Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 29, 1916, Page 4

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mated his ability if he considered that it was possible to flop from one to the other and not stir up opposition of a serious character. However much re- lance he placed upon his advisers, or of however confident he was that all that loosen ‘| was necessary was to say the word crea Mm‘n and the change would take place with- | “That? cried the younsg man in-|ately lay down in order that she mifht the movements of the COFRE: | drur out friction, the experience that he jcredulously. The pretty girl looked|walk upon him haughtily. He was| On the 8ist of July, 1914, ail ine st 5.5 2 = I has been through has other. | indignant. “I suppose,” she said, “that |her abject slave and everybody said |active troops were in their garrisons|yo, 120 YEARS OLD ° |wis you think your tone of voice is amus- (it was too bade and would nothing|with carrying passengers and | 4 ser - ot ‘monarchy | I78: But I must say it's a foolish tone | ave him, because Isabel was the sort order for the tian price 130 & week; S0 a | The abandomment of the Y | o use in comnection with sucn a help- | who after they marry read novels all a year. 2 idea can only be interpreted as an ad- |i~ge little dog! What's the matter |day with their hair in curl papers. o'clock, and at 5 o'clock all the units at the Postotfice at Norwich,| mission of failure. That Yuan Shi-Kai | with my dog, anyhow, that you should| “One day he met Isabel in tears.|assigned to the defense of the frontier d-class matter. is a great man and leader in China |act so7” o §he wrung her hands and said that|were in thelr trains on the way to thelr Ty cannot be questioned, but his great-| ‘The dog,” explained the young man|Fer new dog had run away, and ol = T O et by the mamaer | feelingly. “When you said you were |her heart would break if she lost him, | portat Ht A n Dditorial ‘Rooms 35-3, n which h les and solves the|£0MNE (0 buy a dog I thovght you|and oh, Arthur, can't you do some-|was finished Aug. 3d. The first day the Lo Bulletin Job Orfics 362 1% WRICh, Be B e with meant real, sure-enough one! I sup- | ting? ' © T T Sastern railroed alone sent out £33 otfic S nosed you knew a dog when you saw| “Arthur felt the ability to conquer|trains of soldiers, every one of Wl Zmetect e Bile d e ephons dan ™ = MU | (o setting up of a successful repub- [t~ ty s ords surging within him. Pausing |reached its destination on schedule — == m—= | Jjc. It can hardly be claimed that he| “Your idea of a dog, imrvsing SR e o, R S S 2T rrensFoure BILLY BURKE in PECC B Viodoeadi, Marsh B W pas Grned sroutth by Mo Sekmces |8 BOCR, e Sevibagy e, LI [0 TS TR, et e e et iy et A Wondoctul Ploture With a Wonderful Gast ' .| calf that would need a special build- |town ana that it had north, he |trains of the maximum. After I DISAVOWAL AND UNKEPT PrROM- | (ulf that mould need 3 amme, B | e s 2o, 200 o oo |t 0ot 0 esine wers smapiov” | wBoss ‘exper 2 REEL KEYSTONE. and 3 BIG TIME ACTS i | to manicure 4! Well, I want oneday and dinner and settied down into|ed in the concentration of the forces at Z%as IEYURE GOES O T v Once again it is authoritatively | bat's a pet! 2 = dog trot up the road. points fixed and nnly 20 of them were |on the movement under the oy [ 5 e | 0 stated that if it is found that the Sus- | “If you're locking for pets—" began| He had a terrible time. People he|behind the hour provided for in their | of the Young Men's Christian > . s, rman sub; e young man. - ad seen nothin e what e | schex . m. In lon to . sex was atiacked by a German subma. | 8 IO I, fne dog!” said the | described.” After five miles he causht| " The Tilroads became & moneavring |such '@ "campaign should - achieve m ’—Bunehn act, offer reparation and punish the | 2c] y girl hurriedly. ‘Here, Fluf-|a glimpse of white and took after .|instrument when the concentration pe- jamong the workers to whom the apeal He was led through burr patches,|riod was finished and piayed a capital|is made, there should be for this com- O O green swamps and pigpens, through [role in the battle of the Marne. munity the lesson that today, as never The Bulletin has the Ilargest§|is also intimated that Germany is pre- | “Don’t call it,” said the young man|sand and burdocks and brooks and| Even during the battle of Charlerol|before, we are learning the supreme Parts—JIM WEST, GAMBLER- Ireation 0 any paper 1n Bactern §|pared to put forward the claim that|gloomily. “It's no use! A dog like|finally when he caught up with it|the allies' lef: was reinforced by (hree |imporiance of conserving and putting || 3 » —3 Connecticut and from three to four 3| the vessel was damaged by striking a | that hasn’t brains enough to know |the shades of night were falling and |divisions brought from the region of|to the best and most far-sighted use |l «wHEN THE WIRES CROSSED” times larger than that of any in §|mine. v hether you are addressing it by name |he was all alone in the wilderness | Nanty in 200 trains in three days' time. |all the material possessions which we T KATE® .. orwich. It is delivered to over§| Sueh is but a repetition of that|Or reciting a Ginmer mefiu in Russian! | with what he discovered was the dog.| They had scarcely arrived when the |have—New Haven Journal-Courfer. || “GETTING RID OF AUN . 000 of the 4,058 houses in Nor- §| ., 00, S WY O TSt o0, Why, its idea of a wildly exciting| “It was just as well that he was|retreat was ordered, and the railroads ‘A QUEEN FOR AN HOUR" ¢ and read by ninety-three per gy previous occa- |ime’ would be to play cat's cradle|alone, because he could be unrestrain- | were occupied in concentrating at the| .u. gooey P 3 ‘of the people. In Windham §|Sions but it has mot prevented the with 'a piece of string! Only it|ed about voicing his feelings. A man | center and on the left the masses of | The Afueth anniversary of the es- 181t is delivered to over 900 houses, §|Steady recurrence of just such unjus-|wouldn't know a cat from an ostrich|is apt to have feelings, you know,|troops that attacked the German right nt of Meriden as a city oc- in Putnam and Danielson to over §|tified attacks upon unarmed vessels, if it saw one! Why, I bet that dog|when he has risked his life hunting|and decided the battie, Three army |CVTS Rext vear as The Journal has| house and that if he succeeds in en- 1% 17400, and in all of theso places it § | whether they were going to or from a | wouldn't know enough. to eat a beef- |what he supposed was a noble bull [corps, five divisions of Infantry and re and it should be the i3 cemsid ca tering he will be blinded by the beans. is lered "the 1o daily. - belligerent country, without endeavor- |steak unless it was led up to it by|terrier or a collie and discovers it's|three divisions of cavalry were brought ;‘r‘;ll{ :: !(Yr\‘: r;::'or mdr"m council as| oo o F O e Tl & Eastern Connecticut has forty- §{ing to find out whether they were car- | Fand and had a napkin tide under its|merely a bunch of cotton wool like—|by rail from Lorraine, part to the re- mber of commerce to member of th usel takes capillary attraction. Anything fm- mersed in water has a similar attrac- tion for the water; that is, the object . L fr see that preliminary steps are taken|as many beans as he has years and | becomes wet by the water that clings Alne’t s i chin. well, like this one-here! glon of Chalons sur Marne and part to | * five ‘p%‘:{!fhé‘:’a?.m. ity rving contraband or not of even Ziv-|““Gh, go oni” said the pretty girl| “Arthur had to carry it all the way | the resion of Paris. 10 shat this occasion may be proper- | throws them in all directions and ia |to it. The amount s lmited By the rural® free delivery routes. Ssiriendini “"I‘;“:;l;'e';:: ::2 ‘;‘;' with elaborate iron: Come, Fluffy!”|nome, too, and he kept feeling worse| The battle of the Marne won, the |\ . We have had no celebra- 5 “See how it mindsi” cried the Young |und worse until by the time he reach- |railroads began pouring troops to the It _was about 1,200 years ago during | hand in water, and your hand, when torhe Bulletin 15 sold in every §|sponsibility not ome whit that no|man. “It thinks you are reading the|ed Isabel he could look at her with a|north in this Tace 0 the ses. SHICEIRIn] of the towk. tn yeazs 5g8 | 1ne Teigh of b ‘Bmperor Monbu that | withdrawn, is’ wet! = The Hmited at- o o o e - u D-}| American lives were lost on the Sus- |inultiplication table! Did you buy it|litterly curling lip and not bat an| The relative calm alons the front it | CC e N paYe some sort| the first ceremony of demon-removing | traction bétween the hand and the sex. They were endangered the same |at the wool counter?” eyelash at her tremulous thanks. Ar-|self at certain periods brings no rest| ' .7 ", CF (F el‘:’lch fih'fl;‘ -centen- | wage hLeld in Japan. Adopting the rite | water is gaged by the weight of the as the rest and three are seriously in-| “It is a very fine breed of French|thur was absolutely cured. He saw|[to the rallroads. From February “to g shoud take the| from China the emperor incorporated | water that clings to the hand. CIRCULATION Jaced, and the afdavits which nave|Poodle” sald the young woman with|her as she was. August, 1915, 3,430 troops trains were |form of an Old Home week. A vear's| it with the object of stamping out an' Imagine several hands placed close 7 Mgnity. “Its eyes aren’t pink and it| *“So now you see why I Mok with|run, while the average of supply trains led s0 that the committee | epjdemic that raged throughout the together in water, but not touching been secured by this Sovernment and |;,3 black spots on the roof of its|aversion on your ideas that Fluffy|was 131 a day: at the same time there My be named. the speakers secured | jang. x one another. If this compomite hand the investigation thus far made all[mouth! You needn't bother to tell me|is a real dog! I know the danger that |were 222 ambulance trains in service.|{nd other arrangements made. These| Tonight's modern celebration was|were formed of ten single bands, it point to the fact that it was a torpedo [ how I can use it for a window washer |lies within and the havoc he may| Besides assuring the transportation | (hIN& cannot be done in a hurry and | jike this: Towards evening housewives | Would attract ten times as much Wi which was fired against the vessel|or a mufi or any of those stale ones! [ wreak in two lives! of troops, the railroads have since the | (heTefore we should start now. It| become busy preparing for the cele- |ter as the one hand would attract and And certainly a British submarine | It's just a dog!” war added 200 miles of regular gauge a good plan we rhink for| hration; beans are crackling in ket- |hold on its surface. So, a wisp of hay, and 40 miles of narrow gauge track to | the commou council to take action on | ties and feasts are prepared for the |composed of a hundred spears of dried their strategic lines and largely trans- | this matter by the apointment of a tlon of any moment here “since the| &1l the rooms of his house. welght of the liquid itself. Place your could not be suspected of - torpedoin; “Huh!" said the young man, snap-| “Your story leaves me absolutely on English - vessel whon 1t has net|ping his fingers at the bunch of white | unshaken!” insisted the pretty &irl. o preliminary committee. The t family god and the bn:‘lly. Meanwhile Inm placed in mn; "lflh:‘mov. - Boeri rédfing “emcmy’ vesels fuStnat | COE L bok it ion whesls dniyquivel oocoh iy arecionsl| T Okt - BeZarmed 188 mitary dations time for the council to act is at the | the sacced Hghts and burn iacense, | wou - s & manner. " . the animal royses sad memor- the sacred lights and burn incense, |wWould cling to one spear. Bushes in & the hall!” T e and ySome member of | while awaiting the beans and the feast. | marsh will remove a certain amount The young man made a dash and OINTS ||iution—an Jachould introduce a reso- | Parched beans are offered in a wooden |of water which will, by capillary at- SOUTHERN N. E. CONFERENCE. |lts promises relative to its submarine young | then handed back to the expectant and QTHER VIEW P ution.—Meriden Journ: box to the family god, and the family | traction, clng to thelr submerged For the de £ thi: K & warfare, or if the Sussex was an iso- | woman. vrancing Fluffy the ragged remnants clap their hands and reverently bow | parts. : JFor the remainder of this week and|;,1oq case, there might be reason for| “I was thinking of Arthur Pieplant|cf what had been his headgear. JAPANESE DRIVE AWAY before the shrine. Then the master| Under the microscope, fibrote biot- [the early part of next Norwich is to |0 t0 2800 THETE TUENE he THAON o7 | back home” the young man told her.| “Oh, doggone it! He's a real dog T THE DEMON OF ILL-FORTUNE | CAT¥ins the box of beans, starts round | ting_paper, when absorbing ink, re- jentertain the Southern New England | OnE WOCH FRS DOSTHOD WHICh (€N | <Arthur was one of these extra size [after 'all, I guessi” the youns man! Tt will please hundreds of persons, his house, followed by his children to | zembles, on a small scale, a marsh \conference of the Methodist Episcopal | : fellows that always pick out their op- |admitted. “Well, if yowll guarantee|who are obilged to use the strect, and | Mang a Branch of Hollyhock and the | PeIt out ihe demons of misfortune. |matted “with shrubs and ‘sticks and church, which means that there will | SnCere, but such are not features of | ogites to worship, and after looking ver will run away you may |remove a dangerous traffic condition,| iiead of Hollykock and the | \i1en he throws beans towards the di- | *wigs around which water is flowing as Ihe several hundred clersymen and lay- | CCrman conduct, and in view of its|ihe town over he selected Isabel Karp- : - if the city, or the corporation owning ad of a Herring on the Door. | rection of the god of good fortune he|ink runs about and among the fibres men who wil come <o"snis chy grom repeated attacks upon passenger ships | stairs, who weighed eighty pounds,| I like your impertinence!" said the : B o O AL stact 7 -— cries out: “Come in, fortune!” and |that together form the spongy paper. e i ffremt hoorares in o haastom | Without warning, it can hardly expect |bad a voice like a thin whistle and a | preity girl “What have you ot to S ers es of buiid- |, Ceremonies. typically Japanese, were If Germany hafl been living up to the th il e e S e 3 . when he pelts towards the other di- |There is a limit to the mount of liquid IMassachusetts, Rhode Isiand anmd the|tPAt this country is going to be ap=|pretty face that wasn't going to last|do with it ing material on the highway, will de- | neid Fe throughout the empire—in | rection he shouts: “Go out, demons!” | which a ‘blotter” will absorb as there s ™ot anoctiont Tov tho|pensed by = aisavowal in one instance. |more then a minute. - Arthur tmmedi-| = “Drawing my chalr closer to yours|vote a. fe hours and a few carts to oung | the business of removing the accumu- am | Jatior ehiold, shrine and temple—to drive | Children gather the scattered beans |is a limit to the amount of water that away the demons of ill-fortune. The | and vie with each other in seeing who [a marsh will sbsorb without over- of ice and snow on the shady orresponds to the old Chinese | gets most. and taking your hand,” said the Ipurpose of attending the many ses- |10 1S useless to try to work out a fa- man, “that is precisely what ey vorable interpretation where unkept ce flowing. That limit, in the ‘blotter,” ma 5 oly s it X a 0 w Year, marking the transition from y o . going to tell you right now!”—Chicago | side of the street.—Waterbury Repub- | si, arking There is a syllabic superstition re- |is the combined capillary attraction of ® 05 all these people Norwich extends | PTOMIses are concerned. LETTERS TO T}_‘!E EDITOR | ns. it winter to spring under the anclent cal- | garding the word bean which may ex- | the fibrous shrubs and sticks and twigs * its welcome. A number of churches of | NEw ENGLAND'S GHANCE Notwior s Unbromased O e seareac o WD Tradgition long-oblerved fn Japun | enecus, The Tepaoess Tor chere | B e he Diper—Popular * lother denominations have extended the | e e N ages:. Connecticut ought to do on a small- | holds that the demons of fll-luck Tay | ja “mame” and “mame" means “heatth | o> > or - ‘use of their houses of worship and |, O Section of this country can af-| Mr. Editor: The people of Norwich Stori f the Wi er scale what the government has|be kept away during the year by pelt- | Therefore the bean is the emblem of | s———————————— "many homes have been opened for the |f0rd to disregard any opportunities |are now realizing the unpreparedness Stories of e War done on a vast scale. There are many | ins them with -hard beans and by | good fortune e entertainment of these Euests. Nor- | Which are open to it for increased de- | Of our city, due to lack of foresight|l — | beautiful lakes and charming spots in| hanging outside the door a branch of 2 - QChildren Cr IWich seldom has the opportunity to|velopment and a most important sug- |and politics. - 5 e Tay A_M;»(_:]m:e n‘:‘-h'“h ought to :'»“ re- x_“_;l -hock and the head of a herring. s S A Tk oo b v entertain conventions which take in|Sestion has been made m. this regard 2 = . What Wi Battl serv o the people as state parks e idea is that the herring, whose 'g Paper Abso: nk. FOR FLETCHER'S T > Norwich was boun srow, the: h and| Under the encroachments of campers | odor is distasteful to th 2 G o i e ik s Baane e they | What Won the Battles of Yser and|under the hy dor is ai f e demon, will | Every student of physics knows that 2 the whole or part of three states, or to | P¥ Joseph A- Conry, the consu P-|might have laid out our streets so Ypres. snd cottages some of the bast have |keep the evil one from entering the | water will run up a narrow tube by| SC A S T O R.I A g welcome the delegates from so many ol . ‘j’ e Russian government | thut we would not now be ashamed of| ., % x already lost much of their value as - = {church organizations—there being 174 |3t Boston, who declares that that city, | them. At the present time something| “The battles of the Yser and Ypresipotential state parks. But there are of more pastorates in the three dis-|27d throush it all of New England. |seems to be the matter with Norwich. | Were in the first instance, won by thelcthers which may be yet retained in fricts included in the conference— |C2n share in a $300,000.000 busines: | Everywhere complaints are being made| 'ronch railroads, and thoush the Ger-|iheir natural beauty and preserved for [which sbould prompt the city and Its| WhICh is now soing. elsewhere. AU|of out cliy government, princivally In | Vi pes® Bcr e They' have held | ey, TioIment of, the people of the people to make the most of its oppor- | {3t is needed, according to his advice, | 'TRME | 7 . o |their own throughout the war," says|® " e 3 “|is the necessity of getting out. and|and it s true we are not getting the |t wn throug — - tunity. o ¥ getting Value from our large appropriations,|an officer closely concerned in the h i . It was 33 years ago that the confer- h"f.”"’*’ D Who is responsible? mobilization, concentration and dis- |\ “}';i,’ém',fd SeoTi alintda haen nce session was held in this city,| NeW England is one of the biz man-| /At the present time opportunity is|Placement of the French troops. aid in the breaking of the congestion . which means that but few If any of | UfaCturing sections of this country. It|knocking at our doors. A large con- The Germans have had the advan- |1 "% “removal of the embastgo. Cer- “those who came then will be in attend- | 1S ‘@ larse producer of textiles, ma- |cern is developing here which is bound | tage of distance, since the line took i, "the public, after its long, hard e T e wever. the. iotop | chinery and boots and shoes and this |to advertise Norwich and no Joubt |the form of a triangle: inside that| 03" hensive winter has the Fizht to {string was out at that time and there |5 What Russla is in need of, and ir|many others will want to locate here e thelr ‘palute c‘;’flf_":“’]\;“”‘"‘_‘“’: demand that it be no longe: incon- Ber time i 2 soon, and we shoi red to |2 - s o Sor ati o Nl e B . - samo determined eiort :er}m:es a tremendous amount from | FOO% AN we Saould be Preps 'hg ug part of the front than the ailies’ con- )F"’“‘-“;d r}"‘d-: ']':.“‘:‘ d e ‘l‘l‘ A "“l - ade now to mako all the strangers |{oTcisn countrles. A large volume of | RIS, WOy, SOTNIT SOU DS BP | Centration pointe ‘on the other side | 0% of the selfishncss of individuals {8 iteel at home. Norwich hospitality has [ {Fade is already carled on with Rus-|aple for manufacturing purposes that | Where it is necessary to turn the angle | {1, “elizancics of an intolerable sita- * ot been lacking at such times and it | %)% 1T these lines, but when it is re-|sholild be cleared up and made ready ;“.5,‘9““ of going across the inside of | ;¢i;; *There is hope for radical im- Ib. 10c 25': " s confidently believed that 1t will not |2lized that that amounts to but $15,- | and inviting. v i Zrovemeut soon, If cooperation and 1 Ib. BACON 5 e found to have changed now. Un- |000:000 and there is a chance to par-| The north part of Central Wharf It appears that General Joffre fore- Sted whienvo to be made the or- ¥ s sl " | ticipate in 20 times as much it must |shoul: be attonded to—NOW. North |SaW the German flanking movement | qditCh SHCCATON "3 10 7y Ni Mixed less we aro. sreatly mistaken, Nor- |, ZIROC h, 20 LmES as wweh It must)Ci%% . Inaustrial bulldings ls a large |toward Calais during the last days of | der of the day. And such a cooperas ice! g wich will be found interested in facill- | puice the effort wiich wiil land f area covered with rubbish, not a very | the battle of the Marne, aad began | HoT 1= belnz worked out by experts at|f Salt Pork, Ib. 11c i . el e the effort which will land it. bl e Sending trooDs to parry it as carly & ous congested points e in the 5 ating an fthiering thé great and| mron the manner in which the at- s place now, but if cleaned up, | SPRAUNgE roOOPs U o ¥ valley it behooves the people of tre |} TR T rive Ib. 25¢ 8004 Work which the conference car- | tention of American business is belng | e} Se riot trinn ras s e RRouEn beginning of October o0 tvains. car. | 2ssoclated communitles o do their resh Try 25¢ 5 A s s 5 |it, I do no nk that a more Adesir- i c ains 2l b / 11— o . rHeson = directed to the opening which exists | zble place could be found in New Eng. |Tied 17 army corps and three divisions |PArt and then demand that the rail- ative ens o THE LITERACY TEST. in Russia, It, is apparent that the|land for manufacturing purposcs. It fof cavairy northwards, ; of necessitles for the benefit of this|H Jh. 28c & v much sought for chance to increase |is level, easily accessible, has railroad| A review of e military operations | (o0 ntence 1856 Virtns DAt Hiers e s sccscces . s Strange as it may seem the literacy | our foreign trade already existe. Rus. |and tidewater, which could be easily | beginning with the mobilization shows [ 5¢CHON. o “cons! iy |l Cood Fowl kx| test as a feature of the revision of the | sia is. secking. mew mavkers and 1t s | Improved, on the east side, so that| hat the Tailroads of France have ac- |3%e [Whes, WHCR It Eentne e A o . ' immigration laws appears to have se- | time for enterprising New England to | PArges could pass up, and which the|complished everything that was ex- Fricassee, 1b. 22c cured a strong hold upon the members | make. the most of 1ts ouportusiy ee | F2llroad spur lately proposed should |Pected of them, contrary to the experi- B e e of its op) ; not be allowed to interfere with. ence of 3 % ; The wisdom of the kind of thritt|§ Fine Shoulder s 2 pecially when it is claimed that all| New houses are being built to ac-| The first consideration in developing | that anticipates the rainy day and from the fact that there is a wide- that is needed is to send agents out|commodate the expected increase of | the efficiency of the military railroad is Roast Beef spread belief that there ought to be a|to book the orders, and Russia looks | populotion, and it seems care should | the maximum number of trains that check to immigration and that the un- | with favor upon American goods. This|be used in selecting sites for these g‘"e:el_ru" one after ar:'lflhexrl within a bb. ..... 16¢c-18¢c esirable ele: 3 | B i nouses. Many could be built on sites|8iven time. Consequently all miltary ; a ble element which comes to these | should not mean a delay until the war | Bouses. Many < e 8| trains are obliged to run at the same|] War A Year Ago Today A 2 y tend to develop their sur 2 shores from Europe ought to be kept |iS over but should be followed by im- v 3 d out. Concerning this Jatter class thero | mediaté action for It is apparently in | Toundings. Congested places should be (o0 ueeq peqth JOngwing G2 AT, 5 March 29, 1915, can be no doubt that every effort |Russia as elsewhere, that the early | jcular residential section, this should | System: without risk of accident, the French pressed Germans hard in sm'l' | ought to be made in that direction |bird gets the worm. . be Tespected, or we may lose some of |continuous movement accomplishes (| Champagne. but it is difficult to understand = == our influential citizens. more than would be done by high speed Germans again shelled Reims. I % B e s EDITORIAL NOTES. Much “Tias' Deen said about trolley | Which would necessarily involve in- (| = Austrians made gains at several POTATOES H { H i o i THoAes el i : lines—A line to Maplewood cemetery |Ccreased spaces between trains. g g 2 h‘:,’.:,l,' ‘l;:nm;’{":fc.:es"“"(‘,“ o Sieat- | According to public opinion there are | ang Mohegan park. I do not think| In preparation for this intensive h steamer Amstel blown up L il s £00d, for those | matters which ought not to be left for | either one a Sreat benefit to our city. | movement necessitated by the mobili- || by mine. 6 Ibs. 25¢ |- . who the country can get along better |a clean-up week. 4 few people would use them . for|Zation, the officers of the railway ser-|| ~Attack on Bosporus and Darda- . without to a large degree are those pleasure, but would the city be greatly | Vice of the French army met every || nelles continue who can meet all such requirements. Every time the peace talk is revived, | benefited? year under the direction of the general German Baltic fleet out e The literacy test is un-American |it only serves to stir up the question| Now a belt line through Asvlum |Staff to study the problems involved, | and it does not afford a proper test as |as to who started the war. ttreet, connecting West Main street|cach officer belng placed on the spot GRAPE FRUIT, 7 for 25¢ g to the desirability of those who would with the Fulls, would certainly be a|where in time of war he would be call- - ¥ iadtie citizens of the United States. Now: i Creeca GRaiot Dorroy great benefit. Not only is it badly {®d upon to exercise his functions. The e i 5 X needed by the people of all that west [iast drill of this kind was in April | Many of the immigrants in the past | money, King Constantine will have the | Seotion, but it would be used by many | 1914, when the manoeuvres undertaken who are now numbered among our |full sympathy of Carranza. as a pleasure ride around the city,|SuPPosed the grouping of two armies | PARSNIPS, bb....:... 4c ‘worthy citizens and whose children are | = making almost a perfect circle from |face to face. Orders for the operations { % a credit to the country in which they Aided by the sun the street clean up | Franklin square. Many' cities have a |had been established, taking into ac- 0NGEH lel | CARROTS. Ib. I EEEER) 41: " have been brought up would have been | 128 been started, but it is a job which | belt line and it is considered a great |count the vicissitudes of battle and all " excludea had such a provision been in. | ©U8Nt 1Ot to e left half done. adyertisement to them. the needs of the army, so far as pos- 3 | i Not only th dvantages, b sible bringing their men face to face i3 cluded in the immigration laws of the| Ien't it about time that someone was y these advantages, but it | ; . i I would Jead to the buildine ap of that | With problems, incidents and accidents | Operationnot Necessaryafter * /past. Because European residents have | attributing the big fires about the|section, as there are many desirable|and consequent necessity for immedi- ¥ been deprived of privileges in their e e et I O one Amars strest Toon ssih | ate decisions such as théy would nave| Taking the GreatMedicine own countries ought not to stand in iurther in the line of progress would | to make in time of war. That was how the way of improving their opportu-| The reported loss of 30 pounds by |be a bridge from the upper end of |the men charged with the transporta- for Women. nities and rendering such assistance |Col. Bryan may mean that he is in|Central Wharf to the east and west |tion of troops prepared themselves f a . av 3 he mobilization and the intensive s F “ s they can to this nation. Three |training for the coming democratic |Panks. Then we would have the.ideal |! Miller’s Falls, Mass. —“‘Doctors said £ situation for shops and homes near by, [Movement of military trains that has i & vironment. e plan under which the army was = buch a test would do and have ap-| Still in connection with the sinking - | mobilizea in 1914 the 17 ! ‘ {111 l an operation. I had plied their veto, and there is no rea- | Of merchant vessels, it is quite Import- e othes e T mepaned Wi e Mgttt W "“I | =1 ness could be planned as ways and |had been elaborated since the war of | soreness in both | for 2! son to believe that President Wilson |2nt that the proof should measure up f§aeans are ,o.,,,f," not all at m.yce, but | 1870. From the annual census of the sides and a pulling | !si...n———.g—-’_s.f has experienced & change of ' mind Y Saicient and_encrgetc offcials in | resources of the country i men, horses e Bl || seneation in m Norway Selt MACKEREL _ | Evaporated APPLES B ELat Taticr since ho last put it ur city government, practicing econ- |4nd material, the gencral sWff had . right side. 1 could | 1 D e e e g bt 1] The man on the corner says: Even |omy, much could be done at this time. |A8ured out the number of elementary y 2ot do much work | BN c.cc.asisesiaess 20 be Qlscriminated against In any effors | If it 18 leap year no fellow can marry We have many concerns already here | PRits it could create and the theoretic the pain wasso bed. | N—___m__ lorwegian to bar out the unfit, all the girls who tell him they expect truggling along, and I do not think |Organization that they might give W’.P‘ v In Olive Oil, 13c 2for26c |3 lbs. .....00vvs0y, 28c to the claims. i just to them or to the taxpayers|them. Every corps charged with mo- to die old maids, £ for mew concerns to form the habif ot | Mlization possessed its table giving KA asking for rebates or monetary consid- | details of all the elements that it was YUAN SHI-KAL. _The persistency with which the il- | eration, called upon to furnish, where to find its literacy test is backed by congress in- | The Hopkins & Allen Co. did not ask |men, from where would come the for a penny, and I do not think that|horses and material necessary for the ent in China, Yuan Shi-Kai|will flop on that question also. any strictly good business concern | constitution of new units; every man may not be.willing to admit that the would need to be favored this way, as|had his mobilization sheet indicating lic is the better or that he fa-| The Pennsylvania young man who |they must after all rely upon their own | the corps that he must join; the staff vors it, but it is quite evident that he |has tried unsuccessfully to commit |&oon business management; and if we g‘ that corps had his name and ad- m m mm NR m m 5 that the demand for it is so |suicide four times ought to get mad |90 Our part, and clean up our|dress on its rolls and expected him on fi’mn he can maintain it with less |and insist upon becoming a ocentena- [CLtY and its untidy vlaces, improve S bt S ot e b Steak Polloels, b, ..., 15¢ peral e of every commu a Fine Mackerel, 3 lbs.. . 25¢ 1o it tn bis diter= | rins: our sti , we will make The Rose of Ty ne of Franee under m ‘ e New England a city where manufac-| his system knew exactly where to migation to a change. B, ! By the Yenunciation of his effort.to reestablish the monarchial form of |dicates that it believes the president - tirars wil cormiger 1t & privilego g0 | take the horses of his commune in or- . Large Herring, bb.... 7¢c "It was not without much delibera- | From the time which General Persh- | come and do business. der that they could be requisitioned. | - b 185¢ Mon and a full understanding of the |Ing spends in sending reports, it looks OBPORTUNITY. |Every president of requisitioning com- LA Steak Cod T heeds of Clina that the Chinese re-|2s if he had not gotten to the point missions knew the horses that he must . w~$ibfic was founded. It meant a tre. |Where he needed additional advice Norme Nam e choose and the point to which he must | Lydia B Pinkham's Vegetable Com- take them. This plan not only involved | Pound is famous for restoring women to endous cms-'l lln(:\ umprhe-ented no | from Washington. e The :lwfl of '76. ing 1o | BS ERItInE of these elements and their Iam‘ldme health and strength. When this all problem, of which was per- 7, tor: Not seeing anything in|proper distribution, but every horse wives no longer despair: ving aps more fully realized after the de- | If the old saying that the grass|iegard to the big flood of 40 Years ago, |and every man found what was neces- | children. ol e tlon had been made and the difficul. | Which grows in March will be killed | I thought I would drop you a line. It |sary for him at the spot where he was s I connection with it were experi. | !B May is infallable, there is some sat- | was on Sunday, March 26th, 1876. On|lo be taken. The troops of such a A woman should be reluctant m FROI m ovm DMLY-IM " m m isfaction in the kind of weather we |that day boats were used to cross|corps, with their horses and all ac- to submit to a. ul% have been having. Franklin square. I know, as at that | coutrements, once equipped and ready, | untilshe has given Milk Made Biscuit W that situstion may ] 3 Rt e D time I was living in Norwich and saw |found the train ready for them at the | ham’s Vi pound a h l 1 ced the effort to yeturn to tho| The few warm days this week have | Dem. Hoping to see a line or 5o in|point of their ~concentration, corre-| fairtrial. If you have a case that b ” tirtassiiies 108 chy, ‘without any regard to0|been sufficient to Bring out the ad-|™> Bulletih from you, I am, as ever, | sponding exactly in capacity to the M .d‘u; . Yours, tumber of horses, baggage wag- | vance guard of the fly army, and like- JAMES C. JENNINGS. |ons, nm‘;leg?mnx:hfimcufinn S0 . _‘m.,mm.‘umumnuuma West Willington, Conn., March 27,|forth, of the corps to be transported 5 overesti- | to swat what oannot'ba prevented. . 11016 _~ .. .. - ! secretly. over France and dafs: Jad Y0

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