Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 15, 1916, Page 4

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ORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDA dslegates are ssnt to conventions —_—— pledged for these men, it elther means DAVlS THtA, a-deadiook or the selection of & can- didate who has not had the consid- : SHE FIXED HIS DESK BROADW! > 3 eration, elther of the people or of a — arwic b} large proportion of the delegates. n With these conditions faced it is| == = T s A fied not surprising that there is a strong [ “My wife,” sald the very young mar- | Foof ers would lunch at 12:30 an and Go Otors Deing raade for sending unin |Med man with ill concealed pride, “is |listen to the Hon. Mr. Dubbs speak on | Gtructed delogates to the national con. | COMIng down to my office this after-|Neckties in the Philippines’ and 120 YEARS OLD yentor axd By thie selection ‘of “tiefReoR RN L el L S n L Tl [ IR R My Siwite onensi | Car—— best men to represent the different c o " 120 man?” anxiously inquired the middle| “At the very bottom it seems she --'-.t'h'tul'l'»:v:.- iar, 12¢ @ weeks K0° 8 jtates, it is not belleved that any mis- | greq married man. found one of her letters to me writ- b Bntered at the Postotfice at Norwich, | take will be made. Tn states where| “Why-why,” stammered the young|ten while away last summer. Of 3 JERER v A The Rntotiae 8 the presidential primary law has been | man in some surprise, “why, of course |course, I had opened that, all rizht, THE MISLLEADING LLADY Telephone Calla: adopted this cannot be done but the [she is! ‘Why, Isabel— but it nearly broke up our happy EA Bulletin Business Office 480. way in which the instructed delega-| 'Then” broke in the other intense-|home. She told me that any husband RAN 400 NIGHTS IN NEW YORK CITY ("% Bulletin Editorial Rooms $5.3. tions aro- going to be hampered is|ly clutching his coat lapel as he spoke, | who would leave around missives from Bullotin Job Office 85-3:| [lery o put a quick end to that Kind | 1T Your life don't leave her alone in|the wife of his heart to be read by Willimantic Office, Room 2, Murray | Lroug.t DUt & @ your office for ome minute! If you|scrubladies and stenographers was an Buflding. Telephone 210. of legislation. can’t stand guard over her then be|awful brute. That especial letter had e sure to tell your stenographer not to|nothing in it but a request for a check Norwich, Wednesday, March 15, 1916. WORKING FOR SAFETY. take her eyes from her and at the first |and a reminder to bo sure and come ' | Safety is something which appeals|faint indication of trouble to rush for|on the Friday boat, but the fact made a janitor or elevator man! She—" |no_ difference to her feclings. m—m”ui to cach and everyone, ot if it does not |* X%t o you mean?” gasped | “She disposed of: every pii on that the young married man. desk, hid my pens and erasers so well 5, 2 increased efforts along that line at- ‘Listen!” proceeded the older man.|I haven't found them yet, dug out a i ( atlon 0. tentlon has been called to it fo_a|«“My wife came down to my office ,too, | fresh desk blotter and sighed with sat- greater degree than ever before. Not|last week unexpeotedly. She sald it |isfactlon. 1 expect that if she could %|only have good results been obtalned [occurred to her how nice it would be|bave tied a bow of pink ribbon on the 3 The B““etm §|but there has been revealed the many R e e Shalr she'd have felt still better: A WONDERFUL PHOT! v reas gnan Was nof lorgot to say one of the dus Sbets "ana prevention g0 hand m |UrPrised. "My stenographer told me | piles was important. busincss memo- 0 U = osp THE PATHE GOLD ROOSTER FEATURE The Bulletin has the largest s s0_when inststed on detatls. y|randa jotted down on old envelopes D DALY circulation of any paper In Easters §|Pand and the better the results the | irq gaid that, inasmuch as she didn't|and scraps, amons them the measure- 'I'HE “NACE 0l" TBE HUTE :::Ekon LEWIS . Connecticut and from three to four $ | gTeater the satisfaction that should |get over as far as LaSalle street once |ments of a building that had taken me | FIVE—STARTLING REELS—FIVE times larger than that of any in §| prevail thoughout the entire countrs. |in a purple moon, she diawt sec why |five hours to get. And that was what Norwich. It is delivered to over §{It is a matter of vital importance to should choose that precise e to came back to later! 