Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 28, 1920, Page 4

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-entirely removed; but until thé open WEEK ENDING JANUARY, 17,1920 - 10,376 LIQUOR ON FOREIGN SHIPS. Lifting the ban on the liquor on ! foreign ships while in the ports or within' the three mile limit of this | country, though only temporary at present, j5 in keeping with the pro- 'tests of other nations. Protests may or may not have been anticipated but ‘3t is to be realized that when it is rep- yesented that wine is servéd as a part Tof the regular rations on ItaMan ships, . it is not within his country to say ge must be made and that deny themseives part of while on their ship in the s country. the prov] that a cha they must their mea waters of 3 me as we regard our vessels ‘fiylng the American flag as United States territory wherever it may be, so do other countries take the same stind fegarding their ships and as far as the rations of the employes of those ships are concerned it is not expected that other countries will in-| terfere. It is to a final de test that sized that fore} be expected, however, when n is riade upon this pro- strongly empha- or harbors of country for sale any more than| n, that such li- brought must remain for consumption while in American | ch ships must be that is landed or the prohibition law of other mations as vessels are| here getting or | the protests are likely to be respected, but such call“for the st to see tha on sorted to and The chances of doing in booze w & engaged in. big business ill not be overlooked. | RETURNING SHANTUNG. More than the ordinary amou 1 to be manifested in| regarding 10 China. ula was wrested from the - Japanese during the| pan continues to hold it the manner in which| ured control of it made it| t it ought to go back to) of | interest is bour such steps - urged fhat it shoula " the peace trea it to China. and] one_or more of 1= country copted such | a req 1 it been persistent- | Iy urged. The threat of Japan to re- fuse to sign if such was required| ed the opposition and Japan was awarded country with which war recompense, Wwith the promise| made however that it would return to China. Because of this promise, | gentle the w bound outcome. that owing t the been a feeling | definite statement, the re- be de- e could apan has re- as be forgotte peatedly that Japan wishes to open ons for the| speedy cession of Shantung to China indicates that Japan isn't given to a an prom amounts to hi The world will naturaily walch with eagerness the terms under return the tervitory ance to correct that have pre- s possession of that 0 China any misconcep vailed regarding peninsula. FIGHTING DOPE TRAFFIC. There is no getting away from the [fact that the use of drugs in this couniry has been showing a regretta- {ble_increase for a number of vears. {It has resulted in the passage of pro- {tective laws by which it was expected ythat the sales would be restricted and thoss -engaged in the traffic would be {prosscuted. The legislation has re- ,Sulted in the bringing to light of the fact that there were many drug users {about whom there had been previ- ously no knowledge. They haq ac- ‘quired the habit in various ways and {kept it up until they had become |slaves of It and the worst of all the |revelations was the fact that were thoss who wers willing to use every possible means of engaging in i-h'ful traffic in nareoties simply {for the plrpose of getting their living |or riches off of-the victims of this de- moralizing practice. . Predictions were made that prohi- !wfln would Increase the dope habit. In Massachusetts the claim is now ‘being made that there is a material increase 4n the number of those mak- |ing and Aisposing of quack nostrums dope and aleshol. Chief Briry of the division of registration of the civil service commission is au- s cannot bring| | American and anti-American. ir ¢ that s | getic { to cast | handsome it's useless to try to slush |ardund in a January thaw. pensers of drugs ugder regulation. It at will improve conditions there it certainly should be adopted. ~ ' FEED THE BIRDS. 3 It January continues to give us| many more days like Tuesday it will ot be long before the snow ‘will be ground is once more available fér feeding purposes a wee bit of aften- tion to the needs of the birds would not come amiss. With the ground covered and the trees coated in ice the birds are depied the food that they would otherwise find even durine cold weather. For about two Wweeks now the birds have been having me.chance to feed in the open places. What they have managed o get they have had to do some tall hustling for in ‘order to keep thm from gtarving. There are of course not as many’ birds in this cli- mate the year round as during the mild geasons and not all of those that winter here are favorites but that doesn’t justify the leaving of them to starve to death when the throwing out of crumbs or meat scraps would give the needed relief. There are those friends of the birds who make a practice of erecting shelters and.keep- ing feed boxes weil filled during ev- ervy winter whether the ground hap- pens to be snow covered or net and the vards about those homes dre the brighter and more cheerful because of the birds that can invariably be seen th 0 one would want without the birds, They are a great help in eliminating various kinds of pests even as they are a joy through their song and plumage, and there is no better time in which to show ap- preciation of them than when they are need of sustenance. It takes bus time, effort or material. . And! is true of the song birds is dike- e true of the game birds. Winter causes great havoc among them um- less . those who are anxious to hunt them give thought to the practice of giving them feed when it cannot be herwise obtained. to get along wha w HANDLING THE UNDEPORTED. By the sage in the senate of the Kenyon bill, which appropriates si and a half million dollars for Ameri- canization work, recognition is given to the need which ex: ent time of deal literacy that prev: We have heard need of such at the pres- the alien il- n this country. much talk about, the efforts, but this evidences move in that direction and from such a beginning results age to be expected. The eliminatior cf dan; cals by deportat nd will be 10t s0lv rous radi- en under- ed, but that o difficulty, and you cannot ac- according this legisla- the to do coi complish to Senator is urged s It cannot fail to be realized that there are many native born as well as) alien residents this country who fall short of being Americans, who fail to grasp their duty and who are asily led in the wrong direction. Re- rding these the Tire Insurance tion movement well says: America_has plenty of room and a warm welcome for those who wishs to become Americans, but it cannot spare a single square foot of soil to those who intend o continue un- Fortu- aeport somé of the most| ese intruders, but these | | percentage of the un- *hat about the remainder? Theen They must be ely we c for the de-; ngress or the of ‘the “rank izens. Tt is a t justice, o latures but file of American cf education plus ana of influence it is really a task of moral coer- | Tt plus; cion. task for swift and ener- wherein American ci their vast numbers must opportunities when they exist and create opportunities when they do not exist, to Americanize all who come within their own circles or efse them out of their cifcles. It no time to talk of broadminded or of conciliation where a great auestion of right and wreng is involved.” With the whole country working up- ze seize in on a basis as advocated Americaniza- tion efforts would make fast progress ana a deplorable situation get speedy relief, EDITORIAL NOTES. The man on the corner says: The real big problem these days is to make both ends meet, The Powhatan is demonstrating that there are ships quite as helpless as those without a rudder. This is the kind of weather that starts a train of thought toward the next_ season’s bathing suit. If you cannot step high, wide and Before*long someone is going to| claim that there is a_conspiracy be- tween the influenza and the wets, " 1t looks as if Rhode Island and New Jersey were planning to become big- ger attractions for vacationists than ever. With the allies recognizing the in- be expected to hustle for hunting li- censes in that land. It i3 important to Norwiéh and the towns through which it passes that the be put in proper shape. It you get by a week end without being approached for a contribution for some new cause, don’t expect:your 00d luck to continue much longer. It takes courage these days to pre- dict that prices are going to come down, but some, other than crystal gazers, permit themselves to be thus quoted. Lord French says the:only thing te do is to give Ireland home rule. But it doesn't seem to be a question of giving Ireland fome rule but making it take it. | thesity for this assection and he also eonvinesd that where one grain of el g&-hmmmmmu- ‘Well, it cannot be claimed that Ad- miral Sims is making a bid for the presidency. Like Secretary Lane of the interior department he was bern dependence of Armenia the Turks can! 1 Norwrich-Colchester road should ! Young Mrs. Harpediter sidled into the lighted parlor of the little Oak Park bungalow and deposited her parcels on the chair. Then, with a very sheepish expression, she faced Her husband, 7 TSRS “I'm tired to death,” 'she exclatmed as she.glanced at the clock. “Td no idea o little shopping would take. 0 ong.” “Slip off Your hat and rest a bit” suggested her lesser half, sympatheti- cally. “Then you can tell me all about it. What took so long?’ “Oh, no, 1 mustn't take off my hat yet. T mean” demurred the young lady, “at least not. for a few minutes. Charlie, dre you going to be very angry with me?” “About what!" Young Mrs. Harpenter drew off h sloves, rolled them into a ball an tosmem into the chair beside thé pac) Then she drew a deep breath. " “You know, dear,” she hegan ner- vously. “T've been needing a sham- poo. But I put it off until I exchang- ed that necktie for tou .and, bowsht your new collars and some'of that horrid cheese you like.” “Your preamble presages something important,” interrupted her husband. t is it—a new hat® “Mercy, no, nothing so expensive! So when' I’ finished chasing through the stores I went into Mme. Yvon- nitche’s beauty shop, around the cor- ner, t0 have my hair washed. -1 was tired and limp from the walking and the long ride on the 'L’ and she me- ticed it. 3 ““1 will make the madame oh, so comfortable,’ she said. ‘And then wel will do the hair shampoo in the grand mode, eh? . “I nodded and leaned back in the chair. Madame's fingers wero sooth- ing and the room was warm and I— I'm afraid I dozed. -Anyway, madame asked me a lot of questions and I don’t remember just what I did an- swer. T came back to life when she had_fAnished, and jumped! “Then 1 thought of what you'd say when I came home and I wanted to cry. Perhaps you'll lea¥e “me— “For heaven's sake, why?’ asked Mr. Harpenter. “This suspense is aw- ful. Take off your hat. N-not yet. You see, T began think- ing you'd leave me and then I'd be left all, all alone in the world, becausei you always did like my hair just as it was, and once when I said I'd bob. thuridered her husband. “You mean—-" i o, MOtRiik as.bad as thst, But I thought of myself all, all alone in the world, just® because of a mistake of o ‘ool hairdresser, and 1 gave Mme. Yvonnitche 4 £00d piece of my | mind and started home. “Every time I'd arrive at the door- way T'd shiver. And ‘then T'd walk around the block again and try to fig- ure out some way of keeping you from being too angry. Once I came all the way up-ithe steps and then I saw you in the parior, reading the paper and scowling so fiercely that I fled. Final- 1y T decided to tell you all about it— just as ia réally happened. Charlie —you won't be angry Charlie roge to his fall height. * “Take off your hat this instani!” he commanded. The protecting covering came like a flash. “Henna!” said young Mr. Harpem- ter, grimly. “I knew it!” wailed his-wife as she placed one arm .pleadingly around his off neck. “I knew it. But it wasn't my fault. I didn't know what madame was doing. I was asleep. And I thought how much you usd to talk be- fore we were married about the sun- shine in my hair and_now pretty it was and how you hated fools who dy- ed their hair, and I'd 'a’ given any- thing to get the red taken out of it.” Very youthful Mr. Harpenter patted his_wife gently on the back. “There, there, dear: don't take it too seriously to heart,” he conscled her. “The color'll fade out, sooner or later.” “But then it goes streaky, and you wouldn't want it looking that way. Mme. Yvonnitche says I'll have to keep touching it up from time to time.” “Well—" :'57‘0 fi'ou think it looks so homely?” el “I knew it! ‘I knew vou wouldn’t fael so badly "about the accident. Dearest, you're a lov. out to the Kkitchen and prepare sup- per—something extra nice for my own dear husband.” Charlie, fied glance at the parior mantelpiece mirror.—Exchange. Gleaned from Foreign Ex. changes A Reuter message says thut France's list of 500 names of Germans “wanted” for trial includes— One of the kaiser's sons; Crown Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria, and A number of generals and com- manders of prisoner of war camps. In all about 1,500 will be arraigned before courtsmartial of each of the three nations, France BelZium and Great Britain, or mixed courts in cases wheré™ the victims belong to different nationalities. French ecourtsmartial Paris and Lille. It is pointed out that in accordance with Article 228 of the peace treaty, even if the German culprits are judged by German courts, they must never- theless appear before the allies’ tri- bunals. New Allied Commander-in-Chief— General Degoutte. who is to be com- mander-in-chief of~the Belgian, Brits ish, American and French armies o occupation on the Rhine, was in com- | mand, of the French forces which fought side by side with King Albert's Atmy when the Germans were swept from the coast and through Belgium towards the end of the war. He was only a battalion commander at the beginning of the war, and at 49 was the voungest army commander in the French forces. He first atiracted attention in 