Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 9, 1916, Page 4

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Sohvaly e s i BT 3 : L . ™ Atlarita which show that Wilite he may e - ———— — S £ not be a second Osborna/he js in fa- - e e % vor of certaln Systems of prison wel- FIRF fare which are along the same line RE | ey trying o S doon Ay S > v aries of the new nztion carved m ullefi even i’ they do not assume the same -« ¢ 35 PER territory coveted hy Montenegro, Ser- or| 18 | proportions. 16 can therstire be ex- SR bia and Grecce. - . AVRRG o gucinn SALe Mumnoh 1oy Ahe, grover ce 1 have becn able ‘to identify | (Written Specially for The Bulletin.) {Hanhnah, davehter of Liisha and Han- | "AVIona is a reguiar port of call for ,\fi.“‘ nd: Qoufie o € oot | How Yok thiety varieties of binds in my U | Reference has been made to Thomas |nah Lefilogwell Cark: they had three | FEURC™ s oF peace. T e g v ison le_garden just by looking up occa-| 3 sons and four daughters. - 3 H 120 YEARS OLD maintained in the south by tho 50v- |sionally instcad of 100KINE Uown Al Not ik gnd"closemanr, aarng - the | LS dedth, in 1007, the widow and | Fance to the gulf which Lssten miles WARS OLD =~ [ernment. of the ume, I am wondermig how|yeurs after 1713, in eariy Norwich, _.|daughters, Maiy aud Fanny, iterited | ne®Cape of Linguetta on the south- rowsl 3, Bug further than that he hiae estab, | many birds might have been scen and|” 1, 1788, the citizens of Norwich, dis- | (e Property, whics finally passed into| S “2P0 8f LOSNCCS o8 08 SOUEIT lished a r tion for the utilizing of | named had the wateh bave been con-|iurned by the many fires which were | the. possessior of the only remaining | oo S00 Hg o8 cape . separates the. at the Postoffice at Norwich, | the “servi f prisoners in, a Waghner [ Stant for eight months insteall of cas-J constantly occurring, resoived to have |Son. Henry Harland. who married, In | ouie waters from the Straits of Otran- s second-class matter. Whiich is most bemefidlal 6"l Jcon- | Ual for six.” It s quite probabie the| ’Hre®di sl 07 LTINS, MRl B2 (CNCL 1625, Abigaii, daughter of Judge John | Telephone Calls: cerned. While at Atlanta won | ¢ount might have reached fifty, Which|oe nig friends, Thomas Harland sent in | Hyde and Sarah Rl[;'-*“ Letfing-well. “While oats, maize, olive oil, sheep L s e — Business Office 480. uch praise for the suseess which at- | .5, ¢1¥ Much more than most bird Men | proposals, which were aceepted, nd| o e Tamily o Menry Farland re-|and skins are exported by Aviona. the a 2 e £ vy tin Editorial Rooms 35-3. ‘tondea Gisbcorns T aai. | Wil readily believe could be accom-|he made, not as has been supposed the tained posscssion of th€ homestead| ioquct for which tae city is chiefly 5 ‘Bulletin 'Job Offigs 35-2.f 11! O /0% o 2ddi- | plished upon a City rear-lot $7X30 feet. | firgt fire-engine of Norwich. but. one | JUCng sacoceding generations, some- | pniller [0 WHICh e S 8 Cuely B fo m ngle Office. 67 Church St.ftion to the prison by the employment | And doubtless some people coid have | \wiien was evidently of superior con-|Whet alterms and ‘nodermzing the | {2{R00 from the gups of acorns gath- - 2 S 0’ Usflfll r as g e 210-2, of the prisonerf: THIS very kind of { worked upon :hat lot all summer and| g iruction to the frs-fighter then used]DOuse, but in the main retaining its| req in the neighboring oak forests. - —— === | work is about to he doné at Sing|not seen haif of them, or known that{.: Norwich®Town. - - = original characteristic: ——— n This article takes its name from the P 2 lorwich, Saturday, Dec. 9, 1916, fSinx. There in need for a - chane|six varicties O birds 'were nesting in S G e b o cts Tanes oW It T et Pt Bl o Are Now comm R — | 3 ° | the neighborhcod. And there iwer has continued, - 2 4 b A - from the pr.sent cell block to a mod: e In her valuable boek, The Old House: mark on Sentry Hill, a location which | 2erS: The output of a nearby bitumen - - . half hgndred varieties of insects and|of 1y Bl e Teuiti ol : > . i onie @IV IR SIARRI Bh, €S peiTElEd of Norwich, Miss. Mary Perkins refers 3 mine, worked by a French company, 7 1« highly probable that he will be ai. |25 many stray plants. to say nothing |y thig interesting. way to o eplsode | S6t5 Its namme from custom and tradl- | is also shiped through this port. 3 g2 H F Tfldfl of the wind-sown weeds which are 00 [in connection with this fire-engine of | UoN: doubtiess the lofty helght from| “.pyring the 11th and 12th centuries e . or rected to do for New York state what he | numerous 10 mention. How a little ! baanaee byitdin, Which the forefathers of .th: toWn| o Ghole Albanian coast in the vicin- :ccomplished for the government. This, | knoWledge and alertness wiil improve|” 1o the pssertion of a Litchficld cor-|Sirveyed the landscare o'er, in their | jpy’ Gr ACiona was & battieground for % t is probable, is one of the reasons |OUr capacity for gathering facts offrespondent of The Norwich. Packet,|look-outs for possible surprises from (g o 0 VORS Byzantine With the _$25.00 Ladies’ Plush Velour Coats, $13.97. p interest. B possible invaders. Certainly, the A 5 why he was, sélected and it certainly ¢ that a “Mr. Samuel Thomas, coack|DOS3! Weoni. the: house - exception of one ear, when it was a $15.00 Ladies’ Coats, wool zibeliene. and mixtures, $7.97. o - " i 4 vie roj e -plot_is one of i ] jjnust be regarded.as-a good one, for | what do | think of Billy Sunday?