be a desire oh the part of the ae- cused 1o have the matter speedily disposeéd of in court. Senator New- berry is a net only a man of promi- nence in business circles in Detroit but throughout Miechigan, and the country khows him as secretary of the* navy In thé ‘eabifet of President Hoosevelt, That there will be a dis- positioh to disbelieve the charges as brought ig fot unlikely and certainly it is mest unjust to prejudge the mat- tet until the facts lave all been brought out. Beeause the indictrents have beén broughit does not tean that thé ac- cused are guilty. Senator Néwberry was ‘ankious for a thorough inquiry into the campaign following the elec- iibn result and it is certain that he will not dodgd this charge in any re: spect. That the indictments may have been stimulated by political bias dées not warrant them béing accepted and it does not warrant them being disregatded. There should Ye as there promises to be a speédy hearing of the cases. Thére até important prineiples ihvolved dnd the quicker the sithation can be elearéed the beétter. 2 ol FIGHTING THE HOOKWORM. Regardless of what was thought of it at the time the world was informed of the hookworm and the effect it was having upon people in different gee- tiohs of the world, the Rockefeller Foundation saw a chance to rénder a highly valuable service to humanity afd it proceeded about its tagk in a characteristically thorough géing man- nér. While the general effects of the disease was known because of the study given to it, it was desired to kflow more about the cause of it, both for the purpose of making the cures more certain and to do the far moré important. work of prevention. It is therefore a bit of gratifying information when it i3 anfounced that the researches conducted by the foun- dation have resulted in iselating the mierobe of the disease and a study made of the conditions surrounding its propagation. Thig.will perniit of the fight against the disease to be carried on more effectively, and it is a disease that appears to have gotten a firm grip in many sections of the world, preventing development, eatts- ing mental deterioration dnd a general retardation among all infected. From the tests that have been made it hag been possible to show where those under treatment responded well, zained in weight and were able to dé needed to bolster up his cause. Wheth- ty{worlt @uring the year, or upon the individual, firm or corporation operat- employed or permitted to work duf- days a weéek, or between the houfs of | whether he ean afford to meet |out of the organization. ‘price of coal. ¢ to! those not tréated. The result Hds besi that theré has, been, a ‘welcomed awakening to the néed of immvlng Bealth conditiois by giviag more at- téfitioh t6 sanitary préeautions and living conditions, That the educdtional wérk that has thus been carti¢d on along with theé trdatmvent is bearing fruif Mmeand that much valuable aid {d géing to HE se- cured in arresting the disease. Thé importance of *doing something té help themselvés is impresséd upon thosé wherevér the disease appéars and it is thYough the caoperation re- ¢eived that' gréater progress is being made. KOLCHAK’S POSITION. Préceding the fall of Omsk it was announced that Admiral Kolchak had had a falling out with-his chief aide, who was supplanted by another. Not lofig after that edme news to the éffect that the bolsheviki 'had ' captured Omsk. This means the driving of the All Russian government further éagt, a weakening of the opponents of theé Bolsheviki ahd & lefsening of the in- fluedce of Kolehak. with other lead- erg in that region with whom he is in none too close touch. But it appeard to have been a staggering blow that was delivered at Kolchak's forces for nét only did they lese Omsk but there were cantured over ‘a thousand officers inc¢luding eleven generals and 40,000 prisoners. Kolehak will of cotirse not be obliged to provide provisions for those he lost but he could ill afférd to tose such a number. It weakens nét énly his army But his préstige ang at a time when General Yudenitch in northwestern Russia is likewise badly hit. But Kolchak is not discouraged. His defeat may have awakened him 1o some conditiong. for it appears that he has set about the reorganization of hig government. His purpose is ap- parently to secure the heln that Is er he can do this successfully deé- pends upon the imMipression he makes and the willingness of the new mem- beérs 6f his ministty to back up his programme. He is passing through tincertath