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dlorwich Fulletin aund "-Gicé 124 YEARS OLD _— Swbsarigtion prise 125 & weski 5us 3 meamd; 30.00 * yoar. Entesed at the Pestofios & Nerwich, fvan., a ecwod-class matter. Tolasizae Catin. cutleun Offles 4zs. Edliocial fooms 5.3 Balletin ob Ofles 35:2. WilMimantle OMes 23 Church SL Teleohone 105 —_— Norwich, Tuesday, June 8, 1920. CIRCULATION ‘WEEK ENDING JUNE Bth, 1920 10,629 NORWICH REPUBLICAN. Norwich resumed its normal state Monday by electing a republican city ad- ministration, mayor and members of the common council, on a pledge of an effi- clent, business-like management of city affairs, a promise that a complete repub- lican membership in the council will give the party in power opportunity to re- deem. Both of the aspirants for the mayor's chair can feel considerable satisfaction In the fact that there were so many of their friends anxious to support them| with their baliots, resulting in an un- ually large vote. There is honor for Mr. Lerou in winning the election and no discredit to Mr. Desmond that in a stralght stand-up fight he fell just one vote short, If there is such a thing as a soldler vote and a soldier inuence for those who fought in the World War, 1t possibly be discerned in the llots cast for Dr. Blaclemar, elected souncilman, and Mr. Robinson, elected tax c@lector, the former polling the largest vote of any candidate and the latter being the only democrat to break the®solid republican rank With the election over the new admin- Istration will now proceed to organize and take over the conduct of city®af- fairs in the endeavor to work for the best interests of the city while they are in office. PROHIBITION CONSTITUTIONAL. On the last day before its summer re- cess the United States supreme court rendered its long awaited decision t- tling the fate of national pithibition. This amendment establishing national prohibition was declared constitutional as was also the Yolstead énforcement act which prohibits the sale of bever- ages containing more than one-half of one per cent. in aleoholic content Since lats week when the supreme tourt gave its decision that a referen- fum vote could not be demanded upon a con nal amendmenf, as applied to puch a demand for an amendment for woman's suffrage, the hopes of the wets” have been fading, although up to then there had been persistout intima- tions in certain circles that the supreme pourt would eventually decide against the prohibition, amendment. The victory for natiomal prohi n will be hailed with jubilation by those who have long fought for it Enforee of the prohibition law under federal regulations will now pro- ceed in those states which have placed no anti-liquor statutes on their book: The decisions came in time to have a bearing on the republican. national con- | vention and the democ to be held two weeks i In the former the was awaiting the dec Its plank upon prohibition and in the lat- ler the supreme court's pronouncement may affect the convention choice of a femoeratic candidate for president. THE CHICAGO CONVENTION. Without doubt there is an overwhelm- ng majority of the American people Who are waiting to vote aga another dem- scratic administration to be sworn in iext March. As a bed proposition it san be stated that they are tired of mocracy and particularly of Wilson lemoc The voters are waiting for their ance to express at the polls their rong feeling inst a continuation of ciency and of General Ine in the saddle and for the democratic der has. On all sides are weard expressions from i ong demo- srats that they will never vote their par- ticket again. On the one issue of What do you think of Wilson and the jemocratic administration?” a rousing -epublican majority would be assured. It will be the duty of the Chicago con- vention to enable the American people o register this strong sentiment at the solls next November. If the Chicago sonvention rises to its opportunity by sresenting a candidate big enough and a jlatform broad enough to accommodate he large body of voters who want to sast their ballots against ‘‘Wlisonism™” wnd the democratic party, the election s won. Nothing that the San Francis- *0 convention could do two weeks after “hicago would avail to distract the at- ention and the determination of the peo- sle. Do not let the democrats get away rom the record of their administration wnd they are beaten. Search for a light- 1ing rod candidate to avert the stroke vill be useless. He does not exist. The poorest way to get rid of the Wil- on regime would be to elect a demo- watic successor—any democratic succes- or—to Doctor Wilson in November. The Wilsonian cohorts are so well entrenched n office, and will be there for four nonths after the results of the Novem- ser elections are known that the "Wilson sarnacles would be firmly