Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 21, 1916, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

for office in Maine have withdrawn from primary contests,” because there is need of getting together and Mr. Hughes as the standard bearer meets the requirements for the first office in the land in a manner which cannot be disregarded. Even though Mr. Roosevelt may not be willing to come out and actively fight for the man he tried to defeat he cam- mevertheless have much influence in heading off T sa you can't if the place does many rooms?” SSix. Youil fad the everything on the “I" read the sign when 1 the steps,” said the woman, * more satisfactory to ask. Jimmy, stop bitin, sharp_little teeth. He's such a good boy, Jimmy is'! He always does as his mamma tells him. Do. you own the place, ma’am?” . A “No. Mr. Baer, the agent lives the big building on the cormer. He will show You the apartment.” “ ‘Apartment’ sounds much more tony than flar.” The woman snatched her hand away from the carnivorous Jimmy with an admonitory: “Be good, Jimmy, or I'll give you to the lady.’ She appealed to Mre. Hurd with a mamma’s hand with your “I'm sorry,” breathed Mrs. Hurd, “Oh that's all right,” said the wo- man. “Tm not really intending to move, but 1 like to see different flats and what they rent for. (f I happen to be around another day maybe Tll let Jimmy stay with you again!” “Yes,” Mrs. Hurd assented fesbly. She added quickly, with a hopeful lit- tle smile: “That is, if we don’t move ourselves.”—Exchange. l Stories of the War l Place of Greatest Fishing Fleets in World. ; 2 . (Special to The Bulletin.) soen passed away. Washington, D. C., June 21— The | now than Idid before, scene of the greatest naval battle in|the Compound every modern history is the eubject of a , s it did for . ‘war bulletin issued today | o do. Youhave my permission to by the National Geograpbic Society | lish this letter.’* J.May, s "fi:‘?—n its Washington headquarters, | Lincoln St., Chicago, IIl which says: “"When the high sea. fleet of the Ger- man Pmpire and the prize fighting ships of the nation which boasts the greatest naval strength in the world met in an epochal battié off the coast of Jutland on the last- night of May a pection of North Sea waters was made famous for all time. The scene of this great struggle of steel levia- than is deseribed In early despatches THE ELECTION BET . BUNGLES’ RAINY DAY . THE OPEN TRACK . THE COLD FEET GETAWAY . If you need specialadvice,write those who Insist upon a thira ticket and by his position and advice aid in getting the party together so as to as lying 120 miles off the west coast of | t0 Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Hantsholm, also called Cape Hertberg. | Co. (confidential),” Lynn, Mass. This point of land marks the begin- e iy the besin- | Your letter will be opened, read gmile, ‘e gots kinda fumed when Russian Girl Soldiers. ke's in_ company, Ry HoeK. s ‘The other day the Czar of all the was going to tell you, my sister 1ives | Russia: : e O the waok mide S ane OB DAt L D L M tn YALE-HARVARDBOAT RACE and answered by a woman, and s AT NEW LONDON bring republican success in Novem- | fat an apartment! Her place Is steam | hecormted with the. Croms Tot ot | oo n e asorack: which separaics | held in strict confidences ber instead of persisting in a futilo|heated. 1 suppose this is steam|George" the' soldier Glouschenko be-|mataiand portion of Denmarc. Atl———-—onH0 — (I FRIDAY . .JUNE 23d effort and thereby aid In promotms | heated? cause he had performed the danger-|this point the breadth of Skragerrack b4 The Pedse of the Gemperatic party and| - Yes” 3 ous and important military service|is 80 miles, and its length, fo the| THE HIKER OFF IN THE STEAMER : - g trying to give the coantry four more| <Are the tocms all light! Tne| Of_Pemetrating the cnemy's. barbed- |northeast is 150 miles. = Togetehr COMFORT OF JERSEY 3 vears of an administration which has| Mrs. Hurd inclined her head. 'he|wire entangloments and ~approach- | with the Kattegat and Sound it forms BLocK |SLAN Soevaliad {00’ Mba IEEkRY. T e O T 8 eno| InE almost to the trenches of ~the|the comnecting chanmel between the ir.. “Waa ermans, had returned to the Rus-|North and Baitic Seas. 4 FARE 50 CENTS move i .| sian linés with valuable military se-| “If the great clash occurred 120 miles NATIONAL PARKS. Mrs. Hurd hesitated. “Really—"|crets, with a wounded ®and 2nd|west of Hantsholm, the British.and Ger- There 1s no reason why this nation | S SoncSi: shattered bones. “On, 1 see! Bxcuse me for asking. 1 thought you'd be more_ honest with me—the agents never Will tell you. Of course, 1 wouldn't care to look at —a apartment that wasn't, You under- stand. How much is the rent?” Again Mrs. Hurd hesitated. ‘T be- lieve Mr. Baer—" “Oh, yes! _You'd rather I asked him. Eome' people judt cam't help being close mouthed. But, of course, I'm not offended. I tell my my husband a real lady can’t be offended. Jimmy, you take this bag of candy and stay With the pretty lady while mamma finds the agent. He's just the nicest, company, Ma'am! I wouldn't leave him with everybody. But 1 can see yow're used to children? Maybe you'd better unbutton his coat” The mother of Jimmy waddled away smiling beneficiently, _as one who had done a kindmess. When her small son voiced an indignant pro- test at her departure she paused long cnough to say: “If you amuse him, ma’am, he'll soon forget. I don't like to have him cry—it spolls his sweet little voic Mrs, Hurd found it impossible to persuade Jimmy to leave the vestibule and remained with him awaiting his parent’s return. But when minutes had lengthened into what seemed hours, enlivened by Jimmy's vigorous kicks on the doors and intermittent ells, that lusty youth was finally coaxed indoors by the promise of a cooky. Her small charge settled with a plate of these delights, Mrs. Hurd ventured to turn her attention to the man warships,now lie in many fath- oms of water/ a little more than two hundred miles from Peterhead, ihe nearest point on the Scotch coast, and about four hundred miles northeast- of Yarmouth. It is in this latitude that the North Sea floor begins to_ drop rapidly. The depth on the Dogger Bank, 150 miles to the south, is not more than 10 fathoms, but as the coast of Norway is approached ihe soundings show a remarkable increase until the gulley of the Norwegian Channel is reached, where the depth ‘exceeds 400 fathoms. “The scene of this great sea fight will recall to British minds the Battle of Copenhagen, which occurred 200 miles, in an airline, southeast of Hantsholm. It was in - that conflict that the sestsd Ju “ommertty Nelwon. then a vice-admiral, won added fame by disobeying the orders of his super- ior, Sir Hyde Parker. When the lat- ter signaled to the hero of Battle of the Nile to withdraw, Nelson placed his telescope to his blind eve and re- marked to the officers grouped about him, T cannot see “Before the war iliese bettlewaters were the congregating place of the 1 . greatest fishing fleets in the world. - In 1913 the catch in these waters reached the amazing total of a mil- lion and-a quarter tons of fish, & quantity &o vast that its significance can only be grasped by a mental pic- ture of thirty-foot trucks lined up in procession from New York to Sen Francisco, via New Orleans, each truck being loaded with two tons of seafood. ¥ “With the payment of this vast an- nual toll, however, there seemed to be no diminution in the North Sea's fish supply. England's share of this food before the war was 500,000 tons a should not make its public health and scenic domain as available to all its citizens as Switzerland and Italy make theirs {s the opinion of Secretary Lane of the department of the Interior, and it is being backed up by the issuance by the department of a portfolio of the national parks which is designed to bring the wonders of the beauty spots to the attention of the thoughtful Americans and there can be little question but what it will impress everyone who is fortunate cmough to see it Those who have seen the natural scenic attractions of Yellowstone park, even though they have not had & chance to visit the othérs, or those who have seen the wonderful Grand Canyon, which though it is not now anational park it is expected it will be some day, can be relied upon to be enthusiastic over any plan for the bringing of the people closer to these and the other wonderful government possessions by improved roads and trails, but the portfolio of striking views on the 7290 square miles of the nation’s reservations presents as noth- ing. else but a visit can the priceless pleasure gardens within our own bor- ders. That they should be made more available to every' degree of income, and that they should be thereby given the added publicity which would in- terest tho good sized army of sight- seers who g0 abroad in normal times to see America first is the ambitious effort which is back of the campaign in behalf of national parks. Steamer will leave Norwich at 3,00 P. M. returning after the race. Number of tickets limited. Wil be on sale at the Company’s wharf com- mencing Wednesday, June 21. THE NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP COMPANY Wedding Gifis IN SILVER ‘ THE WM. FRISWELL C0. 2527 Franklin Street On investigation it was discovered that the soldler Glouschenko was none other than the girl Tchernia- vika, who had cut her long tresses and 'had assumed military uniform trat she might actively servel her country on the firing line. ‘With the news about ihe feminine soldler Tcherniavika comes _stories gbout the women who have been serving Russia in the trenches. The most etraordinary is that re- garding the 12 brave girl friends,” a band of young women still in their teens, who went Gut together to fight for their Russia. One of the 12 friends, Zoe Smir- powa, had returned to headquarters in Petrograd, straight from ome of e most dangerous outpgst positions in the Russian army, where she had passed 14 months in military uni- form fighting among the soldiers. She is oniy 16 years old. Her hair she had .clipped like that of a boy. The only way her she was revealed was by her clear and sharp voice. When she returned to Petrograd she was wearing the Cross of St. George, which she had won for distinguished military service. A. C. FREEMAN, M. D. Physician and Surgeon 68 BROADWAY Office Hours, 11 to 12 a. m.; 2t 4; 7 %0 8 p. m. Also by Appointment. Tel, 1426-2 184th DIVIDEND Office of The Norwich Savings Society * Norwich, Conn., June 10, 1916 The Directora of this Society have declared out of the earnings of the current six months a semi-annual div-' idend at the rate of FOUR PER, CENT. per annum, pavable to deposi- tors entitled thereto on and after July 15, 1916,/ © - 3=t COSTELLO LIPPITT, Treasurer 1647 ADAMS TAVERN TO UNDERSTAND | ARE NOT FOOLING. n it under the present bas been declaring for le time that it was dnsist upon the proper re. pr its rights along the Mexican X that it was going to be o by force if it could be in no other way. an expedition in pursuit «chieftain which has suc- up his band and in to cover, but from such there are upon which to judge been eliminated. The pro- the border since the raid us has been greater but been such as to prevent the # from crossing the border, ter- f United States settlement: § ranches ana killing citizens That it has failed in New Styles SPRING MILLINERY MRS. G. P. STANTON 52 Franklin Streef OTHER VIEW POINTS | e Is it an over-supply of egotism that leads people to write these crazy scrawls, or is it lack of commoan sense, or both? A freak, signature is no pro- tection to one’s bank account. On the contrary, the more freaky it is, the easier it is to forge, and the harder to detect the forgery. MONEY LOANED on_Diamonds, Watches, Jaweiry THE WAR PRIMER d Securities of any kind at tae 1861 A perfectly plain, Lowest Hates of interest, An Sid Few have || By National Geographic Soctety int. year, or 22 pounds_for every inhabl- s 48 one of the reasons why | any idea of how precious a possession racet oF"all Tto focee Buscenstully. | tant of the British Tsles. CThE COLLATENAL LOAN 00, SR 2 The ARSIy stanfah ons have been continued.| the nation has in its big parks ana it Also it indicates intelligence, cour-| <Of the North Sea catch three- Put an end to maurauding [ is not to be doubted but what there from which the Mexicans brands of Beer of Europe and America: tesy to others and mental strength.— er, Culmbach Bavarian fifths of the total is herring, the fish New London Telegraph. whose “spawning and feeding grounds have determined the location of cities, and in several instances appear - to have involved the actual destiny of nations and the fate of their mon- archs.” 243 mais Surecr, (Zstab < Lished’ are as many equally beautiful por- tions of the parks which remain hid- den through lack of a way to reach them as there are those which can_be reached by road or trall today. Thus it 18 time that nature’s gardans should be given the attention and develop- ment that they deserve and the nation l:’l.' Toul, the scene of a recent German air raid, is the subject of today's war geography bulletin of the tNa,llonl.l Geographic Society, issued from its & s Washington headquarters, which says: | {1 *ePublicans won a clean up, tak- “From the beginning of the Chris- » " Toul, i o Roman dags | the democrats who have held it for Hab s Fapl Kaowe the past four vears. The city is mak- as Tullum, has been the victim of 2 s i had been sacked by Goths, |iNE this change in line with most of the idea that this coun- o do any different than doing, has operated to en- Mexican deflance. Car- be striving to retain his by the attitude which he but there has been nothing ntations of this country Norwich held its city election and IRON CASTINGS FURNISHED PROMPTLY BY A. A. ADAM, Norwich Town Oid Corn, Dainty silk and wool jersey grows in Telephone 519 Almost as much interest is being | favor daily. Light, cozy, colorful, it should take pride in doing its utmost | Burgundians, Huns, and Vandals be- | (n¢ Other cities in Connecticut. ~ In|manifested in Kaneas over some|Inakes delightful sport clothes. This THE VAUGHN FOUNDRY co 1d lead him to belleve that | to ehow oft its scenic attractions to|fore It was faken Ly the ranks in the {he past two years tho republicans|Aiee “omn 1,000 years old s would | Suit comes in a Wood brown and takes t we sal advantage. e gained control of New Haven, middle of the fifth century. In-the meantime its people had been convert- | hortrord, New Tondon, be stirred up in Kentucky upon the|a patent leather belt and white jersey out of the militta, and B Midaletown, | receipt of some corn_ Juica of simiiar |detachable collar. Velvet maple loaves No. 11 to 25 Ferry Street s pe - kville, Norwich and Naugatuck, ity.—Ark: Gazett appliqued on the turban are smart S which i ‘mad ed to christianity by the Irish monk, | ~OC antiquity.—Arkansas Gazette. -y the' _:'::tnm; EDITORIAL NOTES. B anhty i the Sourth contury. and |have retained sweeping control in as possible. There is an occasional bit of evi- dence that this is actually the month of June. but it Is\nevertheless Carranza to understand control is a failure he toes the mark and does can_expect to receive the Tt will amount to lit- unless some use is made of strength on the part 1t needs to be shown than a hollow bluf, country is ., serio question of proper con- border. L VON MOLTKE General von Moltke the credit for giving that advice which led war, and though he Bridgeport and New Britain and have lost Putnam, with Meriden in part. The democrats hiave held Waterbury Dby g Duloury, — Bxideevart ost. it played an important part in the an- nals of the church until its bishopri after nearly fourteen centuries, was suppressed during the early days of the Napoleonic era. “The history of Toul recalls one of the most:sanguinary fratricidal strifes of the early years of the seventh cen- tury, centering around the stron willed Brunhilda, daughter of a Visi goth ruler who married Sigebert, a Frankish king reigning at Metz. The fame of this wedding, sung by Fort- unatus, an Italian poet, kindled the jealousy of Chilperic, Sigebert's brother, who shortly thereafter married Word to the Wise. The value and virtue of silence in a preconvention campaign — have been abundantly demonstrated in the case of Justice Hughes—Springfield Union. Test of Learnedness. Our own notion of a learned histo- rian _is a man who can name you all the Mexican presidents since Diaz— Columbia (S. C.) State. WHEN YOU WANT to put Your bus. iness before the public, thers is mo edium better than thron the ad= THSInE volumns of The Hulletim. YOU WANT i3 put Dus. efure the nhu&-uur'?‘l- ne tter tham the Soidmns or Fhe Bumetin. PETELER AUTO JACK The PETELER AUTO JACK embodies strength, sim- plicity and power, and is the only jack with an automatic drop bar. It is designed to eliminate the faults of other Jacks and give the motorist & feeling of confidence that it will not only do the work asked of it, but do this work in the easiest way, day in and day out—indefinitely. For sale at all garages. \ THE C. S. MERSICK & CO., =Y i1ness medium vertisiny Ought to Encourage Carranza. Not so much of a surprise that President Yvan Shi Kai died as that he died a natural death.—Wall Street Journal. The man on the corner says: It is a long time since we have heard of a rain storm being valued at a million doliars, When the schools close people will £0 to the shore places as a matter of course und habit, but one dash of really cold water is usually enough for the batber. The average wearer of a bathing euit takes his or her plunge in the salt water for pleasure, not for medicine. The air will be warmer in time, but more sunshine than we have had yvet will be needed Prunhilda’s sister. The new bride be- | to have any effect in rzising the tem- ing murdered at the behest of Chil- | Derature of the water. It looks now peric’s faverite, & war between the|2s if salt water bathing would not be two brothers occurred. After Sige-|among the advertised attractions of bert’s assasination, Brunhilda escap- | New Haven this summer. 1In addi- ed from > e —— The fellow who controls the reser- Voirs of nature ¥s certainly coming to the front capitally in lkeeping the streets well sprinkled. An enamel to glaze pottery with- out the use of heat is a German in- vention. There has been very little thus far to encourage the owner of a cottage by the sea, to say nothing of the pro- prietor of a summer resort. Isn't it about time for Colonel Bryan the clutches of Chilperic[tion to warning her daughter not to DISTRIBUTORS later removed from|to offer to go down into Mexico and |through the machinations of a new |80 near the water mother will need to 274-292 State Street,. New Haven, Conn. in charge of the Ger- | Straighten out the situation along the | husband, the son of her conqueror. |furifier advise her not hang ther. 3 "Because of his faflure to| lines of his peace at any price policy? | Following her own son's death, Brun- | clothes in a hickory limb; she will| irls as anticipated, there can hilda spurred her two grandsons to war with each other, Theuderich II de-|New Haven Register. i feating Theudebert at Tolblac and ———t i= Toul, and putting him to death, in 612.| Just as it the preparedness move- | This_unnatural grandmother 'met a {ment which has produced the very in- | horrible fate a few months later, When | structive and beneficial military train- she fell into the hands of the son of ing camp for civilians were about tc Fredegond, the woman who had inspired | upset the opportunities for any ci- Chilperic ' to assassinate his wife, | villan's advancement.in the army ir Brunhilda’s sister. This royal strifo|time of war, there appears to be a breeder was condefiined to be drasged | desire to extend the field of peace- 4t the heels of a wild horse until death | fime training and comsequently a new released her from the torture. need them more than will the llmb.—l tlon but what the kaiser #Fe in his expression of deep the sudden paséing of this litary leader whose career r have meant so much - empire. the nephew of Hel- | Bern von Moltke to 1 of planning and car- e operations which result- of the Franco-Prus- ‘Though those Who claim to know in- sist that the war cannot last much longer, tHere is no'chance that Bu- rope will be thrown open to the sight- seers this summer. NOT MUCH FUN T0 IT DO YOU enjoy carrying a pail of coal? Now that New York's restaurants have been investigated and one out of 800 found all right, it begins to look as if the inspectors didn't drop around any oftener than they had to. Pronounced Klee-ko %4 GINGER ALE *3ide Toul o Getmen tiven dur-[la. e, coreappnatnts oot sat " 5 yonemy‘ct . i : i n “Toul was a free wn dur- correspondence school of/ sol- Can enjoyment out of cooking a meal as g1 Tothelatterto al e southerly wing of the past ing the middle ages until 1552 when | dlering. It has actually incorporated Maybe you don’t know good ginger i ey i £ & N due the military system ey e oo e Dast few | Henry 11 of France selsed it togeth- | witli $200,000 capital, with Newark,| A . in a roasting hot ? 3 f 8nd his fdeas were close- | 4278 has brough expressions | er with Metz and Verdun, the three|N. J, as headquarters and a former ele at all. There is such a thing as N B and 1 enough to show that there is a whole | towns comprising the terriiory known | West’ Bointer a8 teacher of wouwld-be inger ale that is made of ginger, and In the ing heat of the Summer is there any . T army just eager to complain over the |as Trois-Eveches. This victory of the | soldiers. Three and a half years are 2 = - 2 M i livin, g in coal dust,‘coal smoke, | disagreeableness of & hot wave, Trench was ono of the fasors fn do- | o be suficient o' complete 2 course, the best ginger at that. Clicquot Club, s b ! — ermining es V. abditate, | by correspondence, and then the stu- instead of being a small local ginger ale, .and rub, rub and scour from morning till night 32 ‘When General Pershing tells Car.|leaving his imperial throne to his|dents wil be ready for a commission e of ~ . . 2 ? . ranza “I take, orders only from my |brother Ferdinand and his Spanish-|as a second leutenant in the U. S. is the National Ginger Ale of America Does anyone really love hard work as well as that? / government” fo oUght 'to unds Netherlands passessions to his son|A. according to the published plans. —sold in state—because it is a % a5t nderstand | phiiip. During this century Toul was | That ought to inspire the pacifists to| Aovs 20 Rvery Don’t we all like to take life easy and make it as mmv more than a threat fo|iwice scourged by the plague which |start a correspondence school just to real ginger ale. It has the character, : trigh ncle. Sam's representatives. | swept over Burope. prevent the praduction of to great a the flavor, th and life, the ‘comfortable as possible? . ¥ “In’ the Franco-Prusslan war of [corp of ‘“militarists” — Waterbury e flavor, 'the sparkle - % that—banish the Now that the emperor of Japan|1870 Toul played an honorable part, | Republican. z purity and all-round excellence that it There is only one way to do coal and the czar of Russia. are exchanging | for here Major Huck, commanding o had to have before it could gain the stove and all the and hard work with it. compliments, the world will be hap-| %000 intrepid troops, = withstood &| -The president in Ms address at the| i 2 P e Bl SR e g M L SR T and & of the thou- Then bring in the RANGE and with it some com- George get back to such formalities. | {&~only after 13,000 men, employing sands of families that buy it and drink and g i “ : TR i o e S slayine buy fort econamy, for not only is gas more convenient The struggle is usually bad enongh|}Z davs. Four years atter this war War A Year Ago Toda it and like it. costs , anyway, but with the war, politics | Liancs, PeEan to bulla new forts to|| The War A Year Ago ) oonstrocted in 3100, At he outbreak e present struggle the of forts unding this town made It the most formidable French fortress on the Meuseoe-Moselle frontier. In times of peaco 0:000 mmmuuwgrklrdl' It is situated between Ih.’:wsml(arnt- Rhine canal and the Moselle, the lat- east of the town, west of Nancy, in an airline, Verdun les 45 miles %o th northwest” - A June 21,-1915. Téutons captured Rawa Ruska invested 5 three milllon men, but it is further | 215 Py e azinouncement that e “wmuftnuu

Other pages from this issue: