Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 18, 1920, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

pay for it. The only thing is that : = and Mc’ 124 YEARS OLD Ssteristicn srics 12 & weeki 50a & mesch: S golden.egg.) .. . -2} It isn’t of course a Tetegpzes Cal o - 5 553 : Suieds Cotiasl| Booms 3. RO WEMSIR OF THE ASSOCIATER That there is a demand for ships and that the ' German ships taken{ Jewels which have .,.,H.\d‘m set- over by this country are much de-|tings. of social.splendour when worn sired was indicated by the interest!by their original Russian owners wer exchange. session, but it is a surprising fact|Johnson, Dymond and Son, Great | form, Fange as high as those submitted to| these Jewels'with o history are to be | dsked. the shipping board last month. The 3 bids received, however, do not con- stitute a sale. There must be an ac- ceptance on the part of the shipping | board before any deal cah ~be put through and in view of the increased CIRCULATION . WEEK ENDING FEB. 14th, 1920 | sia. t Ornaments for which Mr. W. E. Hurcomb, who had-arranged the sale, osal of the vessels it | PrinCess explained that the only way me_before anything = obstruct the. dis HOUSES FOR NORWICH. may be some in the way of turning the & - M hy de- | further in the way o g flour. 3 Oy need | vessels over will be attempted. A beautiful pearl and diamond |hOrses by our car, and nted out a| That it should be stated on au- | pracelet which once belonged to a|Frances rather too admiringly for a £ too well -under- from the White House that|Russian Princess changed hands at|Stranger, I thought. whether there w: secret under- | Was probably caused-by what is usual with Great Britain regard- |1y considered as harmiess dust. An: ate A the |dust that will burn can be made ‘to St e only | explode under certain conditions, All In view of theipe a mixture of air and dust in de- whieh 1t is assured the |no:% Troortions hoard placed about (hf“ Some the s expee o cien is blocked hy thé re-|was the cause. It was demonstrated remain | that two ountes of flour dust in a box government in case it| | needs them. { The move of the shippi questionably in respon lid. From which it was calculated that | ng board is e to the de-i4000 cu feet of air would throw & | that the- government should | wegiht of t out of the shipbuilding as well ore us, with fac- plants belt T A They was i 1d, agreed Fran. e nen'T remirked Armiy At like to be showh to my reom. " “That was the way it was on '“,‘: ;um:{x;: spoke to F she hailed someone x;l anut . Nota- coulg say wo! ret : PEx 0 take our automobile into gl Kentucky and Frances pulled off ‘her jacket, siipped into her overall apron’and be- =5 ao § wnmed.hathum!‘nlnlm . m‘ a3 % = case where if you want it you must| > oo E g:!i‘ T Ex|. o i TALL THIS WEEK CHAS. K. CHAMPLIN STOCK COMPANY $2 Broadway Successes t Popular Prices e e o L e e nna . MAT. AND NIGHT—TODAY BROADWAY JONES Geo. M. Coh H Friday Matinee (FOR WOMEN ON! HIS BROTHER’S KEEPER Friday Night—Big Special Show A STITCH IN TIME Percy, I though < those who fix the priees should ‘take| In the.old days, before the war, | were. in Florida,” laimed 2 2 care that they 4o Ot go.too far, that| thousands of American tourists visited | mas shopper when she ‘amfi gfl”’m they do net drive business away In- | Burope every summerfi partly because | friend at the silk_counter. 58 of .increasing it and that they|i® Was one of the cheapest ways of| “So I was" replied Mrs. o : a holiday, Hotels, fc cloth- | dropping her lorgnette and extending do ot kill' the goose that ‘ lays the “‘-“”'8"& S5k m-dxlz. Foy m‘.- .m’s“ R B Fhut we s tomemc Midss = + Atlantic than in America. Now the | rather suddenly. . move to kill|% i "ot axchange will be the principal | may go south dGain after the holi- baseball. It comes from the Wrong|fnancial attraction to tour- | 4ays. But we shall not take direction for any such motive.. It 1s & | ista. For thelr. dollar these it gt 25 | niece, Frances, with ub, and that will o clear case of making the game pay|per cent. more in Bnglish money than | SIE ‘l‘i‘fyi Jmatters. b ‘Nerwien, Cvea but extreme care needs to be exer-|they used to get! in French franes » e Sate 5 | cised unless it forces many to restrict | they will gain 100 per cent; '1n Toaly tond, .‘z;& Frances” continued Mrs. Per- heis ttendahce: to one game when |still more; and if they sho venture g 4, Pafctta Dusinem OTice 4. 4 f,t::,.,.:!:"m; might get. to many, |to Germany they can have marke al- T e dog/ oV r the raise applies to the bleach-|most for the asking. But from our | 628 and she cami es X to mc’sn Ex pe. b ta. point of view the American invasion | Leht that (raveling with her is. wi e Omes 3 Coumh St Telesbons 105 | ers as Well as the best seat . will be equally beneficial Bvery |[eRlly embarrassing. Mr. Perey is so ; proud of Frances' work with the ar- THE SHIP AUCTION. . J’”“"d Jriien tuey. Shat W Jiip Wb My husband and I are exceedingly take- off t she developed an extremely i wir her. lnte]r.!he ‘appeared astonished at my .dispieasure. “‘Why, aunty, I just loved to help Ons had been at only a few kilometers trom’ Marats 16 Grand ,where I was you “know. They 0 to mess with them, d maybe you and w those nice ch Rupt, which i my in France that he was anxious to o ol tend to improve the rate of | 4o something mice for her, and in- vited her to motor to' motor to Flor- ida with us. “Imagine vart of the time, wanted. me_to but I was afrai cle wouldn't like it my surprise when we i called for her, the morning we start- taken in the bidding for their pos-(sold at the sale rooms of Messrs.|ed, to see her in her Y. M. C. A. uni- Frances Perey, exclaimed im- you are simply wild, T that the bids made openly.did - not|Quéen-street, yesterday. More of|, “‘Why are you wearing Saturday M 2 here Do You Live Ne SILN%‘I_& MATINE 5—EVENING BreeD Today and Thursday Earle Williams Headed by RUTH CLIFFORD and J. BARNEY SHERRY in GATE A Super-Featuns That Will Hold You From the First Flash on the Screen Until the End. Positively the Best Production Mr. Williams Has Ever Ma Atlanta on Armistice day and nearly every soidier and of- ficer we saw either howed to or saluted | *“‘Because, aunty, ncthing hurts it,| “We were in In many cases the precious stones:and it's g0 easy to get around in, and represented all which some refugee| because I just love had been able to smuggle out of Rus- | ke me in it? " ‘Yes, dear,’ I replied, for you know Frances has a boyish beauty that is set off well by that trig uniform, but interest being manifested in the |had paid thousands of pounds to a|l was about to suggest that pessibly e e senate and (hrough in.|Russian princess, came to him with |She would feel more comfortable in & e e et to | flour still dimming thelr glow, The | loss conspicuous costume. Frances. Ax we:walked down Peach- tree street she stopped and chatted } With dozéns of them until I was so worn out that T went back to the ho- where I was soon jeined by Mr, ‘Where is Frances’ T asked. “Just now she’s sitting in the lounge downstairs with the best looking sol- dier of them all’ i “I merely sighed for doesn’t seem to have any more sense of propriety about Frances than she | has, but when she came to my room I sired severely who the friend was. ‘Our top - sergeant.’ He's taking a _business trip Rather funny we happened to She did not speak of him again until our first evening at Jack- me to me and said, ‘Aunty, my top sergeant is here and he wants me to_marry him, and. 1 guess T will. asked me over there, but girls were 8o scarce I thought maybe he didn’t know | his own mind, but he sa¥s he has seen thousands of girls since he eame home | and he still wants me so I'd like to g0 | straight back to Chicago and some_awfully stunning “civies” made and have n real bang-up wedding.' she could get her jewelery out of Rus-| “While sia was by hiding them in a bag of | roadside the first day out ! = driving a farm wagon drew up his| we were lunching by the sident would give an emphatic| £360. e \egatice answer to the senatorial res-| The explosion which wnscked an | St o > olution seeking knowledge . as 10| Bdinburg. cork. factory’ lasteSaturday |’ -H’;fif‘yfi“ffifl‘1{;‘,}"3-;33“;6' real: thing,’ he declared. I haven't ‘seen one of you for a year. - “‘Perhaps this im't as good as the used to get, chicken sandwich and’ some (the youth began swap- said our irrepres- | you want to that is necessary. that there shall | stum vou and she ‘and vears ago three flour mills | ping war sto Was beenwere destroyed as the result- of a| “You « intima- | mysterioustexplosion, and experiments | Florida, o ners would | subsequently carried out left no pos- | Trances and her zet into British hands |sibility of doubt but that flour dust! packeq aw: and said good-byve to our guest. “That evening in the hotel at La- ble for|CONtaining two cubic feet af air could | fayette the elevator hoy. {be exploded with sufficient force fo|at Frances and kiow we are on our way to remarked at length, “Now you know why I am frantically | for Frances can't b bothered to select her own trousseau “Well, you'll be glad to have her set- won't vou. Mrs. Perey stared hard |upset two big. men standing on the|you, mirs™ ““Near Verdun. bout 2060 Ib. of flour dust ignited im! “‘Who was you with, miss?¥ to the button on 0 tons to a height of | her coat and the boy said: ‘Oh, was she answered. . but it will be awfully dunl| traveling without “Frances S To the| the. ship ¢ business. C Our note on the amous abbot of \E =4 by the government - | Paisiey recalls to a correspondent the | L ETTE] THI s tive | ate capitel hae, atw theory according to which the town RS TO THE EDITOR | The sale of the o newcomers| great a sacrifice will be advantageous| name SviDed Bor.- Phere |t the cov in the end e = aisiey’s “Baptist Cathedral” as the | friend are, however, not encours 1 T Coats Memorial Church is locally | Hos. oday TUBES VS. AUTOS. of the mail 's ted by Postmas Bu: big ecities to replace Mary's Cathedral in Edin- = mail tubes has h provided b burgh,.Truro ¢athedrah and St. Fin- d only knew that I made a pre- recent torm. ith st S5 v b veon Feb. a & e WO " and transportation in general ha Charles Lamb’s original manuScript | oo between Feb. 1st and sth he would yped is not surprising| ‘A Dissertation Upon Roast Pig” has hould feel ¢ in m amlae r £ n estimate the essay | ori iy 800 words: and that many nto much | peri works out in They for mu rough certain ! p, the storm came! Ms paid for a Lami “the large citi ice previously rendered | 10,000 She iz of mail ous receiv-|° moye and | detained o fond of flowers sed in| Pehind , for instance, the furni- | % v's own room at | ficle ¥ hand- in the French manner. flower: | Heddeghem - in her Majesty’s own s ut | able. ¥ pictures by the same ! it 1t was W rom 211 n addition to . this the Merchants ork is said, by econ- | inays o : rope was t New ¥ rival Fantin Lat fived T | Asociation of New -Y, points ou tval Fan -atour’s. emphasized | that only about 30 per cent. of the Heddeghem one of thel tha weather w ated bY | department's automobiles for mov- | LUeens’ “discoveries. . - Nowed this | i are in condition to be iwsed |, The flower plctures of' Mrs. Louise | that.evening we had a thu kS S e e | Furmage are also among the Queen's i etk e 50 are;cojlection. broken dowr the repa | broken down he repalr ShoP.