'm still 8,000 of the 4,053 houses in Nor- §|each and every one for those who fail | 80 ou‘;. T‘::e‘n sl;e began ,‘,1‘:,‘3"",:‘ sllr;g bmvclg n;,: adjust my "x:a VAUDEVILLE TOMORROW AND THE REMAINDER OF THE WEEK wich and read by ninety-three per s around, waiting for me, un e his| “But” said the young married man, cent. of the people. In Windham ‘°mf,ef:gt',’,‘:;é:_;‘:gd;;','m‘,’:rfik:?eym“;‘; my desk. Miss Keys says she gave a|reprovingly, “vou really shouldn't have | cause they were left behind and there it is delivered to over 900 houses, §| '3 it sort of strangled moan and pressed [kept all that useless mess around, you Stories of the Wi | was no one to look after them. Some in Putnam and Danielson to over §[brought face to face with it tomor-|her hand to her brow as though it|know! It's a good thing to have it = e Vvar | women of high socioty in Belgrade Today = COL ONIAL. = Toda 1,100, and in all of these places it §|Tow. It is through just such experi- |really were more than human woman [cleared out!" were found dead ajong the roads.” b Y is considered the local dally. ences that the safety movement is|could bear! “Aw shucks!" said the other gloom- at became of the Austrian pris- Eastern Connecticut has (orty-§ constantly getting increased support. e L R At the Fall of Belgrade rg:;g}e?"ow' which 'Gho Sorbiana’ had NELL OF THEDANCEHALL ........... Three Parts nine towns, one hutdred and sixty- Thus there is bound to be wide-| -« oft her Goat | SeCIm around and I miss its cherry - 5 = five postoffice districts, and sixty §|spreaa fnterest in the third national e e e O hos ‘are | tacel”—Huchange. The curlous subjective effect of In- | fora 1oy mupie momt, O Some, days be- .a'g?‘-fi:%",: g Vitagragh Drame Wiieal fres dellvery ruutes. exposition of safety and sanitation |that Miss Keys, being a woman her- 5 tense shell fire is described by Madame | Grouitch. plies Il THE REWARD” D:J-':nfillpli..‘aUEEllNG Y . The Bulletin is sold in every | which opens next month in New York |self, could rightly interpret. Miss Slavko Y. Grouitch, the American wife| "I hear that only 32,000 Of them | Qum—————————————— B arbomnimsti et oo/ bR S e town and on all of he R. F. D.§|city which brings under one roof the|Keys said, when I asked her with sobs QTHER VIEW POINTS " "y reached the Albanian coast where they tes in B = I : oo < of the Serblan Under Secretary of rou astern Connecticut, thousand and one things that make|in my voice why ehe didn't stop her, Bl mesmnlbg ol have been transferred to Italian is- CIRCULATION §|cor_sreater satety in inqustry, the | {05 T curse n” the typewricing e rived in Paris. She was n' Belbrade | "4 dont koo oy any ot them | wibeut bimmba e o T T | o e States Secloni- §|street, the home and the dally Mife|school they never taught them a - throughout the bombardment. |got_through,” said Madame Grouitch,| The Germans and Austrians so fac |cal Survey has examined larze arcas §|of overy ome. It can be readily ap-|fhing about how to prevent one's em- | Congressman Hill says he has his| “Flity thousand shells feli in Bel- i “pue they were in the same position as |as Madame Grouitch has been Inform. | of the shale fn Colorado, Utah, and 1901, average.. + 4412%|preciated as President Willlams of | poyer's wife from making hash of his|Tasons for voting i v e P i S (Jay of the bom-|Serblan soldiers. many of whom died |ed. have treated the Serbian popula- many dis- . et 2 i nt,” she said. - 3 ind . 1905, average. T | Pt il b A e al e e D e her 1ip |Shall have to take his word for it. He|tions were so continuous, the —steady | Sone i g pnger in the retreat |tion e o o am | ot i - £ s 'y that such endeavors as that exposi- ‘And while she was biting her lip h Y | When the Serbians left the cultivated |atrocities, so far as she has heard, ex- | that are several feet thick will yield £|tion sets on foot result in improve- | nervously and trying to think of a po- could hardly make the matter any|crash of shells exploding simultane H . 6 inches thick H B et thot sy oue touch. |resolution was defeated, and there are | priving one of the power of action. It | Sons, I1t0 the wacant mountain spaces | Bulgarians in the South- o e S March 11 5 s Whero thers was no food, no rest, — will yleld more than two barrels of tice, inventions being increased, new | ["Tia: Gask was doomed (o be drop- |other hings to do than to discuss|was not a sense of danger but' a nothing to goto. GASOLINE FROM SHALE crude ofl to the ton of shale. One methods being devised, greater care|ped down the elevator shaft or boiled | PErsonal o o sense of calm with which one heard | “The Serblans treated their prisom- - ton of shale should therefore yield being taken and new standard being |in oil after office hours, my wife was S these incessant explosion, S0 DUMErous | ers with kindness. 1 know that it often | Yield of About 10 Per Cent. Gasoline [nearly 10 gallons of gasoline by the set, in it up to her elbows. that one might compare them to the|used to be said that we were too sen- d 35 Per Cent. Obtaimed From It. |Present commercial mcthods of gaso- When it is realized that a half mil-| “There may be men who can carry “hgne 1s ?mlqged‘ lhnht it is not :u glrsuc;rfl‘ash';:m:‘r;g:f“:sm;:r;:;;g;:r:; timental about them, that we gave the | *™ T < line extmfl!on.‘nnbd larger “;"’; may i peoDle, ratively on their affairs with their lead pencils ney and milk” in this country, by - v: Austrians more than regular rations, Tmade possible by new methods. It this country has reached a thor- ::: ey conservatively estimated,|and pens laid In Symmetrical rows |reports of tre bread lines in New York | MOSt of us seemed to feel that we had | wwhile the Serbian voldier had only the| In View of the ever-increasing de- e ietien Tas Sater- gatth 60 ough understanding with Carranza re- | ... e b o and their pigeonholes entirely in or-|city. These may be regarded as peren- r{\?_{‘y of time for everything. al ration. Even during our flight |mand for gasoline and the Increase IR | thig shale because the quantity of pe- garding the running down of Villa, |fhers 1e n eide fad oo ed ihat|der and a general look of a big hotel | nial institutions that come and go with | “When mf;:\:_‘fl‘fol?: Pombardment Was | we used to meet parties of Austrian [price of crude ofl, from which it is|troleum produced from wells in the i P - m some Of y 1 3 ;‘:‘:fi:;"““figdp:‘o‘;:e::?t 0 :";‘y sreatly reducing the mumber, to say|array any minute of the twenty-four understood in communities where la- | a2 Qothing more than a demon-|the men would give it to them. |that an almost inexhaustible supply of ;o years the oil shale industry of oo i i - | h , but that, my , 1S - |bor is at a premium and wages con. start. This country has had no am. |ROthing of the opportunity that ex- | hours, bu my boy, is pure strates meant to draw on the Bul-|Thirty-two of us had only sixty|Oll may be obtained from the shile|giotjand has been a very important T o s e e x| footations! A Teal. regular man can|stantly ndvancing. It will be remem. |garians. This theory was accepted bY | loaves of bread during five davs. The |Of northwestern Colorado, northeast- bition to become involved in war with = i v, ly |cept “the terrible things done by the |more than a barrel of oil to the ton ervously and better by trylng to explain now. The|ously had the strange effect s o D coumEY; Thes Wt AR 9 033§ ments being made and put into prac. | lilt conversational opening desigmed to & ect of de- Y H A THE RECIPROCAL AGREEMENT. bol o one. In recent year more than work best when his desk looks like |Dered that the bread lines came back |the people, even in Belgrade, ail the ;ligwance for the day was &salt. out | &rm Utah, and southwestern Wyoming. | gg) men were employed in the indus- any country, and it has none now, but | SUStrial plants. the spot the cyclone hit. Bverything |into prominence, the country over,|more because it was believed that' aach morning and if when evening | This shale contains materials which| o' op.. “country, vet the average it cannot tolerate such deliberate vio-| GANNOT ABANDON RIGHTS. then, is right where he can put his|about the time the democratic admin- |French and English troops were even |came you didn't have any bread left, | When heated. may be converted Into| . f,q7o¢ ofl per ton of shale was Jation of border rights as have been a RIGHTS. lgngers on it instantly and life is sweet | istration’s economic policies began to[then on their way from Saloniki o there was no possibility of getting | Crude ofl, gas. and ammonia. TH®| .., ‘less than that which appears carried on by Villa and his army cul-| 0 connection with the question of fani peaceful. take effect and that only the inter- |Nish, and possibly to Belgrade. No mgore. So that anyone who gave |Di8h cost of distilling oil from shale| o, e from the shale of Colorado B itis in t1a rila woon Conm arming merchant vessels for the pur-| “My wife besgn on a foot high pile | vention of war orders saved hundreds|Very grave concern was felt until the as compared to the cost of producing |y g Utan. It is estimated that in o L x umbus. | ce of defense, much has been said |of ads and catalogues and samples of [Of communities from the humilation |aftermoun, wher the ipcessant severity oil from wells has thus far prevent- | 800 “iah., 0 3 FIVC I ent shale Carranza has obligated himself to . i | O o A e B g D eS o5|of establishing soup hotses. — Water- | of the firing, the wholesale destruction ed the development in this country ot | Colorado glone there is sumcient shag stop such operations but in spite of (10 the effect that Americans ought|TRISSPR IPCRER U0 I8 ™ foor |bury Republican. ; being done fo he lower part of the AID SUFFERING BABIES such an industry and may continue | 17 DOAR B SECt TF, MOTE YOt ted i all that he had done they continue, |NOt t0 involve this country in trouble|gyishings and patent bollers and the town where many buildings were al- CAMP FIRE GIRLS' APPEAL |to prevent it for some time but 8000~ | g oijand, to yleld twenty billion bar- The time has therefore arrived when | (PTOUEh their acts in disregarding | ihings that clutter an architect’s ev-| Better element of Mexico, or rather |52y on fire and finally the tick-tack er or later this great source of sub’|rels of crude ofl, from which at least this country must act for its own pro- | thelf own safety, meaning that Whet |ery mail. T had I them there till|the people of Mexico you mizht say |Of, the machine guns proved that an ply will be ut ““md o ’“;"’ the | two billion barrels of gasoline may tection. Villa is the common enemy |it 1S understood that there is danser |1 should have time to look them over,lare not in sypmpatny with Villa tac- | eack upon the island in the Save was S Toaiion e be extracted by ordinary refining from taking massage on armed liners |becavee 1 like to keep track of th|tics. They are forced fo the back-|Doing made for the purpose of land- > ARG S processes. of both Mexico and this country. As " P > ing, that people began to leave the The oll derived from the shale is » Jong as he is at liberty it can be ex. |they should take more than a per- fnew discoveries. She sald it was per-|ground from the fact conditions have | thy, (hal people began to leave —th imilar to that which Is being pro- | o AS Was stated in the rectn reply of Dected that he will persist in terrer. |SONal View of the situation, or place a | Perfectly scandalous that things post-|not arrived as yet when the people o - o e 2o - . Secretary Lane to a senate resolu- d = 5 ritish naval detachment with the of- duced from wells in the United - 2 £ ago shou 4 cast . on on ot <0 “The erablo for the subjects of other coun- | 126¢ there might be manifested on| . it ivcy were there a thousand | the same with many other countries | [dies in a pretty summer house which 000,000 barrels a vear. \When refined | impiy awaits the time when the price Siea, such a voyage. Others feel that