|ong, Shalse-maker, was entitled to thel Lorge /i rendth and. behuiy. Fortian, Dossialall (e s s 0 dit given to Mr. Marland for this under the dominion of the Ottomun $8.00.-and $10.00 Sample Skirts, $4.97. / If this improvement at Sing Sing can | well, Willlam, judged by the fruits of | pied & i - : 0 be secured quicker by such employ- | his Tabocs he oo 10 be the Sreatest P o Surlounioworkmanshins, 0 - A NUision. remdente of latep yaure; SHN T I S Aans W $30.00 Best Silk Plush Coats, fur trimmed, $19.97. ment of prizoners, because it means a | evangelist since the days of St. Paul; est answer, lhat,muuollng from the|the Harland home was famiiiar as thé ent state three A}""ln ago with ihe $4.00 and $5.00 Children’s Fine Sample Coats, $1.97. large reduction in expense there is|and his works not the style of his €X-| Norwich Packet, we will let aim tell |I¢sidence of the lat> Gen. JAward|brince'of Wied on the throne. . Unsil ildren's Fi svery reason why it should be. pressions are the (hings (o measure | ine story in his own words Harlang, who was born and died un- | eSO 020,20 D8 8 otention o 10 Children's Fine Sample Coats, $4.97. e iy im by. Billy Sunday is alive an R 3+ " der its® ancient roof. It is a well- ies’ i - il ‘The gentlemen of Norwich Land- = 2 the country, Alvona, Jike Durazzo and Ladies’ Angora Sweaters, value $8.00, our price $4.97. MAKE EARLY. BHOPPING A MABIT {sincers and in earnost or he 1 nOt|ing having determined to purchase.aKioWn afory hereabouts, Fis service|scutari, was. practicaliy unknown to A 3 P Bath R : ) Drseslng Bao t There are but thirteen shopPing | nduce over 1400 aduits or 1760 school| fire Engine, expressed a wish that I1(0 his towr and to nis state and|ono'ngien soeaking world . & Brite complete, variety of Kimonas, obes and Dressing Sacques a 8 i Tesult country, as a lawyer, soldicr, legis- ! ial ‘pri 8 fivs loft before Christmas. ' That |of his preaching at the conclusion of | WoUd, Inspect some of the Jatcst made | [T, A8 2, (AVICT: RI0IeR, 81 |ish consula:“agent iiustrating _the e SR | moans that those who would do their |a sermon. Getting these people to hit | i 90 SPRTOYET JHAShines OF Gt} eitizen,” He first saw the iisbt on | YasUe notions Shatvbone peior. o Many styles of Crepe-de-Chine Waists, value $3.00, now $1.97, holiday buying. early may even now fthe trail is not makins them over, OF|provements I migit adopt ther, Hav-|JUné 24th, 1832, a representative of|'gquoddeq’ reopod auwmiodeat 1oy A complete line of Infants’ Wear at special prices. be late but there is still as good rea- aculously changing them intoling -found one that appeared to me|{n® of the founders of the OWN, OVer | elates that a leiter piainly addressed i H son as ever for. conquering procrasti- [ Church members. It is only LINEINE|guperior to any I had seen. I tock the | tW0 hundred and fifty years earlier. | alhanta* was on onme occasion sent o e~ Yor GH Il fiife W0 0P ! natlon and doing it as ®arly as possi- | them to a consciousness that the Ser-|exget plan and dimensions of it, and S America, and was returned from Al- Children’s All Wool Sweaters at 97c. 4 ble, vice of God is the best service man|as | did not see anything I could|_He was the grandson of the original | bany, N. Y.. with the laconic inserip- : P 4 o No one likes to sfiop in the midst of ffié’m"emi?gi“fln&’.‘:iofi:"fluifi‘"fiii’i'n“s‘? y:at;s any l(!lnpro»ements upo;g. ]l :;.d- I]:o:na; Hx;!mdi] nr;d dm‘r;e of ue:]xry tion, ‘Try Europe.™ Angora Scarfs or Caps, 47¢ each. 7 2 efowd, howevergood natured it may [ vice is a religious duty. It is Possi- | rensional eaimiom With very. little In- i e s Special lot of Unbreakable Dolis from 24c up. & be.' Th-1g" OOC Sotiagactary. sither for | Beeto e eEious duty. . IE 13 Dessltentional variation: ated from Yole ia 1553, he studied X law with the late Congressman John the purchasen or for the salesmen,|without becoming aware that valor is| “Mr, Samuel Thomas assisted in|T. Wait, and was admitted to the bar STORIES OF THE WAR The Bulletin has the largest§|’° that is what results by waiting|a religious quulity and energy a reli-|maging said engine, he. id all the|in--1835. - But the t shot fired on tion of any paper in Eastern §|UNtil the Yist moment and trying to|gious force. Billy Sunday says rug-|woodwork and also assisted in some |Sumter, in April, 1361, changed all his ecticut and from three to four § | SPeed up the work when everyone else | iStered members of Crristian congre- | other ‘parts of the machinery. 'The |plans and stirred his patriotism: he THE PASRIK CO. Sell It For Less is doing the same. gations :n Doston are. saying meaner | valyves, the pistons, the large screws | enlisted, April 25th in, Company D, 2 x o Ze ST i B o i A R O SRR R S T ) PR TIE 1 daiveced 1o wver Thg, early shopping movement was | LDNgS against his work than the li-|for the several joirts. I made myself; | Third Connecticut ¥oluntecrs and Chango in Infantry Tactics. of the 4,063 houses ‘n Nor- 3| inaugirated for the benefit of all. It |<uor dealers Why ~ two of my apprentices, with a smith|was mustered into the Unitcd States'| The result of forty-five years' in-|thing that would iave rallied the men |wrapping paper seems to constitute o & r 5 and a founder, were also “employed | service May 11th. as capiain of that|fantry training has been thrown on to|so quickly. In the inovitable break- such a waste. It is made to be thrown e ‘.‘;‘l;‘:%e‘;‘;,:“"l;’ oo abor§| peridits the purchaser to look over| ¢ is an accomplishment to know Sacnalonally, Gll the whoS was: comz | ComTany. The: Third Lartichaa(ed in|tis Brap Heal bir s HREIE Scuy:— (o) 66 % Toraistisn. Mirias: wit. ariachk |away. _Customers, once their parcels delivered to over 900 houses, 3| 8 stocks of goods when they are at|when and how to tase rest in this|jcted.” the firs battle of Dull Run, under| At the beginming of the war the|men get lost, and the sound of many |are delivered, regard it as a nuisance. am apd Danelson to over %[ their best, it gives time for delibera- | world. Rest is not idleness, but re-|" os Mr. Thomas seemed to wish to|McDowell French infantry, like that of all Con- | whistles beinig blown by the oificers|The natural tendency of merchants is 43100, and in all of these places it | tion, it allows the clerks time in which | straint from going to excesses in any | continue in this business, ‘“Thomas tinental nations, marchea shouider to|must be sometimes confusing. Early|to use less paper than formerly. And B aRiderod the local daily. to look out for the wants of all, be|direction. Rest is the protection from|arjand gave him letiers of recom-| The gallant Captain Harland was|shoulder to the attack. Soor, however, | in the war the Germans tried to con- |much can be saved in this way with- = haustion—the recovery of eners . Eastern Connecticut has forty- §| courteous and at the same time aveid | X . = ‘aine towns. one hundred and sixty- §| the strain which goes with the rash|for £90d and cdntinuous work. five postofiice districts, and sixty §| which is created by the shopper who 7 mendation, alsc offering bim the use | musts %, after three months ser. |the Dower of the very numerous ma- |fuse the British soidiers by imitating [out the customers objecting, If the orer [ of o shop and tools: but as he him- | vies f{:‘; R B Ser S | chine guns with which the German | bugle calls, and the buzle 1s not now | wrapping and tying are carefuily done. much 5 0 have businesa|into the servica s' Colomel, ot 3ih. | LF00DS werc provided—outnumbering |used to the extent that it was then.|—Meriden Journal. ] z er rest itselt becomes a pain”. It is o Tab stbtRer e B SiAEEan . o p 2 |at least four time those of other arm- | But the huntsman's horn was a new free dellvery routes. puts off the selection of Christmas|to work with a will and fo rest with Tor ‘ensine; works and mevers . | Sin o T oror i g0 Wl ave | e brougnt aliont . ihe sdpptics’ d|thing = tol the Germmmes: Tt atarted < L LT ST The Bulletin i cold in every Tt hetore the moligay, T C oF thedoy. The law of our beln Droviies|sumed or arrcsated” to himself “any |ershur, Peitersburs, Fort Hugar|MOrc open formations and recalled the | them and brought Aismay to their |, What sbout the women who are un town . F. D.§|night before the holiday. for the renéwal of our enersies rot|meyit as an Inventor or improver of h i < e |lessons of the Soutn African war. |ranks, and they ran like foxés with : ‘ Foutes In Eastern Connecticut. It is therefore in the interests of |for the destruction bf them. el . gad - olher bactes of the ‘War.| ~He ever attractive they may. be? What is Ian | said machines:” and, he adds, “T|was S cinads Which had beea neglected the hounds in hot pursuit. ; . ¢ s and, adds, s promoted Brisadier-General of X 3 CIRCULATION the buver as well as the merchant to | Was created to accomplish something. | never entertained an idea that it could | volunieerd Nov. 59ti 1867 ama tome| After the battle of the Marne, when| “A wounded man of the Coldstreams + 3| make the most of the early shopping | He Wwas not made for »'"\‘0"11'"*"‘» be considerad as a proof of mechani-|manded a brizade from that time an,|the Germins dug themselves into deep | tells about the effect of ihe hunting Loz the psychological effect on them of the sight of beautiful but unattainable garments? Is their artistic nature sufficiently gratified by seeing this ap- ellow e sa12§]19a ana endeavor to male it o’ habit, | PUt for @ purpose. It cal genius t» construct x machine so|The records show that, in Iebruary,|trenches in the hope of establishing a|horn on “imself. He and nis compan- ¥ re- | Who rald: “Tu “will what God doth{gimple, so frequently, and adecuately | i vas c jumping-off place for a future advance |ions had been scattered by a devastat- It is to the advantage of the store- | Tup ks oniy Sience that gives us|Smibie: S 3 ¥ 3 ely {63, his brizade was comvosed of the s F oah pas i men disproportionate to the dvantage |and whether they had gome on further o iy rend | gained. They incrcased the number of | or gome vack when I heard the Col- June | their machine guns, but tiose of the|onel's horn. It male me jumap for Germans -vere piaced in positicns | Joy. and I never thought ot shelterin® especially when the benefits are mu- | In this regula returned home with an hecr tual. It is theref ime for ever oh Yo R S| Si; on to et busy aeh show an eocts va| | often wonder wny bar-tenders | the unechooled. You canrot fish with S T8 tesicmed Bt ronuna he can. It Is onme of the cases whered §h0uld not.have Thunksgiving day to|minnows and catch fish that are hun-)22nd, *65. o L altruism when they see the other . on rest is to be found. — — — women attired in the most opproved style while they are themselves in old- fashioned duds?