attached o the ship of state before the inaugura- jon. Even if President Wilson did not un again, a democratic victory in Nov- mber would be invested with much of he character of an endorsement of the W¥ilson administration—and especially so f a Wilson candidate were named at 3an Francisco. . Then it remains, as already said, for he Chicago convention to nominate the nan and surround him with the meas- lost y battle ires which will be winning assets in the sampaign. For this conspicuous real- zation of the needs of the hour, the American people are looking to the Chi- sago convention and the republican lead- ers, that they may give a clear and un- m expression of their determina-| tion that there shall not mow follow a. third democratic administration, and of their conviction that it is vitally impor- tant that the next president should be a republican. BUSINESS IN RELIGION. It -has remained for Bruce Barton to disclose St. Paul in a pew light and the Bible as the best treatise on salesman- ship. Addressing the Federal Council of Churches at Cleveland, Mr. Barton de- clared that “St. Paul sold religion to Athens when it was fearfully overstock- ed with religions of its own; and he did it by making a survey of the situation and utilizing conditions at hand, just as modern ‘salesmen must do. Modern business methods in tne man- agement . of church affairs were under discussion when Mr, Barton cited St Paul as an example of the sueeessful ap- plication of business methods to relig- fous work. Utilization of worldly wis- dom may well be used to forward the ext tension of the kingdom of the spirit but it is a poor excuse for indifferent and slip-shod methods to plead that the doers are serying the Lord. In fact, might it not almost be designated a form of sac- rilege to insult the Deity with the kind of work that any secular institution would repudiate? The principle of sound business and true religion are not antagonistic, but should go hand in hand. The strong churches today are the churches that have applied the princi- ples that lead to success in secular af- fairs. The practica! side does not ex- pel the spiritual; consecration and en- thusiasm are more likely to be found where the church is conducted efficiently and frictionlessly than in cases where there is no diseipline, no assignment of duties and functions, no business system. A modern pastor has no light task. He must be a man of God and a man among men as well. His executive capacity is called for alongside his theological eru- dition. 1If it is irreligious to be an able executive, then St. Paul was one of the most irreligious of men. SMUTE AND THE LEAGUE. Out of/ the calm and distance of South Africa a new light on the League of Na- tion§ seemed to be dawning upon one who has been generally eredited with being largely resnonsible for the text of that covenant. That celebrated cove- nant, swhich was known for a time as the Smuts-Wilson covenant, or the Wilson- Smuts covenant, now seems fo be large-} Iy renounced by General - Smuts, the South African statesman, who is report<| ed in an interview in Cane Town to have expressed considerable skepticism over the inability of the league to exert any influence over -the progress of events in Europe. Strangely enough too, the general ar- rives at a peint of view for South Af- rica which accords with the point of view of many wise Americans. He is report- ed as saving: “This country does not want to be selfish, but it wants to keep away from FEuropean entanglement A wise South African sees the same ob- Jection to entangling his country in Eu- ropean complications as Wise Amerieans have seen for their own lond. This Is a significant declaration for one who was at least a co-author of a scheme of arbitrary brotherhood to bind all nations together, pledging cach to take up the quarrels of the other. General Smuts is said to have called attention to the trade conferences with Russia and to the fact that Poland has| been waging ~war against Russia, “though large narts of Poland are starv- ing and typhus is raging,” and he in- quires what the League of Nations is do- ing that it cannot-stop this. The league, he thinks, ought to have prevented the! aggressive campaign of Marshal Pilsud- ski, and he is not satisfied with the offi- cfal explanations of the league's failure to function. “Poland,” he says, “is an ally member of the League of Nations and yet cannot be checked in this en- terprise.” It must be with deep regret that the general comes to acknowledge that the practical operation of the league does not | justify the sublime faith in its potency to keep the world forever going straight. Perspegtive gained from the distance of South “Africa brings out lights that were obscured in the close-up enthusiasm of proceedings at Paris. EDITORTAL NOTES. Throwing