Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 27, 1915, Page 4

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i f sty t _any in Norwich. It is deliversd toiover 8,000 ofrthe 4,053 houses - in Norwich,.and read by minety- three per- cent.,of¢the people. In Windhamit Is deivered tovover | h 900 houses, in Putnam and | ‘Danielson to.overt1,100-and in’ all of these«placeselt is:consid- \ered the local. dally. Eastern Connecticctthasforty- - nine towns, one hundeed and §) P00 TOOW of the _—_ ‘woul Ssixty-five. postofficesdistricts,and ) §| THE HEIGHT OF INGRATITUDE. -3 Dusedens - china - e 't a I3 a8 5 % elxtv rural free deliveny routes.. The man who is ungratefu} is sup- e - 3 The; Bulletin:is sold{inievery ’ §| posed to stve evidence of having with- EL d he: marry ‘em—why, I sh o it! by, 1N m‘. "’fl ¥ E‘.‘fl‘“ °'c:|‘"' R. F. D.<3!in him no good quality. It is the ::; and—" b 1ter in-Eastern Connecticut, .- §| human fault which has been bran : o % devilish for more than two thousand stonily. ‘Men marry women | ered 1 su CIRCULATION gl o oo g o ‘Just from the fact' so relleved, Gerald!"—Chicago News. 1901, QVOrRGO: oeece s 4412 0, sverase .. 5,920, _flAV.EfTHE‘EULLETN FOLLOW. Stories of the War rom thoge who in honor bound felt it to be & pleasure to 4o 50; dut they haven't come up and they do not all mean to. - The treasury department at Wash- ington is right in giving notice it will Germans Working in Turkey. |the Ottoman army are a On the road to Entilly, three kilo- 5 You sue at law ofl who do mot walk |tle towns in Anatolia, in a group of |correspondent to say that the Turk|of the Alpine Chasseurs. Chasseurs! d the cost of their relie? and . | makes an apt pupil in military mat- 1 RAYMOND POINCARE" Readers of The Bufletin leaving || uP and pay and | arafted Armenians engaged in road- |TIRIS8, A1, AL PRGTL T tolita o] ¢ TEvecy time I open et ' envalope; fhe city for vacation twips can have || rescue. A Pronl iokre. I feel it Teliow them daily and thus keep || No wonder thess persons are sus- |PUAINE The fool Chat ho 1o & gmast sclier. TWE}gnd i e e 4 i spondent found a young Germsn en- |is tho weak side which the German|{n' which joy and melancholy are ou aiffairs. ter | |'pected of belonging to that class which Fosiy in the uniform of a Turk- °m'rc§r appeals to with good results. mingled. I am very happy in thinking OTHER VIEW POINTS siad e point upon which the Germans |that you &7 through ' The . Bulletinybusiness of- feo, poverty | ish ploneer officer. bave concentrated their greatest ener- e — - WHAT THE NATIONS NEED. Here is ThTe Setiman Wlowsand Regsecunl 5 sy here. e e om % EDITORIAL NOTES, Pac - rious batteries have been improved by whichyaccordsfwith thecivilization of | When Uncle Sam stands for right —ith . dion s t; but it cammot. be|Dhe Presents no unnatural pose, for that artillerymen have been been given such : £ to th The world is suffering today for New England’s western visitors are|old place, for that matter. But nowa- | parts, when ultimately it may be told, i ™ in the history of the present war. asain Bear the marks of medlovancm. bus| e time Deople figure upon. we can. T Which is imbued with good will for| The man wht say goodbye to|it was best to keep it in good repair ¥he welfare of all;the Lations. instend | iia sweetheatt on a warii. summers|¥as Shown a littis Jater, when & resi- #ealngnce - Weltes: to. Suidienty f being packed) with riders for the|night in less than half an hour lacks|Ment of Turkish artillery Went over it| The President of the French Repub- mdvantage of ‘the shrewdest. The | fervor, at a lively clip. lic regularly receives his copy of “Le P s 'A% the foot of the Amanus Pass there (R eain & diplomacy. which is was another German engineer doing | Diabl founded upon honesty grouted in with | Secretary Lansing does mot put his | meies siocs. lated “The Devil of a Fellow"— one Diplomacy may represent skill, in road; thrower he is not likely to win dis- |road,” he replied. “You see, these old ;the French soldiers in the trenches, synon: lerman; lomatic some donkey first discovered that as teting T oma stmprecsion ot Jocticn: " | of the Suortancs of euos veat b paiss | POINE oo way of gelting over the bill |, CAptain of the Alpine Cheseurs, | Repu Bayest decelver has for ages Tanked |issues not dreamed of by her cor-|.