1894 when, refused per- mission to take part in the French ex- pedition to Madagascar, he “obtained leave, without pay. Proceeding at his own expense fo Madagascar. he offered | atiop of mule transport in diffuelt hill coun- . and was soon rded by being appointed to an offiical post with the expedition. will sit in scarcely a more mixed race than.the Sudanese, for some of them are Avabs, some Nubian nesroes and some Ham- ites, while others are of mixed descent from any or all of these. The Dinkas, the wild folk who have lately given us some trouble, are generall as negroes, but even they are under Their «peech is a Sudanese dialect. and, like all negro languages; is of doubtful, though possibly, as H. G. Wells tells us of Sumerian origin. This at any ratgis certain—that they are savages. untamed and seemingly untamable, who fiercely resent and re- sist the civilized control which has but receatly been imposed on them. How We Got Leap Year—To the wisdom of one Roman ruler and the whim of another we owe our lean vear. Julius Caesar found the Roman /Kalends in such a muddle, for, ignor- ing the seasons, it often produced summer in the middle of winter, that, finding the astronomical vear was 365 1-2 days, he made that the civil vear, too. dividing the davs between the months in 208 and 31s. except that February had 29 davs, with an extra oune in leap yera. But later camws Augustus who, an- noved that his name month had only 30 days. took one day from February and added it to Augnst. Thus August now has 31 davs and February, except in every fourth vear, only 28. The Wisdom of Osler—Sir Willam Osler’s death at the end of the year recalls some inepiriting savings of his which were quoted as New Year reso- lutions when he became rerius profes- sor at the beginning of 1905. The master word is Work. Throw away in the first place all ambition bevond that of doing the day’s work well. Take no thought for the morrow. Live neither in the past nor in thé fature, but let each day’s work absorb your entire energies. The value of experlence is not In seeing much, but in seeing wisely. The secret of successful working Jies |in"the systematic arrangement of what How N. Y. City Children Care for Their Teeth The principals of New York's public schools only allow the children to re- classified | susnicion of being » mongrel race. | performance. of it. hobby. The “Tr of Heaven.' men in Enz of Heaven”—That . which has been un. rocted by a at . Henley “ailanthus” of hotanist with us attain the majestic he! climate seldom lives superb fol! publiz parks but for the f exhaled by the flowers. It ever, lately been ai the flowers of male ous. a as, rees are malodor- So people who wish to posse: plant only lady saplings. The Peers of the Year- including promotions ;to highe: times—it i fortunate thx styles) as their titles. the recipients have adopetd Wester Wem and was shortened to infen, Of the four who risked the loss of their identity by adopting differen names, Lord Rirkenhead onlv is r under his new designation newspaner readers would reco Lord Wyfold shall be fescued from nhscurity. were respectively Sir Herbert Ro Colonel Hall-Walker Hermon-Hodze, all by their Chronicle. erts, men \Less Than a Fifth Give Warning. Editor s lin tomobifsts giving warning: ings that are very same whichever They never seem s are going. at Maing street to 'go StreeN crossing. During last week there were 100 tos that went over that cros: out of that number there 20 that gave the signal of over the al the future, T. D. DANIELS. Norwich, January 1920.° High Cost of Diplomatic Living. Mr. Edi Diplomats,” was read by signed with more est for the reason that the and expense of the makes it imperative, to be pai And now Pl go | And youns Mr. Harpenter gathered Probably. up her packages and her But be-| A teacher tells of the following fore she left she flashed a very sat's-| hich she found in a written hiogra- veu have to 4o, and in the methodical Do not get too deeply absorbed, to the exclusion/ of all outside interests, No matter what it is, have an outside f “tree said to be the finest speel- is the It ‘does not ] zht that suggested the native name and in our more than 50 e would make this tree) a desirable addition to smen | to how- overed that only al “tree of Heaven” should take care to s the year has produced so many new peerages— rank the number is 28, a recérd for modern the major- ity of the ‘men ennobled have chosen their own surnames (or their former All but four of | this | course. thoueh Wemyss has become i Swinfen-Eady fa- | Few | nize either Lord Clwvd, Lord Wavertree or To'save research ihey They | and Sir Rohert | well known | old ' names—The London | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR| Will you please insert s as a caution