times but is apparently en- deavoring to get the suport of the anti-bolshevik - factions in Siberia which he has ptreviously fafleq to do. It he can get them tqzether, unite them under his leadership by convine- ing them of the dom of a unién front, it is probable that he can offsét thé reverses he has suffered but hig task prows more formidable the longér he continues at it. FEDERAL CHILD LABOR TAX. In a récent refefence to the im- provement that has been shown In child labor cenditions and s to the plin for the observance of Child La- bor day statements were made to the efiect that thé new federal InW whieh imposés o tax upon manufacturing ‘es- tablishfhents whera children under a certain age are employed only con- cerned ihosé faotorles where the pro- duet was “ghipped In intepstate com™- mérce. Comtnissioner Hy@e of the state bu- réau of labor takes exdeption thereto and rightly se, for the statements were based upon the otiginal ¢hild ja- bor law whith applied onlv {6 gosds shipped in interstate commeria whare- as under the present fedéral law it makes no difference wiethar the goods are shipped in -intérstate commerce 6r net. According té the law a tax of ten per cent. in addition o all other taxes, shall be paid unen the net prof- its of the individual, firm or corpora- tion operating o mine or fquarry where children under 16 have béen allowed to ing any mill, cannery, workshop, fac- toty of manufatturing establishment where children under 14 have been ing the year, or where childrén be- tween 14 and 16 have been employed more than eight hours a day of six 7p m and 6a m Stch a tex eats deeply into the net profits a8 it wag intended to. It makes the emplover - conwider well it for the sake of keeptng child labor in states which would permit it. The re- sofrt to taxation was made not for rév- eine purposes but to better child Ja- bor cenditions, where they could be reached in no other way, and from the reports that are being teceived it is having its effects. EDITORIAL NOTES. When the operatérs will not work their mineg it ig time for the govern- ment to get production. The Man on the corner says: No one experiences difficulty in saving money after the first million is obtained. Héw much of an increasé do the meést of the people need to keep abreast of the high cest. of living? King Albert contin@es t6 give his impressions 8¢ Ameriea but he shows né disposition to write a book about them, | In the east many of the turkeys afe réferfed to as Western birds, put in the middle west tutkeys are sold as “New York dresséd.” e You eannot do better than to pht your spar® éhange into Red Créss Christmias seals and thus help the f1l and protéet the well. e, An efitstanding featuré of the whole dispute is the persistent refusal on the part of thé miners to submit the difterencés to arbitration, With a New York judge sending mo tér car thieves to the reformatory or to Bing Sing for two to four years, the only regret is that more of them ate not éaptured. . A union ledder in Pénnsylyania de- clares that the reds must be driven 3 That: resolve #hould be asted upon generally by all rational unioh men, Few 2re thé states that haven't as yét. brovight out their favorite sons as candidates for the presideficy. There will be -quite a dieplay of timber until the convéntion is 6ver. When shocking profits are mades in any business disclostires are timely but the great trouble with McAdoo's revelations. dre that he wis wiliing ta keep quiet until he saw the chance for a ghandstand politital pliy. He wasn't concerned about briaging down | shadow of the neighboring mountains “I hear at last,” bfmn {lto Had run across m 4 &pool of thiead. “1 bum You are simply delighted!"” \ “Yes,” said the lady being borrew- ed from, a bit dubicusly. “T don't seA why you say ‘at last’ Mrs. Bowknof. I am sure I have never heen anxious to lose Clarice, and wheén a’' girl is as attractive as sbe is, and has so many beaux mmging around, ' goodness knows my Worry is-to keep heér afl home.” “Of course,” soothmg v agréed ine botrower, sitting down, "I never heard S aother wha SHs'e tallc that way and I must say it ddes them credit, aftef breaking their necks to bring off the happy event! Théré's so much com- petition nowadays and mién seem s6 scarce that I tell you a gifl is th 116k to get engaged, 1t alone martied! So many engagéménts aré broken off at the last mintite, 106, that yot inever can feel safé until they've really started on their wéfldmg teip! “And you know it séems a¢ though there alWays {s something for a moth- er to worry about, doesn’t it? Thére was that gifl Who lived 6n the top floor last year before you moved in here and thé invitations were all or- déred and she had spent a ridicuiots amount of money on clothes for people in their direumstanceés and then what did that mdn do but write her from Seattlé that he was on his way to Alaska and to forget him. The bridal wardrobe which Was left on her hands was nothing short of 4 tragedy. 1f I were you I shouldn't let Clarice buy a single thing she wouldn't buy any- way this winter if she wasn't get- ting married rather stiffly said the mother of the bridé-to-be, “that Her- vert has no intentions whatever of go- ing traveling in any direction without Clarice!' I want my daughtér io have a wardrgbe that is noteworthy.” “It mest always is a mistake, though,” her visitor ' assured, her. “When a girl marries and does the work in a little four room flat and can't afford to eftértain vety much she can't efpect to go otit very much; éither. ahd what does she want with 4 lot of clothes. Nobody sees what she has of at the movies or in an fce creain sodd paflor! They ought v théir m:nfi for & ratny aay—" ‘Clarice,” sal T mothier, omémmd & Jot! flei’lgm hds & large “will be| nml‘_ljyofmfive Who—" 'nn:;dm“im‘ i A givl i who m; rlu & lot of esn't make any differ- efl« How far remoyed fthey are— ny and every last one of a man’s inifte rélatives always mourns over great-aunte are just as inferésting as as though he were dead hnj goie | ‘wl ‘géts married, 1 shall ad- vise Claricé to hold a firmi hand from the start and not take any interfer- * “Herbert's mives' indignantly stated the Sfldes niotheér, “are just as devoted to Ghrlce as hé is! Wh are perfectiy picked: Her outt hey would never dream of rhixing in the you: le's . ing yol hspeop Sbths folks are mat ‘uy > admit- ted the 'caller, noddivg her head “Just dpineless and shiftless without enough énéfgy to take an interest in anything. It's too bad Clarice is mar- fying into a* amig of that kind, Of course noé doubt Herbert is different frém the rest of his famiily, but u‘ bound to croy out later in lifg. - 160ks liké a fice young man and you £ sy He his a fine position—well, I Hope he Molds it. Usdally a man of that Kind' #p¢t of sltimps when hé Is thirty of s0 and névér amoutts-to afiything, > Zaty White back home was that sort. Al he aid after he had been married tén years Was o smoke a pipe and bosg his wife when she rah the clothes through the wringer, and it was very disappointing to every one coneernéd, But every girl thinks her | experience is going to be an exception. | I wigh her luck. It is just a gamble, anyway. shé never can tell what will come to hér later off in the Way ~6f trouble. Pledse give her My best wishes—and ! I gongratulate you after ali your work to help Lind Herbért. It must be an awful feliefl” “Lots of things are a relief,” said Clarice’s mother as she shooed her callér out of the front door and shut it firmly. “Nevet mthd bringing back the spool of thresd!”—Chicago News. STORIES OF THE WAR General Yudenitch. (By The Assoclatéd Press:) General Yudeniich, commander-in- chief of the anti-Bolshevik forces on the Baltic front, is an ordinary army officer who has fofced his way up- ward by his talents and his characte said General Dobrjansky, respresent tive of General Yudenitéh in Bngland, in a staterent regarding his chiefsand the lattegs ideals. “As far back as the Japanesé war he showed his stratégic capaéity and initiative as commander of a fegi- meat,” continued Genéral Dobrjan- sky. “He then received the highest of awards—the uniform of the rifie regiment which he commanded and a gold sword, assigned him by a meet- ing of representativé8 of the army. “Geheral Yudenitéh's idea is to Aght Bolshevism to the laét, in close con- nection with General Denikine and Admiral Kolchak, for the libération of hig country from its oppressvrs and to give the Russian people the possi- bility of expressing ite will through a freely elécted constituent assémbly. “Hig staff eonsists of mén faithful fo their national ideals and their duties to Lhe alliés. They never acknowledg- ed the Brest-Litoesk peace. and, rob- bed of all, worn out but firm in: gpir= ity they are still fighting the German mercenaties and their Wolshevik agenta” > % Conditions in Montensgre. (BY the Associated = Press)—Travél unarmed in Montenégro, evén for friendly rs, is uot always safe. The mountains are infested with ban- dits and robbers. Mufders are of daily occurfence. Recently ' two ‘American Red Cross officérs, Captain Ri/nard Keller and Captain John Cathey, while taking a camion-load of reifer supplies from Podgoritsa te Kolachin, were held up at the point 6%} bayoneéts by membeérs of a mountaine eer band. Red: Cross men were able to ¢onvince the bandits that they were Americans and were in Montenegra only to help the sick ahd wounde They were | permitted to go on. H On another oceasion, Lisutenant James Ashworth, on similar duty for the Red Cross, was held up by 2 roving band in tiie mountains between | Cattafo and.Cettinje. Ignoring thair threats to shoot, the young officer doubled the speed of lis motortruck and escaped. After these two inél- dents all Red Cross trueks were ae- companied by armed guards. Theére are only a few large towns, and communication betweén these is difficult. The largest town is Podgo- ritza, which is the commercial céenter and is situated among the mountains. Cettinje, famous alike as the home of ex-King Nicholas and the scehe of Lenhars’ populat play ‘“The Merry Widow”—which was ~written in the —is a town of less than 15,000 pop- ulation and is the séat of the royal- ists. It tallest building is three stories high. * As in most parts of the Balkans, there are picturesque Turk- ish mosques and minarets to remind one of the times when the Moslem heldl sway throughout the Near East. A great many of the péople in Mon- teniegro are éxtremely poor, They live in erude houses of stone - and mud. These Houses usudlly contain a’ #ingle rodm and are without win- dows. TimBr is so scarée that it has the value almost of a precious metal. In the poorer” sections o6f the éoutitry the péople live in caves. In the town of - Podgoritza . the eotrrespondent counted 31 persons in a eavérn hol- lowed in the rock. These unfertu= natés slépt together on thé - bare earth flgor and ate out of a esmmon bowl. Their ohly fodd was that sup- plied by the American Red Cross. Their clothing cohsistéd for thé most part of scraps. of burlap:and carpét. The Americans have been. trying to train native ‘girls- as nurses, but in the higher Montenegrin cirolés * a girl | is censidered. to have forfeited har | brofession among Aftef mueh difficnity the|- in work ottside her own home The beasants, however, haye been _quite ready to engage in this Humane work. Thanks to the work of the Red Cross doctors and ntrses, nursiny gradually is hecoming ohe of the most hinorable the women of Monténegro, where formerly it was' 16oked upon as undighified and de- | grading. IN THE DAY’S NEWS Arabia, “Twelve pér cent, of all the pepole in the wotld take their rules of com- duet ‘and laws of life from Hecea, and take a keen, personai interest in all that happens in Arabia, and to Ara- bla. That is why, according to & bulle- tin from, tihe National Geographle So- clety, the complicated problem of Afabia’s dispesition porterids so much to the future pease of the world. Quoting. ffom a communication by Frederick Simpich, the bulletin con- tifittes: - In physical ebaranter, flora, and tduna, Arabia is more like Africa than Asia. In shape, it is alfmost a trian- gle, and it funs from nerthwest to southeust. ' It J$ bounded on the east, south, and west by the. Petsian. Guif, the Arabfan Sea, and the Ked Sea re- spectively; on the herth it joins Sy- fif. As Josephus of old wréte ‘Ara- bia is & couttry that joins on Judea, And Rémah gebgraphefs drew a fmap 6f Arabia that -included Mesopotamia alnd the Syriah desert back of Pales- tne, “The length of the peninsula from the head of the Gulf of Akabah to the Straits of Bab-el-Mandeb, near Aden, is about 1,800 miles; its - greatest breadth, in latitude 23 degrees north, from the Red Sea coast on’' the west to Ras-al-Hadd on. the east. i8 ‘about 1.500 miles, “As one sails ‘along the Red Sea coust of Arabla, with the low—3,000 feet high—ary and barren mountains Iying just batk of sahdy, empty strips of tountry, he i8 reminded of the Pa- cific side of Lower Califérnia above Cape San ILaicas. Many small is- lands, hot and dfy and uninhabited |extept for half-wild bunds "6t tramp fishetmen, @ot the map dlong this coast. Omne of these; called Perim, near the mouth of Bab-el-Mandeb Straits, fs occupled by 4 DBritish gar- rison. “The southeastérn coast, similarly emipty and marked by sharp, jagged rocks thrust “up fromn glistening sand beds, is broken by several good har- bors, like that at Aden. This latter | port is a British possession, mot un-| liké Gibraltar. 1t is heavily fortified and is the entrépot of commerce be- tween India and Europe, “The Persian Gulf coast country is somewhat more cheerful, cultivated here and thefe, and sloping.down to salt water from the high, slightly forested Jebel Akdar.or Green Moun- tains, “Famous old Maskat, once the haunt of Binbad the Sailor and later the stronghold of the Portugueése buecea- neérs, clings to the hot rocks inside Maskat harbor, and is the romantic capital of old Oman, an independent principality with a sultan all its own. “Oman has been prastically under British protection for many years; and, though an intégral paft of the Arabiah peninstila, cah hardly be called a part of Arabia. “Along the Red Sea coast lie three prévinces, the. Most important in Ara- bia. Yemen, the most southerly and most populons, has many arable val- IFT00 THIN chancés of marrlaae once she ennm Diseases That Come From Neglected Teeth Science - knows now that disedsed teeth ih . .grownups cadse fheumatism, heart trouble, indigestion; in children frequent colds, aternia, ewe-affections. As epldemics enter lbmn:h the- mouth, such. children afé often ¥ietims 67 1n~ fluenza. and spinal meningitis. ~ . Mouth cleanliness is* necessary f everybody the -yéar Afound. That flna not mean: ‘fiyorthéa chres”-or - other myBsterious - arficies. Pyorrhed 15 dh- known among the yeunz and childrén ghould not beé allowed to use any prep- aration claiming to cure this disease. TRY BITRO- | PHOSPHATE | While axccmvs w3 nnels might - he attributed to vafious ahd stubtle causes in dnterem indlviduals, it is a wells Known fact that the lack of phu- horotis in the lumaf system . I‘l largely respounsible lvr ;hls Conaition. established that it seems to Wi this deflclenny ln hosphorous may % of Bitrs- ém M obt: i"%'m%iu. Whe ained from 3 cmunlent mb!a\ slc Tnlike thess, Albodon Dental Cream | pocte Dioniioee ooy %fg‘;’fi v’l:::x"‘ fod is simply calely te, savonifted xu-mgth ! es weakindds and-isck: of nnddml.lélm 2 l‘v‘:fl wt‘lfll-mwn lnfl‘ ufl Eoion oe septic o of clo innamon an - éucalyptus, Which: authoritics iike Drs. f‘m&&t ::;ch&ed m a ‘i'a e; peries Prinz and declare makes an, ef- nnngnngo be u% tective and safe compesition for wos i oIPhosphati men and chfldun. It is just &8 good | i hmuflmzu ror the - Feliefof mere you, and” ‘should ‘Bé ih your home. vuunu, gene: mm.y. ete thu. for yor thef A tiibe'lasting five weeks m be Wgflt guaranteed at anv drue atore. n:.idvml“e ntnt g 1 oma usp Sxtra eare n v & ?n fatinrad: I hope she Wwill -enjoy this ; brief time befare her vreding, bécause | At once! Relief with & “Pape s Cold Campound ~The first lue edsés your cold! Don't ‘stay stuffed-up! -Quit blowing and snuffling! A dose of ‘“Pape's Qold - Compound™ taken every two -hours until three doses are taken us- -yally breaks up a severe cold and ends all grippe misety. Relief ataits you! Open your clogged-up mnostrils and. the air pas- |sages of your- head; stop nose rum- ning everishness, sneezing, stiffness. | Pape’s . Cold Compound” is thei auickest, surest relief known and eosts only a few cents at drug stores. It lacts without assistance. . Tastes nice. ‘Cantalns no.quinine: Insist on Pape’s! 'MASS MEETING £ o for’ THE NATION-WIDE At Trinity Episcopal Church Thursday, Dec. 4, 7:45 p. m. | Speakers: Rev. Jobn G: Sadie| ler of Bridgeport; Mr. Chas. | A Pease of artford sereness and HOO! HOO! OH LOOK! TONIGHT i e et b e __ OLYMPIC HALL T OWLS VICTORY BAZAAR Enjoy an Evemng of Fash- ionable Fun and Frolic Free Vaudeville Dancing and Side Shews Vote for Your Favorite | Admission_ to Hall 5 Cents [— i | i leys, producing: - coffee and dates. It has two port cities, ‘Mocha and ilo- deida. Aseer piovince lies north of | Yemen, and north. of -Aseet and ex- tending to the Sues Canal stretches figs, - spices, the provifice of Hejaz, wherein lie the farious Moslem - cisies—~of Meccy and Medina. “The anciehts, ‘fof convenience or' from lack of geographic. knowledge, led: Arabia ift6 three - parts—the the Desert and the Happy. Our knowledge of its imap’ shows most of its high interfor plateau occupied (ex- cept for Nejd province) by four great deserts, the Syrian, the Nefud, the Ahkaf, and the Dehna. “The Mahi and Hadramaut ptrov- inces, . stretching for hundreds of miles above Aden, are unmapped and practically’ unknoivn. “Nejd; ‘the . great interior province,: i8 declared' by Arabs to be the birth- | place’ of their most cherished insti- tutlons and “traditions. ‘““Hasa province, at the head of the Peérsian Gulf, and Koweit, its busy port, from which -many cargoes of dates] sponges, and a wealth of pearls | are shipped, is no doubt destined to see great commercial development in connection with Great Britain’s ac- tivities in Mesopotamia. “The Germans had selected Koweit as ‘the salt-watep terminus of their famous Bagdad railway, but the British, by a clever coup a decade ago, madeé a treaty with the Sheik of Ko- weit and blocked the kaiser’'s plan for a railway port on the Persian Gulf.” OTHER VIEW POINTS Today the repugnant and terrible system which is turning Russia into ‘a ‘mad house has been seized upon as a new bogy with which to terrorize the American peoplé and diseredit men oy movements. We have our bolsheviki, both in- high and low places; there is no doubt of that. AFTER SUFFERING A WHOLE YEAR Mrs. King Was Made Well by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- ble Compound. i Tole, Kansas.—‘‘ T was a constant suf- | ferer from female mblle ;:; »onem .w . Ins fll”;]' mxmm{H‘ ar. 1h '&:‘m | i lh\ in fact all over me, andwas all runi A friend of mine was 1 cannot Vegetable Compornd mzfi?m may publish my teshnomll s i mq be the means Ot"h‘lirnfl some o Wu'ficmpbensueag Iola, Kusu. t umm of unsolieited tes. umo :n 31. at the Pinkham Lok of which are from tim bmhed by issien, ar e Comapo! e en Jfi.m wotnan in the Usite: wri ble Compoun Hltook it and it gave me health and strength and made snew woman of me. sdv‘lc!. It & free, ready to bring yc hulth and may save y ‘ relieve _the headache, dullness, ! { duction 3 i g | WOLVES OF THE NIGHT § PART FOX PRODUCTION m-nuly Dramatic PM Love, Ehvy, Conspiraty * and ‘Revengs, Based. on Mining Rivaley Wall $traet Triekerys EXTRA ru'flmu AND “SHACKLED” Not a “Wronged GaP' stery. Not 4 “Vampire Weneh” Affair. But the Stery.ef a Noble Woman Whe Scatters 9 the Winds Préjudics, Stahder, Calumny, by the Ferce of Her Great, Gooed Charactsr! SIX BEAUTIFUL ACTS e RAINBOW COMEDY oy 'A LITTLE BROTHER OF THE RICH Three Big Stars, a Famous Author and Universal Produc- tion Is What Makes “A Little Brother of ths Rich” a Win- ning Photo-Victory. MULES AND MORTGAGES A LARRY SEAMON COMEDY SCREEN SMILES [ WORLD’S LATEST WEEKLY - A EVERYTHING NEW PRICES—50c, $1.00, $1.50 War Tax Extra Telephone Orders Must Be Called For Not Later Than 6:30 Tonight. WHERE YOU SEE THE PICK OF PICTURES TODAY AND THURSDAY Carl Laemmle Presents the Grfi.afiifll\vuémfiacm OTIS SKINNER HENRY MILLER DANIEL FROHMAN BLANCHE BATES CONSTANCE BINNEY — 1IN “TOM’S LITTLE STAR” A Million Dollar Cast That Seunds Lixe The Hali of Fame ELAINE HAMMERSTEIN —IN— “THE COUNTRY COU. A Picturization of the Famous Stageé Suocess of the Same Name by Booth Tarrington and Julian Street. HAROLD LLI—?'YD PRIZMA in “RAJA . The Most Beautifu o(ugnp’ly Z.OOGInFeet of Laughs in Naturx} %nh ! We have bolsheviki of the pen and bolsheviki of the bomb and we Have There should not be particular diffi- culty in filling the places of the strikers provided the protection promised is really givem for it will be needed, as thosé on strike have the false notion that they own the jobs.~-Bristo] Press. 8ingle smaghups on the Derby turn- pikeé have lost their novelty. In the past week there have Deen two oe- casions in which the accidents follow each othir in stich close sequence that the total strews the surrounding ter- ritory with fragments of half a dezen automobiles, but, fortunately, so far there have beeh mno fatilities—New Haven Register, patlor holsh i and gutter holshe- viki. Hssentidlly they all belleve in the rule of the minority and, as sure as there is still democraey in the heart of America, we are going to rout them out—Manchester Herald. It is to be hoped the energy of the government will not weaken in its announced purpose of seeing that the coal mines are operatéd and pro- maintained despite the They are invited to ré- turn at the increase of fourteen per cent. in wages. If they do not care to accept the offer their places arfe vacant and will be filled by others. e COMING FRIDAY EVENING! PULASKI HALL, NORWICH. DECEMBER 5th FERDINANDO BROTHERS MARINE DANCE ORCHESTRA Saxophone Quartette DANCING TILL MIDNIGHT DANCE 8 to 12. TICKETS 55 CENTS SPECIALS PURE ALUMINUM SAUCE PANS Tauaiteime ... .. 0 Thi e 114-quart size oSl 2-quart size .....................51.00 One Set of All Three GRE-SOLVENT l-poundcan ......................15¢ 3l-poundcans....................40¢ strikers. S — THE HOUSEHOLD Bulleun Building - 74 Franklin Street Telephone 5314

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