¢Nebuchadnezzar. Since then all the |of the Alpine light infantry, known as | warmtl high in diplomacy. Gladstone point- | respondents. armies of antiquity and a few modern | the Alpine Chasseurs, whose blue uni- | put in ¥ ‘ed out that no diplomat could ‘become ones have used the road without know- | forms and dare-devil courage have|¥ou a Who couldn’t lle without,show- | NO doubt Germany would go out of |ing that the hill can be ascended in an | earned for them the nicknames of “the | eVery . -t Cconstratnt. it Belgium for ten bilions, but what|easier way. ‘ blue devi / . ndent The President has written the Alpine “And so it was given me to see you . Under present diplomatic methods|Would the Belglans do with it with| Then he showed the correspol Chas: Jetter to thank the i el on00e | scarcely dimes in their pockets? & new survey he had made. The old seurs o letter to thank them, not | closs at hand, to mix with you, there road “ight turns to get over the |alone for sending him their paper, but 0 do the other nation and not be done e o o™ ey ateop. | The | for the courtesy titls they have given 3s the sum total of the dipl at's Cucumbers seem cheap at 10 cents | Pass, ly ery b ‘endea: & dozen, but when the doctors ani|ReW road takes only one, and it re- ivor. s nurses are paid they prove to have 1o ah When nations - or two, a little revetting, and the | thank you for sending regularly Srorthy th thetr deal'nas with ong an. | PeoR dearer than anitque chine. T S fioge “Le Diable au Cor.” But I particularly ; DDA e o 2 forhe suragtte who in & recent con- | German medical officer. The man had erence declared “motherh o ormerly been in_the employ of the RESULT OF<A DECADEOF AGITA- | o ot arte mmust have Jost merselt in | Bapdad raload. When the war came 2 TION. the hot vocabulary of contention, he ente;ed the le;vicu of the Odttoman Some people do not believe in agi- army, because physicians ane g Xationibey @0 ot tos. the sood st| The Turcpean wer is giving Ameri- |£eons were needed He was put i Taaking an issue and sticking to it liis | G408 & chance to ses thelr own coun- | SO rim death to & nigger; but the agita- | UV a4 they scen it first they might| ““They have had scqe typhold fever tlon for ten years for a safe and|DaVe SPent more money at home, ang typhus around here,” he explained, £ firing in Burope s the cause of our |ed up. Most places now safe. Noth- e N frequent rains will have more dim- |ing to fear. The inan talked as if he had to turn [ribune led the forces for a safer and | *!%Y In €XPlaining last spring’s drouth, |, 3" ertified voucher for every word S e | o i e s LT B R \onnected with celebrations had Tisen | LL° CZar3 0rces to leave even a flow- | ne had ever smiled In his life. THE aid it : er garden to please the eye of their le] another German officer 0. & loss of life larger than that | enemics should they have to quit War- | wae mec " He. oo had hig miche. in lat the battle of Bunker Hill, saw. fhe Ottoma. army affairs. He is jook- campaign for a sater and, bet- [ TSR — ed upon as somewhat of an expert in conduct of celebrations has been| Do not omit canning the frults and | Dase and line of communication’ mat- vailable. it is certain that their influence in the | envelope upon which, under my name, Ottoman army is great. obser- | appears the title which is dear to me |of your battalions. meters east of one of the dirtiest it |vations induce the Associated Press|and which binds me to you: ‘Captain| “Honmer and glory to the Alpine them, new ones emplaced, and Turkish | 0f “blue devils!’ Each time that I am - » best | will inake a most interesti the Alpine Chasseurs, your welcome B b o Gitlomaty mhich sy nor | stuck on “Eastern time” but it is not|days we all have to help Where st in ng chapter au Cor”—which might be trans- [ arches, in which the moss of the forest was faith in hot alr. As a gas bomb| 1 am taking the kinks out of the|of the many newspapers publisned by | desined charming decorations out of overcoming ental issues and | tincti Tamps up the mountain have been |addressed to him stretched in fromt of your trenches— deferring mational strife, but 1t ‘has| | e used from time immorial. I suppose RAYMOND POINCARE, 38 & werd. you were most tngenious in {gus this. yeer, W may ing and design. - Simply send fifteen Wedgwood $2.75 and the setis yours. Think of pa1 set of dishes like this for such a small sum. mkedni.mofiasodnfigum r try Wedgwood Butter. and get this beautiful forty-two-piece dinner set shown here. It’s strikingly beautiful in color- and s will ,Bouhmm it on its merit alone. . You can’t buy Jetter butter than Wi Start saving for the dishes today. You mast est edgwood. butter —get the grocer’s best—Wi Always in pound cartons. P. BERRY AND SONS, Hartford, Conn. - Sole Distributers for New England States experience a very real emotion me as one of Yyou, “Yes” replied the young German to0|gy is the Dardanelles, with the Galli- ;::, at the hufln:: one loyt ;no:r' v".‘if;fif poli Peninsula. Since last November | companies, in these tragic hours. ou 1 almost yield to the tempta- such a thing uniess made\stable:upon the present.ancient |1® his natural attitude. rather be | additional training as was needed, The | o0 not to leave you. motive In keeping the ladies mnd eroded foundations. in the firing line in Flanders, or any |story of German endeavor in those| “Last Monday, when I paid a visit|jearnin the goosestep. — Meriden Vosges, to the third brigade of | Journal of you, I included in that homage all German newspapers o, “Were I not bound by other duties, | Vailing vogue of full 0 reason that the extra how proudly would I don your uniform | TSRSQR, AL tRo el SOt Tent is a-mean editor who would propose cloth- the pre- for the it be It hed an ulterior from waked to me that feeling. You| 1t seems to have taken New York ble of being so o] and even the trees along the|Their law has just been so modified you set up pretty triumphal |a5 to require identifying markers on led to the ensines of war; you | Register. s ‘wire which, tomorrow, will be| New York, New Jersey and me the Tepresentative of the | from. r tic of France. But you put into i e Lo I my four-footed donkey, in the days | This particular paper is the organ|Your demonstrations a sympathy, a|Mgass, that their p: o h so cordial, so famillar—you|growth in population bas really been machines of this sort—New Haven Masse. chusetts have each taken a state cen- to them so much comrady that|much greater than shown by the recent t once took from our meeting state census. Why do_the states tor- vestige of ceremonial, of official | ture the patriots thus? lem't omce in ten years often enough to dbe pointed ?—Waterbury Republican. —_— mountains, better to appreciate | THaw, at liberty eeems to be even devoted to minutest relation of your efforts, your bravery and your|mere an object of notoriety than Thaw success. 1 admitted your wonderful | in limbo. The columns of news - pace Quces the possibility of accidents. A | “My dear comrades” he writes; “I|bearing and your sublime gaiety—nor ‘this surprise me. And when, on the at man’s slightest move cater to a gre: n_of the Commander in Chief, | public curiosity that PLUM TREE is (well and persistently conducted and |vegetables for fe ters, but, to judge by his appearance, accidental loss of life on the | tem mak fon st g SISWY TAY | oo’ could swear that he hed just MFourth was 8 for 1916 and 9 for 1914, | too fresh ne may got ptomaine poison | SLRESS, Out Of the best drawing-room making a total of 17 for two Years |in his. e Tt Wiey SOt e best. ‘®gainst 466 for the year 1903. L said he was doing wonders. He had _This shows good and satistactory| The mews that Francis Joseph's|just managed to find several, tons of work, The reformers have worked with |mind is affected is not surprising. | railroad spikes where nobody suspect- & will and the results stand to their | Other titles being lacking the world's | ed them—in & clothing store belonging icredit. May sanity in this cause never|STeat war might be called the war|to an Armenian, r “How they got there, I don't know,” ‘egain vield to insanity. of the roval Wumatics. he mused refiectively in the casino. { o e gt “Got some water piping in the same THE POWER OF MONEY. B industry: -Off agin. om agin | 502 ! John Wanamaker as en American Finnigin,” is a short note | * mverywhers the correspondent found prince has all other princes | D% 1o diplomecy between nations a |the German officer, aimost always sin. || Pretty Wash Dresses {fnerchant prince has all other DIINCes | column in called brief. Industry secks slehanded, and t-iv‘m in charge of : . oee § He is a great advertiser and in sug- [1© 100Dholes in language, s S Py At th's low price a great variety of a contribution of ten billion G-y bdvem ships, American consuls in belligerent there. They were || 25 DIED as $6.00. countries are keeping dependent Ger- man women from want and suffering. R Furke s Women’s and Misses” Wash Dresses $1.98 White Dresses for Girls. i s S ng touch 7 The-manner in which Mexico City i | work aiready done, Secviceatls Dresses sombining common British finances are reported to be in excellent shape, but the momey will the models in lawn, voile and linen, for both women and misses. The values of this seasonable offering run ..$3.48 Clever Coats for Present Use. . .. .$5.00 attractive The kind of a coat you will need any cool evening most desirable. Many of these are slightly sense ma- and are consequently much reduced terials with attractive styles. The weaves are neat worth as much as $4.95. Made up In ‘batiste, linen and rice cloth, at home or at the beach. Mauny of them were priced as high as $11.50 and in style-and finish are suggestio: ‘At Ishlaiah the correspontient met a | thank you for sending it to me in an [T presented crosses and medals to some | morbid and disgusting to the mormal > Yale-| il Matines 2:80;" Evening 7 and B:45 istoric relics is preserved the '.l:v:c:q;:'dl.anw.' Soclety at - faitin g: i That the road was needed, and that Teceived me with the accents of the|state a surprisingly long time to @is- | any Brahim; cover that a motorcycle, aiso, is eapa. as to be a menace to others than its passengers. Christianity, whereby the iron crown started upom its cemturies’ career oé'ondfil:fll associations with ueens, kings and emperors. q"?wc Gregory's gift was & fillet of STEAMER BLOCK ISLAND Joireiive" WATCH HILL and BLOCK ISLAND *Daily, except Sundays Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and F ridays, July 7 to September 3rd WATCH HILL 2}%ax | BLOCK ISLAND 270an Adults, 50¢; Children, 2Sc Adults, 76¢; Children, 400 ‘Shore Dinner od Bathing Beach near landings st Wateh Hill e e e Tt araation, Darky retess sooly ot olic Whart, Norwioh. ~ ©. J. ISBISTER, ASent Keen KK ~_—AND— Iimperial CYTHES EVERY ONE FULLY WARRANTED SPECIAL BARGAINS 25¢ HUMMER WINDOW SCREENS. . 35c HUMMER WINDOW SCREENS 40c HUMMER WINDOW SCREENS.«..+s0veves STEEL SCREENS at Reduced Prices $4.50 LAWN MOWERS: . sc.vcvseeavasniiny $5.00 LAWN MOWERS. ... $£5.50 LAWN MOWERS. 25 ft., 4-ply, 34-inch, $2.50, reduced fo 25 ft., 5-ply, 34-inch, $2.75, reduced to. 25 ft., 6-ply, ¥-inch, $3.25, reduced to. 50 ft., 6-ply, 34-inch, $6.75, reduced to. utter I 10c FLY. KILLERS ‘The Household

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