for au- ho are very negligent in going over cross- It is the | the law requirés them to give the signal of danger when they tirn from North Eighth - | nd ! am authorized to send in their num- bers if they fail to give the signal in Your editorial, “Pay For the under- than ordinary inter- dignity ambassaderial posts of the United States in the cap- itals of the great powers of the world to the mind of the writer, for adequate compensation those holding the diplo- matic positions of this rank. At pres- are. ly. 1o of necessity, g0 only v{uluru:!ho “care Hitlc how- the venture may prove to- the provide their ambassadorial Hom pay sums in behalf of the gov- Lernment of this country, getting in re urn therefor nortmnsfimore than high | honor and very inter®ting soclal ex- perience. 5 Obviously the most perfectly equip- ped ambassador of the United States is useless as an appointee under pres- | ent conditions uniess he has the add- ed quality of wealth. Such lfmita- tions as now prevail on\the salaries, and thus on the list of ambassadors, should not be tolerated by a mation in a situation such as the United States now occuples. It is not that we ex- pect obstentatious extravagance in Qiplomatic circles, but Wwe must ex- pect an expensive mode of living, a costly establishment and_a respon- sible position among men in the great jeapitals. One’may not be an am- bassador of the United States at Par- | is, London, or Rome, without living up to the position and ohe may not Tiow live up to that high office without having private And independent means | of more than the average order. To| be an dmbassador is a rich man's job under the present compensation. America ought to have permanent | and adequate and sufficiently impos- | ing ambassadorial quarters in the| great capitals to which our individual ambaseador may go_when he takes| his post. When the Stars and Stripes float in the foreign breezes of these im- portant ¢enters they should hang:from our awn national property and not make a sad attempt to dignify a struc- ture wholly out of keeping with our, dignity or decorate the fine mansion | | obtained because our representative is| able to keep it out of his own expen- sive financial resources. Ambasea- dorships ought not to become mere political plums to be doled out to the unfit who seek the fat salaries, but they certainly also ought not to be iimited to choosing men of wealth and leisure as they now are. The high cost sive . They | and i EUGENE BERTRAM WILLARD. Chelsea, Mass., Jan, 24, 1920, Stories That Recall Others. | phy of Shakespeare handed in by one This is a Short Letter, but it of diplomatic living is a real problem. | X - 1t have catarrhal geaniess or o éven just a Jittia haM of hear- ing. ot have head nofses. Eo to vour druggist ami get ons ounce of Par- mint (double siteneth) and add to int_of hot water and a littfe, sranujated sugar. Take one table- Spoonful four times a day. Dis will often bring quick retiet from the distressing head noises Clogged nostrils should - epen, breathing become easy and the muycus— stop _dropping ints the throat, Tt is easy to.prepare, cofts littie and is pleasant! 1o take: Any- one [oxing hearing or - who has catarthal deafness ‘or_ head noisas Should give-this prescription a trial. OF INTEREST ~ T0 WOMEN Furs, Evéning Gowns, ; and Slippers CLEANED TO PERFECTION GOODS CALLED FOR AND DELIVERED EVERY DAY BY AUTO GIVE US A TRIAL TELEPHONE 7432 150 MAIN STREET Postal Telegraph Office, Norwich Works, New London—Branches, Mystic and Bristol. “YOU CAN RELY ON SHALETT'S” Brings a Message of Import, ance to every Woman. ‘Woodford, Vt.—‘Itook LydiaE. Pink- ham’s Vegetable de and Liver TTEERT e s before my ehild | [l||| . || l{was born and it did s | ke ; y igh- | ‘ A jledeightandone-half | mds when born | and I did not mger ‘ ny pains. ou lish this let- ! if you wish for I | would not be with- | qut your medicine | before child. birth.”” | Woodford, Vt. 1 The reason why Lydia E. Pinkham’s | | Vegetable Compound is so successful | | in overcoming woman'’s ills is because it | MOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE (All eods Covered by Insurance During Transit) NORWICH—PROVIDENCE—NEW LONDON—PUTNAM of her eighth grade pupil “Shakekpeare’s schooing Was limit and iv 15 not known when he was born, but it is ‘thought it ya: probably sometime in the early part 1 of his life.” Thereupon a first grade teacher was | reminded that- when the reading Prince Cherr; pils came to the wo I there in life for a_man that i but read them, “For what | in-life for a man that is bald? “For what is bad? re Such’a Dryness. A club, which in the Zood old da was noted for the “wetness” of its dinners, gave banquet the other | night and the invitation thereto call- jed attention to the fact that it was be a “dty” programme. Thinking that thert was a joke in the invita- tioy, and that probably the arran; ments committee had located the nec essary stuff for an old time: celebra- tion, the club membership turned out as one man. The committee, however, was' t to Tis word and served this m Dried beef, dried corn, dried ap {unbuttered popcorn, salt macke: | salted peanuts and dry toast. There was nothing “wet” on the “dry” pro- {gramme and the speeches were the {driest part of the entertainment. “But the worst of it was” lamented one member, “we didn’t even get a dry martini or a dry Manhattan.® IN THE DAY’S NEWS Why Salton Sea Is Salt. Reports that the ~Salton Sea shrinking rapidly form the ba a bulletin by the National Georgraph explaining the causes of this wonder of the West. = s Iago the Gulf ifornia extended to a point about 150 mil rthwestward from its says the brastin, which on to The ety by Arthur P. Davis. “It ‘also extended up the calley of the Colorado river Yuma and probably somewhat above. The Colorado river, rising in the Win River Mountains of Wyoming and tk Rocky Mountaing of Colorado, car the rocks along its course and brou the resulting nd mud down -|in its swift current, discharging them into the arm of the gulf near Yuma As this process went on, without ces sation ceatury after century, the valley was gradually filled, a delta built up, over which the river flowed far out into the gulf. Tt encroached rogressively upon the gulf until it huilt up a delta entire acroes, joining the foothalls of the Cocopah Mountains on the western shore. This cut off the head of the gulf, and the arid climate rapidly evaporated the waters thus separited and left an inland depression, which at its lowest point was nearly 300 feet below sea-level. It is estimated that the amount of silt carried by the Lower Colorado river is sufficient to cover 53 square miles one foot deep with dry alluvial soil each year. “The river continued to bring down its load of sediment and to. build its delta higher and force it farther down into the gulf. Like all such deltaic streams, the channel on the top of tne delta is constantly shifting, cutting one bank, building up the other, over- d the | class was| one of the pu- | 2 e e 1 Gaida told how the revolutionarigs as-'fOr public purposes. The remaining { hanks in the valley reglons all fhe wa¥ lsembled in the rallway station at;l0ss of values in plenty for private ;| from the Grand Canyon to UM O divostok but were fired upon by|interests to stand. — Waterbury Re- of | ht | shores of the | | contains the tonie, strengthening pro: | rties of good old fashioned roots and ! erbs, which act on the female organ- ism. +Women from all parts of the | | country are continually testifying toits | strengthening, curative influence, and FALL RIVER—NEW BEDFORD and Connecting Points EQUIPMENT—NINTEEN PIERCE-ARROW TRUC'S E. P. WINWARD & SON as it contains no narcotics or harmfal Phone 1250 17 WILLIAM STREET drugs it is a safe medicine for women. | 135 WATER STREET NEV/ BEDFORD 1f you wapt spécial advice write Lydia NORWICH Fhis e 9331 | E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confidential), | 192 SOUTH MAIN STREET 133-142 DUPFEE STRIET | Lynn, Mass. Your letter will beopened, ' PROVIDENCE /LL RIVER read, and answered by women only. Phone Union 3842 - Phone 3619 | flowing both b [ water “sometim | jan cld channel for a new one. In this {way the river has from time to time | flowed into thé Salton § for some ! years or centuries, and anon has shift- he. {0 : {52 to fhe castward and Jischarged | them to take the position of command. 3 2 en- | or_in-chief of the Russian army if eral course the river has followed|their efforts to overthrow the Koichak O D T e R lancheedsin /Dekteibing this wonieiday water the Tiver normally overfiows jtsirevolution and its failure, General minister of the constituent assembly t was formed last year. with them,” con- “1 promised OTHER VIEW POINTS The drys were at one time violently opposed 1o any compensation to the Jiquor trade, but it is mere elementary justice that the' public should take over the stocks that were manufactur- ed in good faith while the busine: was lawful and were taxed heavil Ly nigh wa- | 891, the over- | flow running into the”Salton Sink has | been sufficient to materially raise the | level of the lake and overflow the| | tracks of the Southern Pacific ral which are - built along publican. Claims made for the sfate pler at New London are beginning to justify themselves. Two shiploads of flour from the Pacific coast already bav been landed there and a third ship on the way with a eargo-of 5,000 ton: This will make the tofal amount of government flour stored on the - pier twenty thousand tons, which is prob- abiy 1lore than ever was collected in New London at one time before in history. Incidentally, this is equal to more than 13 trainlcads, hid the flour troops of the All-Russfan government | from the hills around the city. “When we tried to fight our way out of the railway station,” said Gen- eral Gaid: “we encountered lines of | Japanese troops drawn up with bayo- nets fixed. We had to go back. e o ight @ cordon of Allied| STORIES OF THE WAR |troops. two battalions of Japanese, a| battalion of Americans and even a Revolutionaries Killed at Vladivostok.: 1arge force of Czechs, was drawn about Nearly all of the 500 revol the vard hey would not let us pped by the forces of the its shore ionari All-Rus: through and ¥e would not fire in an: way that might endanger the Allied! { Ty T iR attempe _| forces surrounding us. | been shipped by rail and ~had each |sian government in the attempted re-|fOrfes SUIFARAENE WS 0 o oq | train been made up of 50 cars filled to {volt at Viadisvostok on November 18| o us that might and “Russian war- | capacity. { were killed,. according to General|ships in the harbor began to Wrop| /Ihe argument that trade follows fa- Rudolph Gaida, the Czecho-Slovak |shells into the circle where 509 of us|Cfities is juts as sound as that trade | commander, who acted as military | wére confined. ¥ the flag and it is doubtful if anyone in the future will have oe- casion to question the state's wisdom putting up this ' pier.—Hartford Post. |leader of the insurgents. General| - |Gaida went to Shanghai after he and ptured when the re- t lasted all night. Two hundred dead and mortally wounded lay where '™ they fell. The next morning those| who were left were permitted to sur- d of the revolutfonariesirender. They killed them all . AT Iwere killed in fighting” he sald.| The Allied authorities at Vladivostok| Sericulture has been scientifically { “Three hundred of them were marched held that as Czech citizens General|advanced in Korea, until this yea! there will be a harvest of 700,000 bush- s of silk cocoons, more than three times the production five ears age. {out like cattie and sho {hearing. They were dr firing squads. | General Geida said the real leaders {of the laborative revoiution were Ivan| { Alexanderovitch Takussheff, president of the Silberian Duma before A\A!'mrnll Kolchak was givem the tital of su preme ruler, and Colonel Arkadi An- | tovich Krakovetohi, who was Vice- o trials, no} ven before the Gaida and his staff were not amen- able to Russian law. They escaped death by promising the Kolchak com- mander at Viadivostok to leave the country at once. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S . CASTORIA FRESH BATTERIES FOR \POCKET LIGHTS The Norwich Electric Co. PHONE 674 \ 42 FRANKLIN: STREET The largest pin factory is in Birm- ingham, Eng., where something like 0,000,000 pins are manufactured ev- ery working d 1ib- erafamount of STUFFING or DRESSING fla- yored with Bell's Seasoning. In- orease the pleas. S-eueRTE— ureanddecrease M the cosi. Hotel ohefs Tecom- mend it. . If our_grover et e fof Yor rome Plo Ask Groeers For BELL'S SEASONING CHOICE CUTs ~ Corned Beef b.......... 10c ceive such dental preparations as con- tain mo grit to scratch the tender en- amel, no drugs to inflame the delicate gums. Mothers should be equally care- ful at home. # Mrs. K. K. Jackson of Public School 78, and Mr. Romeo J. Perretti of No.| both of New York are glad to have their pupils use Albodon Dental Cream. They have investigated and know it is both effective and safe. Al- bodon is caleium carbonate, saponified and mixed with the well-known anti- septic oils of cicves, cinnamon and eu- calyptus, making a composition one- third cleansing, ~one-third palishing, one-third antiseptic. Authorities :gree this is best for women and chil- ren. on the wrong side boundacy Jina of our northers lmm for A tube of this cream containing suf- 35 brushings can be bought poypheii g Shing ARMOUR’S LINK Sausage, Ib. 26c Hamburg Steak, Ib. .. 18¢ FRESH CUT Pork Chops, Steaks:s25¢ Sirloin - Round - Porterhouse Cut from Swift’s and Armour’s Beef FRESH SPINACH : Lean Ib. .. 15 lba. Legs, bb........ 25¢| Half Ib. box 22¢ Stewing s Chopi: b, .. ... 25c For Potting BEST JUICY LEMONS, dozen 19c CRANBERRIES BEST MAINE POTATOES —TODAY ONLY— Butter:s 65¢ Meadow Brook Creamery The Finest Butter in the World EGGS, doz. 57¢ Mohican Selected Every Egg Good FRESH Opysters, pt. 25¢ BREAD BREAD BREAD 11b. loaf 9¢c 11 Ib. loaf 14¢ Considered the best in town by a great many Best, Pure, White Lard, Ib.... 29¢ g Best No. 1 Smelts, Ib.. 20c Pieces BEST GRADE Succotash Nabisco box Cameo Biscuit 15c Fine Dinner Blend Coffee. .. Ib. 37c 50c value Beef N. B. C. Social Teas CALIFORNIA RAISIN BREAD peck. .

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