Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 3, 1915, Page 4

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TNITODII N t - Liah;&w@ — Gorwicl Bulletin Postively the Most Wonderful War Pictures Ever Produced EA C ) e . - P ] 119 YEARS OLD S e e . ahe ..g';.?s., ‘ coiias T out er sewing. g you were ¢ 5 o : Smmecripiion prics 13 % wesks Sov & to m;'fi?f:{‘b‘&"fi? é‘:_-nz 53?1.'2& in no : Taken by a War Correspondent by the Permission of the Austrian Government -and IS Sl cs evion o e s T, e RTINS BaRn et 3 wve me a startled glance. “Why, oflo?'a “’g‘:“l see, mother,” I quickly inter- | list.” Bulietin Business % o letin urull;o = pored, “he is to give me a f He launched forth at otice on a pre. = ik u‘l lletin 'm-& lesson this d!:ur::on and I told filln liminary lecture for a beginmer lke Willimantte Ofice, Reom 2 Mureay | Period of five years it will have cause | that if he would drop in here for|myself. I had not thought it necessary | SOmmu | the separation. IFATRF] tulate itself if it is able to|lunch we could get an earlier start than | to inform him that I had taken a few | SFYthing to Tht E E, frulldtog. Telephone 336. oy e eade that all fts people | If T went downtown and hed lunch with lessons from, o Drofessional teacher T At e I Maikatad WiIth & st sROADWAY ‘,:L B e T A read and ‘boun last summer, knew it woul . HUWA atinee 2.30—Evening Norwich, Friday, Sept. 3, 1915, b mm:‘fl*:;d:': gt lgof:: . "But. Luclle why dida't you mention hink he had such an apt Pupll Tow that any should have lost them. : : —_— - o o - 0 nae sats, ot o many oters wnicn | S RIPE, 28200 reslee tha b le| Cohn e LAHOEN & DUPREE N&w:™ are In no better or & worse condition| “Oh, dear. ls ft7 I had forgotten VELTY ACT “She ‘made ents ahead | which, I remarked to him, 18 N SINGING, MUSIC, COMEDY AND $H OOTING, o e L o T s 'M‘:n"zfi i woudnt be kind to hlcflutm . part.” He Stories of the War SPECIAL S8CENERY AND ELECTRICAL EFFECTS e LS e A D interfere wi er Besldes, pleasant mother P ————— AR e ) . Perhaps | ance of the morning Eriday and T =3 — 4 PART MUTUAL THE CopiNTY FA, ;‘;‘n:lkn:;' ab:t::r.:elepho:ewir. c:;- :g: merry time, and he and I went off to Saturday HB AILURE and it deserves all the encouragement “Can’'t we keep I kad helped her by planning MASTER PICTURE The season of the agricultural fair| to— the links in gay spirits that lasted | Hundreds of Changes in British Peer- Featuring the Popular Dramatie Star John Emerson The Bulletin has the largest fs at hand and like every such op-| “Why, mother, aren’t my affairs just | with me until I returned home late age. . et o Rt portunity for the people to get togeth- |as important as Tilly's? Surely You |in the afternoon. Then, as €0 Often| ;.. .. .ico Jigts of the British ar- |l REVENGE OF THE STEEPLE JACK. T Thabhouser Brame cireulation of any paper in East- _ | wouldn’t wish to rescind an invitation? | happens when I come in from any little After o Httle mors |l THE LITTLE : o R P R Casadt rm Conmactiout and.from thres 1|7 4nd el 200 (¢ snoy (oo sitrac | Rl Wiler I forma) perk | pitasurs, e sky waa marved by mouh | B P Blreadz, Mier 8, Jile Sone cuPio. Rest Funny Gomedy s ~lat all. He will enjoy a nice, simple, | er'’s quorulousness. =t ' to four times larger than that o §| tertainment it is one of the grandest | fiicie meal v U anded, “have you|dreds of changes in the sy in Noewieh. ‘it Is dalivar: chances for extension work and the any idea what you did today?” “But who's to prépare it?” “I'm sure I played great deal better len, % loesn’t mak - heir is now in the trenches. Several X Rty ntie doesmt make | kol han oy thtor sxectea. Lmugnes o o new o e e Sl | Colonial Theatre ot it : e o7 i s o e s 10 || e e D T ol e she ta soine 58 ounder MY whike crepg | of your amaiver . Lres O S igl hetr. HE CAVE ON THUNDER CLOUD” 2 Resl Essanay blouse for me to wear to the board| It pained me to see mother in such| The changes wrought in the peerage to over 3,000 of ths 4,063 houses in Norwich, and read by ninety- three per cent. of the people. In Windham it iz d...vgred to over 900 houses, in 'utnam and promotion of the interests of any par- ticular section that could be invented. The fair has its own peculiar advan- tages and it makes an appeal which should be widespread in its bearing. Danielson to over 1,100 and in New London county has been ac-| meeting of the vocational flat this|an uncontrolled state of impatience.