Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 7, 1916, Page 4

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1" Entered at th X _./Conn., as -mn:—elm ‘matter. { Telephone Calls: | Bulletin Buuw Office_480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms 35-3. | Builetin Job Office. 35-3. | _“Willimantic Otffice, Room 32, Murray | Bullding. Telephone 210. i | Norwich, Friday, Jan. 7, 1916 The Baulletin has the Iargest circulation of-any paper in Eastern Connecticut and from three to four times larger than that of any in It is delivered to over 8,000 of the 4,068 houses in Nor- wich and it is h‘z Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100, and in all of these places it is considered the local daily. Fastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty- five postoffice districts, and rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town snd on all of he R. F. D. routes in Bastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901, average....cceivecsvees 4412 reeenens 5,920 1905, average. January 1 83E98 i 3 gae i made by the British foreign minister, who is apparently preparéd to prove for commercia] vessels in gun mounted on the rear deck it is only such as was sanctionsd for ves- sels of that character by The Hague | conference. But whether they carried a gun or not there has been no consideration the Mediter- Tasing ™ hinsel” For nstance, ] ! ng ngs 3 asked her to go to the theatre with me. Of course going to the theater isn’t much after you've been around s you and I have, but naturally yow'd think that Clarice, just an inexperi- enced young girl, would have been didn’t her to yawned—yawned though some one was asking her to the theatre every three minutes! “Thanks, Bobby,’ she sald. I detest being called Bobby, as though I were in knickerbockers. ‘But 1 have en- gagements every night this week!” “Now, I'd like to know how a girl of 1R can be so popunlar that she has every evening filled up. Why, Clarice isn’t at all the sort of 'girl you'd ex- pect to be ropular. She isn't a rav- ing beauty, though she's pretty enough, and she never takes pains to be, well—er—real nice to a chap! “Thanks, Bobby, as though I had of- fered her a chocolate cream and she had already eaten more than' she wanted! And she has such a way of saving things that of course the fel- lows can’t be crazy about her. A man doesn’t like to be treated casually! T suppose if I treated Clarice as I real- 1y ought I'd drop her. But I feel sorry for the girl’s crudities. T've made up my mind I'd overloak her untactfulness. I am really interested in seeing what Clarice will do next. Ang T hope I can gradually show her what a mistake she is making! Why she won’t have any friends at all if Superintendent Crawford of the New Britain Boys’ club gave an apt ilustration should show in institutions by their money when he annual report to the directors. Boys' club was visited more frequent- of the interest people :x:‘rortad» his If the ly by those who contribute to its ‘s’zpport it is certain the income would greatly Increased.—New Britain Herald. . ‘We cannot understand the state- ment attributed to Colonel House that one of his duties undertaken at the request of the president and the sec- retary of state, will be to inform var- ious Amerjcan diplomats as to the precise attitude of this government. It is a disturbing thought that there has been any fallure to understand the precise attitude of this govern- ment Upon subjects under considera- tion. It bas been -the complaint of the imperial governments of Ger- e ATty = 4 ¢ R clear i/ No more hawk- snuffing, headachs lnwhtl dryness. No ggling for breath at night; your cold or catarrh d pears. breathe freely. TRIANGLE FEATURE paseage the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen. mucous membrane and relief comes instantly. It's just fine. Don’t stay stuffed- up with a cold or nasty catarrh. to the Prince’s court at Vienna and to the supreme district court at Inns. ‘bruck. Its ulation is about 9,000, 2 . and, such is their thrift in matters of A HEART GRIPPING DRAMA OF LIFE IN VIRGINIA public housekeeping, that there is no KENNEDY & MACK public debt. Fefcre the abolishment of compulsory military service ‘in 1868, the army of Liechtenstein was 91 trong, well-officered and well- trained mountaineers.” “Hamadan, the treasure city of the great Achaemenian kings, identified with the resplendent Echatana of the Greek writer which has come under control of Russians advancing from Tekeran. lies well on the way toward that part of the Tigris basin where the English and Turks are struggling amid scenes of the earliest human battlefields,” begins a war primer is- sted today by the National Geogra- phic Society. "The anclent city lies 138 miles west-southwest of the Per- sian capital, Teheran, while the ground maintained by the British expedition- arieg lies about 250 miles away to the southwestward. “All vestiges of the bygone glory of the place have been destroyed, save alone a famous but battered stone lion, wtich lies insombre, mutilated desola- tion flat upon the plain near the road leading to Isfahan. The old lon has lagted through all the ages of Ham- adan, a guardien genius of the town: for it was set up as a talisman to pro- Colonial Theatres “Wasted Lives,” Vitagraph’s 3-Part B’'way Star Feature “THE MAN IN HIDING” . . 2 Reel Kalem, Mammoth Cast. Big Story “ARLINE'S CHAUFFEUR” Sensational Biograph Society Film Tonight—Augmented Orchestra of 10 Pieces Tomorrow—"“BOUGHT,” 5 Reel World Film Feature shall be able to bring all other human wills into subjection to their own, and so ‘rule all mankind, or whether the people shall rule themselves. The question is whether democracy shall by the tribute-bearing tourists. Vis- itors from the Americas, and from England seldom came this way. Strass- burg was a regular travelers’ objec- tive, and, for those who went south f ' 3 v tect the walls of the city. The lon's | from there, the Swiss mountains weré|bend its back to the scourge and die oS 3 fal! You'd have thought,|Many ard of Austria-Hungary that . th I of the next jump. The Ger-|a martyrs death. CITIZENS MUST DO THEIR PART.| ranean. The Ancona was not armed ;owmth!tcmlh e might have smiled re- ey have Leen unable to keep ip|i8te and the city’s fate were connected | the goal of e ne: “p. P s o oF Gl % gl e tnod | With & gun and the eubssquent sink- e B i thar the was horrl. | touch with their representatives at|i" & Prophecy ' that the city and its|mans and the French sought the Vos-| o s e effort is to be made by the organi- zations of the business men of the city to get Norwich to rise to its oppor- tunity for development:. The step has been taken none too soon and the public meeting which has been called ing of the French and Japanese liners without warning was not based upon any such contention so that no mat- ter whether guns are carried or not the submarine policy there has been to sink everything that was encoun-|agal tered without even respecting the re- bly sorry and wouldn’t I ask her again and wasn't it a tiresome shame that she had made all those dates Some- thing nice like that! It would serve Mr'rl'ght if I never went near her nt™ “Sure it would!” asgreed the other Washington, but it has not for a mo- ment been suspected that a like em- harassment was affecting our repre- sentativy in Europe. . We shall have to keep 'an eye on Colonel House.—~ New Haven Journal-Courler. ges mountains for winter sport, for siing and tobogganing. The people of other lands went for similar sports to fashionable and more expensive places, like St. Moritz in Switzerland. Alsace was to homey, to common- place, to hopelessly middle-class, to people would be safe as long as the lion was not thrown down or broken. The talisman today enjoys a superti tious veneration; mothers bring their babies to kiss the huge carven face and pilgrims place offerings of stone before it. According fo ome tradition tor a century seems to tremble in the nce, no intelligent man has a right to be, in his heart, neutral. No nation, to which God has entrusted knowledge and power, has a right to be neutral.” The only question remain- ing to it is, What can it do? It is not T _| the llon was set up to frighten away | make much of a name for itself—un- : for tonight should filt the town hall| (i niine. or ‘International law or|JerY young man. “Why don’t you| There ls a o’g’;g:d";‘;‘dmi‘:a“gy the severe winters of Hamadan. iil it became the scene of the bitter- |{o a8k how it may keep itself out of to overflowing. Norwich has a chance| novine any attention to the rights of |JUSt Stay away? German ‘sallors. That ma: ¢ 27| “The name of the city can be traced | est fighting in modern times, soon af- G haw IEviks EhoN | such as was never previously placed o Feinnl - Sowoed g oG : Y ot D | hack to earjiest times, and it means | ter the outbreak of the presemt war.” |®ase amd Jn quiet, y before it and the time is ripe to lowed its greatest opportunity to slip through its hands as it is possible to do now concerning certain other efforts on the part of manufacturing plants to establish their business within its limits. If there is a proper manifes- tation of public spirit it will not and it is believed that there is confidence jenough in the proposition which con- fronts it at the present time to re- ;spond to the requirements. Norwich wants to secure the thou- sands of dollars which will be added to its payrolls, a large part of which fmoney will be spent in its midst. It wants to insure the development of the firearms plant which is contemplated and from which it is bound to profit !in many ways, not for a brief time, but permanently and it wants to grow. All of these things are practically as- sured if the people of this city will respond to the demand for housing facilities in order to take care of the several thousand additional employes ‘which are to be brought here. Bridgeport is doing just what is be- ing sought in Norwich. Homes are springing up everywhere in that com- munity to provide for the increase of '50,000 expected and the officers of the big arms and ammunition company declare that “apart from war orders ‘there is work enough on hand and in sight to keep the immense factories ;busy for many years without reckon- ing on what the future must in or- dinary course provide.” Such business is by no meafis con- fined to that city and with a plant {such as is contemplated here the pros- Dects are as bright for Norwich. {Whetlier Norwich increases by five, ten, fifteen or twenty thousand it is worth securing and every public-spir- ited cifizen should get back of the small requirements that are asked of its people:and see that it does its !part. What' is worth having is worth humanity. The fact that there were guns on made plain enough, nevertheless, that very little consideration has been giv- en to the presence or absence of guns in the wholesale taking of life in the. Mediterranean submarine ‘warfare. Nothing can apparently be allowed to stand in the way of ruthless destruc- tion. FIRE PREVENTION. Results are of great. importance in tha hoosting of any cause and those which have been obtained by the fire prevention bureau of New York city substantiate all that has been claimed by it. The recent announcement that the fires in that city during the past year have been over 1,000-less than in the year previous means much to that community, but the manner in which this reduction has been obtained is of the greatest importance not only there but in every city in the country. It shows what can be done when in- creased thought and attention is given to fire hazards and what will result when there is an enforcement of the regulations. It is possible to bufld a fire depart- ment up to the highest degree of effi- clency, but a most serlous neglect pre- vails unless there is a determined ef- fort made in behalf of prevention. It is through the observance of simple vrecautions and the adoption of pre- ventlve measures that the most val- uable and cheapest fire fighting ser- vice can be maintained, and this ap- plies in every city as well as the metropolis. 'Where there is careless- ness and a disregard for conditions which can be expected to produce a fire, if given the right kind of encour- agement, there is an obligation im- posed upon community and individual to correct the situation by keeping to the front the impoftance of preven- tive action. New York has backed up “Well” he said judicially, wouldn’t be just right! A man of my “that isn’t any pleasure for me to call on her and have her keep me waiting half an hour before she comes down- stairs and then have her play heavy things on the piano all evening and not talk to me, when she knows that I Hke the light, catchy ragtime music. And besides I might be saying a lot of things that would do her good to hear! It will be borne in on her at last what a mistake is is making!” “You are wonderful!” breathed his friend admiringly. “To be so self- sacrificing for a mere schoolgirl!” “I have nothing except her own good in mind,” said the first very young man. “Of course it would take a more accomplished woman of the world really to interest me! But ‘here are possibilities in Clarice, even if I have stood a plot from that girl! “Why, one night when I was calling tha: huge, awkward Andy Pelton, who plays polo or football or something, dropped in. And Clarice strolled off with him to the sun parlor and stay- the whole evering, leaving me to talk with her elderly aunt, who to say the least was tiresome. I just waiteq llke a gentleman till 11.30, when they reappeared. Clarice act- uvally seemed amazed to find me still there. I pressed her hand as though nothing had happened and said “Good night, Clarice!- I shall soon be in again soon!” A SEASONABLE FROCK FOR THE DEBUTANTE'S NEW YEAR’S BALL true. But anyone is a fool who im- agines that the havoe among non- the savagery s pursued. President ‘Wilson is to be congratulated on his speedy appreciation of the crisis forced upon us by the palpable perfidy of the Teutonic Governments. That he may at least deal swiftly and forcefully with the treachery of the two nations which are putting the Barbary pirates to shame is the fer- vent prayer of the American people. They are steadily being provoked to the limits of endurance. They have been driven to a point where pa- tience is no longer a virtue but a vice. —Providence Bulletin. A 'good many people will agree with the conclusion in report of the Massachusetts special commission on military education and reserve as they relate to State military. What they have to say is as applicable to all the other States as to Massachu- setts. They recommend that all State military be federalized. They regard it as absurd for the states to go to the heavy expense for forty- eight little standing armies that would be of no practical use in case of war. It says that the fighting machine skould be wholly in control lizerally ‘a place of meeting of many T e Ny, Tt 1 1 . ' - i rather it may help the right to sive it a proper welcome. It| g "Porgia and Glengyle may add o | caporionce cam do b lot toward pold. | Combatants on Mediterranean bassen- oIn the days of the city's splen. | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR | Conquer the wrong. 1f the ousnt not to be posslble for|ne oo R e e sed | i Clarice ger vessels is not aided and abetted | {57 (51 Teq wond crossed here.” Tr - States, by throwing itself into thif it to be sald in the future that it al-| ¢, perugdle the issue, but it has been| “Now, for instance, it certainly|by Perlin, no matter under what flag |, il] o meeting place of many high- How Shall fhe. Wer S5t SRS coul hHug sbout peace in righteousness, and thus make secure the highest interests of humanity. it would be verily gullty before High Heaven for keeping itself in its safe and quiet nook, looking tn. When we Were straining every nerve to gain our independeénce, we did not wish France to look on only. And she did not look on only. Circumstances have changed since that day, but not the obligation to help the right with all the power that God gives us. JOHN OTIS BARROWS. Norwich, Jan. 6, 1916. ways from many parts of the Persian kingdom, and the chief station on the road from Persia to Bagdad and to the Persian Gulf. It has, thus, been able to maintain a scrap of its old prestige as & place of wealth, and a city im- portant in Persian commerce and in- dustry. “The leather made in Hamadan is in demand throughout the East, and great quantities of its are exported, unworked and in the forms of sad- les, harnesses, trunks and other leather articles. Felt goods and cop- per utensils are made, and a flourish- ing transit trade brings its tolls to the city’s 40,000 people. There are exten- s've and well-stocked bazaars, and ruore than 40 caravanserals. Among the few concessions that the hoary “treasure city of the king of kings' has gruagingly made to the nervous, rest- less civilization of the West are a post ard a telegraph office. “Hamadan is situated at the north- eartern foot of Mount Alyand, whose ranite walls rise to a height of 11,900 leet. The city itself has an elevation of 5930 feet, and a level plain, fifteen miler in length and ten miles in Mr. Editor: On-what conditions shall there be peace? A right answer can be given only as we take into account the issue at stake. For what are na- tions fighting? Who began the bus- iness and for what purpose? The Ger- man emperor decreed that there should be war, and without a moment's de- lay, set in motion his mighty, and al- ready mobilized forces, to crush his neighbors. His one object was to con- quer. Whatever was in his way must get out of his way. So solemn treaties, international agreements, the peace- ful homes of non-combatants, the lives of such as might try to protect their children and their firesides, the treas- ured art of centuries—all must be destroyed without question and with- out pity, if they should prove to be an obstacle in the way of reaching the end sought. Unoffending Belglum was the first to suffer, and the last is the Armenian race. These people are Deing destroyed as an incident of the holy war, said to have been urged upon the Turks by the Germans, and the work accomplished by means of the most fiendish cruelty ever devised Children O;y FOR FLETCEER'S CASTORIA . Ceyton Tea, bb. . 35¢c All Other Teas, b. ... 25¢ of the National government and that the States should .depend on police bodies for domestic protectfon. This is but another way of saying that the present and greatest demand of “pre- paredress” is creafion of a sensible definite, elastic system under federal control, rather than for great ex- penditures armament.—Bristol Press. for Our new mayor prescribes economy in allopathic doses for Meriden dur- ing the next two years. We must take it before meals, afterwards, be- tween meals and “before going to bed.” He also prescribes a new meth- od of garbage collection, a board of health and a motor patrol wagon. The economy feature of the prescription will doubtless be popular, but the doctor, in a way, is somewhat over- concerned as to the condition of the breadth, spreads before it like a gar- den. Barley, wheat, vegetables, and the scarlet poppy plant are grown in profusion here. The mountains frame the plain, like a part-enclosed appan- age of the city. “Crooked alleys, dirty walks, and street-ways, squaiid houses, and din- gy-brown neglect effectually suppress memories of the city’s former great- nees, when it was the home of kings, the seat of fabulous riches; a fore- display-city of the world, whose lings were fretted with gold and and the home of such riotous luxury as the world has never seen again, and as modern civilization has forgotten how to provide. All Juxury has departed from Hamadan; but, then, the city is supposed to have passed its 3000th anniversary, an age at which the giddy pleasures of youth are no longer tempting. “Ramman-nirari, whose great claim Baking Powder, Ib. ... 12¢c Not-a-seed Raisins, pkg. 12c by man. These things are done in ac- cordance with the principle that the state is everything and that individual rights are nothing: that the govern- ment_does not exist for the individual but the individual for the government. In this case the government is the kaiser. Nothing is allowed against his will. A little Prussian oligarchy, of which he is the head, claims the right to rule over all weaker peoples —to do this peaceably if they. can, torcibly if they must. Shall they suc- ceed? Is it right that the stronger of the nations about them should per- mit them to succeed without a strug- gle to. prevent it? Not If it is ever right to defend the weak and the in- nocent against the strong and the cruel. This is the question at lssue, Shall suffering human beings be grant. ed thelr natural rights and privileges? Shall an_inoffensive people have the right to live? And, accordingly, shall United Tea Importers Co. 218 Main Street to fame is that he was the husband of Queen Semiramis, began the long cen- turies of royal patronage that built up Hamadan, and his renowned queen, Semiramis, launched the place upon its brilliant career. dan steadily grew In wealth and favor, added ever new splendors to its public works, State buildings and private palaces, erected columns and arcades overlaid wilk plates of gold and silver, con- structed a costly royal home of cedar and sypress woods, and planted fa- mous gardems. Most of this wealth was looted by Alexander the Great, wkose men carried away a treasure vast even for the present age of ‘wealth. Following Alexander, Anti- gonus, Seleucus, Nicator, and Antio- chus the Great plundgred here_ and, according to Polygius, the Greek his- torian, there remained in Hamadan a wealth equal to 4,000 talents (3$4,780,- 000) to the last plunderer.” patient. 'We have spent a lot of money, no doubt. But we have a lot to show for it. Our new water sys- tem, new streets, mew lighting sys- tem and new fire department will, we believe, amply damonstrate that they are worth ell that they cost. The outgoing administration has no rea- son to be ashamed of the legacy left to its successor. The practice of economy should be cotnparatively easy during the next two years because practically all of the city’s large and urgent needs have been so amply and efl:iclenfly provided for—Meriden Rec- ord. mothers, with their children gathered about .them, on the deck of the boat ving them to their home, be ruth- lessly sent to the bottom of the ocean? The question. then, to be answered by this world-war is not whether some great nations shall suffer much, wheth- er vast treasures shall be poured out, s ¥ i ay Instructor of Piano, Har- whether the blood of armies shall 4 ° shed, but it is whether what is right |fj T0ORY, W and the recognition of this necessity by ac- tion and the reduction in the number of fires together with the reduction in the average loss per fire point out the value of its activity as nothing else can. . Fire prevention work pays in more ways than one. EDITORIAL NOTES. ‘What has become of the fellow who thought the first note sent to Austria was too strong? ‘working for. i !* SUBSTITUTE SHIPPING BILL. Bven though the question of subsi- dizing steamship lines has never met ,with favor ih congress, the need of increasing the American merchant |marine and the importance of pre- jparedness in seeing that the country {has a sufficient number of vessels {which would be put into service to ‘meet the requirements of naval opera- tions should' occasion reguire, has prompted Senator Gallinger of New ‘Hampshire to introduce into the upper house at this session a substitute bill designed to take the place of the measure which is being advocated by the administration. The need of;giving national encour- agement to shipbuilding and operation is recognized and under the provisions Jof this bill freighters in the foreigm trade would receive a subsidy at the rate of a cent per gross registered ton for every hundred miles traversed on the outward voyage, it being required, however, that the vessel be of a type Which would meet the approval of the secretary of the navy so that they would be fit ‘for service as transports, fuel, supply or ammunition ‘ships in case of For the high speed mail liners there would be an increased compensation not tq exceed $10 a mile outward to American built vessels. Such action would be in accordance with that which has been taken by all the other large maritife nations. It would place the American vessels on & basis which would permit of com- petition with foreign vessels, which does . mot exist at the present F. L. FARRELL (CONCERT PIANIST) shall prevail, whether the weak shall n. - be protected in_their rights, whether 3 . the poor shall be permitted to dwell Season commencing p‘eaee’ablyhinhlhelrthomss. Tl’:e ques- ~» a&mmbnrllth. 1915 tion is whether a few men who claim udio: Central il to have the authority of the Almighty, kral Sty A new diary llke a Iot of other things creates a lot of enthusiasm for the first few days. THE WAR PRIMER By National Geographic Soclety It begins to look as if the diplomatic exchange of notes and treaties was a waste of time and paper. Housekeeping Is Not the Task It Used to Be ODERN inventian has done away ‘With the opening of state legisla- tures periods of uncertainty are begin- ning in a number of commonwealths. Alsatian Vosges—“Americans who have spent vacatlon times wandering through the Alsatian Voges will re- member the long forested slopes, the velvet-green valley floors, the unex- with much of the hard work. i pected views through breaks in the 2 For i the i plnes on the mountain shoulders, the ¥, e : Fdtamcn, g quiet ways solftly carpeted with pine floors, : needles, the spicy air filled with the of i aroma of evergreens, and the perfect- ly-kept hills, mountains, and winding valleys as combining to form the cozi- est, most intimate charm pot by any mountain country on earth” says a primer issued today by the National Geographic Society, which describes the Arcadla turned inferno by a year and a half of stubborn a of ors before the out- mountain fighting. “This region was paradise peasant 3 break of the war, a green-and-gol patchwork of 1little ‘farms, some no city lots; and Liechtenstein—“In the war of glants, two midgets counterbalance, San Marino in the Entente camp and Liechtenstein in the camp of the Teu- tonic Powers,” begins a_ prirver des- cribing the smallest of @Germany’s lies, ¥ssycd today by the National Geographic Soclety. “Liechtenstein is the suggestion of a valley and a clus- ter of inountain crags, situated on the border between Switzerland and Tyrol, and it shares the distinction with San Marino and Monaco of being the smallest independent stats in Eu- rope. From almost every statistical viewpoint, except that of square miles it is considerably smaller than efther of its rivals. “The obscure principality lies south of Lake Constarce, and includes more than 60 square miles of rocks, bleak mountain sides, avalanches, ever- green forests, high pastureland, and brook-scarred valley bottoms. It is The man on the corner says: Most people are inclined to pray for what they want'than for what is good for them, — e Now that Russia is announcing that it has plenty of ammunition, something else will be expected of it besides a strategic retreat. ‘While a Pennsylvania girl broke her jaw laughing at a joke others may have been endangering their insight trying to locate it. ‘This simple gown is a triumph of drapery—diagonal folds of pale coral taffeta over white net and disked with The bodice follows the gar] of deep red roses the shoulder and depends from the inconspicuous ‘waist line. £ The War a Year Ago Today. Jan. 7, 1918, i 2 e French made progress in direc- || about 12 miles long and its width va- iy ot s o ToureEt| In spite of the talk about am in-|]tien of Altkirch, ries between one and 6 miles. Its to do it. hm” m‘.“ eo‘ of““‘-flm. globgmtar quiry into the gasoline situation it Germans in the east hampered || highest summit regehes an_elevation .n‘”‘r‘flmb“ mc.m,m“mg o At commerce in | 40°SD't Drevent an occasional boost of §445. feet, the Rothe Wand, and here the Vorarlberg joins the Liech- tenstein frontier. Vaduz is the capi- tal of the State, a residence of about 1,000 inhabitants, where are the gov- ernment offices and where the diet sits. The town is two miles south of the Schaan reflway station, beyond the notice, the worries, and the vani- ties of the world. “Liechtenstein possesses a constitu- tion, given {n 1862 and amended in in price and promises of more to come. ‘While it is that 40,000 sol- diers have N-W—a blind by the war, it would be difficult to tell many neutrals have been affected in 2 similar way. Japan is sending 4mpossible to overlook the suggestion | the Mediterranean hardy trees, whose fruit oft each year to the ers. obtained from the auctions was applied to the upkeep of the roads; and, thus, like m rting. the uppOI 3 ‘were unspolled ,& manner which has never been done plum and & before. was auction Turks ml.:y Urumiah. sion i ith S Soiiage: cutrage, bur THE BARALONG CASE. If the Baralong case is going to be 3#— be, ‘be three cruisers to to protect its In- 1s made in Teference thoreto by | terests, but if they are no more effec- T8, el g e midmar et} - QHTlATON Uy (Sir Edward Gray when he secks an |tive against the submarines than a0 3 e the 3 Sy by = pean Vids : S ha& uelvvmntt'g‘ml’finm.'flhun FOR FLETCHER'S

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