Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 25, 1920, Page 9

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NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIUAY, IURE 25 — T = Ruden are recently reported numerous ) "y -4 cases of violation of girls and” women“by k ; Serbfan soldiers. The peaceful populas 19240 owners or others who have -legitimate business'to eross- the- line. . They-admit the complete embargo on” food, but elaim they exclude only -political -agitatorg, andj propagandists, They meet -theé A\llh‘lln’ ! charges wit heounter-charges of thé same o I 2 haracter and voint to the fact that through the intervention of the -entente nifssion here, composed of British, French and Italians, all but about 1,200 of the truth of the charges freely made by the refugees who fled north when the, Jugo- Austrian authoritics, but that the inhab- | Slav troops moved in have been permit- itants of the zones are having aerough|ted to return o their homes. Also they time of it is easily apparent. The Jugo- | allege that among them are hundreds of Slay occupation of the whole of Zone A,|agitators and - electioneers well supplied on the south, with the rigidly closed |with money who are abusing their priv-- frontier, works great hardship. flege’ in proselyting the population Passing east and west through the fer- | 2gainst the impending vote. ' Then, too, tion of voting district A-is constantly ex- posed to all kinds of vexations. Criies of every description are committed daily, and those who live near the frontjer are risking their lives every hour:” 1t is difficult even by thé personal in- vestigation just concluded to establish the Klagenfurt, Austria, June l.—Along the center of the beautiful valley in ¥hich this old ecapital of Carinthia lies runs the demarkation line separating Zone A and Zore Bof the Austro-South Siav plebiscite region. Tts population of eome 125,000 are stiil waiting to know to what government they shail belong, whether they are to be part of Austria or subjects of the king- dom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes. The treaty of St. Germain provides that within-'three months of the final ratification of. peace the ballot shall be held, and it ig _believed - here that the plebiscite will take place in August. Meanwhile, Jugo-Slav troops, Who moved north last May, hold the south side of the demarkation line between the two zomes as tightly as a war time fron- tier, They stand guard within rifle shot of Klagenfurt and in only exceptibnal l.on of Time, asthma, our expense. matter- in ‘what climate you live, TRY THIS TO BANISH cases can the line be passed by the in-|tile basin of Klagenfurst, and bisecting | they charge ‘that the Austrian officials mel hed should relieve you prompil ly. habitants of the 11 laterally Lake W gl 4 5 refuse passage to persons of Slav sym: Ve especially want to send 1o i of the valley. aterally Lake Worther, on whose eastern S i i ALLRHEUMA“C PAINS Sevetal persons have been killed by|tiD the city lies, it cuts farms in two, |Dathy. They do not, however, accuse the thuae apparently hopaless cases, when all forms of inhalérs, douches, preparations, fumes, eto., have failed. Austnian guards of killing. Austrian figures place the population of Zone A, the southern region, at 23,000° Serb guards. One was the naturalized American citizen Ernest Jaklitsch of Jackson, Kas., shot dead, the Austrians often separating farmhouse - from its fields, leaving others with their woodland on the other side, and as the Jugo-Slav “patent smokes” eople who have been We want to rheumatie erers for years—yes even ' 80 i vi i autlioriti 2 f s i and Zone B |method is designed to end all difficult 84 that they were unahbie to |claim, without challenge, while passing|autliorities grant permits to pass only in|Germans and 50,000 Slovencs, and h‘l”‘thcnnnes—gne Bhen Drau ht|the frontier. The Jugo-Slav autherities | certain cases, much hardship has resulted. | at 49.000 Germans and 5.000 Slovenes. I’{fr“%“lL‘i'.,‘g‘l,-','é‘,?{‘l‘%hc‘e’.“ all those 6 robust health tirough the|say he was a notorious smuggler. Tarmers with stock on the other side|The Jugo-Slavs do not*admit this, claim- | '*5rh € PRIOTIRMS AL DACL Sortant to - 5o aots with s esd; it often| Fifteen year old Betty Fide, shot by|have been compelled to kil or sacrifice, |8 that the Austrians list as Germun|neglect 4 single day. Write now and Brings in oniy a few days the rellef everyone who speaks the tongue, while You have longed for. 1t helps antag- #nize and drive from the system ll\? poisons that cause agony and paln in the joints and muscles, then all @oreness should completely disappear. a South Slav guard while crossing the little stream that indicates the frontier, was buried with great ceremony by the city of Klagenfurt. Citizens of the villages and towns along and in several instances the correspon. Bsng dent was shown piled firewood across the line, sometimes but a few hundred yards from the house, which the owner was not permitted to bring home. begin the method at once. money. Simply mail coupon th opulation is largely bilingual. s 2 Do Tt Today. Neutral observers point out that if the southern zone votes Jugo-Slav, Klagen- furt will be forced to do likewise for eco- FREE TRIAL COUPON It 18 a harmless, inexpensive rem-|the zone have petitioned the Vienna gov-| No food can cross to the north. It is|nomic reasons. Should it remiin FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., edy, but gratifying and quick-acting, |érnment to seek relief through the en-|all diverted to Laibach and other Slav|trian, with ‘a political Room 95-K, Niagara and Hudson and s the one discovery that has|tente from the alleged oppression of the | cities. " Thus while milk from cows that foreed rheumatiesm and selatica to ri¢ld and dlmappear. Streets, Buffalo, N. Y. Send free trial-of your method to: Jugo-Slay soldiery and authorities. The following is an extract from a letter ad- pasture within sight of Klagenfurt goes|from the agricultural and village popula- Tt's ‘only necessary to t o Rbs to Laibach, the American relief is feeding | tion that meansits life, it would ‘perish. cemt bottle, and it you 89 not tm.|dressed to the correspondent of The As-|the city’s children with milk shipped from |- One of the Jugo-Slav arguments, how- mediately begin to get the joyful re- |soclated Press, reciting the killings men-| America. They have just been requested | ever, is that their boundary must be : you expeet vour money will be 1ladly returned. Lee & Osgood al- #ays have a supply of Rheuma and guarantees it to you. tioned and ceftain other specific attacks on citizens: “From the vicinity of Lavamund, and to try and feed an additional thousand. The Jugo-Slav authorities in this region deny that permits are refused to land- thrown- north ‘of the Karawanken moun- tains for military reasons.. They say that“this great natural fort, dominating A 1\:{ "'fi Metiod That Arl.u'n Caa We ‘have aifiew method that controls d we want you to try it at No matter whether your case is of long standing or recent de- velopment, whether it is present as oc- casfonal or chronjc asthma, yqu should zend for a fres trial of our method. ‘{g n matter what your ‘age or occupation, if! Y«m aré troubled with asthma, out opium show evervone at our oxpense that this new no| below. MY GOLDEN GIRL . OH MY LADY GOOD NIGHT ANGELINE ..... RAINBOW OF MY DREAMS ... CLOUDS THAT PASS IN THE NIGHT. Special Record Hits That Go On Sale SATURDAY, JUNE 26th EXCLUSIVELY AT THE TALKING HEACHINE SHOP . Sung by Walter Scanloen . Sung by Walter Scanlon Irving and Jack Kaufman . The Three Kaufields . By Billy Murray Made in “DAISY” and “SKIDLOCK? Treads Aus- frontier drawn across the edge of the city, cutting it off the regions to the south, must be the back line to their front in event of a war with German countries. HUMORK OF THE DAY Ruth—She told me she slapped him because he tried to kiss her good night. 3 Halen—He told me she slapped him because he didn't try.—Columbia Jes- ter Mrs.. Willis—I caught nly daughter reading & book today that isn't fit to have in. the. house. Of course I took it right away from her. Mrs. Gillis—Quite right. By the yway will you loan it to me after you |hnlsh reading it?—Judge. “He has dry wit.” “Yep. About the only kind of wit that's left us to have nowadays."— Dettoit Free Press. “I see you use all kinds of motors for agricultural purposes.” “Yes;’ replied Farmer Corntassel. “And I'm not sure that the cost of gasoline isn't one of the things that are making farm products so dear."— Washington Star. She—You say you weuld do anything | for me, Charlie? He (fervently)—I would, darling. She—Well, you know how fright- fully red my hair is. I want you to dye your red, just to keep me in countenance.—Pearson's Weekly. He—If I :kissed y ou, would you scream for help? She—What would be the use? Pa is out and Ma is stone deaf.—Baltimore American. “A married woman should see that she has all kitchen requisites as she starts housekeeping. “Yes, even to a husband, who washes the dishes for her.”—Judge. “Do. you believe that heat produces anger?’ asked Sofith. “Did you ever put the lighted end of your cigar in your mouth by mis- take?” asked Jones.—Cincinnati En- quirer. < eerew Hawailan seveweeu Accordion «+s Accordion KAIWAI WALTZ ...... BLACK BIRD—HORNPIPE RAKES OF KILDARE—JIGS ...... UNCLE JOSH AND THE SOLDIERS, All the new Record Hits by Irving and Jack Kaufman, Arthur Fields, Eddie Canton, Waltisr Scanion, SIX BROWN BROTHERS, Plantation Jazz Orchestra and Murray’s Melody Men are on sale enly at our store. All Our Record Booths on Main Floor, _Convenient to Street Entrance. “The Only Exclusive Music House in Norwnh” 2 The Talking Machine Shop NEW STORE, 24-34 FRANKLIN STREET _ All the Latest Victor Records in Stock. T days of every year. One of them is that on that pays all his debts and’ starts clean_slate. New Year's day eyery man, woman and child in China hunts that bore them and her and sees to it that all her wants are that the air gets damp just before rain, and damp air is more tramspar- ent than dry. Diamonds have been discovered in fallen meteors. The field of the farm tractor is con- stantly extending. A circulad saw is now rigged up to {trevolving hori- zontally and a large tree is cut down in Chinaman with a the other is that day every And up the mother takes present to attended to. The English guinea was first coin- ed in 1673, and. derived its name.from the fact that the gold of which it was at first composed came from Guinea. A reason why distant objects ap- pear to be closer just before rain is a few minutes. The third finger of the left hand (the wedding ring finger) is said to be the first finger that a new boru babe is able 10 move, and the last of which a dying person loses con- trol. i Hotel Manager—We have everything | here for the convenience of our pa- {'trons: wireless telephone, wireless| } telegraph— Patron—Do you happen to have any stringless green beans?—Le Pele-Mele Paris. A smartly dressed woman was sit- ting in an omnibus, when a quiet-lool ing young man, in getting in, acci- detally trod on her foot. She talked to him for ten minutes NOSTALGIA Give me my old coat again That | have worn through many days of rain, Whose hue is varied, ripeni>d by the sun To subtle patterns; give me one Of my old books to read by firelight half asleep, Whose effaced memorizs leave gaps of deep réon,ecthureh over lthaugh\s thnL lie ;‘n r:ltt and w v saying: eneath their platid linen et the blest o e e e O | White hands of-silence touch me, and the white e pologiz: Cool hands of rivers soothing through the night The young man bowed and ¢ almly Into the dreams of tranced sleepers—hands sald: Reminiscent, binding me wnhh u‘,an{n bandsi “A = . " = The wake of clouds shall touch me, ose pale ships cha‘;céa{fly would -have given me a Pass suavely over; let the whispering lips Of twilight tell me of dead loves and legend glories, - And let thess flames unscroll their golden stories OME historians give LaSalle— famed as the explorer of the Missis- THE KALEIDOSCOPE o T e : T s fRere 3 Crabs measuring two feet in length - % sippi—credit for the discovery of the Northwest; others give have been found In Indig. o B iat T e o, dar. o B . . See-saw was played by the chil- That | have watched through ghostly scarves ef red 7 g the honor to Radisson. Very different in station and temperament, the Sein cf| Sntienh aspe 000 teais Thretigh fringes of pale Jights, and:Iet e Gee A ago. i An inventor claims to have devised a \pructical system for stopping moving tralns by wireless. “Kamiko,” as paper clothing is call- But let me touch them now, and know and bless ed in Japan, is made of real Japanese With this new love and dawning. tenderness. paper manufactured from mulberry 3 “ Faricisese ... =lris Tree, in the London Athenaeum. There are two customs practised by the Chinese in a body New Year's Her streets that wound into my brain so steadily That | hear yet the chant of them that roars Along their blinded spectral corridors. Give my old joy and wonder back again, The adolescent loveliness of pain; one a clear-cut cavalier and the other a rugged frontiersman, they were equally’brave and fearless. The name of the former is associ- ated in history with the Niagara and the Chicago Portages; the name of the latter with the Macb'naz? Portage. When these bold “voyageurs” plunged.into the unexplored regions of the Northwest, there was no word in our language to describe the difficult trails that connected lake to lake. So they called them Porfages—a word derived from the French —meaning “to carry” —because upon: these.rude paths the travellers had to bear the burden of the canoes and baggage on their shoulders. ~ The Porfage then came to mean the hard gruelling “carry,” the back-breaking tacl burden-bearing that all the pioneers of the North and West exnerienczed. s 8 & T'H.E first Portage Tire was produced ten years age. It was a big, rugged and muscular tire—designed to stand up under the severest strains, built to deliver abundant mileage in spite of the jolts and jars of rough roads. A dependable tire then—it is immensely better foday! Every detail of carcass, tread, side-wall and bead is. scientifically de- termined and built to exact specifications to insure correct balance and even wear. ; Only the stoutest and most carefully tested cotton fabric and cord goes into Portage Tires. That gives them strength to endure. Angenerously thick and tough—but pliable—rubber tread gives them Ju:(uom‘ language adopted the word Porfage because of a need —#0 has the motot public adopted the tire. They get you there — and back! KEEP-KOOL Clothes are made.to take you through the hottest of hot waves. "You come up smiling when you wear— i e {The National Summer Suit for Men We have them in all sizes, for men of all ages and tastes—in standard summer fabrics, ranging in patterns from light washable colors to rich dark effects. Let us show you today. J. C. MACPHERSON : : QUALITY CORNER Opposite Chelsea Savings Bank PORTAGE TIRE & RUBBER CO. ) A S5 S et i s s e BUCR Y g

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