|DY the death roll w‘l‘a"‘"" ":m::":} ”“M_u:ce):flosz‘:a.:‘.¥fldmn:nm m’thlum all of these places it is consid- §| tively engaged in the past two years|atternoon.”s “You ruined my crepe blouse. It was|ihe °ompIeatons B70 N"itls possi- || Coming Wed. “Midnight at Maxim's™, # Reel Cabaret Spectacle. Kalem. ated the Toont dally. in an endeavor to better the position “Do Y;J’\.‘I’MVO to wear that particular | a handsome one,. too, and cost mu Bie thats Aative action may be tak- garment for a common interest and through an| “It happens to be the only thing ! 4 which | we lfl-&f out ‘:fu':: o e towns, one hundred and organization the agent of which is|2available. One dress is at the clean-| now!™ e ul Snat memotials. brother and heir to the Marquis of | credit given by Americans to the sixty-five postoffice districts, and §| constantly busy looking after and giv. A e | - siotheE TR, At L O e n e tia tause them to pass to{Northampton, is succeeded as heir by | South Americans and in some in- cixt rural iree delivery routes. $§|ing advice concerning the many prob- | {he :mp:"-v:;t el B d b Bk a. but it et easily be done|some obscure relative without bt‘ha :fi"' Douglas Cecil, the Marquis’' un- :omncu “z'h? dn"n:: waut to ‘fi‘é; t.::: The Bulletin is sold in every lems which arise in the various local-| ing this skirt to wear with it.” again and will look all right, 'm sure.” | shadow of a just claim to ennoble- Tlant Tieut Toch Aundsler % 080 Ar‘r‘l‘.'ncan u_:d. mm.ly . p.o et town or all of the R. F. D. §|ities. “Well, I'll launder your blouse while| “It will never look all right again! | ment. & i | mendien Ty is osuator TRl ATME. don Shasad to U Tren routes in Eastern Connectizut. The county fair furnishes the oppor- | Fannie conjures up one of her delicious | You left the electric iron standing on| As the law stands, .:menlannu Sev. . Annesa Prilatn Herale tunity for bringing all these efforts to| little lunches. I'll be delighted to do | the sleeve with the current on and it|limited to direct male efim gy e CIRCULATION a focus and to demonstrate what has | it for you, mother” So saying I ran|was burned completely off. If your|who may be as far remov: it ff to Cousin Fannie and helped her | grandmother hadn't smelled it and been | last holder of a title as a grandso no 1t s dis el hat. tha. ‘St been done and what can be done in|9 = . - o tha house | & paternal uncle. Daughters have no cover: a amily the way of greater productivity. Ex-|bisn > Teal that could be quickly pre- | nervous about fire probebly the houne |8, B e atever sxcept by special act || OTHER VIEW POINTS || wast-ras is as dangerous to heaith as ted amples are always inspiring and such| ™ ~just some cream tomato soup first.” | ing board was smoldering when we |of the king, as in the case of Lord — e?r:‘mm Pt :;s' lcteh:. !flm‘ 5.920 displays of farm produce, dairy pro-|I said, “then one of your Jonderful founa it orl:. how I wish you weren't | Roberts, e ok s 08 for TBviiusl Buma fres Sash-sRew = ducts, cattle, sheep and swine are of | omelettes souffle, with rashers of bacon | 8o _careless, Lucile!"” ollo R %o the o u:le greatest impol;tunce in helping |and old-fashioned fried potatoes. Then | Poor mother burst into tears. I tried|the more notable deaths of officers| Connecticut has just as much need They seem to be as necessary 1901, average .......... . 4412 1905, average H ! Eastern Conmeotiont e fortys 31 o o ! H - pursuit of happiness as individual % ~|we can finish with some preserved|to soothe her by calling attention to|who were heirs to peerages, and the | as ever for a camp of instruction for I i 1ot of trotinie others to better results. Object les- | enches and that delicate sponge cake | the fact that the house hadn't burned | effect their deaths will bave on the | the soldier along the lines of the | diniing cups What a lot of trouble sons have a strong persuasive POWeT.| o, make that is so good warm. 1I|and that the loss of a crepe blouse | title: Plattsburg experiment. The lessening The New London County Agricul- ed vented germs!—Waterbury Republican. know Walter will like that simple|was a very small matter compared to| Lord Wendover, who recently dled |of the tension with Germany does not = tural soclety Is not a Norwich, but a|menu as well as a great feas what might have happened. I told her | of wounds, was sole heir to the Mar- | in the least mean that we should cease —_— < county organization which is labor- Then I dressed so to be sure to be|she ought to be thankful. But any-|quisate of Lincolnshire, a title con- | to prepare for the eventualities that Bridgeport is fortunate in being & ing to encourage the many interests of | ready when Walter arrived. It is so|thing I said appeared to increase her |ferred on Lord Carrington in rmcm- may come upon us any day.—ADeonis | zrea:' industrial center, in which the all the towns in this section of the|sauche, I think, to keep a guest wait- | irritation. I said no more. I was ex- |tion of thirty years' service to u: Sertinel. cpportunities for employment are nu- state and it should get & response|ing So I was in the act of ironing the | tremely glad 1 was going to the theatre | state. There are five daughters, mererous and diversified. But Bridge- You s She Uniice bonah last sleeve on mother's blouse when I|that evening with George Requier, for | married, but they have no claim eith- | ~Tpe English and Germans have al- | port is unfortunate, because so few of Readers of The Bulletin leavi: S e ____.en & = .__y saw him coming. I ran to the door |the disturbed atmosphere of the house |er to the barony or the marquisate. ¢ | ways given the South American mer- | Fer captains of industry, and so few the :ty for vacation trips can m?fi GERMANY ALONE CAN FIX BLAME | let him in and he commented on my [ caused by mother's nervousness was| Captain J. N. Biggs, only son o HAVE THE BULLETIN FOLLOW chant princes all the credit they|of the stockholders of her great in- it fcliow them daily and thus kee: = high color. most depressing to me.—Chicago News. | Lord Stamfordham, private secretary | wanted. There is money in it, too, | dustries, live in the city. Most are in teveh with home aftutrs. Order || From the réports from Germany it to King George. There is no heir 0 | pecause reasonable interest can al- | residents of other communities, and through The Bulletin business of- || i€ Indicated that by the sinking of the the barony. ways be gotten and the South Amer- | the profits taken from proceeds of their fce. ! Captain Claud Meysey-ThomDpson, | jcans are payers. Up to now, | operations here go ‘{ enrich the places - good STablo Mere liag Do & ulre D o= ison and heir of Lord Knaresborough. \mmr days has been the limit of | where they live. eport Farmer. ry out orders which had been Issued concerning a reform in the submarine = TTERS TO THE EDITOR RIGHT HAS TRIUMPHED. warfare. . It was intimated that this m A O would be cleared up by the return of There is cause for national grat- the underwater vessel which did the Ification at what appears at this time | deed, but the indications point to the to be the actual adjustment of the| probability that little can be expeci- controversy with Germany over its|ed from that source if it is proved, submarine policy for the oral and|as believed, that the submarine has written declarations of Ambassador|been sunk. Bernstorff make it evident that Ger-| Thus it appears unlikely that there many has decided to recognize the He was unmarried and there is no other heir, so that the barony will be- come extinct on the .dean: of his fath- er. Lord Hawarden, who fell early in the war, has been succeeded by his cous- days also for such enterprise. But