—Torrington Register. g parel on other women - to make the o : is_the s0 commion, and so open 1 5 th and 1st C ®|on Paris, the French found it impossi- | ing machine gvn fire and wers shelter- . { 2.5, 9208 ] oevex and ihe hasdofia his Dart the fresi» L3t fsenot ddle. Tungs; ‘so; Tuthilio napection as the Tl Eudiner . | in, 15th, T6th and Stk Comnec: H o e Gt Sccctiuily A i conld Work of ist creators worth while? Doce s blic should not only be willing but ) Hahaead ok k 5 E ticut Regiments, forming a part of | Dle ’ s this love of the beautiful offset the de public should fiot ‘only. g bt |as 4 well-baianced mid which malc s s D fan'ry attack in the formations until B sl Nele L B O B e s & = 5 A 3 3 oo 5 e unin and w i e my e cere tnsious lo furnigh the cooperation |for rext. A mundate we must Al 0S¥ | rhomas Harlgng married, in 1778,| " Generst Fmana for- | then in use without losing a number of | and wondering wiere my mates woi A it aasiroy, the RULt BMEit of e ; which enabled them to sweep away|any more. There was ite Colonel themselves as well as_ Clristmas or|£ry for earth worms. There is a fit- ; - any frontal atiack even before it had | waiting *here with all the men run- = A TEUTONIC ADVANTAGE. o Dot Tetn B Jagn Tor othorwids B e e il 1 ey S s el Iate camlr tas matler of)10eli Heen Draperiyidevaioped. ning up to the sound, and he did not| Superintendent Crampton of the | That the Teuton success in Rumania % : oesn't * look ~ well compelling Far- ANy wavE - ot 5 - At the present no infantry officer | wait long. fish and game commission says he in- oo pflaw his election as revresenta-lof the old sehool would recognize an ‘Some of onr men moved right in- |tends to restore shad to the Connecti- tive in 1869 and again in 18 his sex- [iyeontry unit golng T to a trench wiere there wa< a crowd |cut river. He has undertaken a con- vice te his district as state senator tenders to loaf on election dayvs and INCREASING THE VETO POWER. |permitting them to be required to sell A new agitation is being started in [8r08 When their families are cele- 48 going to be of much value to the central powers cannot be questioned. 5 o Tk b inclined erable task. In the first place in (This will even be admitted by the en- |, . BEW (EHACON IS DERE Maried M |frofing a Christian festival. It isn't Sundas Mosi Taik after his election in 1570, and his e N reins be correapondent .:ry:‘!n‘;n:m‘ngu‘:efig'w“""i S e d e Tha bt Tkt 1 :“ *&‘_‘l"t:"“l “};flkh they l’"";w! the presiGent the right' to Veto osMaln gleafiam S R SEns unday orning ial ability when president pro tem of the | s present recent.y at a demonstra- | There was a great the boy- |will be necessary to make over the | o belittle tho significance of the fall | 1° Pres er come home inebriated at any time; { senate, during his term. From '72 to sections of a measure without affect- b Gans Pratée 76 he was juige of probate of the o Bucharest. g and: if tbe state can protect them on i6_he 3 0 .“n. Teutons give evidence of their | P8 the remainder. The purpose in this | Christmas day v shouldn't it on — Norwien Distiict. 1fe was Adjutant \/ intentions to follow up thelr ‘succeas |19 0€ course to prevent the killing of the | Thankegiving ' dav. The bar tenders| uHE GLUNG TO HIS PADDLEx | Gencral of the commonweattn under o the purpose of threatening the | €004 in order to dispose of the bad |are entitled to cel=brate Thankssi g i o tion of the mew infantry k for,|onet and the Huns stuck to it until [hardware fish on the lines of a Ger- on at a school. In<tead of as for- {only about a couple of hundred re-|man submarine and to equip it with merly a battaiion of iufantry being|mained and then they gave in’" an electric light apparatus in order composed of so many hundreds cf men = that it may cleave its way through I In March, 'K hy appoiated a armed merely with nd bavonets the thick flu;‘d !é'mt oozes flXro‘ng ll;: ioF 2y ider enit | day with their tami much 5 = 2 . March, 83, he was appotated a|prai€c SRETECE, ol g deenaent channel of the Connecticut river. -of ] and thereby overcome the rider evil. : On tomb,” s Robert Louis e S T § and entrenc! g tools and dependent onirol In Bulsgorina. This win e b o workingman: and the salouns o Stevenson, 17 ever. wve one i tamaa] TGmDeE of the State loard on artiiery to-clear e way. tor 1t|| OTHER VIEW POINTS || ouid seem to te less aiffcat to re- ‘Row in control In Bulawina. This will| There have been frequent instances | Forkingman: and the salovns o to ‘get th vords iheds ARl ar Daroantinued toilie. ¢ during an advanc o battalion is store the river to a condition of de- | of course be resisted by the combined | [0 cornection with important pieces of | y5re than other places of business, |10 S€t these words .- ribads: oHeloq for years, till s clung to his paddle. The occasion of ti taph was the si short tim» bafor L now a little army perfectly equipned cency that would make fish life pos- Sl Ll - | for cffence wnd defen-e and able at all 5 o sible in its waters. However, almost i‘wmr SiL it "f'n'm\:m el times to ire of itsell without any| Former Premier Asquith holds mo|any ‘mta(;h’llxree;hop can turn out shad. st # ek tanc ept in the case of ar|monopoly on his dislike for the word |—Bristol and later vice president, I on a fortress or strongly forti- | - : R aei e 5 k on a fortress or stronsly - | “aictator.” Aside from the people of it e fisd fleld work. ’ the United States who abhor the dic- Bituation on the Bulgarian front This | them with the result that the presi o clitencd 14 bis nana The | ¥ linee, 10w TamiBine story. tosNor e e e e orehly ore o peobh of - Mestas | A ltmoin 8 shown by the offer of ald ty Greces | dential veto has been.applied to the | Billy Sunday never fails to words are a fair summary of the car.| Vich Tesidents. nid the various smalier nnits vho suffered under the reign of terror |apioarcd briefly vesterfay case f bill because of this..very.. situation. |15 audiences: “Go home and speak|eer of a man who, all his life, strag- corposed that wher acting tcgether|contingent with the rule of the worst | S 3 the grear deligi :S n A e s JERINSL e | Mattors which 1t ia known. would. mef | PIEASARL (0 vour wire!” Site may think | glea againat many more taan the. Gi- eibeoredjname *dH‘ar‘an'd wa3|they form o complete wkole without|Dictator of them all, Huerta —New |Sefer bove e = Cermar & cxchanee and it would not be surprising ] you are insane at first, but she will{dinary il's that human f st urther perpetiatcg by the rare|any confu: g Britain Herald. s just abe: it 2 inc o :’cdmncq had already been sent to [ be able to stand on their own feet|get over it in a little While Do not|fle & that very thing: he clony 5| Zenius of nnocher Henby, the fifted rifle srenadiers, 2 new low level, the practical joking { Mne Bulgarians who are opposing the | ave been tacked onto important ab- | fhink this is cheap adice cast UPON | hiy paddics he miver nEre e young author who dled at San Ren c rifi-s, Bom-| There are thousands of housewives |- Mot al on onc side—New Yor Pperations of the Serbs to the north | ProPriation bills and because of the |the desert air, for it could be said in ita’y, D‘r.\ ot lmo‘ ui-]w srx\;\V a B T e o e Worie, Df Monastir. This is a course which | UnWillingness to veto tHe whole de- |every audience of any size in New native of Norwich—but altheuzh born e R e e : ¥ Wive Deen avticipatea would | Partment's appropriation, or the lack |Bngland ‘and not be wasted; and it|inan hopefulness. No one s HKely 10| i or me ncicinn foved, Jhe oid onstration of the possibility of fecding Solviny a Difficult Problem. S, | The Teatons can now |Of fme o7€n (hraush the: Brcees o e reas com ition might b cainly cepre_{ t2il until he losea grip of hope. Hel (2NN, OfFE ANCTNe L, b, 10l 2 a persh on forty cents a day. They| One way to square up w point to the example of Rumanta as | Feconsideration after a veto, have been | the Teal con lition mixit he “a Ty "ebteT| fails when he res himself to fafl- | was Norwich-torn. Ife lived much in are nof excited because they have been | costs of livieg is to reason for Greece to hold at | 2110Wed to go through. : 2 E & e ure. As long as he clings to nis pad- i he same thing for | millhons ana the cov aggers ave not ottic England and Rome, and it is an oy Bemechptresing o millions ana own the s %0 its meutrality, and it can by | These are of too frequent occurrence | 1€ NASECrs are not all in petticoats,| gio'the most a -umstances | ooy Ko v some years and they cannot see how it | Mr. Rockeferer does. ‘forces of the Russians and Rumanians | |egislation where - unwise features | A citizen stagses _ But it 1s uncertain when or where the | have either been incorporated in the | giving day is Brmies which are now in retreat will | OTiginal bill or added later on. There | which there is no excuse in a civilized Suake their stand. has been a recognition of such while [community; and every citizen who In the meantime the Teutons %re | the two houses were taking action but | doesn’t try to prevent it sharcs the ‘planning to give more attention to the | there has been a failure to eliminate | blame. ng home on Thank: sicicening spectacle for | > whimsicul epi- of the rovel- Ose. ertion, he hud managed more dead’ ¢ I is heir to. There are few more useful virtues anirymen with rifi pose “each unmit, ihe s companions in ‘action ammunition and able to replac ase tney sustain a casualt vy man in .the zcction, even the nei‘her are these confined to any b A x secret that. had he wished. he mizht | simple riffeman, is irained tq : s “experi- | pur same means lend encouragement [and the trouble cguld be correoted if | ticular class. Praver will not - abate | Ji¥e no compelling power over him. |have been Sir Hatry had e chosen | ot the sumcit sy, T3¢0 10 o onelean ve CoRSIONTel wannoNcl Cexpericdoms 1t entry into the war with the cen. | the President had 'the power to veto|these habits, but Christian living will, | L1¢ Prightest pages of history ire thel o yelingnish h's democratic principles ment."