hats into the ring at Chi- cago will be an expensive sport at the present vrice of straws. Bergdoll, the millionaire _slacker, achieves a low degree of visibility as he| flits about the country. The man on the corner says: Worry is the rust that wears out the human machine more than work. ) The Volstead enforcement act may be good law, but perhaps it would be more effective as an eleventh commandment. It will be worth while to fight freight estion just as if the war were still on, even if it is on a line that take$ all summer, Georges Clemenceau solemnly swears: “I will never write for a newspaper again” Other men have felt that way and have not held out. For. one thing, prohibition has dis- closed that many diseases treated dif- ferently in the good old days now call for whiskey as a specific. The worm turneth. Mrs. Catt tells the men that they are the emotional and sentimental side of the human race and neither reasonable nor logical. Secretary Danlels advises against nam- ing baples after living heroes who may lose their halos. Thanks! That makes Josephus a perfectly safe name for our next. Children born in France since 1914 have been trained not to want sweet things.” A generation without a sweet tooth Wwill cut the country’s consumption of sugar, which is now one-eighth of the pre-war figure. Haverhill shoe workers are setting a good ‘example when many of them pre- pare to find abiding places in the coun- try and raise vegetables while the slack time in the Haverhill factories prevents them making shoes. Hoke Smith ‘of Georgia wants to cut the president’s salary to two-thirds of what the British ambassador draws. But it is not to be exnected that he wants to see a re-nomination and re-election in order to hit Woodrow Wilson that way. Kidnapping in Delaware is a felony punishable with either death or life im- prisonment. That is the proper penal- ty, for in some respects, kidnapping is worse than murder and in some cases amounts to life-long torture for parents for which no punishment is too severe. “Yes. Ask the minister who preach- es my funeral sermion not to say I am ¥ _ “Well, Rubena,”. begap, the young man With the beetling brow’ “now that we are to be married we may as well make up our minds where we are going to tivel” A “What's gone wrong with my hear- ing?” anxiously commented the young woman who was pretty, but had too much powder on. nose. “How do you get that way, Wilbur. And who told you we were to be married?” “Never mind,” said the young man with tke beetling brow, waving a hand dismissingly. “We are, and that's all re is to it! 'What is the use of pulling and hauling and discussing a settled topic? Now, if you'd rather go way out on the north shore, why, of gourse, it's all right, even though we shall have to pay more for help. If you prefer the south side—" l “Oh, don’t be funny!” said the pretty young woman a tiny bit crossly, patting her back hair into place. “I suppose you think this is a joke, but matrimony is serjous, and we've never yet heard of a girls being just told she is going to marry a man’ without having anything said to her on the subject—well, you know what I mean! Why, you've never even proposed to mwe, Wilbur!” “Of course not,” he told her promptly. “If I had proposed to you, you would have said no wouldn’t you?” “My goodness, yes!” the pretty young woman said with discouraging prompt- ness. “We have awfully good times to- gether and I like you a lot, but I'm not in the least in love with you and anyhow I don’t want to get married for ages and—ang everything!” “That's precisely what I thought” said the young man with the beetling brow. “So I decided to skip all that part and pass on to the section where we plan_the living room furniture, and whether we can afford oriental rugs. It makes it so much simpler just to assume that without any fuss or bother we are to be married. In time you will grow ac- customed to the idea, Rubena, and you've no idea what a saydng it Is-on your nerves to escape all that stretch of be- ing in a refusing state of mind! Just let me do the talking and be quite calm. I think it will be nice to take an apart- ment big enough to inchide a guestroom, because your mother Wwill want to stay over sometimes, and then there is my Aunt Hettie from the country who will WHAT THE BOOK ADVISED enjoy coming to I am certain fi\ityevery few minutes she will be ship- cut in sharply, “stop it! just going round and Tound and I can’t stand it” I n:;;r h;rd l’:]filn."n: ual it in my life! ere is no ‘0;1 your going on like this, when I've told you -I'm not going to marry you! I ad mire you a great deal, and I sure you are going to make some very ot - s < “You're the girl,” he told her prompt- ly. “I wouldn’t consider making any girl in the world but you happy and that's all there is to jt! You needn’t Worry a mite on that score! Why, there isn't—' “I wish you wouldn't talk so fast,” the pretty young woman ged, flutter- ing her afstracted hands. “You sort of twist things so, too! Why, if you had come to me and told me you were about to marry another girl and she was the right sort of girl I'd have been just as pleased as anything and wanted to know all_about it Y “I'm telling you all about it,” the bee- tling browed young man interposed with anxiety. “Just as fast as 1 can, and if you'll listen it will all come perfectly Clear to you! I detest church weddings but if your heart is set on one I'm game, to the last fuss and feather. I'd eonsent to an aeroplane wedding— sugar product with'a delightiul | flavor. American Sugar Refining Company ‘Swieeten it with Domino”’ gest some hastily extemporized election headquarters and® whose ‘parliament chamber is rigged up with benches and cheese cloth in the auditorium of the sec- ond-class theatre, boasts of but one beau- ty, and that—to speak in paradox—is forty miles away ; for, in whatever quar- ter of Erivan you may be, lift your glance and great Ararat of eternal snows is seen brooding distantly over the mean streets with his aspect of majestic calm. He is the Armenian’s Olympus, or rather say, the Sinaj of a race which has known bhondage and wilderness-wander- ing, and for centuries a people’s imagin- ation has turned toward him, “The little Erivan republic which cen- ters about Ararat contains within its “You've just got to litsen to me, Wil- bur,” cried the pretty young woman, a bit hysterically getting up and taking him by the shoulders. “I can't let you plan like this—because I never had any idea of marrying you and I'm never going to have—in fact, I won't marry you, Wilbur! I mean it.” The beetling browed young man stared at her a long minute and then slumped back into his seat. “Copsarn the book!" he grumbled. “It's all wrong—and I paid $2 for it!” “Wh-what book?” “It said” explained the disgruntled L il wer was every- 1 fh",'::;ga",’,i‘i"'m;’:ath:“‘l‘.:; o i | present limits less than 1500 square thing Rbout was simply o take the|miles—only one-half of which area i point of view that it was so, and it]|¢apable of high productivity—two hun- D e e bt in this ease it ism't, is] dred miles of railroad, and about two #t? Now whatll I do mext, T'd like to|mMillion people. It has been the center of know, about this matter?” refuge for Turkish Armenians ever “Well, gasped the pretty young wo-|S5ince the massacre of 1915, and between e bt ove yoRF o GoNLINy. san. 300015505 360 0005 e e Ry, “ e 2 b a2 chind ed within its borders. nther book, Wilbur!"—Chicago News. e Five Minutes a Day With Qur Presidents Copyright 1920—By James Morgan ’ LXXIV—THE THIRD TION 1901—Sept. 5, McKinley’s' last speech at Buffalo. Sept. 6, 4:07 P. M., shot by Leon F. Czogolz. Sept.®14, 2:15 A, M., died, agad 58. Oct, 20, the assassin put to death in the electric chair. After his reelection by the largest plurality on record at that time, Mec- Kinley entered his second term united behind him and with the good will ev- en of his political opponents. No oth- er president ever was spared so com- pletely the bitter with the sweet of success as this most softly spoken, most ingratiating man in all the presi- dential line. McKinley quarreled with no one. Although tears of regret came into his eyes when Senator Hoar told him that he must break with him on his Phil- ippine policy, he took the Senator's band and assured him: “I shall al- ways love you whatever you do.” ‘When he asked Senator Cullom wheth- er he would get very angry if he dis- regarded his opposition to the appoint- ment of a certain Illinois man the senator had to confess: “Mr. Presi- dent, I could not get mad at you, if I who stormed in upon him one day, friends as he came out: know a blamed word he said, but it’s all right( boys. As time went on,’ McKinley had ened his Cabinet and his ad- stration by going outside of poli- tics and drafting into the public ser vice, doubtl with the aid of Hann: up of unusually able men, Taft and Knox were the discoveries. hoped to distinguish his and Ameri- To test pub- McKinley second term by opening a new brilliant era of expansion for can trade and shipping. lic sentiment, he began a tour of the country a few week: uration, but this a W topped at an ¢ stage by the serious illness of . McKinley in California. Postponing all public plans, he Te- turned to Canton with his wife and stayed by her side through the sum- mer. When she was again well enough to travel, they went to Buffalo in Sep- tember to attend the Pan-American Exposition, where he outlined in an address the new departure which he hoped to see the country make: “Isolation is no longer possible or desirable,” was the keynote of the speech which had been for months taking form in his mind. “Our capacity to produce has de- veloped so enormously . . that the problem of more markets re- quires our urgent and immediate attention. . . Reoiprecity is the natural outgrowth of our won- derful industrial development . 1f, peprchance, some of our tariffs are no longer needed why should they not be employed to extend and promote Qur markets abroad ?” _ In that broad spirit of forward-look- ing statesmanship, this champion of protection and of the home market de- lievered what was to be his farewell address. The next afternoon he re- visited the exposition to hold a recep- tion in its Temple of Music. He was urged to avoid the risk of exposing himself 4t close range to a great crowd. “Why should I?” he protested; “no one would wish to hurt me.” In that trusting spirit, the President smiled into the face of a young man who approached hfm in the course of the long closely packed procession, and he offered his hand in greeting. But the right hand of the young man was wrapped in a handkercief, and out of that ambush he fired two pistol shots at the president. Too late, the guard of secret service men, detectives and soldiers seized the assassin and threw him to the floor, Notwithstanding his foreign-sounding name—Leon F. Czogolz—he proved to be a native-born citizen, like Booth and Guiteau. Like them also he was the tragic product of evil conditions. As Booth had been unbalanced by the sectional hatred of the Civil War, and Guiteau by faction strife, Czogolz had grown up in the bad social conditions of some of our big industrial centers, where he fell an easy prey to the wild doctrines of anarchy and nihilism. The wounded president was caught and supported by anxnous hands. The ruling passions of his life—kindness to all and his devotion of Mrs. McKiney— “Don’t let them hurt him,” he begged as triumphed over the pain he was suffering. he saw his asseiant struck by an exci In the next instant he whisper- ed to his private secretary, “My wife—be careful, Cortelyou, how you tell "her—O, be careful.” An immediate operation in the Emer- gency hospital of the Exposition was decided upon, and the patient repeated the Lord’s Prayer as he passed under the ether. When the surgeons had finished their work he was carried, to the residence of his Buffalo host, John G. ulation of 40000 has been doubled by this influx. There starvation apd typhus have claimed their toll sf 9,000, - the! death rate fluctuating between® fifty ana} eighty a a “Though the doctor and T were here to Milburn, where Mrs. McKinley bravely had received the terrible news. For six days the President made such steady progress that th physicians feit warranted in announcing that he was out observe the worst phases of the situ- of danger. That night there came a|ation, each of us wainted for the other to turn for the worse, and the next day all | sugmest a trip to the Tedir m:mn.l hope was abandoned. where we were told starvation was most “It's God's way,” the dying man said in perfect resignation. “His will, not ours, be done.” and he murmured his favorite hymn, Nearer, My God to Thee.” He could still raise his arms to enfold in one more embrace the wfie who pite- ed, “I want to go, too, I want Out of hjs faith, he assured We are all go- acute. “The town rf Tedir, with its local and near-by populations of 30.000 Armenians 20,000 Tatars, and 15.000 Yezidi vealed some squalid. stre t “ few people seated disconsolately here and | there, as we drove Throughout those tortuous, sun-beaten byw dren played and no animals roamed. air was. heavy with dreadful such as hands over plague-smitten A mighty chorus of “Nearer, My God to Thes” grose from the altars of the[CUmunities. - . o as they | Nation, as the bedy of McKinley was| . ve fouN Gunge Nbarstnl ::gle&ex:ge ‘:‘: Capitol in Washington | on "o horrible odor. | its resting place on a green hill at Canton. Mingled with the sorrow of the peope was a feelinz of hu- miliation that their country, the great Republic should have, a blacker record | of assassination than any despotism, that the simpy;, freely chosen chiefs of(tjny vwithered up. crone-like creatures our democracy should be less safe in|yunot whose faces the eemed | their lives than czars or sultans. FOr | stretched to a drumhead’s tightness: | the third time in hardly more than a|whoss peering eves shot terror and third of a cenfury, "a president had th, as if death’s presence = been assassinated, three out of seven of ¢ perceptible to them, and who lay the presidents electéd, in thirty-six years| t famine’s climax of physieal ex-| and were informed ghat there were neith- | er medicines nor "disinfectants where- | with to allay the condition ‘of the man | little sick-beds ] Sick. Say, rather, the bed-ridden—a | word which more justly describes those | in here had been murdered, and these the | haustion. In those young. vet grot gentlest. ed faces, we seemed to see al T g lifetime of edy packed into Thmorrow: The Strenuous Life. eight or ten childish years. A “The ad huts which we visited pre- sented an_invariable picture—a barren, SNAP SHOTS OF cave-like interior, lacking one stick of | furniture or household utensil, and with |a few bleached bones scatered here and there. The occupants, stretched on the DEMOCRATIC CONVENTIONS Copyrighted by G. M. Adams Service THE CONVENTION OF 1836, The democratic national convention of 1856 was the seventh in party chronolo- gy (figuring Jackson's convention in 1832 as the first). Yet, go far as the “modern era” is concerned, this review may begin | with 1856, because it was that year when | the alignment between modern ‘“republi- canism” and modern “democracy” began. The convention of 1856 assembled in Cincinnati on June 2, with John E. Ward of Georgia in the chair. General Frank- lin Pierce of New Hampshire—who had been chosen four years previously on” tfe forty-ninth ballot as a “dark horse”—iwas seeking renomination. He was particu- larly favored by fhe southern wing of the party. Although there were three candi- dates against 'him—James Buchanan of | Pennsylvania, Stephen A. Douglas of T11i? nois and Lewis Cass of Michigan—the real opposition focused in Buchanan, who was largely favored by the northern wing of the party. This sectional division was emphasized on the first ballot, when the delegates from the southern states divided as fol-] lows: Pierce 72, Buchanan 29, Douglas 14, while delegates from the northern states divided as follows: Buchanan 106, Pierce 50, Douglas 19, Cass 5. Buchanan led every ballot from the first to the sev- enteenth. On the sixteenth ballot Pierce fell out and the convention divided as follows: Buchanan 168, Douglas 121. # This gave Buchanan a majority, but! failed to give him the two-thirds vote which was, and is, an historic democratic convention requirement. Douglas could have used the two-thirds rule to veto Bu- chanan because he had suffiiciently- stead- fast control of more than one-third of the convention. But Douglas had always been a persistent opponent of the two-thirds rule, and therefore when Buchanan pass- ed the majority line Douglas withdrew and Buchanan was unanimously nominat- ed on the seventeenth ballot. There were 10 candidates for viee president on the first roll call, with Gen- eral J. A. Quitman, Missisippi leading and John C. Breckenridge, Kentucky, the close runner-up. Quitman quit on the second ballot and his example was quick- ly followed by others, with the result that Breckenridge (later to be a presi- dential nominee) was unanimously chosen. ' The conventlon in its resolutions praisel Pierce—though denying him re- nominatio: and strongly declared against any federal interference with the institution of slavery. It also resolved against the right of the federal govern- ment to engage in a “general system of internal improvements,” to protect indus- try by tariff, or to charter a national bank. (To be Continued Tomorrow With Story of the 1860 Convention.) IN THE DAY’S NEWS Armenia, Of timely interest because of Presi- dent Wilson's proposal that the United States assume a mandate over Armenia, though written prior to that proposal, 1s a communication to the National Geo- graphic Saciety from Melville Chater. Relating his personal experiences in that famine-stricken land several months ago. Mr. Chater writes: “Erivan, the capital of, Armenia's pro- visional republic is an inconceivable con- trast to the Georgian government seat at Tiflis. At Erivan one finds no spacious prospect nor viceregal palace, no smart shops, Russian opera, nor gay night life. To behold misery Heads Irish Movement R EOPYRIGHT. KEYSTONE VIEW_CO. NEW_YORK Stephen Gwynn, under whose chatr- manship a new organization has been formed in Dublin, Ircland, calied the Government of Ireland Bill Amendment Group. The formation tempt from Home Rule bl T'he group is com- | posed of widely known business, pro- fesstonal and wuniversity men and will soon Issue 1is manifesto. ~ ASPIRIN' Name “Bayer’-" on Genuine the “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” is genu- ine Aspirin proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for over twenty years. Accept only an unbroken “Bayer package” which contains pro- per directions to relieve Headache, Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Rheu- matism, Colds and Pain. Handy tin in Tiflis, one must|boxes of 12 tablets costs few cents. search it out. In Ervivan one cannot es-| Druggists also sell larger “Bayer cape ft. packages.” “Aspirin- is trade mark “This poor, straggling, dingy city of|Bayer Manufacture Monoaceticaci- the plains, whose government offices SugZ-. 5. . A Nowe Hit For the Little Lady /7 For Children’s Day The little girl’s costume is a matter of as much im- portance to her, and to her mother as well, as is her mother’s own, and there is just as much change to recognize the demands of fashion. We are making a special display of dainty trimmed hats for the little ones from 5 to 12 years of age, specially appropriate with pretty ribbons—there are Panamas banded in white and colors—and there are daintily trimmed Hamps and Javas — all of them clever and fashionably correct. THE PRICES ARE SO LOW THAT EVERY LITTLE LADY SHOULD HAVE A NEW HAT SUNDAY -$2.50 to $3.98 —SAVE .JOW AND WHERE AND WHEN YOU CAN. $2.00 Waitress Aprons, also Nurses’ Aprons . 39 Ladies’ Durham Hose ..... .00 Ladies’ Silk Hose . Ik Hose . Hose Jersey Bloomers Sateen Camisoles . and Misses’ Smocks cees nd Children’s Ribbed Vests . adio: % Ladies’ . . AND THQUSANDS OF OTHER READY-TO-WEAR. ARTICLES FOR LADIES AND CHILDREN. THE PASNIK COMPANY Sell For Less clay floor, would half lift themsel s to| the department of justice: regard us with dazed and questioning | ashington, D. C., June 2, 1920 eyes, Those gaunt faces, those “Mrs. J. J. Grace, State Capitol, Jlart- tenuated bodies clad in a. shagginess of ford, Conn | filthy rags. seemed centuries removed| “President retail garment deafers axs from civilization. You felt that you had| garments are worth only what public wil; stumbled into prehistoric man's . den|pay for them. Many other hig mercha during some great famine vear. Ohroustiont countes Heel, Teows: * Gall] ddenly a shriek wept up and a|antee Trust company says salvation licx woman rushed out of her hut, with an|in more saving and greater production. Urge women to continue curtailment of buying, not to be misled by current pro- paganda stating prices will again rise. (Signed) zed face und heaven. Hers as proclaim: with hands lifted to was such abandonment that death has struck the first born; yet it was a tale of mere robbery. What the captured thief de- livered back to her proved to be a pal- try handful of roots. And upon enter- ing the woman's house we found, in fact, “EDITH C. STRAUSS.” Mrs. Grace is aiso writing the townm chairmen to urge women's clubs and ine dividuals to write M. Printz, chairman her only daughter lying dead, not i i cold, while the mother crouched dry-yprcon s Crom: Sult and Skirt Manufac- eyed before a tiny fire, intemtly watch-| Jo7in, RN s ety gl Protestin ing the pot wherein bubbled those preci-| & eir avowed intention of a & cided change of styles, long skirts, etc. this fall, and telling him that the women will not wear the long skirts, and that they feel that this ehange of style i be- ing made in order to induce womea te purchase new goo Looks That Way. Socialists, in their platform, demand the repudiation of the war debts of Europe but the payment of the war ous roots, her next stomachful. ‘One seven-year-old girl crouched by herself, cracking something between two stones and licking her fingers. The doc- tor bent over, examining the object. He asked with peculiar sharpness, ‘Where did she get that—that bone? “The child looked up with a scared, guilty glance: then her answer came through an interpreter, who said in a\low oice, ‘Yonder in the graveyard.' “I am not sure that we preserved our 0 debts of the United States, It must SAEDOSIEE. S be that some of them own Liberty PUBLIC URGED TO CONTINUE i et T DEmbony g CURTAILED BUYING Mrs. James J. Grace, state chairman, is Has Had a Great Fa sending out the following notice to the nl'l'll;afo don’t call it the “Almighty local chairmen throughout the state of|DOlAr” any more, when it won't even buy a peck of potatoes or two feeds the woman's committee of the department|of ljver.—Houston Post. of justice: Now that the public has had a chance to take advantage of the 20 per cent. re- uction sales to buy what was necessary to replenish their absolutely worn-out articles, the woman's committee, depart- ment of justice, urger upon the people the necessity of continuing their policy of curtailed buying, in order to make affective their previous efforts in this di- rection. It depends upon each individ- ual's part in the program of restrained buying whether prices rise or not. The following telegram has been re- ceived from Miss Edith Strauss, national chairman of the woman's committee of | A woman derives more satisfaction from the things she suspects than from what she is sure of. EURALGIA EASED AT ONCE BY u.nmmmfly'_ INE ITS UQUID = QUICK EFFECT TN Partly Through Its Riding Qualities But Mainly Because . of Its Rugged Construction, Freedom From Mechanical Troubles, Reliability and Economy This Model is Being Adopted in Large Numbers by Nationally Known Con- cerns For Their Salesmen. Three Touring Cars Available For Immediate Delivery at $1095, Including Tax and Freight. THE FRISBIE-McCORMICK (0. £2 SHETUCKET STREET