the|in, Captaln Eustace Maude, who is initiative was ‘his, I more than sus- STEAMER BLOCK ISLAND 208y SF WATCH HILL and BLOCK ISLAND Windham Hall at Connecticut College. Mr. Editor: Sept. 27th will be an serving In the Egyptian army. s Captain Lord Brabourne. His heir eventtul day for Connecticut. Its first| T kept Mr. Burnham under observa- |is his uncle, Cecll Knatchbull-Huges- college for women will open its doors in | tion for seven years, up to my OWn |gen. weicome for at least 95 students, the departure for the west; there will be Viscount Northland is-survived by AM. AM. P.M. P. M. will’ be any immediate disclosures in few who will charge me with looking 1 than two years old, who be- pd rights Wwhich this country has fof |enat direct: g 14 eall for|Rumber enrolled up to date, and Prob-| ypon his face with too generous an | somes heir to the earidom. #8585 +49.15 | Block Island Lv. *2.15 #3245 manths been demanding. the puntahment of the Builty officlal. | riries " Thore soenis’ ave ne; ‘e | cotimate of Rim or with too fertile | “Jullan Grenfell, cldest son of Lord e = et il o0 R G S0 Nothing is belng conceded to this|The return of the submarine was re- | Connecticut girls—they hail from | fanieguiy o4t face 1 read a litany: | Desborough. of Olymple games fame. |} giocl'igland ‘Dus 108 130 | Norwich Due 639 650 country but what it is entitled 10.|jieq upon to show whether that com. | Maine, Massachusetts and New York, | ag,Deauty of holiness; the joy of sal-|One of his brothers, G. W. Grenfell, Germany like other countries had P.M. P.M. *Daily, except Sundays s vation: the sweets of fellowship: love | nas killed. mander had received instructions in | Which is good evidence that this col- | of the sinning: sorrow for the needless e Tord Woraley, ~ebidut;atn agreed to protect non-combatants and | socordance with the new policy, or | 1886 meets a long felt need; :u col es; hurt (as he deemed it) men inflicted | 4ng heir to the Earl of Yarborough. to glve them adequate Warning|whether the responsibility for the deed | Siot Will it women with an all round | on themselves by sinning: uncomplain- | }is two brothers are both army offi- education, which will make them not| t the sl of the before sinking a vessel. It has disre- | rests higher up. The chance to Dun- | only an ornament to the home and so- | N8, SOTrow at the slowness Y iy garded these obligations in a number |ish a subordinate has been lost, but | clety, but & competent home-maker. A | wog oo o 10" Off its needless burden, | ‘Lord de Freyne, a kinsman of Sir of cases, but in preference to a break | with Germany’s excellent system it{mother said to me recently: “Will this e John French, is suceeded by a half- with this country it promises to change Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, July 7 to September Srd No one could be diesatisfied with the Another half-brother was can be readily ascertained where the | College fit my daughter to be a sens! ~ brother. n its tactics and assume Its responsi- | guilt lies, thoush it may be for the|ble domestic woman? That is what 1] o Peris iends found In him, but in | killed in action on the same day as bilities. WATCH HILL &0:n | BLOCK ISLAND &35y B 1t 15 the sttty ot e AU ] STty OC that jaeiRrmint S oves want for my daughter” This is ex- | ine Years since I have reflectea upon the peer. = the conditions which diminished his - Mitford, Adults, 50c; Children, 250 Adults, 76¢; Children, 400 ke actly the aim of the Comnecticut col- | o h Major Clement Freeman ! ikt thi dounitey had dedirsd; (Trisis de:o“:zfi:i Voo Tiriiis has con-|jere as I understand it. It will send | |oiue to the whole community; chiefly | ¢jgest son and heir of Lord Redesdale. was no demand for entrance into the 7 - the segregation, the stratification of vl Shora Dinner Houses and Bathing Beach near landings at Watch Hill out ‘women with an all round educa- | the moral and religious forces in Nor- | f (o JOUT DroIners LN Ay % : To blame the dead commander of| tion that will enable them to fill an¥ | with and all our communities. war although if occaslon demanded it| the submersible, if he went down with { position to which life may call them. 3 this country was prepared to back up army in the navy. and Block lsland. For further information, party rates, apply at office T4 the first heit o the sais which mct:;mn Co?w;n-.“d T Ehilips. eldest son | | of company on Shetucket Wharf, Norwich. i g o amonde JENIC X ds. His STEAMSHIP COMPANY his vessel permits of an e way out | The spirit of service will be the key- - and heir of Lord St. Davi NEW ENGLAND its rights. The course which Germany | of the situation. but it is srosely wn. |note of this unique college. Most of | C'°Sed With that year. 1850, I had been | protner, Roland, a calvary Meutenant, has indicated that it will follow is the e sane one and to the administration is fair to that oficer If he was not gullty | 0Ur Wwomen colleges make a point of | L iat met OF Horen Matn o due the credit in accomplishing its Which met on North Main street in & | 15 B0W sole Si of Mne aled & 9 € > g w s oy 1 Io Was not #Ully | the clamsicalt ana teniinentil educa~ | SIUoh Mot on Hoeth Main/atreet i & en the Earl of Erne died a fe that his must be pretty sure just where the :‘I‘in The Connecticut college includes | jockc factory. In this place there were | TORths ago it was supposed P.M. P. M. **Sundays only SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS C. J. ISBISTER, ASent son and heir, Major Viscount Crich- TE purpose and the carrylng out of the|fault lies and it may secretly apply| The coliege Will be thrown open for | frasr h“m\aller h'; uoclh-.l wm:f{" ':gm ton, was a prisoner in Germany. Lat- STA’ OF CONNECTICUT will of the people. whatever punishment it considers fit- | inspection probably on the 27th. Pres- | yTET0CT VRSSO are SLLef Thete | or ‘information showed that he died T De: American diplomacy has won a sig- | ting, but if he only followed orders|ident Frederick H. Sykes and other|gaceets John = MoN: o them 80, |about the same time as his father. reasury partment nal victory. The president has stood | which he received the lost commander | members of the faculty have taken up e + The Viscount left a son, born in 1907, ’ 1 chairman of the board of directors (of firm and determined not being swerved | should be absolved from the blame | their residence in New London. The who is now the Earl of Erne. that soclety), an engine wiper in the = from the right course either by the|and the responsibility placed where it | {TPOTaTy office of tho college is in|roundhouse of the Norwich ana Wor- | ,,Captyin Lord Guernsey 15 succeed advocate of peace at any price, the | belongs. daily with the friends of the college. | CSSter rallroad, near the old (and the|jg0g™ who now becomes sole heir to enthusiast who would rush into war, e 1t is interssting to mote that it was|PreSent) station. He never occupled a or the partisan who would place an EDITORIAL NOTES. s f Ayles- position that did not with his occu- ’ - not only the money of a Connecticut % 2 M B embargo upon the export of munitions| Taking a fortress is getting to be|man that made this college possible, _f’n“s,?;:f;flfi;;!‘ofit',‘;’,°%7§&g;"u"":‘} The Earl of Plymouth has given Owners of securities such as notes, bonds and other choses in action in of war. only a daily task for the Austro-Ger- { DUt the buildings have been equipped This country hes adhered to neu- i two _sons to the army. The younger, : : . " ¢ endd as far as possidle by Compecticut gfin?}:;u::?