Amer- | vears, so she dumped them in the|when the: 1adion By a hanttulior | S twenty-four oy later waa de- f by ordinary methods the ahale oll| o gasoline or the demand for other TUnderstanding that Vill icans should stay away from Europe|wasie busket. hot-heads, ‘Tt requires time before the | MOlished by the explosion of a shell. ylelds an average of about 10 per cent | gieiliation products warrants the pmn e thal ads noC car: |5 r e vy W 5 ot heads. It requires time before the} A1l day long the German aeroplanes 4 5 gasoline, 35 per cent. kerosenc, and a e s Tying on his operations with any : e. When she found, underneath them. |real people rise up. It i3 the same in | ,uo of them hung over the city die %5 < B emount of parafiin. Tho vield |Ctillzation of this substitute scource. sanction of the de facto government of | It i8 Tot to be imagined, however, |a bunch of mail which I hadn'c had|particular communitles when 8 mob | iacior tho Are o1t was eontimucns ) ¢ e R ton: the shale may prob- | This may happen in the future. At that country, but in opposition to it | that all the Americans who go to Eu- |time to open and Which was dated all | breaks loose. You can no doubt recall | ynan the roads leading out of the site 3 O e eoly Inceeased by the use|all events these shales are likely to ke rope, or who have gone since the w: the way from last July down, Miss|the time it takes for the people to| . - ” . e 34 ¥ . - |be drawn uvon lopg before the ex- for the purpose of weakening it, the of - 0 e WAL | e ova salil she dipkrly (hed hyetorica < jt was the big guns that took the of refining methods especially de Tenching of an understangias botarens |oPeRed have done so for pleasure. The | KeVs y ys . [start. During great strikes a similar my wife cried, any one could|state of affairs exists, so do not get|hecii Out of our men. It was thelr B signed for that purpose. The gas|baustion of the pétroleu elda. the two Eovernments whereby both |f3Ct is as the Springfield Republican ; - = - ! helplessness at being battered by WRich is a very goo0d illuminating gas. i leave me a milllon dollars and T'd}alarmed over the Mexican situation in 4 y % ¢ 5 - % 4 will unite in getting rid of the bandit |POINts out, that “The Atlantle ocean [never know it if that was the way I|its present status and Qo not Judge ail | e v sy i onge of any- 1 el renuied s it the Fiest Tiehe S thctecy. leader promises, if fully adhered to, to | 'S @ Vast highway which is under the facted! Now, T had been morally | Mexicans alike just because an outlaw | no'fie "t ™ e DOUCH Tete I SSC e a B e dhete. This is the first time we can recall Prevent any wrons ideas belng gained | SOTSTHISIIY of 1m0 nation, and every fsure when I stuffed the mall there|of (hat country is riding along the|great hills beyond Belgrade, which The ammonia is 4 most valuable |when it would have been safe for Por- 25 to the Durposs of the Tires Stats | vear in peace times hundreds of thou- | there was nothing in it but notifica- | border trying to embroil the United : P T ad ver bef been captured, not y-product of the distilation and may |tugal to undertake to whip Germany, expedition by the Mexican people, and | S210S Of Deople travel across it for | tions that I had been put on the com- | States poasibly at the instance of some o e T i o Cotanmton ety - p :2, P tilizea in the manufacture of | Austria, Bulgaria and the Turk all at t L reasons which are good and sufficient, |Mittee to inspect weather vanes or|other factor unbeknown to the peopie | gar 5 3-inch g 0 - o g g sl With that possibility climinated s . fell before the long 13-inch guns of 2 commercial fertilizer or other niiro P important obstacle has been emoves |1 War iimes even as the record of |that the Amalogamated Soclety of just at this time—Midletown Press. |ine Austrians and Germans.” : With the constitutionalist forces and ‘Alfllsmdc!sglcoses, it is }:!;'l:'vxuss!hle!lo sc'.ll Madame Grouitch made the retreat those from this country cooperating | P eAn a3 & hizhway of travel It is remar wble, but still belleveable | with the Serbian rear-guard She left v L appointments — twis: 2 year with your fhose fom thls country evopersting |5 the Ciilized popuietion of ihe on the reasons siven, that the New |town after town in the morning, : Keep t.hag Sntimeces = ¥y ght to be little difficulty in |0 a et profit 2 ied i e 3 dentist and three times a day w cornering ana capturing Villa, which ety Imslnees S necsmlty THE WAR PRIMER than It @i aw)zr o, notwithetond: | by Aecsinn and German purmsece S ol s se peril- Bet would mean the end of the opera- tions by the forces from this country. THE BALKAN SITUATION. ‘With Germany asking Bulgaria for : BE Netona hic Soclet, ing that it is handling from thirty-|Later, the trip through the mountains v ous days as well as in days of pro- Y S ¥ three to sixty per ccnt. more business |to Saloniki was by horseback or by found peace. now than it did then. Of course there |cart through wild country. It is not always possible to secure are correspondingly larger receipts for| ~The reason officials and women { passage on American ships or even| Girici . example the gross income for Janu-|with them were among the last to ; ilician Plain—One of the historic | Sromble the gross inc : 3 . las Fige ary this year is $300,000 more than|leave places because they did not two divisions of troops and getting |S- P> Of neutral mations but the ex-|places of the remote past that may|was the an |leave places was because they nof 1 1 i & ¥ | was that of January last year, while ant th pulation to be in a nic,” ¥ ERFECT the reply that they cannot be spared Kif,‘;""xffem:i Te“ that American lives | yet be destined to range itsclf along-| ne et Corporate Hntoué was $148,060 | explatmed: Mufame Grouttch: It wan L et o n lost or endangered Whether |side of Bagdad and AMesopotamia in & I - less. This is accounted for in varl-|not possible for the Serblan govern- ¥ ) manifested by Rumania and the feas | NSy Were on merchant vessels of [present-day interest is the Cilician | ous ways but chiefly and above all by |ment to forbid people to leave thelr 4 i that 1t will neutrais or belligerents. Those who | Plain. a small territory ranged around |, certain congestion of freight that re|homes, but it seemed far better for = il Dot De long before thatare trying to get from European|the xtreme northeastern cormer of |cuiicq Nrrg: in slow movement of loaded|them to stay where they lived rather :g:n;l;fie:ntihms t;em:;l;“unl;hfb:id;s! countries back home are not joy ,id__;‘:;b;\:egse‘rl:agng S;lae»“:‘tdr‘;'f& G.ay| cars, and involving at the same time | than to take the road without food or o . 2 - 14 y 3 u 3 yment of entirely profitle: ¥ ¢ transportation, and in a ! . Doctor M:-u-ry kans takes on a new aspect. ing any mare than are those who hap- [ German_ capital turned for an outlet | much PavIment Siee = ) st 2 e Sepitly = T overtime. Moreover there were an|desolate country We did meet every- . It has boen affected considerably by | 227 t© be cmployed under neutral flags | for the Bagdad Railroad when check- | unpreceded amount of _demurrage | whers parties of people along mountain - AR Send 2c stamp today for a generous trial pack- the success which the Russians are|pno Voi!tls these very ones who are|mated in its desire to reach the Per-|eharges, and charges for about 40,000 |roads and mere paths. When anybody | B2 Lt age of either Dr. Lyon's Petfect Tooth Powder - having in Asia Minor, and less Is|.l PeFil becauso of the intentional |sian Gulf; and It was here that the|cars belonging to other roads, or twice |fell out in the fog they were lost be- > - = of Dental Cream. being heard about the concerted drive | 415regard for the rights of humanity Germans were beginning to build al,q many as the New Haven cars de- N ;i the high seas. The abandonment |odern comercial port in the near|igined on other lines. In short, strange of the central powers against Salon- |°F . e v 1 now that the supreme efiort 1s be. |Of FIEItS under such a situation woula | (St before the European war broke as it may scem at fitst sight, the road | thousands of horse power running to ing directed against Verdun, so that|SUHPLY be an invitation for increased : is losing money by having more busi- [waste there. A water power company violati In a statement prepared today DY|ress on hand than its normal facilities the position of Bulgaria and Turkey violations of international law. the . S e . L W. LYON & SONS, Inc. §1| W. 27th St., N. Y. City A . 3 n cannot obtain a license from the gov- B Ealy tiftiret fon ot ose M daaartas S in his ity a | Snable It to do economically. — Stam- | ernment that is not revocable on some | For the rellef of suffering babies and 2 few months azo and it Is but nat- ECIFORI M. NOTES: striking picture is drawn of tne his- | "0 AAVORE____ etk i Washingion. " Thes 12 10| Europe. the Camp Fice Giria are sk vral for King Ferdinand to realize| If the elections in Maine cities in- | (OIi¢ Dlain. = of the Medi-|. What has been called the ‘heavy|appeal to the courts against this of-|ing efforts in the week of March that he Is going to need all his men |dicate anything this is an old time | terrancen sheves will beveal the fact|hand of strangulation” has been laid |ficial. One company which did ven-|11-18 to collect money and clothing. at home if the allies send the forces |republican year. T e A Teranetta i e deas|on al water power production, but it|ture out into that field is said to have | The appeal sayi “Little children are now assembled In Greece northward — P e o O e e mosthenat. | especially affects the northwest. The|had a $10,000,000 investment taken |suffering untold miseries both in our or it Rumania enters the arens amd| The man on the corner says: Not- |crn eoast of that sea. Flanking it on |hard times are still along the Pacific|away from it, and it was obliged to|country and in Burope. What is going = o = th coas s = coast and in that general region. One |charge off that amount because of this|on in Europe is enough to make us all starts southward. ‘withstanding the scarcity of dyestuffs, | either :1(19 arethlgh 1'2011 5 .rangss, Teason given by those who live there | bureaucratic system. What evidently |unhappy is we only knew about it. We X H u{. P Bulgaria had rather an easy time|one sees a red nose here and there. |Tunring back from the waters od8e| inat all private initiative is so con- |is needed is that private capital be al-|go on with our work and play, iittle We have in our Used Engine Department one . of it getting the coveted portions of Uty Shejdeen: riamion & “|trolled that capital cannot be found |lowed to develop this water power for | thinking of it. The newspapers can- Servia while the Teutons were push.| NOW that it is denied that there are|Many miles to the north of the nar- , Bt E “Ki ” ine and Boiler, 0 ing across that country, and it has|inhabltants on Mars, that relieves one | 0% EUif these ranges come together, Dy, pablibhing the Arsdrl things thet Kinney” Safety Steam Engine Tt ™| Ana no wonder. Take the e*ite of|cation, except on a court decision, of by publishing the dreadful things that o “ ” undoubtedly made plans. for bringing | JANESr Of any interplanctary squab- | e aned” o hr hisorie. riers, | OTéson. There are thousands tipon |the license—Waterbury American. |are actually happening. _Over thers mounted on boiler. Also one 8-H. P. “Foss, Jr.” Gas- the acquired territory and its people | PleS- which once bore the classic names of | s - ere— children are found wandering in the B : i : 5H. P. “Star” lunder Bulgarian rule, but with the Sarus, Cydnus and Pyramus. Through Delds hungry and edld, crying for thetr oline Engine, mounted on truck, one . situation changed as it has the out-| '/ Den appeals are made in England | the ages that they have coursed down = day, 5 i “Star” Gas Engine. look becomes less rosy than it was |0 economize in clothes it probably [the sides of the Taurus, Anti-Taurcs P e M Al Gas Engine and one 8-H. P. { in the recent past. With those who |has no reference to further abbrevia- |2nd Amamus mountains, they have in many cases have no clothing at all THE C. S. MERSICK & CO., made it possible for Bulgarle to tion of evening gowns Brousht dowin {hie Ao —many freeze and many _starve to 5 B Sevi caliing upon Baigaria tor — . from theic great dlopss and haye Il aeat The picture shows Mrs. 272-292 State Street, - - - New Haven, Conn. up at the head of the gult a magnl. Bastburn, one of the Camp Fire Girls' aid and Turkey having so many trou- | From all accounts it must be im-|goent alluvial plain of about eight ~ b8 Dbles that the desirability for peace |POssible to tell by the noise whether | hundred square miles. g has already been indiceted, it i not|there is a letup in or resumption of | “This littie plain once was the cross- ¥ surprising that the Bulgars are -1the attack befo Ve Toa of civilization, rough whicl Smcing to look to tho ucum?n;z o Y an the greatest highway between the L Fast and the West on which stood their own country. Instead of divid-{ The reported mutiny among German ing Servia they may be participating |troops and the decision to lssue po- g‘,?::t‘”;fl::x; 'é';fi;:‘:";""&%m T Vo TE F aR r”E PO" Y OUT F’ T’ in @ strusgle soon to preserve the ter- | tato cards in Berlin indicate that all | Anatolias piateau to Tarsus, was butlt ritorial lines which they already pos- | the suffering is not on the battleflelds. | through a_narrow defile calied Ghulek Bess. Baghaz. Further to the east it pass- { TAILOR If You Buy . The latest from Col. Roosevelt is|ed through a masonry gate before en- S T“ a PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARIES. |that he is sending messages and mak- | teTing the plain of Issus. From this / MADE ™ Many of those who have been the|ing speeches, and yet he went to the | atler plain onme road extended south i and another morth, each of them FOR HERE most enthusiastic advocates of the|West Indles to get out of the public | through giant masonry gates. presidential primary are today either |eye, “It is thought to have been due to For a limited time we will make Dress Skirts tailored to fit to your exact measures at Jukewarm or openly opposed to the the fact that Alexander knew mnoth- i = 2 s “idea. It was considered to be the ono| Reference is made to the fact that |ing of the pass to the north that Dar. $1.50 which is the price for the making, the cloth we will sell you at prices lower than way of giving the people a chance | despite negotiations the torpedoing | {Us* Was able to cross the mountains I . goes on steadily. That has been a|Dnir i2 #he battle of Tssua =~ Evom 4 § elsewhere. We will save you 12c to 29c on every yard you buy here. Also Suits ite as president instead of leaving aracter! - . - - . = - to'a convention. The plan was do- | J A5 COITIM SISUES of Teutonle) feuied s histary, ng the Sl Dite tailor made at $8.00. Think of it, a Suit strictly man tailored at such a ridiculous low and presented because of -the == - = strove for mastery. price as $8.00 or a separate Skirt at $1.50. CAN YOU BEAT IT?. Leave your order e boom, conpam oot o+, w‘,’,”:,fi‘,,,“.”“...":,;‘.};‘.,_’{:‘z:.:’; now while you have the opportunity. Don’t wait until it is too late. New Spring Dress ‘appear to be & wise move to stock him % . e : expected of it. up with all the arms and ammunition || War A Year Ago Today ; MARSHALL'’S 101 Main St, Norwich Not only havo’those-who have. March 15, 1915 ored for «nm-'-m‘“;d g .‘:‘ From the spesd with which Car- French captured trenches north mfl'fl"; 7be, used on %% |ranca’s men have. surroundea Vi, || of Arras. their name_should.: be_ considered K arsushe vaptured ehil eanturn Loo K! 150 PONY oun-‘rrzdrl‘.smuui SKIR’I'OIDER. the. delegates are’adsembléd ‘in Those members of congress who s'."','.'g“ Agnting yi::clulm‘\minl and z ntton. voted against standing up for the || n _ice e Carpathians. Hdp little friend to win the M . siso veon o genersl effort rights of thelir country took a position || _ Britain refused to modify block- b e Pany for investment in new enterprises.|a given term of years, without revo- south of Ypres but were beaten at and allowed him no chance to escape, || , Cormans drove back British sons, _in | which is likely. to give them consider- ada order.

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