—Providence Bulletin. Y s u: Will | records of men and women weishted e EreTand Frannent | f rs. The Teutons have ma. | cOntain sections without affecting the | Too many folis expect God to Ao what | 050 R & L el e, pebanent 4 i ly strengthened their position i | FeMainder of the measure. There is a |they chould do themselves. It is in | 00NN under diccouragements of wea for his wonderfully able writ-| Led Charge With Hunt Horn. | It seems as though private individ- ,_ ss, opposition, limitation of oppor-|; i Tace il ate How Colone! John Vaughar O t ti o ° ‘Balkan: danger in connection with that, how- | better form to thank God for the res- | hco5; OPI s op_o ing won him a place of sizaal diznity | How Colone! John Vaughar Camp-|uals or some amusement corporation TR ot 4a ident T3t | ever, since It 1s possible by such a |olution He has given vou to o things Ve e and set, through sancti-|and jmportance in literary. and nr beii of the Coldstream Gunls won the | would see the value of Steeplechase , er they have been accomplished, Sritain. achi Somme < 2 . L5 increased. There Is a new bat- | defeating any particular clause upon | ;o1 *ag yourself. : pglionelesmmess has rorbed iumanity | mment. 5 11 Press Liureau in London. Here [ard js an advocate of breatninz pinces | § “Land of Sanshine and Flowers line established and it is to the |the Ppresident when shoy S 8- S more s than any record can| His mother and fe- -the ‘latt s the story: for the people, and Steeplechase would 4 vantage-of the central powers. sumed Dby congress. It would mean| Ly you noticed that the nobility | oins nic tar e WICR the Sick man| wae3iss Arlene Merriam, of New| “A Victoria Cross has been award-|make an excellent park. On that lflflflillnenvllblccburfiom o Increased work for the chief execu- | yranine orer muamarcint Eonoroiity | turns his face to the wal) and causes | Vo, “is alvoted (o muste as ed to Colonel John Vaughan Carep-|ground it would be an asset and desir- | § the rigors of winter in the c : n 2| to try or to expect to & > HOW TO GET MORE sHEgp, |!ive and such that he is not likely to|put that “the nterests” boss all £ove | ihe wataners crie up st qanel! phat ' | ber anxious to assume. Thus While |ernments, and oppress all people to|only when the home team, hard firess At the meeting this week of the |the partial veto has its good points |the point of resistance. The milstriall oq : Jetters.and now spending th bell of the Ccldstream Guards for alable, but if the intention is for a mu- North. One may play Qolf under of her wido var rei gallant feat on the Somme b:tgleficld |nicipal amusement resort—it looks like perfect climatic conditions, in TLondon—iove neient family | ITe rallied his men at a critical mo- |too expensive a proposition.—Eridge- | § batheinthesurfofsemi-tropicai ed on its own 10-yard ., seel t " i o1 pug ver avy 2 len and worsted manutacturcrs in | under certain conditions there are oth- | combinations which employ the peoble | b asknowleding detont ot sho ot | home as he di T e o RSN P RS A 2 (vaters, motor over the finest 80 Wew York city, the need of raising |ers which make it less desivable, can with _comparative cuse oppress|ers furl their hanners and start to|iye hteobol and sunny and hospita- | barrage of firc, and w e beachesto be found anywhere— y sheep and therefore more wool them to the point of persecution.|move out toward (hs gate. ble, in m'gvord‘v«: h its traditions since _’"!lo e“"f] llw‘ c I tisn't the publishing industry alone | § in a word, enjoy summer pleas- m this country was again pointed out. EDITORIAL NOTES. Labor wasNiguiniiot Bekutun 10uien| 1 One. ot thie- mostu Srelkifig xpistures | 15 aani AUriL. . Laere L Al or T s beoal aeh with e e e o l"’“t*hflfmlfioit':llmer n the 3t was shown that there are today in who employ workmen were inclined to{in the Metropolitan™ Gallers. in New | 117 -l THE DleTAG 1 |ers silver horn in ths « a i Sheles Hrotiles <" > § society of congen le. The B & wool clp of 2,836,00000 ponnds ecaus . Field Marshal s or were zoverned by con-|Stream.” That a storm has raged is wonderful effect on the British Tom- s fons righ ss. Labor , e : + Lo ! cear and a half 300 to 400 per cent.| § hold out their varied sttrac- Mackensen is 67. : iéttons ,;:Ilm.‘- '”ofm:':;fmg' t;e\vggors: $;é§31‘,§§“w°" Svestiagiwoves i n > mies. We have had other storfes of Heavy wrapping paper that could for-| § tions. The man ‘on, the athe, says: The | examples it IIfe; oF of Being Tordverp oo a8, Vater ape e ooy THE WAR PRIMER the way the British soldier responds | merly be bought for $30 to $35 a ton is | | Ferleokit“TeepteatTripe sad atormatio,spply ‘means that there are 19 sheep o every 1000 acres of land or about et 5 T to queer encouragement—he dribbles = o 70 8 % pone sheep 1o every 50 acres and that | cry for justice is too often in accord- against movements for. the betterment | aimlessly. The crew has heen twept || By National Geographic Soctoty foothatls ovor the Perapet aad Actecs s sl - Bl bl . 'Aflanficc:lasfli e jone sheep produces about four. and a |ance with the personal intarpretation 01 e l;efl"-efl e | ‘pedple. -md’ the | away—all save one. who is stretched the bullet strewn No Man's Land and|paper that used to cost 35 cents a [Balt pounds of wool. Furope had at | of what 1t shouid pe classes do not mix any more than ofl | jistiess upon the deck. In the offing that sort of thing, but this is the first [ream costs $1.80. Cardboard has risen “The Standard Railroad of the South” the opening of the war over three o aeliglons - bodies remain|appears a full rizged shii. Help s _ time the fox hu horn has appenr- | neaciy as muth, Frery merchane in 3.0, JORNSON, 1. E. €8 a8 many sheep as there were in| Humanity has received so many [and this s why they are et e at hand, but the sailor’s back is turn-{ Avlona — When Italian troops|ed In the great every city in the country feels the 238 Washington St Besias “North America, with a wool production | staggering blows from the war that X ' Sl A omial i atie Jmarcaing castward ca in contact{ “It was no inspirition of he pinch. The worst of it is that the effective: 1t is hard {o make men b . ¥ E 5 3 - = with French trocps westward bound, or years Colonel Vaughan ,muy Jarger in America than in Fu- |it is beginning /o get toughened to|lieve in a Lord of love and mer: has ceased to hope. d ¥| Pernaps the worst thing that cven|; inity he Albanian sea mpbell has accustomed his o e most_anything. when they are given over to the devils | Billy Sunday can say about Hell Is the | iyiig. Jicinity, of the Albaman sea- | Camphell has accustomed his men to n this intry, however, the number of greed, specialy in evidence today as | hopelessness of tl tter estate. The | kan battleline reached a leagth of | sented to him by the Of sheep has been growing less in-| It remains for the allies to reflect | Speculators. inscription that Danfe saw in vision | moré“than 200 mil>s, from Sere 's and men of the Iirst Bat- Btead of greater and this in spite of | that thieir problem in the Balkans has, over the docr of the Inferno is a true|tne Aegean seashore, to the allion when he left to join the Third B he fact that_ more sheep and more |been increased by, the Teuton suc~] Few paople seem to be aware that|ave—All hape abandon. ve dino: come Aviona, an inlet of the Adriatic. Con- | Battalion. He found that the clear, ")", Wool are reqfired to meet he needs | cess In Rumania. the Savior claimed no monoroly offhere” Sq long as one awalts the | cerning Aviona the National Geogra- | ringing motes of the horn were more (] . e rans On O. W02 the market both for food and. for power. What I am He _said "MHis|dawn, he can endurc with fertitude | phic Society issues the following war|eacily heard, gnd on the battlefield | Mmanufacturing purposes. In a letter| There is one (hing about this recent | followers might become. One of the|the long hours of dackness, but when | geography bulletin: there was no mistaking it. [}/ o ““""hmm paper by a Washington | attack upon Chihuahua, - Villa has | ETeatest temptations of the church|no dawn is expected, men's hearts, he- | "5 (he nearest city to the south-| “The men came runming in from fhe seems to be to denounce as imposters | cause of fear and sorrow, tarn- to ¢ i : i B le: 3 s the reason for this is shown to [ Shown that he can make a raid and | fnoce” who aocompish. good wode e | ciome: ern extremity of Italy, (being separat- | Shell holes just lika the hounds from t " - - iving by Brindisi | the cover,” szid Colonel o b 3 dogs and in his opinion the siogan | E€t away without being killed. what it considers illicit ways. Jeal-| Let the mood 6f expestation prevall, | oo i Sioe llsl"& gu-firm)nfn,]fi";y}f;.' when on ' leave in oEn:‘l:mE"".Hl“?nee"y uld be “Kill the dogs and grew TR T ousy once prompted the (isciples tofthen. Fven it one has mever vet|ggssing the best barbor in the mewly|came almost liamediately nfter T bles p He further adviges the or-| The stack of bills which congress |come in and report: Master, othors are | achiéved great success he shou'd never | formen pHuciaality of Albanin: Aviois| (he horn. They seemed to secoontm - A ition of sheep clubs for boys and | 'S Zetting for'the reduction of food |doing works like unto thine own.|lose hope that some day he will do so. = & i g A seems destined in a fow years to be-!it at once, and they knew it was 1"« the boy corn clubs can grow [ Prices Isa't a clrcumstance to those | Christ did nat turn to them and say | However the score may stand, let one|come a much larger and more Import.| “Tn the xtraordinarily dificust st “more bushels of corn to the = : | play the game of life to the cnd, un-|ant city than at present. Today is has | uation, the horn was probably the only bills which the. consumers are getting | they are imposters gnply sai g ey R g o ave, B AGt thet “Those who are not against us are for | defeated, at least. in spirit, He may | a jittle. more than 6600 inaaianter k. 1 to ;7‘:1;‘;)1‘::: by thelr i usl” Do mot be aiarmed by pecple|win morc than the prite, S Db ittant Thas S0 Lonsbltents 3 Y . * ¥ In view- of the. pesition of Rumania, | Who are showirg good results for their{ Adams E:lp(‘rof! SAVS if though theie is a fertile hinterland - bd“ &.m th“e ters. I]I!y fzed to show their daddies the | i Gonstantine of Greses. ean. fufi | WOrk. He mever lambasted ihe earn- |could not discourage his doc Which produces maize, cattle, olive ol AXD POINTS There are none b Somdee e in growing sheep at a minimum | ack on the elnim \hat ne 1 Lor pra | 5t Worker for good, his condemnation | danger appall his fortitude Je-land cotton. the lines of communication “AVAN bound to please. Bitian \ana. ator with & masi | ooy or e Sl Boe o s for ‘he Pharasces and hypucrites. | spondency he knew nothinz; trials| ape pefuitive. IN CUBA — um of profit?” Tt e nas s was he i er, course | Chistianity has mever heen advanced |only served im for superioe (rug-| " ~Ope of the severest blews to the batel imate. If it is.slmply a matter of drawing P FEY T Sengese g X en beitgnonsd & You have a reason why history | commercial advanroment of Aviona A visit to our store at this time will convince you that between the sheep and the ¢ not again: ‘acing ot ho are for|has starred the patrfot’s' name. and other Albanian towns of ihe IN THE 2 That writer who claimed that the | good are for us us, said - tal region was the completion of V' BAHAMAS we prepared to suppl large share of the items &, there ought to be no hesitation | Belzians are happy and contented un- |the Master. But it is Stenvenson’s own experi- ffi;“»?uk..'f railw: :r wunm}tspm;mmus Polo, and serd-bething. e e }’ * . o iz § ver what should be done. The dog|der German rule had apparently not ence that is most full of susgestion|at Saloniki. This rcad taps the ter- hfi?‘ s kW your Christmas list. / New York. flileh Jellls sheep can expegs to have | heard sbout the deportation of those | It was Victor Hugo who asked|for the average man. “I .meant when |ritory beyond the mountains in rear 40 friends, and there can b® no doubt | people, or the révolt of those in Ant- | “What is slang?” and he furnished his | T was a vouns man,” he says, “to write {0f Aviona, and until the proposed line ; what jmiich good would rosult | werp over the German oFders own answer, thus: “It is ghe langusge|a great poem, and now I am ocbbling| from Yanina to the ratiroad at Kala- M Art Calendars, Christmas Greeting Cards, Fine Sta- : getting the boys interested in of wretchedness.” “Wretchedness has | little prose articlés aud (r excellent | kaba joins the Greek railway systems £§!!h-(-:.(v)-o- 3 g 2 = 3 IR e oo, nierestea \lts of that Chicigo squad |!© €xpress itsclf ot m the languaxe|zood spirits. 1 thank you. So. too, I| with ‘extensions to viona. Previsa, Ly, 1 tionery, Fountain Pens and Beautiful Gift Articles in Cut . Sfustry. iThe sugsestions can’ live on 4o |Of the seiools but in the lansuage of | meant to lead a lia that shonid Keep|and Monastir, the scaport will suffer Through the Panama Canal g ma worth adoptins. to the streets and of tlié commonest peo- Pmounting from the first. and thoush 1|t the profit of its Greek rival on the Glass, China, Mahogany, Pottery and Leather are a few R & @ay, keep In good health and |ple; ang what can better reach the|bave been repcatedly d azain be- | Aegean. The region which such = 2 t hocome emaciated any ‘more than s AT (et o 3 Beel enil b Letes Hibn- = Suld pen b fevalth. W i E NEW SING SING WARDEN. |t P ema hearts of the people thar® their own |low the sea level and nm ecarce high- | Series of lines would open to develop- i suggestions from our stock. N as If“they stuffed on the fat of the|ianguage” It lacks elegance, fut it|er than when I started, T am as keen | ment is rich fn iimber and supposedly k=% £4 ; “"b‘ ars to have been several|iand and: dig ‘their:part' in helping | never lacks force. ~The intellectual |as ever for the enterprise. Our busi-|has a wealth of minoral resources as x 2 the selection of Willlam | along. the high eost of living. may be instructed by’ the use of rid-[ness in this world Is net to succeed, | well, | A e 4 bJ Moye the new warden of Sing dles; but the simple have to be stirred | but to continue to fail in sood spirits” | “The town of Aviona, aiso called on axply. with words which sink inte their sounls Are not these words of a notable | Valona, is situated at the head of the Who view | Whether {Hey are to be found in the|spiritual vietor? And is mot A similar | guif of the same name, on a helght i “which the | dictlonaty o wot. As| Wiy’ Sunday | victors within tho yeach of any fen | alout” «! mile ara o haif from ne vy p 3 i says: “Do You get me?” Strects paved [ wjo admit the pleasures or the mis.|shore. It ¥ a picturcsque place, th ¢ ot ke amin '“"“’km‘.'h Bk et with ebmpers 2| with gold do not allure the men. who|haps of ‘his earchly voyase silll pre- | green’af its charming gardens plerced : L vl |5 e e enmmediate ViCin- fare accustomed to bifting the teil; | serves a resoliite heart and clings o | hore and there with mnflw oty Y ‘# é § ; language to be admired by the intel- | his paddie? arets, while its most Duild. Teceiving just such material lectual has no > THE PARSON. ing fs the palace, flte’::vfi e Y 5 e Py

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