‘;o::mgwum?f trg?'n:: A. Windsor-Clive, has been kil cluding deposits in bank, (not a Savings Bank) are liable to taxation trality. It has straightforwardly in- sisted upon its rights and the result| Lucky is the town which has not products. The group of buildings, New is only what it should be. It is sim-|had to apologize to its visitors this P e Ea P g vy | right as care could make it. There was ;‘;‘ :"{’;"ih:”;mngm‘;:"t;: Serv> | either to the State or locally. stone house, are bullt Of a Dleasing | boioer Spraas” morgs” ag ik At the lof his death the heir would be the| The State rate is four mills on the dollar and MUST BE paid BEFORE % gray granite quarried from the college present, peer’s uncle, George Windsor, % » ol 2 case whers right has triumphed | summer for lts weather. grounds. The other three bulldings, sy e el L R ) s () years oia. T OCTOBER 1st. Enguire of your banker or write to State Treasurer, Hart- and the dignity of the nation has been ‘Thames hall, the refectory and open Captain Charles Monck I a nine maintained. The 1dea now is to ignore Carranza, | air gymnasium, ‘will be completed by | fy U5, 17 & vortex of euch tragedies as |, 70l son, “who s now heir to his | ford, Conn. that is something which even Vil- | Sept. 27th” The domestic Tudor style 3 ~ - - —_—— Peter Burns; th Wa Do , | sTandfarher, Viscount Monck. DESERVED REBUKE. la has been unable to do. of architecture harmonizes beautifully | goter FUTnS: there was John Downs. |™c,piain” Douglas Kinnatra was the = with the peaceful and varied land- It was only a few days ago that a =5 . tongued and pure hearted storekeeper |Ccldest son of Lord Kinnaird. His 1iles 1o NEw: Tores [uave. & vAtas The predominance of the automobile | $C2P® which surrounds the buildings, . sumptive is his brother, William, o ol the near future and that countles may | Sy ONIY In a part To pass from | TOTS o = surpose of placing the prisoner under 4 should be greater respect therefor, |as could be expected. The only sur- i g MARINDA C. BUT ROBINSON. worshipped with, but the sinful cared 1as received in the order which has = o Wate R. Burnham. The first Sun- | to have had for the men in that tem- Chine protested violation of her reformation upon the navy were given Even Roosevelt has to admft that in April of the year 1880 has re- iy e is fixed for avoiding this tax by a law passed by the last General Assem- the street from the place of | Prother e army. ; ; which is very like an English panorama | £ C00 e ly. A of the I il be mailed to any-one writing for it. nan before him the option of a thir- {IS readily disclosed by the attention|oe ,mod“'};m. ma%gy: urving | meeting, Timothy Kelly; there was Robert Bruce, eldest son of Lord| bly. copys aw wi ile y 9 one stratum to another was not im- |Years old. erect dormitories in honor of the men Lieut. Colonel G. H. strict discipline without giving him| ;he man on the cormer says: The|&nd Women who have made their coun. | POSSIble: for there was a splendid open Morris left a ‘he blackeye of a term in jail. 7 n Wi wifether the judge has any jurisdic- | prise is that his divorce case was not al n‘;fi‘&ofi'.’nf.':“"m‘ famu: :.figr' r?: The ar a Year Ago TOda’ ion over an enlistment or not, but|started sooner. Sy tor Dantelson, Conp. little whom they sinned with. There Germans approached the valley Jeen issued by Assistant Secretary| The despatching of more troops to 3 . was a wonderful catholicity, in the || of the Marne, and took La Fere. the impending outcome of the Arabic |mained to me a memorable one. In neutrality by Japan. ©0 understand that they are entirely st e S jutside their province. Discipline of | $25¢ 18 sal oty Certatiily iy days' sentence or enlistment in the| Which & balky horse mow attracts. |along the Thames river. It is hoped | palick Bersfeld O'Sull " needed b Ml brother, aleo Tn the arm>: tellow who will met admie that he ja | ,mnet It le. Ther Ts abundance of | PuPhe Sastage of ons, from gne. 13| min of Gaway. 1+ o (o LT il It was pointed out at the time that ol . seemed Ro0sevelt to the effect that eniist- |the border is action which this coun- Waterman R. Burnham. e e o Gmapetitend L Greenberger’s. . high order is maintained there, but | Petter than plunging this country into helr by his' brothes, alec in: the army. F. S. CHAMBERLAIN, Treasurer. 2avy. It must liave been apparent that that individuals will be moved to wit- but more, a man, who needed = 2 o g v means in Windham county to build a| DUt the passage of one from ome to[nin of Gelway. he navy is not a reformatory and hinder the interfusion of all the forces 10 thought thereto. Many of the big manufacturers are | {oRRer. 1916. Let us all pull together church and it had many entrances|| . Prince of Wied left Albania. nent must be denied to that New Jer- | {ry has been engaged in for many 3 for - Bowman. -In the purposes the city’s aposties and here are too many other serious re- | WO - {.Mflm’umo the u:le of :l‘r' B':Ihrnhm ell, s juirements imposed upon the officials have since been able to e light s ind the men to expect that they can | \Cr, it remains for Great Britain|or nat face within call.. He was in jailer jailed. The A lling. These 100 were segregated, |bY his brother, John Parnell, a lieu- way, but it is to be remembered that | of dear ones passed on by contributions | 5t; i o|tenant in the army. The heir pr >ould enforce, but it was nevertheless I3 t will stratified; they were not in the whole . pearil of the penalty for the|there is the Undian period yet on the | for buildings that will be needed in 3 dissolve the walls of partition which is always expressed when we Sympsthy. shut into separate and nan-communi- s > by any court in the land. There| Harry Thaw has kept quiet as long s Cotle; T OIS Pt SRR - ed over the exposed. The worshipful Serbians defeated Austrians at in the county have a share in it, if it vhich called for attention from the|of dves. It is the wise fellow Who|is only one dellar. 5 might have been careful whom they || jadar. 1avy department and that attention it|sees beyond the war business. What is it that makes Waterman R. S t is high time that such judges as|Peace. v orabans of loes value than ne-soeni || ta! of Bukewina. ire disposed to force the work of not the lustre of that (then) exalted | ILieut. Lord Congleton is succeeded ‘he enlistment was nothing which he | . It TaY be that summer has gone its| ness to the honorable and valued lives The Strongest Indication of Satisfaction whipped cannot expect any underdds | Windham hall. if the men and women | A0Other stratus seemed to do little to| Ideut. Lord Spencer Compton, only should not te looked upon in that light Wi hall. Lef of evil Martial law proclaimed in Paris. The alternative sentencé was one]planning to engase in the production| o v nanam hall. Let every woman which closed not night or day. - ley youth if he applies for the same.|Months and yet there is no sign of Russians took Czernowitz, capi Je forced to conduct a reform school. | 14, Germany to start a discussion as| the exercise of his most laborious, . 1 to their respective influences in get-| jeast remunerative, most cherished of- 1, large, wtw m YOI.“‘ th' ‘t is a wrong idea and the navy de- ting ther gran cessi Three o'clock each 8 = > 8 . '::’:l:"“ i:_' to be commended in mtm Sk R e tormoon in .those ‘i:’h: ::fnn“d“h?:y:t‘: Dot in cah ciey Tts men I sical welfare, you will Wlth a purchase of $2.00 worth of L S — t place. e ni fore, Teligious assets We - . - e ‘after the announce- | sudience room above, John H. Vincen time In’ pro- 2 . : ORTH CAROLINA HEADED RIGHT | Xt ¢ slénificant after the announce- | {:0: thien s bistiop) Had spoker. . That any- Liquor we give away a nice Whiskey It is an ambitious program which| by the wife of the new secretary of less W';rh- Mr. Burn. dy in ).t:‘rlwlch mll“ )g'qvo heard of d . C - l 50 1as been adopted by the educational| state, that shouls TR S D Caent s B | Can et Franet aialq simiounod & | anudist d Burnham with indifference is & pity, if| St 5 ase, value C. lor its slogan “Every person in the| to this country. : o itate reads and writes in 1920 It 1as recognized the excellent examples| The action of Germany in ureein( th “due- o vhich have been set by other states|to respect the rights of this country : ol . or the overcoming of flliteracy and it must be a bit disconcerting to that | COOK . commendable move which they | body of German-Americans who up- save made to do kewise. recognizing | hold the sinking of the Arablc and de- ; \ 47-53 Pl'“klifl Street e Savo- | al law. i

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