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o it t :E:gg &t i %zzg : IN THE UNITED STATES - United States, possibly the require- ment that all men between the ages of system, was disoussed today be- fore the house military committee by Major General Scott, chief of staff of e army. General Scott told the committee that the United Sutiloo'ollld n?ud':‘n army of nearly 2,000,000 men in e ;Vent of war. It dwalopnd dn.rlngthlh. an .quirement, Oennn.\ Scott thought the administration’s continental army plan offered the most workable solution of the nation’s military problems. If the plan failed, he said, there was no es- cape from compulsory service. Every country in Europe, he added, realized the truth of this, and England might ‘better have realized it sooner. With military service imposed on men be- tween 18 and 21, as a patriotic duty, with nomiunal pay, he thought it would cost the nation no more for an ade- quate force than to maintain its pres- ent establishment. Everyone Should Drink Hot Water in the Morning ‘Wash away all the stomach, liver, and bowel polsons before breakfast. To feel your best day in and day out, to feel clean inside; no sour bile | b to coat your tongue and sicken your breath or dull your head; no consti- pation, bilious attacks, sick headache, eold.l. rheumatism or gassy, acld you must bathe on the in- l‘lds like you bathe outside. This is vastly skin into blood, while the bowel pores do, says a well-known physician. keep these polsons and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, drink before each day a glass of hot ‘water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it. This will purify and freshen the entire alimen- tary tract, before putting more food into the stomach. Get a quarter pound of phosphate from your pharmacist. It is inexpensive and almost tasteless, except a sourish twinge which is not unpleasant. Drink phosphated hot water every morning to rid your sys- tem of t.hua vile poisons and toxins; also to prevent their formation. ~To feel like young folks feel; like you felt before your blood, nerves and muscles became saturated with an ac- gumulation of body poisons, begin this treatment and above all, keep it up! As soap and hot water act on the skin, cleansing, sweetening and fying, so limertone pho-pha:e an hb( ‘water bef the MOKNEY LOANED on Diamonds, Watches, Joweiry and mecurities of any tes of Int firm to wi THE COLLATERAL L A5 6o a"ublm llfl,) ACT/WISELY | Keep Dunn’s Cathartic Liver Pills in the house at all times. Thelr ac- tion le gentle but | s freedom from hesdache and heavy foeling oaused by a torpid liver, They're 100 a bottle at Dunn’s Pharmacy 60 -MAIN STREET Neponset Shingles |s iz ond afl kinds of Masens' Bullding Matorials for solp by Podl.McWflli-m-&Co. MAHONEY BROS,, " FALLS AVENUE - Hack, Livery and Boarding We to e the vout Sriees. ALES, WINES, LIQUORS AND CIGARS Frosh, o “plete stook, Bost Bervise, DAN MURPHY 11 Bath Street our most itive, insuring | M a whnhula liquor dealer. Mrs. Watson were arraign- charged with keeping a place reputed to be a house of ill fame, a place of assignation, where there was carousal, drunkenness and fighting and so _on. The nccused pleaded not guilty. The witnesses besides those named were Mrs. Hattle Greeve, Charles Peckham, Mirnnie Crandall and Fanny Miner. The ceses ‘were prosecuted by Attorney Benjamin H. Hewitt. After hearing the evidence, Judge Hinckley declared Mr. and Mrs. Watson guilty of the offénse as charged and imposed a fine of $60 and costs upon each. Mr. Wat- son could not pay and he was com- mitted to the county jail in New Lon- don. Mrs. Watson told -the court she could probably settle if given oppor- tunity. In her case sentence was sus- pended for 30 day: Michael Donohue and Walter Bur- dette were arralgned on the charge of intoxication and each was fined $2 and costs, making a total for each of $14.63. They could not pay and were com- mitted to jail thereby increasing the total to $19.38 each. The train that brings the early """“Yfl mail and newspapers from ork to Westerly, due to arrive at 5.30, arrived on time, Monday morn- ing, but the mail was delayed in de- livery end most of the newspapers were ground beneath the car wheels or whipped by the wind along the roadbed. This train does not stop at ‘Westerly, but is supposed to slow down as it passes the station so as to give ample time o throw the mail pouches and the newspapers onto the station platform, but there was no slow-down. Monday morning. Theé train whizzed past the station | [at a_mile-a-minute clip and the mail ruehea ‘were thrown off away beyond he station and near the West street bridge, unknown, of course, to the aggage man at the station. An hour Iater a'young man who saw the mail pouches near the bridge reported the fnd to the baggageman and the .mail Pouchee and a few newspal ‘were. sacured and properly forwardad to des- tinetion. Someons erred, whether the ergineer or the mailman, but the in- cident was reported to. the proper de- | partment. Thie ol lng from the Pittsburg seotion of interest: Tepics, il of Iwn| Ham B. ington is a young—and shali we say nt'.rae- tive?—widow. Her husband died a fortnight or more ago from bullet wounds in the head and plans for the limphlt funeral were carried out and the body cremated with what, to the rank and file, might be termed un- seemly haste. Then Connie (she was Constance Aldan before she Mr. Darlington) gave away her colored closed car, planned for an outfit of mourning and with her little son left for the Pacific coast. The Rev. Dr. Maitland Alexander, who 1is very clever at smoothing things out—or over, as you will—took chn-rte of the funeral and the disposal of the body. Mrs. Darlington is to lh’ in the west Indefinitely.” Councilmen Francls G. Maurice W. Flynn and Charles Crnlq, the highway committee of the town of Westerly, who have in charge the rebuilding of the highway between the villages of Weaterly and Watch Hill, were in Hartford Monday in con- sultation with State Highway Com- missioner Bennett, by Anpoint.mem They ved considerable informa- tion on road bullding, ineluding the varied materials used, the cost of con- struction and general majntenance and were also shown sample stretches of highways of different copstruction, The highway eomminee is emdaa.wrln to be right before snnx -.hm Wit rebuilding the highwa: og tween 360,000 nna $70, is to 'be ex: pended. Twenty mmhn January meeti m.crm ulacu rll.l ‘were ont at the on land, which was fo] s Rev. Mr. Earnshaw vou of uunfi s for his e excellent vnm Prosident l!!ll Wllm of the West. was of the old M‘rhnofmw-u- cuymun ts inception ) u.t.l‘nmulfl,o?nhchm- m—qu&u Pon- on the tap! 'mlenllsn'nidom!cof‘rlpnkhofl spread | t, ‘Rhode Island state prison. The of-the disease is due to the overcrowd- ed conditions, there being four or five men in cach cell. Mr. and Mrs, Charles W. Willard and daughter, Miss Grace Willard, started Mon for their winter quarters in We e, Fla. They will return in about four meon Dr. Russell B. Smith, medical in- epector of schools, has concluded the annual ear and eye inspection of the pupils. He found 139 pupils below nor- mal in vision and 44 defective in hear- Senators Colt and Lippitt have an- nounced that they have no objection to the appointment of John A. Farrell to be postmaster at Westerly, Desilets at Manville or Lamb at Natick and McPike at Warwick. PLAINFIELD Local Historical Society Formed— Fines for Intoxu:ntlorhml- San- ford’s Pupils Give On Jan. 8, in the town clerk’s office at Central Village, an informal meet- ing was held at the instance of Judge John E. Prior for the purpose of seeing what could be done towards forming an historical society for the town of Plainfield. John Prior was elected tem- porary chairman and J. L. Chapman temporary secretary for this meeting. It was voted that those present act as a committee of the whole to draft a constitution, and it was voted that the constitution and by-laws of the ‘Westerly Historical society be adopt- ed as the constitution of the Plainfleld Historical society, with such changes as