|. Announcement that ths King and| | Queen Alexandra are to give old i fashioned English rose trees to th 5 Shapespeare Garden at Stratford-on- encountered conditions | Gvon reminds me (writes a friend who | {that it cannot overcome through the|has spent t - |abandoned tubes had they been re-| America) that one of the most 1 made to reach &y alo ~harm- come all ce troubles} an be appreciated tl | derground service ig not affected b; have| i1izzards, ntral Park af i ew York. to be found.there, and the which it is kept proves the Mg 4 n of American Shake- | [EDITORIAL NoTEs‘ overs'for the great teacher and t. s my friend) a bis ste ronger bonds between the two na- watches made. extra ;> 1 such | nited States, taking with them ad- | cnal roots ‘from Royal and other on the corner says: Even|nicle. hose who are suffering, finding| = ly. the ¥y imagined. It| of afl that has| reaching of |+ encourages the their agree-| does not as-| It means that t be made.if this gov- oing to have any hand therein. Whether Burope considers Bat necessary remains to’ beseen. BASEBALL PRICES. £00d ¢ baseball . fans a ton for coal for export, why! contagious. The New York stock ex- ;h.;r:l:e Biague o enctiaimtiidn | RO R building. | 3 can spirit of democracy | and_generosity can always be depend. | in the formation of an intérnational| J0Yere cirtumstances. A.stdrm much Suburbanites, completely deprived of | man hasn't failed of recognition, trolley service, and with only a few “lift” on a private | cost:of seeing theina- | roads should charge an extra cent, | PFivate cars were always full. Thel be < greater “hereaf- £ e Wagea | owners didn't wait to ask to e intro- ame as:everythinggelse| Keeping out of the war and reduc-| 3100 t0 the wayfarers who wers For, a- considerable’time ing the ,cost of living will probably| s oooiBe: {been apparent ithat with | continue to be used by the democrats| sed rise’in® thesalaries #of. campaign slogans. Of course, there were exceptions,| there :must” be: something. but then. there are always such, and the managers. to_cover (their| Think of President Wilson . calling| the noini to emphasize. is ' h ope in and come along!” until each car had its capacity load. They of! course.ehould,. foritheyfars|TLausing calll They deserve at leost! The storm that takes rank with the saénred: or, retaineq: for *the. A less it is a strong*aggregation{o smile sand rub: their {hands. Wileon * indicates he wonld have let| Wes forgotten, Jitners disappear- [ a sug: /has advanced just. fhes same cassin m.m that . thesoutgo”; -uuu; af jwentment when it attempts legislation| fered.| Tinder ths ctroumstences it is| to a series of jots where be balanced!bythe.income,sRx-{ making it a misdemeanor-for a.land-| hardly fair to the. trolley 'sor- | ignited and form o stream of int [penses. must (be ‘met or therewil:be{lord to refuse to rent,premises to| YICUA# o Tma(ternf consme. itidbserves mo- baseball ;and: expenses: :with ehfidren, But posaibiy m’““m"‘"’»’t;:n,afl‘_m uvfltfm To- | apalnet ihe . BAOW. mmma-:%‘m ‘with eWlidren would be more > = B s vioe 4 2 ‘ot .ocur: 0 ‘witp {landlorés (£ such fam- June Elvidge The P:isdn Pen Romance—Suspense—Thrills of ours and the constitution of the| United States still lives. Weil, T never | said they didn’t. But under the as- sault of Attorney General Palmer the censtitution is heinz mutilated as none | owes its name to its abbey church; the | Predicted Bignest Storm for Feb. 1 to8 | name Paisley being a corruption of Mr. Editor: I would like to write a | few friendly words in answer-.to my FEBRUARY 18th, 19th, 20th and 21st ‘and you'll find yourself looking over the cars at the STATE ARMORY The principal makes of cars will be on exhibition; why not make comparisons at that time? BIGGEST DISPLAY OF CARS EVER HELD IN THIS SECTION ‘ Broadway STRAND We Lead, Others All the Latest in Mu: “BOB AND_PEGGY VALENTINE . Singing, Talking_and_Dancing ATSON'S CLEVER DOGS The Dog‘s That Do An'zthins FRAN i BREAKER"—A S8ix Part Speci LeBlanc, Bully of the North Woods, Loved to Leave the Imprint of His Boot Calks on the of the soccalled Reds have ever.at- The democratic party heen guite sick for some time, and en Palmer gets through with his the obsequies will be It is difficult to get the drift of all the nonsense with which M. Willard fills his X sum it up in one word: Camouflage Cut out the smoke screen, Mr. Wil- lard, and come down to cases. Every crook in the country from.the pro eers of big business down spittie agents have used this camou- flage of patriotism to cover up their | The names of pirates | gouged the government out of untold sums of mon The burden of final setflement rests the shoulders worker in the country. these men have worked graft with the Stars and Stripes float- g oven them and with their tongue in their cheek have professed to models of pie 1928 or even 1924, < The railwave in the Lens district not be completely Ofithe 200 worl tempted to do. PRIZMA In Natural Colors. known, has been called one of the four | There are no hard feelings on my | triumphs of ecclesiastical architecture | PArt. as I am still game {0 the end: feved in the British Isles during the | AM not sore because someone else is in eteenth ceutury, the other three | MOre srosnerous than I am. grandstand pla diction that our bigzest storm would not dwell prove it. but owing to a lot of sickness | time, so much of my predictions and erum- | ally cause all the bad s ! | weather, T thought it Dest Fen” 5.4 t t price ever paid | mum on the weather | £ E 2 B America and the | kent it out of the press. Now as to the letter he wrote, the is _probably 250 | only thing worthy of no times as much as he was paid for it, | the way he signed his name. 4 chance to|and ne: as mech nfoney as he; heard all of the substi-|earned in 4l his life as an author. |out and seeing his shadow or hiding b <| collections of flower pictures In this| bahind his shadow, Qi Macy B ris [ hog hid behind a iree or something, o i oy s ona el the et e it db i o sen (b bids Rachmaninoff Famous RUSSIAN PIANIST WOOLSEY HALL to their liek- bling that I r stuff, so 1 bave Every one of t the ground hogz coming.| bunch of sanct Deserves It. A nation so supinely happy that it income-tazed of itself to be support an army seluths deserves qvervthing that may coms to it from the boots of the gods. —Chicago Tribune. Break Well for British. ‘Things break well for the First the Germans scuttle their ships and now Holland refuses to dissorge ashamed of your name behi u nut in the paper. W0 room at| e (o state,also that if the one who ainted With| gizded his name Ground 4 crow (as dAn't tell anvihing abo There are heautiful ‘tall screéns | K0T, (2% he didnt tell anvthing about iy = 2 5 e ity who the hand-painted with roses by Miss Van | {nnievation he al} ahout ft monfous hypocrites, New Haven eral Palmer was fuMilling the du office, and working for the inter- ests of the public, he would be making war on these real enemies of the coun- e false im- | pressien that we are about to see our 1t Attorney Gen- | TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24/ nresident was of whose TICKETS $1, $1.50 and $2 At Steinert’s, 183 Church Street, New Haven. previous letter was writ- intention of men to the fact y of our public offi- backed by the big business in- terests of the United States, are doing more to break down and destroy a democratic form of government than the aliens in the country. ten with the | Hived in Washington on a Monday and the inaugnration the ¢ nto a howling I was at the inaugural ball and when 1 came home from that it was a terrible night t not harder than our recent storm. I know T fook a trip on the cars they called the Jim Crow cars, where the (iedd o e 1o | whites sit together on one o0 (dsal of tme” inl ] s on the'other, and went to Alex- a ve t ble to] I lantation: P s andria. then to Mt. Vernom. would have made it possible to|Ing plantations of the kind is in the | 2745, then io AT d of old-fashioned English | P the Potomoc r and after ihat it turned Dizzard. nowing as hard bending every effort to fasten which there will b There are now nending hefore con- gress a number of bills which if they | 1l place the great masw of thé people in a far greater bondage the citizens of under the rule of the kaiser. early history of our country the peo- ple were in the habit of callinz their | representatives te strict accoun it matters little wha With the ex- Stories That Recall Others. | 1t Didn't Keep Up. Some children do not | are enacted w ton, back by boat | take kindly to| the inangural. Every telezraph nole bel more and Washin by the of standing in 1 sluch listening to be a gracious thing making - for sthers cannot get there quick enough. | Bitly was considerably peeved when | told that he was siated for school the| following Monday. | Two nights before the fatal Mon- day Billy complained of a pain in his 1t WAS a sure-enough pain and the mother resorted to numerous remedies known to anxtous mother: and finally Billy went to sleep. About’ midnight he awakened The pain was still there. | spent some time in deep thought and | then remarked: “Mamma, if this thing keeps up 1| won't be able to go to school, wili| s broken off inches of snow and men in Washington do. ception 6f a few staunch men and or- ganizations here and there, any official statement is accepted as a fact which dress, which people were taken sick with pneumo- 4 nia caused by delegation of British Shake- | What saved the day for me w s couid journey to the| bottle T { cannot be impeached. indignation seems to he largely be- o “I uphold the Red propaganda throughout the land.” T really said nothing of the kind. But Red propaganda would do us less harm than the stuff fed to us by the “royal gang of prof- Mr. Willard's rried in my hip pocket: the directions rea ternally, often, 2 1 | that is soread ardens, for planting in'the encloguree | day I ean sav it saved me from having the other side?—The London Chro- | the pneumonia that day. God help the crowd that was thera if it had beend - under prohibition, the way it i vs door locked brings re-| OTHER VIEW POINTS |I walked around all day long in slush up to my knees. Tour men have volunteered to make| Tso Horace Johnson did hit it cor- 1 it is possible to get $1.30 | the rocket trip to Mare unconditional- | ractly. and-he was probably the best hy| HaneTtree. of them are soldiers sta- | weather provhet 4 i at Fort Slocum. The thousands | produce 3 or spnd any at all to New ENg-| of ex-service men who wert m::x'x‘;h? Jate Horace Johnson. i locum as a receiving camp. will| In closing I would say that T know e = | Dot be surprised that these men are| T have made some sore simply because The tendency to put things up 18] Frlling to be shot to Mars to get away | T have hit it right, but I presume they Forf believe that the The mother declares there was a note of exultation in Billy's voice. But | the thing didnt keep up and Bily| went to school. Maybe a Bone Button. Marcelle’s mother had been taking daily treatment of an osteopathic phy- She told at dinner just how the doctor and a thoracic vertebra that had departed from true allgn- ment in the epinal column. 3 So when Benjamin came over to Marcelle began “thumbing his backbone for a misplaced vertebra. “Here's one that ha¥ gone pad,” she, shouted triumphantly. But Bennie was not “Get away”, My position is this: T believe that it is impossible for any man to know what he ie talking-about if he has not had both sides of a question presented to him. What, may I ask, do you think would be the verdiet of a jury if they heard the prosecutor's side of the | ? We must bear in mind that the whole American people are a jury, and intervals are called on tu register their verdict at the polls. hould presume to call himself intelligent unless he drops all preju- dice and examined a question from all angles. It is easv to foliow the crowd; it does not require any independent thinking, How many people do you suppose have accepted Mr. Palmer's word as gospel fact in regard to these The great majority, 1 1f any man should take the time to think for himself he would realize if any of these aliens were actually trying to overthrow the government Dby force they would have bheen quietly arrested and given a trial by jury as our ‘constitution provides. It is signfi- cant that of the three thousand taken in the raids none of them were armed. Furthermore, it would be the act of a fool or madman to imagine that three overthrow the United States with its population of over a hundred million. interested to know the status of these aliens they should read the letter of resignation sent by Francis Fisher Kane to Attorney General Palmer. The great fault with most of us is that we are afraid of the unpopular side of a question and in that respect we are moral cowards. the prophetic wordw ivle would prove true: “Two centuries, less, before democracy gO through its due, moat baleful, ste of quackocraoy.” o larl wes stirred to indignation by my ensely | Previcus Jeiter, at least ome man, a preminent pusiness mazn, whom I have b this state will ever 1 take my hat off to him, the Slocum.—Waterbury Re- | wili continue to rave and holler as putticas, tong as T make predictions. - Yours respectfully, % H.'W. LUCAS. The selection of Elihu Root to aid| °l UPOn to &me to the fore under| Norwich, Feb. 17, 1920. fcourt "ot Justics shows. that a- shed | 2eYsiordax's brines it ‘out. Belioves Profiteers Worse Than Reds. Mr. Editor: oons i Sieoiy all, how some people get all het up >, to_plow through, were| when they have a little common eense These are the days when anything| faced With the alternative of walking | trrewe ot them. Mr. Willard the autodrivers ask is paid, but what| to Work or getting a. enthusiastic. “that's only a deportations? my letter of Feb. 5th with a howl would go up if the trolley| c&r. And it was noticeable that the :‘.:;gh:n:fi;gmbn. 1 know exactly how he feels, for I, too, have read many thipgs which caused me great indig- It was always a of ol el I L 2 case of | policy of some of our public officials a cheerful “H Meo get hot. under course, Mr. Willard calls them brave and matriotic. that there| Cossacks under '.R;'lflat;trza{fi' s.ate vers. maxy+ Y, eri- . Hisher salaried: players-maztor |together ‘the members,of the Capinet| WEre S0 fow and far between—Bridge. | o mern o SIS Sovermment may<not increass-the gate . receipts.| who have been responding - to the| POrt Tclegram, STORIES OF THE WAR Long Time to Restore Lens. Although ali possiole efforts o re- construct the war-shattered mines of Lens have been and are being made, there is now no hope tfat a single ton of coal will be extracted before 1931 In fact, the task of bringing back Lens to its former prosperity i3 so immense that it is mot expected; that the town and its mines will return to like their former state before 1928 or nation. thousand men If anyone is big ones has gy > 11 ive rise to the thought that th heck T 'en & pretty convine! the storm git he o ichacks-and s ekt Nouetatler i o e ot The. A e e e Y ems ’gmvided that the work can be car- ried on withont interruption, it will take all 1920 to clear the underground workings of the debris they were chocited by the German: Most of the workings, and all the deep- er ones, are flooded. A plan for drawing oft the water has been arranged. The reconstruc- tion and repaitr of the tubbing will be {carried eut by German workmen, and ithe cement for the ‘purpose will be brought from Germany. The pumping out of the mines is exspected to tako at least three yeers, Dby next year it will be posaiblo to ex- tract coal from tho first which are only 800 feet deep but it is not expected that the water Will be pumped out of the lower workings, ! yards, until * | dependabiliey of the trolley. The smow | means of removing snow L a o s vy 2. lc was prett; h - | wagons and shovelers now provide. piayers it doesn't,drawethescromdsitn| . Had the position ofthe prestdent| alyzed. Steam traine in many ~in-| CArting sway the- snow s aliogether the sray that makes *the / managers|and Mr, Lansing been reversed, Mr.| stance¥ quit and fhe railros: d unsatisfactory. Perhaps is offered in the means| But+it is notisolely*thesp 7 country’go to the dogs before he| ®% eltogether. They were down and| taken by the- railroads to keep their| { : out. But the trolley cars ki of snow and ice. They | jmries that the managements:have. w:nul n-v‘. mwu’::t .;1 pmu_nt 1 pite IE Dis o nm m ;‘vlvri't:"h::d oyl:: ‘:ml O bttt o] jconsider. Everythingsinzocomnection|who was incapacitated an BOOME RO| mgny e wu’”m'“ made regular | torches to melt away the snow f; {m the . conduct’ of: a Sbessball iteam . Not a very pralssworthy stand.| tripe on fair sehelmle time. Had they| the switches. Possibly an automcdl flunked es steam trains-apd the jit- | truck equipped with a tank containing ‘other enterprises.and ‘1t lig quite:fm-| New Jersey shows the:proper :re-| neys 4id. the publc-wemld heve suf-| crude fuel ofl to e fed under pressure with whieh d schedule | too slow It looks as if Thomas Car- It is ho hot flamse, thess Jets to be directed| t s hoped that er met, wrote me a personal letter thapking me . for | ezminst & propagends that is bound to destroy (bis country. s ;&ii!“m" = refsing my voice certainly there is need for im- for prop-| v £ 74 snow removal practice. GENUINE SPRING LAMB FORES, 1b. .. LOINS, Ib.......... 30c PEANUT BUTTER NATIVE EGGS YELLOW ONIO] MAINE POTATOES HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE AND MOTION - PICTURES—BIG - SHOWS ‘ollow—The Leading T Sat. — Big_SHow. STRAUSS TWINS Two Girls In a Musical Novelty “MARSHALL AND COVERT 2 Men In an Excellent Comedy Act Two Women and Two Men In-an Acrobatic No HARRY_CAREY in “MARKED MEN"—Taken From a Saturday Evening Post Story Named “The Godfathers”—A Desert Baby ‘ Fur- nishes Three Pals to Biscome:God. ey Find the LittlesTok When They. Are Maki cape From the Gua aces of ‘the TARRY SEMON, King of All Com- Will Be Shown in a 2 Reel graph_Comedy. Up-to-Date Wizekl; —— e A Big Two Hour Show With the Best of Entertainment — Wa Are Al ways Trying to Please—Watch Our Ads For Our Future Shows. Next Week, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday—Earle Williams, the Screen’ Most Popular Star in a Seven Reel Super Spec Hunter”—Taleon From Winchell Smi Same Name—A Leap Year Picture Full of Romance, and Three Big Acts of Vaudeville—Don't Miss This. The Btrand Will Continue With Their High Class Vaud, Tha Twic> Weekly. The United Booking Office Has Promised the Strand the Best Shows—A Special Holiday 8how H. | Entitled “The Fortui s Celebrated Stage Pl Been Arranged For Next the kaiser. Things break well for the British because they know how to play Chicago Tribune. Slow Finding Out. Mr. Gompers apparently finds it's| impossible to realize that there are | 110,000,000 other people in the United | States who have views and a voice in | ihe government. repaired till zmen's dwellings belonging to the Miners’ Soclety, not a hundred can be repaired. Four hun- dred concrete huts are to be built in is hoped to house .the 5, workers who will be employed in the clearing of the pits for the next two or Heouston Post. Piumbers Come High. Already Uncle Sam realizes that it | is going to take a good many expert plumbers ‘fo. cure all the leaks that | may threaten the country's bone-dry ness.—Indianapolis Star. liquor-sniffing Help Them to Remember. The Germans take a solemn oath never to forget their lost cauge. if they show signs of forgetting the ' remember.— Cleveland Plain Dealer. RING'S MARKET THAYER BLDG.- FRANKLIN SQUARE WHERE QUALITY COUNTS™ * SUGAR CURED SMOKED Shoulders, Ib. . 22¢ SMALL AND LEAN. Lean Corned BEEF, Ib.... 12V5¢c STEAKS - 1lb. 25c - STEER BEEF Best Chuck Roast, Ib. . 20c Boned Chuck Roast, Ib, 24c Beef for Boiiing, Ib... 11c Hamburg Steak, b. .. ..18¢ Beef Liver, bb. .......:10c Springdale Creamery BUTTER, Ib.. 63c ;YHOLEMILK CHEESEst Armour’s 3 X OLEO- | LARGE TANGER]NE& MALAGA GRAPES WHITE ROSE TEAS, bb. ... SWEET CORN SERVE-US MACARONI Package . COD FISH CHEEKS SEEDED RAISINS N. B, C. MILK RED ALASKA . Special Sale For Wednesday 500 1-8 BBL. SACKS 1 : We Are the Scle Agents For This Flour In Norwith, AKEADVANTAGE cove 10e

Other pages from this issue: