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| i : Norwich, Saturday, Aug. 7, 1918 £ circulation of anypaper in East- ern Camnectiout and' from thres . Lot unprepared, unless, of.course, those to fourutimes larger-than that of ! ‘who m in no condition to make prep- any in/Norwich. It Is delivered : 1 of the fac aratl SR ' to\overs3,000-of tho 4,058 houses in Norwich, and reall by ninety- three per cent. of*the :pecple. In Windham it is. delivered to -ovér 900 houses, in Putnam and $|cation calls attention to the fact that z ground gvith everything : But hew diffecactly do, 1o on3| Nt so the Oidest Tnhabitssts Wen,| = -ri’"'EM; ! for months. % AN OPEN DOOR FOR ALL. | bocause they are %o mumerous: but | The oldest inhabitant will exclaim with | yes; e purty hot, he sdmits. But |y, "Germans fong range guns was a O rprise, in e = The United States bureau of edu- | those Who simply think it is their duty | SUVIST S4s 50" Gegrees or over, early | to the flannels which kept him cosy | Wasted effort. The stronghold was B S ek e 1 | i e e g | S ST Ml b e B | BT SRrh o G B 1 . H 5 c 3 Danielson to.over 1,100-and.in {| the oppartunities for learning wers|pay to so strain our eyes looking for |, 1ot J8vs and uncomfortable days|CUact (o ricymatis you know. and|ng’correspondent this morning visit- all of these.places. it is*consid never:so many or.easy of galning as|dutles to perform that we get a stra- hi 7 97 ed the trenches facing the most ad- 1§ eredithe-local: dally. now. Bus!du‘t.::h colleges, universi- | bismic view of life. or spiritual Jim- on WEHUE I oY W e A yenced German line, ten miles out Eastern Conneotiout.has <3 es:an ‘normal schools, libraries, mu- s concerning © requirements, the Fall, Winter and Spring, by pil- | Peyond Cumiere, near Champneuville, ; m'n.-:a':n: s hundndhrnvnd seums and art gallerles, there is no| Dolng right keeps us in the straight e [.7¢ [ H : H Ing coal into the furnace. any a situated at the end of the Meuse. The 3 path, and duties just blossom al it He can recall the time when he was French ition, sixty-five postoffice districts,-and §| o0 t0"the organized socleties designed | jikq 'violets by R Srs s |a small boy, and stole away to ‘set |DiSht when the wind was howling, | FRERCh, Dositlon, on & BUIL is exceed- St roral fresidalbvacy’ rontes: oive overybody o chance. ¢ 1g)2nd Georse Eilot tells us “the reward [a coolin' dip in the Ole Swimmin' Hole paratively inconsiderable force. It is book. There it was, “Musket- f each duty done is the power to do[On the seventeenth of Junei he re- being intermittently shelled by Reinhard.’ And The, Bulletin. Is sold In-every | eartzing, as never before, the desir- | omothons members the date, because his grand- Germans, bursti > town - - on all,of the R. F. D. 3| abiity of & wide Qistributton of the| “her fit at Bunker Hill, and was rem. | Steam heater; and he has piled on Jest cheud e tot:ing = 2 3 ' a trench just ahead of the visith ‘tew routesin Eastern”Connecticut. ‘sclentific information it has collected | Som: p”“’b‘”:&‘n‘x}lw = saved gy Ln‘;u{;f'"lfn;’:. ‘-"‘d' ;""C"o,g: o1 t;.{‘;‘;i :flfl‘:nn‘g I?ueg g:::g".’:;dmh:: u]r_thy. kmé‘d three soldiers. o .".‘{t:.-.“'_?:‘i.'.'{”" e arge - expe: tim grace, some by , and som ow the ban spirit of determination and the| “And ctminn: seln, | il ‘mguln CIRCULATION e e s aone: | Works, and they give ho thought to a | chased the Red Coats, ete. ete. (et Densityof mamian = OCT 118 | Sartis oalinaios o€ the Jstw ace 00| Tt Ll e et et e Tl Fra P s o it ot service to or of good infuence | That anniversary ws 3 siasling aay | RORSCIONL 10O, o I erich | concelvable to those who have motstricken with reimh g : among thelr fellowmen. How rs00 s - - They seem to feel their|" « Srwin comes budkt” she 1601 avera 4412 3] affecting _directly the overyday pro-|ever thinik they may be saved some ot |on the trees; the cattle, well-nigh |8 SnOWy night, the white feat Dositions are ‘impregnable and het|aas Y = - . o-BVOrRES eeoene e & cedure of educatton. The Boys' and|not much. The safe idea may have |overcome by the sudden hot wave, |Would drift in through the leaky roof. | BOUSSNL o Cuestion of time when the | sy He'ts o onty e Talys SO0 1906.- avecasa 5:99( | Girls club.work in the department of | narrow or far-reaching boundaries, |weakly sought any avallable shade. Germans worn out by fruitless efforts| =~ ~+Are Ernst and Oswald'— b agriculture and the circular letter ser- | There is nothing definite about being | Men sweltered, or dropped in their| That was in Winter. Does he take |, preak through their lne must| wghe aid mot let me finish, but ned~ Vice of the bureau.of education fllus. | Saved any more than about being good, | tracks in fields 'and highways, in foun- | an opposite course when July comes?| yoayen. e m e trate two different types of the in- | OF Srong, or rich—it is possible to be | dries and market places. It was for|Does he arrange to cool the house by “He ‘Will come back: I sald, over- il bt do better, of stronger, or richer. It is|sure a powerful hot day, llke a breath |the same system used to warm 1t |y .\ 4 ol il L Germany. | come by e teear 154, 2 ormation service of the federal gov-| ot what we seem to, be, but what we |of caloric from that place our Uni- |having iced air forced through the o s Tesling confidence ernment, both of recent development.|arg that tells. The man who “does not radiators, as the hot steam used to Vacant lot and waste ground culti- In the two years ending June 30,|intend to do much business this week, come during winter? vation are being pushed vigorously. — 1914, the bureau of -education issued|but next week intends to make business | their brethren, end their explanations| Does ho throw wide all the windows, Fab In these se- R 112 numbers of its Bulletin, repre- |8che” defers where others accomplish. | why are far from satisfactory. The |Stop grumbling and buy electric fans, | vation are particularly fl!'° e | rious days I had almost forgotten thej HAVE THE BULLETIN FOLLOW || senting about:a million separate coples | What makes for salvation is responsive | Cains are on the increase and _the|shed his garments as do the enimals ‘;‘n“.:?...:%?'p%{uf'&"‘fim‘;"‘.‘; great | woman and her hard lot. Then I met Yyou and covering nearly every phase of | STULUItY lo Evod thoughts now, not next | Abels are perishing by thousands Man | 200, 7} "CF "% provide plenty of nour- | tracts in their suburbs. This little | her one sunny day in the park With Readers of The Bulletin leaving || 23ucational endeavor for the direct|yupon thinking good thoughts, when do- | ceit and fgnorance to becoming a. sin|ishment at the time that the body is | town owns a trdct of good soil tn its | shining eyes she was pushing » whesl e e e rection etn leaving | use of schoal omctals. g $o00 706600 18 WS Gininite.:. Bomhe| sere Bon Of SOl apt to have lowest vitality during the | center, which has been reserved for | chair in front e ! it fcliow them dally.and thus.ksep A host of other organizations mak-|men who join the church never get wilting heat? new church, schoolhouse, parsonage a recognition passed over. ' . her features and, stopping, she sald’ in touch with home aaire. Order ing no claim to a place in the formal | far enough into the spirit of it to feel —_— and small park. This is offered in - ihrough The Buletin business of- {; school system are nevertheless dolng | Sure whetner they are associating with Does he apply his intelligence to hig | Small lots free to those who will | with quiet Joy: 1 4 bles. ““‘You were right, sir. he 1, i active work of a directly educational | the goats or the sheep. . system of daily living—following again | undertake to ralse vegeta e There nature. The Boy Scouts, the Girl Sunday Morning Talk J|the customs of the races inured to| In Bavaria there are great tracts of |my Erwin’ And her hand pointed to land, belo: to the com- | the wheel chair in which sat a == [:Scouts, the Camy Fire Girls, women's conditions in hot countries, taking ad- | high mooriand. belonging - young, | wonder how a person <an become 5% H too intellectual to be intelligent? Per- vantage of Nature's aid in the shape | munes, the general government and dier, scarcely 20 years of age, GOD’S SCAVENGERS. clubs, parent-teachers’ assoclations,|haps over estimating mentality, cod- of julxcy frults, cooling vegetables, | the mlutn.ry1 depnn.meni‘ ;’."’a'nfi'.’,‘i’é whose breast was decorated with thel Now end then we come across-a bit ‘musical socleties, art centers; these|dling pride and hitching both to con- easily digested grain foods? moorland only requires to iron cross. e are doing a work whoss educational | ceit is what makes some intellectual DOES GOD SEND TROUBLE? ;;: mmusy::“ésiffifikw:;?:%:q’m ance is only beginning to be|DPeople appear weak and silly, If con- Th i Bala e Hjn-lw::htendea' ceit and learning did not mix eny ere are times dle, B. A, Ph, D, etc, says: “The fiy's, proboscis is more successful in re- tarding the progress of civiization |y, and the alleviation of humsan sufler-] and treated with phosphate to pro-| T hand. duce good crops the first year, and will soon when even plain|, ";:""d . """"',"" - ““"""t t | many prisoners of war h":wbe«"-;‘ Young people always re- bett o the dark races’ love for the water- | ¢ this work. It is a great boon to the | cover very quickly.’ The Inflverce of the fraternal or- h:.p::!lt'l?laen “;‘r‘ :gg,_‘{:;:;l::dwg‘e':go:: men turn thecloglans. One can hardly | melon, the light, cheap, easily pro- | prisoners. it gives them occupation| “He smiled resignedly and said with' ;ganizations is directly educative. to succeed in making mionkeys of Hve in this perplexing world and form |cured banana—one of which Is sald | 3nq a chance to earn a few cents to|a shrug of his shoulders: The whole vast fleld of religlous| themselves. A little learning is not |00 theory as to the method of its gov- | to have in it as much nourisbment as|puy tobacco and little comforts. Thou-| * ‘Both legs.’ struction in churches and Sunday|as dangerous as an over supply of |ernment. What has God to do with our |2 POURd of beefsteak—the julcy pear. | sands of acres are reclaimed already—| T felt the words penetrate my heart ‘schools represents an educational| worthless pride; and it doesr’t make | human affairs, we ask ourselves. From | T PIUm. lfl:]g:fhéy ot et fandty] A Toustet Ifke thrusts of a dagger. This hand- problem that 1s seldom viewed as|much difference whether it is the|time to time the public or private| Hv Iatuition they realfe Thek uch , |some young fellow a cripple! such because of the larger spirituat|Pride which lends haughtiness to the | calamities that shock our minds bring Co‘:,”z erne e © hich the system| «“Mother, Mother, Let Me Gol um'mf; n‘:: has m; ‘:n:rl. cr:-a sald, issues that are felt to be involved, and | S0ul, or prompts one to ape humlility | the problem nearer. The untold suf- needs during the hot season; also that John L. Stoddard, famous American ol oman radiantly, t:o now. and Deetles to remove filth from the | mecause of thetraditional s tion | 2nd lick the dust, for pride goeth be- | ferings in war-ridden Europe, there- | ReGRS CUPRE, LOF nof BCOROTE BM0 DiAl | jesturer, describes (Tyrolese patriot- m tmel surface of the earth that the air should oD fore a fall, anyway. The intelligence | cent steamboat horror in Chicago, the il h |ism in the following manner: not bo polluted and plagues ensue. | s, 20d.state in America. that is ail wool and a vard wide and | almost daily record of cruel tragedies [fruit and drink less ico water, which [ls78 ' (e T0 Bt Where the carcass ls the buzzards|qol> AUQua, farmers institutes, lec-| takes on indelible color has no van-|on land or sea that filis the pagers, e o sordors in that much abused | boy 18 a prisoner in Siberia and whose gather, and the beetles congregate, and | cargmn o arnnge, Young Ben’s ity In its warp or woof. these present themseives to the think- | S0 7 second son is in the fleld, now starts | €Ves with a smile. Shere flth 1s flies abound. Every | Christian.association and Young Wo- ing person, anxious to believe that he | OF&2an. with his remaining three sons—all as| [ ¥es, mother. saaiter] b s g 2 lives in a normal universe, and cause eers— “Kalser und ] e e scavenger is a protector of the health ;‘e;:nfl";‘m“m“ a,umc,c'hm;’:n}::dm“ Joa- | souns a8 e ever o e ey by | much dificuity. Then as to dress. Happlly, after | Olunieersio, G600 105 (O oS cells |the 0ld woman pushed her son. who of man, and there are billions of them | Lor oty SUTMer c = Tov e nimselt. bt no oo e iebes | “Some there are who always lay the | much criticism, there have been per- | TUr VAterleleo (& VOCAY, FORCY or | had been siven back e Al and they work in the wilds as well as Lrpisdi S frofnim CT0 IS not likely that we intends | Burden of any kind of trouble on the |sons brave enoush to put aside ‘the S e now (e it Tl rel :2‘1 ot:';:y educational agencles as the| bt prevaricate, but ne does mot re. |Almighty. They find a sort of conso- | starched collar, the heavy clothing. the g y in the firing line, 'm“:‘"’“ e Co) S i) mermber how youns he felt in the long | 13tion in the belief that whatever k':lllng und:}rfl'lhi:’gl. c::‘::f: = g:fi”m:} her husband, 67 years old, is going as neighborhoods and ‘made an end of EDITORIAL . NOTES agv. || Thevexnbersucetor el at* (£70 | LI0ws {all on amen are ssut by God. In|ihay were the voSHe a volunteer. OTHER VIEW POINTS the fiy nulsance. They removed th 2 which makes a man believe his own | the presence of calamity they lower|times, e B e g 4 °| Since whiskers will:soon be fashion- | faisities is worth having, Life is | thel eves and speak of the sad event| Cool, cotton has replaced the | ., vs. “It will be hard, for food is cause. able’ goats are likely to be in style|spent for more than half the world |28 & dispensation of Providence. They |midwinter woolens, collars have been | /o™, 0 0o but I should be ashamed If we wers as much afraid of Alth] ap e erera. before_they are 40; and to see the cur. | POW themselves to endure what they |rolled over, sleeves lopped off in wo- | 'S v o™y "atay. as v;«ep:;:e:f::;‘h‘;i of :x::o;dg:.;g e Dl ol S O ront of life running high In a mortal Tegurd as the dtwine ‘Wil e s h‘r‘;:. the thin | From my own ~house have gome a e — = ‘beautiful world, man ond three scort - 'S appear. The fiy 1s just as guflty of | moses = o e et 5 are in “the habit"of re poisoning man as man is of supplying the fly with the poison. ot " | youthful gardemer and my second |the necessary police duty of this hem- makes o terrible time. changing . the| derful; If we-are In the hablt of re-| All of this may be thoroughly admir. | o5t the featherwelght hat. the soft” |lo\joner's son, a gifted woodcarver, |isphere and it must either do it orl Isn't it time we got at the primary cause of our troubles along these ing than all the armaments of our most Christian powers!” Fhew! God made turkey buzzards and flies lared style of get-up. That there garding it as being common-place. It | able in spirit but it does not always | O just 18 years of age. They came the|serve notice that it is going to quit Doundsry: Rnes. may be true that & man is never any | reveal a clear understanding. Neither |2F¢ & few women and men who o to |0, " "% Stand before us in their|and turn the job over to & board of garbf a t Satan never claims the Lord. is on|Older than he feels, but the world s it calculated to increase the love of | Gxircmes,in summer garbing does nof | uniforms, so proud, so brave and—oh, | trustees or an _international _police presumes to judge his age by his | the average man for the Almighty. Be- dear God—so full of hope! commission. It ‘will be the chief loser Hnes? 1';3 d"flfl- His emissaries-often “deat | looks, and he usually looks it. Age |cause he cherished a belief of about this | (N® &Verage styles in vogue. The signal which should summon |by such a step and it can hardly in- S the devil at that. 4 makeg_the head light and the feet|sort the primitive savage felt himself them to join their company at thesta- |sist upon the right to enforce the DRAWN FROM INDUSTRY, heavy; and it is fortunate that “the It is a strange fact that a person to be given at midnight by | Monroe doctrine once it takes such a g 2l surrounded by a host of spiritual forces igh tion was to gt The exigencles of the present: warj ell-spent life brings its | malevolent at heart, forces that hate|Who willingly pays eighty cents or|ihree bugle calla We waited for it in | step—Waterbury Republican. eaw. It may be 2 joy; and very lampstw;tg it” Gray ha.:‘s ahoulg be | the ways of man and beast, despise ;e:gg;{h '0;_; e st b o -.'dlhme the darkness olh g-e n'.;lden.x’rho young § 2 dburd too. respecte none more than by those | their pleasure: d rejois in their J lad sat beside mother. I could see 000, o a | underthin; E - e S L The:motton pictures passed by the IS indeel fortunate whose foolishness | his gods. Can the modern man have a | underthings, cool, sflky hose MUEh(-|pers. The murmur of the fountain was [ TeStion ls neww £SHUne Gowm 1o BROU™ S e it L and wisiom seem well balanced at 70. | sentiment essentially more tender than | Welght garments, the weari the only sound. Suddenly,like an elec- training in time of peace, and whofSenSors show that thers is something this toward his deity if he must charge [ WOuld entirely revolutionize his opin- | irjc “shock, the signal came—three |Oring guidance of Mr. Root the plan can imagine what a tax this.is upon ° -good taste._ A bright paragrapher writes: “Eve|up to Him the wWholeeorry tale of hu- |ion of suminer; make him SUperior t0 | cjear and thrilling blasts. The boys |0r & sbort ballot, refucing the elco- the output of industry‘in the Datting| pnere Is mo - o|nad the best husband in the worid—|men disasters that so wring our |the tortures of heat and hum ty. sprang to thelr fest to say farewall I mm‘mmmu e T e aant countries. use of calling this t that time.” St hearts? dared not look upon the parting from We are informed from time to ttme | %04 backward summer, for it 1 & ! on oy could & comparison b made.| I &m ame of those who belleve, not| He will spend much more In cold | their parents. It was too sacred. Yet |0 B S e that great industries in Germany, Eng- | *°0Se% shivering tramp. How 13 it possible for a man to be|that God sends, but that He only per- | drinks, ice cream sodas-and the like: |1 heard no sobs—not then. Only at|Something fike it s conatitution land i better of worse it there 1o mo one|mits trouble. = He allows the great|will swallow patent nostrums adver- | ot came the imploring words of the ng legisiation— and and France are paying 20 Der| 1¢ theswar in Hurope, as Tane Ad- | etk i Since. Adam | natural laws to take their course. Ef- |tised to keep him cool, when really | ydung woodcarver: Cowrant. cent, dividends and the Inference is|xams says,.is,an.old man' war, there| was not sharp enough to beat ihe|fect is suffered to follow causo with [the help he needs should come from | ¥y e mother, let me got that business of all kinds is Tooming {35 nothing very feeble about it. devil, or Qhr‘e’r:'den:nogugh om ?..p : unerring certainty. God does not|the haberdasher and the laundryman! T o Considering that we falled to pro- in these countries, but a revelation cotract and preserve his own domain. | override nature in favor of one who | When the price of an electric fan, for e : tect the French lezat:on at Poht au Tike this leaves not a doubt that bus-| The patched-trousers brigade must|it i8 Tot in evidence that he was so | breaks a law of nature. Trouble comes |at least one room of the house, would | A German Mother—Five Sons in the | prince from violation by a negro mob iness is badly hampered in all the 11}pe thrilled with a feeling of anxtety | VerY capable; and as he blamed his|in this world in consequence of human | bring him untold comfort; when awn- Army. the United States could not do other- nations now engaged in strife. ! This 14,000,000 men represent about A wifl his he * ignorance or dlsobedience but that is|ings, porch and window and 00T | woccasionally the same faces do re- | Wise than assent to the landing of & at the prospect of shorter coats! | L oir: a the monmoid wigne ere” | by no means equivalent to saying that | screens, a plazza, no matter how prim- | , ~OCCasionally Tho, Bame Kaces U0 TC- | prench naval force from he Descar Goa . itive, screened in, a bammock, and a tes. Ha offers another conspicu ome-sixth of the Industrial force of the| We should admire Willlam Jen- | Maobarenie: ced v moc Eae berg o i osause we are human. |few other hot weather comforts, would ::mar";;?‘{"r’e&m“;‘; s e et DUnited States, and at an average of fnings.Bryan's wonderful spirit if it|difficut for the writer to learn much | The body is part of the material order, |leave him strong in body and mind | ¢;rmer serving woman. dootrine must be abandoned or made one dollar a day reduces the earning-f'was not garbed in filmsy conceit. about him, since our knowl ‘of | subject to those laws of physics, chem- |to meet the caloric and to snap his ““Is your son at the front, too, Mrs. | to Work both ways in case a European capacity of the masses 384,000,000 a the etrly ages is all traditional The | i6try and mechanics that obtain every- | fingers at old General Humidity. Reinhard? That is your name, is it | nation is irritated beyond polite bear- week. Instead of being employed to| Now they are trying to make out|record of Adam as a ploneer is far|Where. When, through accident ordis-| Much dg‘“’n‘ of 'chflh: 1&;}:'4!0;’;; not? ing—Hartford Times. increase the wealth of the natlons they.| that a twilight baby will never be- | from being satisfactory, and our In-|€ase, the machine gets out of order |cept at meals is a mistak i “She smiled and nodded. it heritance from him d Wo suffer the consequences. We fail [serve to make one realize that the| . a A S Bt | e tstoynectt e se success. Mercy mel |fEritZace from him docs mot indicate | n business or in domestic life because | human body has seven million pores, | o Five, sir’ she answe simply— -z untry has bad - stnoss hoomingalrcad! T ohly a We either cannot or will not fulfill the | through which perspiration oozes _if tr - 3 oeds. _sipte ] ilson came { ‘business that i Every day in th [t ay. t with liquids Five? I asked in amazement, office. ° e been 1o Seouies i e ), il ot ot R ’:‘“fl conditions of success. Y‘hat}mever a gnly onei?"o.(rz(ehlg eystem with Maulde | /', ;" vge fromtT ‘And ey 3% e v ot truction of property and the butchery:| 8SSurance to. the fellow who so often man_soweth that & e also reap.|to make igent self-con- | 2112 FH purt at ruz, | of men, = 7 says: “The fools are mot all dead| . h1an,usually gsts the best glimpse | \we qie because wearemortal. Thehu. | trol {s necessary in , this_resy it e e T e e s e 7 b man machine is made to last just about | one woul —CE AR Bas e butld h house for his family according | 55" jone and then it goes to pleces no | cool!” fallen. For four weeks I heard noth. J 1 t 1} ow: lans. rage man o AGRAPH. ing from him. But now it is written | Our THE TOKEN OF EFFICIENCY. |’ qyo.pfan.on the Comer sy It 1s [ hmon) Sk abru es St Lo mal | matter what care we give to it o T TR here—fallen in France. And she press. | nal have been reduced to a very small Under present labor systems thelg ‘steady job lke the traffic police-|ning A convenlent house ss he does ed her finger on the list of one of the | figure, and indeed the new democrat-; skilled mechanic is becoming starcer| man's, but he can't get’into the lime~| about constructing a Latin dictionary.| But if God does not send trouble, countless names. ic method of accounting excludes that| and scarcer and as a result organ- |jight, ‘Wher Mark Twain built g house with | why, at least, does he permit it? Only Stories of the War “‘Are the others also in France? I ized companies have to resort to some Gt et a d it i Wichen o teretthin it usually | a hint toward answer s vouchsafed asked in order to say something. method to hold their best help in idle Stock in an ammunition - factory| Was ated, the world was amazed,|to us but a hint that will, perhaps, “‘No, only Ernst. Oswald and Franz times so that they ma; 3 althotgh it recognized that it is better | serve as a clue to the labyrinth. It is — are in Russia, and my youngest, Er- them when their labor 1o noctng. 7| Lhat pays 20 per cent. makes & man| i,y below the odors of the kitchen |that through the sharp discipline of s win, is in_the Carpathians’ - s 3 think war is a blessing when It is only. tbove them. The primitive housa | pain man learns what he could learn The Siege of Verdun. “‘How many mothers like that you 0 one ever expected skilled labor|a blight. B e and ey o | Bt im0 other way. Suffering is permit-| The Germans hammering at Verdun, would see a day when it would be parlof was gn the front vard. Man's|ted, but it is ordained that strength |the fortress on which the drive of a handed a retainer, as lawyers are, to| If an American is a glorified-Eng—| origiml idea of a house has increased | may come out of the suffering. year ago went to pleces like a wave hold them true to service. Large |lishman, what will. Henry James.be|from a box to a wonderful arrange-| God caused no member of that fam-|on a rock, may continue for years DAILY SERVICE concerns in this country are paying a|when he becomes sn Emglishman’ by |ment pf many boxes. The kitehen has [ ily cirole to die In order that the other | and years without making the siignt- (| STEAMER BLOCK ISLAN o G dollar a day and more to skilled idle j*adoption? \been fried at every corner, and is now | members may be made more tender-| est impression. The underground Stk e et bellevid to be properly located if it | hearted and sympathetic. Our relative [ life with which the trench combats ” Tepresnts the pleasantest and airiest | died because his physique was hope-|of this war have familiarized _the WA l c“ HILI_ a“d Blncx 'sLANn th::re ls:rvi:ea wthu: Tsed:::_ Amon: e'Xn! tt:\oc:‘x‘ne of v‘va: :a Russian gena :room h the house. Man as a bullder is | lessly undern:‘lned and ldeazh x%almesltlo world and to which-the mode;ne loldl;rt the the great Remington company. |'eral ot . ge ckmated. The « ‘rom impossible sit- | aire: are accustomed, Te has el e has s GAAt e e gfslow. [It took him centuries to discov- | Telease him an already are us derioe er that a chimney- Dation, But now God can so overrule | reached its climax in s ern,and isbusiness likeand necessary. |'the game. i Py S him ont o =g e and misery. It has taken him | the bereavement as to make it reveal | underground:city prepared for the de- P.M. P. M. ‘A few surplus hands are held in this) ages ty recognize that out of door life|in us the peaceable fruits of righteous- | fenders of the key to Northern France. % way with a view of always keep-| DVery generation:ehows its genius;|is theltrue energizing life. ness, of sympathy, of tender-hearted| Miles upon miles of streets, alleys %Mmh"'“m" . Lv. mfl "M‘a Ing the supply equal to the demand. |In new expressions. Those Who used| \ conslderation for Gthers as we have|and public squares, chambers stoc i oo B8 —— These are times when business|to Do called loafers aro mow-spoken M hnesty is the best policy the ds-| POTeh KOONR DTS, 1o man'a bust- | Snd” ledsmgs. ecreation rooms. . & Norwich «.........Due 630 650 factiods Havytolpoton fiied sxuasal| o A= eTiclncY [eIDactE eonasht the sabely. "L o am x| ness. Ruin somes Decause of some es- ‘make s e P.M. P.M. S lined o attribute this to original sin | Sential weakness in t particu ndays only close-fisted methods of the long:ago Missour! needpit sneer.with pride|as to jresent duplicity. There was a | mercantile arrangement. But when in these days spell failure most -every ['because she has a donkey:that chews|time when men must have maintained | fellure comes, be it from misjudg-|have been constructed facing time. “tobacco. Connecticut would not think]a highyr average for honesty of pur- | ments, from dishonest partnerships, or | meadows of the valley of the Meuse SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS The negro who followed Becker in the electric chair left a- better im- ~ression .behtnd. : family lerred in wanting to know too | Beath'the defeated man the everlasting | has been placed in the path of who- [} Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and F ridays, July 7 to September 3rd government purchase of German shipg that has a firing zone four miles|of eart! have gone to the other ex-|Detter than gold. That one has a|the ancient fortress, 75 feet below the confiacated i cauihtion the Meas Our- o e oy oad, of fecognising the | I 11" means merely that he is hav- | pilitacy” prepatations that aiready Shore Dinner Houses and Bathing Beach near landings at Watch Hill Here In the 20th century we witness | the Captain of our Salvation, he may | fashioned siege. Here alsp the staff of speaking of just one. pose tlan they tdo today. The first|from whatever cause, God puts be- | surrounding France's barrier which Secretary MoAdoo is boomingthe d shows him that much—it would eat of the frui arms of his love an ever attacks from Metz. Tormment purchase of Serman ehing | W% con bleme o eperdresdnanght| oo of knowiedge) but tatsy the men | here s some thines in Nt tn, times | G whe lorel of the oi4 mowts of || WATCH HILL néfan | BLOCK ISLAND .25, ag! n at | they will be seized by the allies and|greater than ours for thinking the.|treme and seem to delight in knowing | hard time in this vale of tears is no| summit, the galleries begin. There Adults, 500; Children, 25¢ Adults, 75¢; Children, 400 - American navy is a joke? too litth, Instead of recognizing the | evidence that God is displeased With|are no evidences in the most perfect ing the war under any flag? . 5 i the it ing.some of the tougher lessons in the | have been completed of any lack of |} and Block Island. For further information, party rates, apply at office (% takes & brave and devout woman Sreter t A0 a3 they mave e o¥: ABEY | schoot of Life n order that finally, liks | ammunition necessary to stand an old || of company on Shetucket Wharf, Norwich. fo lend five sons for the defenso 2 e A NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP COMPANY C. J. ISBISTER, ASent er_country and to feel thankful for|millions of armed men representing a|Pe “made perfect through suffering.”|js quartered and an entire army corps the return otrwu legless patriot. )score of nations engaged in n’i‘finx THE PARSON can easisy be accommodated under