may be deemed advisable for this committee to make. It was_decided to have a eecond meeting Jan. 15 for the purpose of or- ization. The members also decided to extend the notice of the organiza- tion of this soclety as widely as possi- ble through thegrflll and by personal invitations. During the meeting re- marks were made by Mr. Gallagher tlvqunx such & soclety; he spoke of the ‘interest’ taken by many in the town, especially the young men, in the town's early history. All those in any way interested in this historical soclety and the history of this town are being invited to be present at the meeting Jan. 15, which is to be held in Central Vfllm. Pupils’ Recital. The pupils of Miss Amelia Sanford gave a recital Monday evening in St. Paul's hall before a large number of people. The recital was in every way a marked success. The programme follows: Overture to Norma, duet, Miss Sanford and Fred Cooper; reci- tation, O Mary, Go and Call the Cattle Home, by Mrs. John Newton, with ‘Miss Bessle Taylor, piano accompani- ment; Contest—Introducing (a) The ‘Theory of the Scale, Miss Alice Sykes and Miss Eva Oates; (b) First Work in the Scale, Miss Rose Brelsford;" (c) The Scale Forms, Miss Sanford; Lett- hand Etude, Miss Alice Dumaine; song, Thora, Miss Florence Butterworth; Chopin’s Nocturne in G minor, Miss 8anford; Contest 1, C In Sths, Misses Alice Sykefl, Eva Oates, Mildred Bor- den and Florence Brelsford and Alfred Royle; monologue, The Heart of the Village, piano accompaniment, Miss Sanford; Maid of the Mill, by Miss Florence Butterworth; Contest 1I, C in all forms, Misses Butterworth, Marion Lee, Julia Leo and Yvonne Dnmllno Mendelssohn’s Fantasia in C minor, b: Miss Thelma Lynch; Contest III, Major and Minor Scales in l.ll torml. Misses e Taylor, Alice Fred Cooper and Miss Sl.nfnl‘fl Overtm to Willlam Tell, Miss Bessle Taylor; Judges’ decision; premium list and awarding of class pins. Jall Employe Fined. Horace Mason, employed at _the Brooklyn Jail, became intoxicated at Moosup Saturday afternoon and was Jamin Brizes Central Village Monday morn!n and pleaded guilty and m fined Sz and costs, amounting to $18, which was @ was prosecuted by Gran Juror Frederick King. P‘n-llud for Intoxioation. Another case came up before Jus- illage with Grand Juror King u(ln‘ yesterday morning when Thu was arrested at -ose-~ an( t of Ti- | whioh 16th, junday evenineg, Tha bishep iy m-!dm be a re- MarReb] by all thon who deliver a sermon, Ser- onoe u 6,48 p, m, 'rhere 1 musfa enq exerelses, Looal Bmall Notes, Gy Friendly soeisty held % Mw uufi. 3 snl—‘ ng dn ’l’-hm! will be Wednesday mumm‘g’ Bard wn{ efficiate at the Tayer nex The, nguuvenwnmt e will meot o svmianis hu yige will will be . returned work 2t Albert §. Kmnady'--lurh e d iivs, jekeph Ghagmen at | count 7. a I-sunn’ Tecent visitors with N'Kn?h—s”w 1 w g oy dl-enuln. n. %}co Bm!wfln R. Briggs_at Central | Chris THE MODERN GV OF ALEXANDRIA The Country House and Commission Office of the Nile Valley. (Special to The Bulletin.,) ‘Washington, D, C., Jan. 10.—"Alex- ander the Great, like an erratic me- teor, flashed across the drowse of civ- llization-weary Egypt; and, perbaps, as a memorial of his deification in the land of the Pharaohs, he left behind him the beginnings of a vigorus Greek city, Alexandria, it Juvenation to the worn valley, and today, with Constantinople and a few other places, one of the greatest for the contesting army millions in the East,” b.ighu a bulletin just prepared by the tional Geographic Soci.w. “Alexander built his city 323 C. upon the ruins years, Alexandria has become the life of Egypt, its largest port, one of the busiest ports on the Mediterranean, and an important world-city. “The modern city is divided into two parts, one of which, inhabited by Mohammedans, is a listiess tangle of Oriental narrow, crocked streets and uninviting buildings, while, the athur the European quarter, is solidily bulls and possesses many of the n.-n'-hl conveniences of the American or Eu- Tcpean metropolis. It occupies a ridge of land Detween the Mediterranean and Take Mareotis. The Rosetta mouth of the Nile lles more than miles to the east. Cairo, the uunlor metropolis, ltes 129 miles by rall N the southeast, aud the Suez Canal is more thar 1:0 miles to the east. The city is linked by a network of rallway and telegraph lines to the other towns of Hgypt, and is in telephonic con- rection with Cairo. “Alexandria is the counting house and the commission office of the Nile Valley. The British chamber of com- merce has its headquarters thers, and there, 60, are located the head offices of many of the largest commercial or- gawnizations doing business in the Near E‘.IL The value of the city" trade, In normal times, is about $240, ooovoo a year. The western harbor, designed for a modern, first-rank commerge, is visited annually by 8,000 vessel” The chief articles of export are grain, cotton, beans, sugar and rice, and the business Il ll.!“ly in the hands of Europeans, ‘whom there are 50,000 in the tot.n popnl;uo-n of 400,000. The city is comncud by ca- ble lines with C!Pl'ly Malta, Crete and port ' Said. One of the interesting | ., phases of Alexandria's commerce is that it sends 80,000.000 eggs each year to London, where these mate relationship with the man’s breakfast table. “Dinocrates of Rhodes, architect and friend to thd. famous corners, including the whole In a par- allelogram q thoroughfares. This n‘llllrlty city-plan that Dinocrates fl.vvlo wal.; ’the bmlnx of '.hl. hl:h;:l of grid-iron city-building, of ti - sonal, strictly business city only now W waning in popularity. “The exotic Grecian city was a battleground from the start. The ‘East and the West met and fought out their dlflormo- to Greek learning and Greek phflmph’ found refuge in Alexandria, and there antagonized, and finally Nlnd‘d with, the phflosopmal of the Chris- tiapity and Plsl.nllm !ousht some of their most bitter batties there; and the Jews, the Christians, Pan estess, was torn to pieces to glut a | Pré-arran Hypatia, brutish populace. “The ~ famous Alexandrian religion from the desert; and bllmln' of the great book-treas. s ury been keenly lored l:hchrl of each mu‘:: lneou!w Ing. “In the latter years of mrr the city wu held W uu mne&. t had sunk to the sta of a small vmm under centuries Mohamme- of it ish ennml of the m ‘wel Egypt's walfare, dates from since which dzu a new o(v hll developed, and that % er degres of Nll.flmhlp to the than to the Hast.” IMPROPRIETIES IN "FOK TROT CLUBS” OF CHIGAGO Police to hwntl‘gd. Charges Made by a Ysung Woman, Chiesge, 10—Pelice fnvestige- tion. eath"t’oxut:'oz Clabe in the down- head Itafian soldi Forn in 1632 and. mm:::; 16" foriressses, .fl A T ¢ Armyfianarmyof“ “Bull™ into their action and “punch” into For a vmle, lxv ly, manly smoke, “roll your own” wnh GENUINE mien. That’s tngmfiam smokers. o - 'BULL DURHAM SMOKING TOBACCO “Bull” Durham is the mildest of all tobaccos—a fragrant, mellow-sw: co that soothes the nerves and brings the happy, con- tented feeling that comes from thorough satisfaction. Made of the famous “bright” Virginia-North Carolina leaf, “Bull"hubea:flwwAmmn Ash for FRE -y 2 :‘!. smoke for tobacco enjoy a real smoke. An MNustrated Booklet, show- eettobao- . There is no other like it. You “roll your own™ with “Bull” and JURY COMPLETED FOR MOHR MURDER TRIAL. Members Wil Today Visit Place Where Crime Was Committed. Providence, R. I, Jan. 10.—Phe trial of Mrs. Elizabeth F. Mohr and the two negroes, Cecil Victor Brown and Hen- ry H. Spellman, charged with the murder of the woman’s husband, Dr. Franklin Mohr, a widely known phyllcl.l.n of this city and Newport, began today. 'l'he jury was complet- ed after Willlam H. Lewis, former as- sistant United States attorney gen- eral and counsel for Brown, question- ed each man as to his attitude re- garding the alleged confession of the negroes fln.t they had shot down the serfously wounded his .ecnury Miss ly G. Burger, in their stalled automobile on August 31, 1’15 at the icstigation of Mrs, Mohr. The two men later repudiated their F. Stockwell, farmer; Robert D. Heys, decorator; Wlm.l.m H. Greene, farm- er; J. Austl Willlam H., hrm o. HHL Etha; Mowry, farmer; Chuku F. Dmm mill_hand. Efforts to have Mrs. Mohr, who h charged with being an accessory fore the fact, tried separately, tulled. She has been at liberty on bail and came into court today wearing a light veil which did not conceal her slight paleness. Tomorrow the jury will go to Bar- rlnnon on the road to Newport, where shooting occurred when Dr. Il’ohr‘- machine was halted by Geo. W. Healls, the negro Ch.fiu::fl:r' be- Sngpe, storekeeper; Hl!ch.lL iupecmr ; Ora John Curtis, lumber- and an in order to ena- accomplices to do the but the murder Indictment was quashed when he of | COLONEL HOUSE SPENT WEEK END IN LONDON Disoussed American Affairs with Am- bassador Page. London. Jan. 10, 5.95 p. m.—Colonel WAGE INOREASE FOR WOONSOCKET WEAVERS Wersted Mill Ogeratives to the Num. of 2,800 A!' I:M.llflll. ‘Weoeonsocket, R, T, Jan, 10.—8ix mills INVESTIGATION OF STRIKE = RIOT AT EAST YOUNGSTOWN Organizer Flyan Claims Ripting Was Caused by Paid Sluggers. Youngstown, Ohio, Jan. 10.—The opening of the grand jury investiga- tion of the strike and riot in East Youngstown, the resumption of work &t the plant of the Youngsiown sheet and Tube company and the ordering home of the Fourth Regiment of the Ohio National guard, called here on , were the developments in the situation today. Quiet prevailed in the vichnity of the tube works and employes who re- ported for duty today wers not mo- lested either when entering or leav- ing the piant. Prosecuting Attorney Henderson announced that he had asked the state attorney general to send an assistant here to aid in the investigation and prosecution strikers. Thomas H. Flynn, general organiz. er of the American Federation of La- bor who returned here from Pitta- burgh today, issued a statement to- night in which he charged that the rioting here last week was a financial scheme to depress the value of stock of the Youngstown Sheet and- Tube company, so that a merger of inde- pendent steel interests can be affect- ed. “We have evidence that we regard as conclusive that this entire trouble was caused by paid sluggers, brought to Fast Youngstown by the Youngs- town Sheet and Tube company,” Mr. Fiynn charged in the statement. “The gunmen who did the shooting were residents of Pittsburgh. ‘We under- stand that these gunmen, 25 in num- ber, were -deputized by Sheriff Um- stead. If this is so the sheriff violat- ed the law. Prosecuting Attorney Henderson, when shown a copy of the statement, said that Mr. Flynn would be called ‘,g the | tured. DARDANELLES-CAMPAIG COSTLY TO THE ALLIES Berlin Military Autheritigs Estimate Entente Powers Spent $1,250,000,000. Berlin, Jan, 10.—“According to :gnnu by competent authorities here, e entents powers spent $1,250,000,000 on the Dardanelles expedition, not in- clusive of their los in warships and trading craft, e Overseas News agency toda: “According to that have reached the Turkish capital the en- tente had arranged for distribution of #0 that one- on the island of lludrol in order to take charge of the civil posts imme- diately after Cmflm. le was cap- EXPLOSION IN ANOTHER DU PONT POWDER PLANT In the Hagley Yards Near Wilming- ton Dei—No One Injured. Wilmington, Del, Jan. 10.—Thers was an explosion in the Hagley yards of the Du Pont Powder company near this city late today, but no one was injured. The blast was in a barrel mill of the yards. The shock of the explosion was felt many miles. The explosion was in the upper cnd of the Hagley yards, where on Novem- ber 30, thirty men w .xum —_— hofore the grand jury to repeat his charges under oath. At the office of the tube comipany it was claimed that about 500 men returned to work to- day. Three departments were put in operation and more ‘will be added lat- er, it was announced. Doctor Says Nuxated Iron Will Increase Strength of Delicate People 200% in Ten Days tablets of ermnvy fnuxated iron three meals Bl R i LS e | e mfl«;‘m q-ym- A ng’?‘e‘r m%m 'flhont ob. =fl Tacts lharo 14 iron to also &