Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 31, 1917, 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)

e ot oL All mortied. See were a1l worx! Momg&u d deal wri iy o ‘min! r 3 ;i into law, but from i hould think the €ty court last clearing station after the and dens wers through with At the present time we hear cin save from $1.00 to $3.00 a pair. . Also a good Men’s Working Shoe, elkskin, in black ove T, Shous"in ~vestukin | and tan for $2.50 and $3.00 a peir. E M in getting.out of = With the rout of the Turkish army. . z .; e " heait - n ,. ¥ —%T o o m Brth Sm &w Store 5f 20,000 near Jerusalem and the cap-| 138 MAIN STREET [ y | g g ure of the cominanding general, the 'ivisional staff and 909 men, the Brit- h force which is operating in Pales- ne is progréss in keeping ith ‘which 18 being shown by the i g H ifich and a half long, siruck me tush[increase the power for evil of & '8 Jeo: 1wl stana tor s | Jeche, it it “Tivounry (ro ace, | poeserice:of even . tew wach 1o and works romer monih. and (N |of e mauthy whance - was Lo aciod. |Lon mage of & menace than 4 brot : ot many vears ago the town .of 1 .mllm\;xii:‘e Biece, which I wicasurd |tion in the long run—Waterp [one might chat about in telling of do- |Lrenklin was cutsed with two overy | StumnEd as though hit by i il I 5 56 5 i H 3 s i and east, in a manfief WAICH 18 driv- InE the ‘eneiny before them.. Turkey is not enly facing the most !.. i | ! Br crowning glory of its|ings in any New England town of hamer; then came a rasty oo - The asrest:of a man in in its efforts to check the advance of ‘and the blessed- shal' be I eise, As @ matter of C3arse | 1oy g emmed e frrn o not. exactly very painful. Pulll: susplcion of belng & spy (o the any one of these thres Golumms. The and |1 knéw that thoy must dllelr; ‘:mr. it| city to help, but at last the devilish Ilafl“l:nf;n); fll.z"'té managed ¢ : mu. vispiint shiaws it the ripls movement is keeping them busy 3 ; hap-|was merely an example of human|yysiness was. driven out. -What has BPS AR he Seies’ Eub. g ¥ . s 5 p 5 “and: s g adaptability, that women in Juneati | paon ime rasunis wou iy thiere the logs of blood causea %0 hidden dangers in the state 4 s on all the fronts. They are being 3 ] should have teas and oard parties, and | Jeutien’ man. and ne conre Dusiucss |5it d0Wn. Mywcompanion without cause, It behcoves “shift. inactive a8 ¥ that the men were interested in ub- | raag in your esteomed. papes hew |y @i, and applying a firs of all. New w;n"a cities i reinforcements from ome section to a- houses and bullding gocd roads for | (ha honomible Judse: ot the iy coory | Ereseing. 1 iaid on an 0.4 fush- [days.io be espesielly curiou = 1 visible. mea quality tends to promote happiness; men right om nur own street and In |and how plegsed he was, Dut I believé|CUEing all that time I was fully- con- | concerning manufacturing planis i another, but on the other hand each section is forced to rely upon its own ability and the result is that the Brit- nce in- all che sl - See that he [but the attainment of ou¥ desires or lour own town. s g iclotis, ana 1 distinctly remember my |is a chance also for patriotic e R e St Shst Siiviam Furs e inHims, | ambitions often produces & semblarce SNt D R esnten,2 frsat deal more | (£ip_from .ihe place .of the wound te | The American citisen can holo srw key into a-corner, and it the progress |qi abides heathen to|of happiness, but nbt the real ™ nversation with this bright, | woulq ‘take their comts off, put their | Engiand. by, feporting suspicious character which the armies driving in from the Happinees aiways has a IOty woeiwan 1o 15 1o ) out] oood ke the wheel, and drive, the | Mr. de Tupenne desc:ibes tiic follow- | the Dolice. A woman Iy reporied L 2 ve vered ers, mag 1 4 I ¢ north and east are making continues [ne’ “liic.“Pone heads fo it will nat be before they will be ——— able to bring their lines together and | Inteliectual . freedom is administer a crushing blow, to say|right to be lionest, said a nothing' of the réllel which they will {ern writer, yet how few intellects be able to bring to the distressed peo- [aSTes with hime. By the man of & i wiiat 1 could about this wonderful pos- | devilish business out of your fair eity, | ing incident of which he was un cye- aéssion of the United States. this Al |3nt 713 per cont of your tomnt BiGiciss | witness: = aska, which has a coast-line about|would go with it. Not long ago there | "It Was in the early times of this 26,000 miies long, more than tWiiC aS|was an elegant plea from a New York | terrific struggle. Somewhers in Fian lonk ‘as all the rest of the United | paviy for tha sinnis o F e Trk ches atood only 200 yards States. about ours here at home? I have two E gench, drawings of factories that led arrest. Hete's one good way —Waterbury Republican. The senate echoed public_dpi it st tellect - avery. of license is- ih I learned that this wonderful Amer-|o¢ my own, apd would much £ 3 ~ Ger- |defeafing the well meant bht unv S e new advamce which is | GU1ed in. And honesty to be.upon & - idhn wilderness has SUCh MArveioUs|oce them nder the turt (har i aio |mans had Attempted & counterstiack, |attempt to prohibit boys unde b2 - il oo S | firm basis requires first that we shall Scénery as is to be found in no other|tphem victims of the drink habit, and as it was getting dark ticy were |years from selling newspapers = belnz made in Palestine gives the al- | be honest.with ourselves, or we may s place “on - the _globe—forest-clad is- GEO. A. KAHN, |{0rced 'to retire, with mreat icrses, |Cact is boys are not exposed - . Hes a real cause for encouragement in | fall into every kind of dishonesty. Be - ds, lakes, glacier meadows, cas-| Lol ~ons Naien 20, Seig . |leaving the dead 'and wounded ‘the | occupation to any more danger € b + that section, and it is seriously doubt- | true to self convictions and you are o cades, fjords, sounds, majegtic moun- e O rch 30, - feld. Amid this awful carny two | they wotild s in roaming the str = . ed whether the efforts which General | qualified .to be true to others. An tains, picturesque headlands, moun- men only remainéd, a Frenchman and [t play, and they find in this work 3 Mackensen, who ‘Deen sent to the | honest man is not the noblest work of — - tain walls, in infinite variety. All Guesswork. a German. They were engaged in a |OPPOftuhity to éarn méney e fa - |God, but the highest attainment Mr. Editor: duel, one trying t: kiil the [sometimes needed gorely in h e PEaable 10, over e Far from being a bleak and frozen | cimi Toltgns - wirChel oaectls, hh "y wore botn Gancine arcund | homes. More thin that U1iey cortie thé " nevitable. The. stck man |SIble to mortality. Every work of @od| L. spimiT OF SNOBBERY. % A ) must in itself be noble—man has the 3 - wildeérness as is the popular idea, it is | wqwesiner for M. o1 in circles liké demons thrus‘iug and |themselves & spirit of self-rell of Brops is In & precarious position. | power of self degradation. Mam him:|, oSt of tn|Fich i forested hills, lwith ~ their | JIUGRTCE ToL MOTCR thal B Tule %7 | labbing right and-deft. One 124 to go | tablish & love of honest labor SUFFRAGE IN ENGLAND. self was pronewnced to be good by his . s the story '® | countless spruces, hemlocks, cyprusses, lany followed by “medical almanacs,” |And they fought. It was practically |habit of thrift that could not ND. Creator; but he has since marred Harvard professor who, walking in the |pines. even famiuar dogwood and alder | 3% . "pog" that the “as predicted~ does | 'ark by this time. The pa:e mwon | wise be cuitivated. They have y That one of the great questions |image Of holiness in himself by his|colleEe yard, —— ;m'-rwkl’-:‘ et like our own, the wild apple, and|noi appear once in & hundred. times | fhone a sickly reflection on ttes two Dele Werk 498 I s s freed : thers, . 4 4 5 swere | un n sentim A NAVAL NEED. which has been disturbing Engzland |errors. Intellectual Iom then ds |, L rcayTe 1 -domt Kuow . auybody | Norer was thete such a lsnd for |SONCerning his predictions, and thep | hunan beings, Their featurcs were|unfottonase © Srl ol ClTo % |Simply the right to be true true to n; = then | drawn and. haggard, their eyus fizshed Not a little has been said in ad- | [Or S0=ie time is making progress to- | Goi™ Y ue to elf. true to others, trusfside of the Rdcky Mountains” Was |berries—huckleberries of many species, | Sn1¥ 12 Dis own writings; that “the | UGN 300q Gut of their orbe. the ex- | portunity to prove themseive wards a solution in accardance With|,’clory quty which involves the well- | the freshman’s sorrowful answer. salmod-berries, blackberries. rasober- | moiing o mistake was whon I allowed | Préssion on_ their faces was glastly — |field of labior—Aneontis Sentine 2 vocacy of providing for a better de- |yttt Sl R, B D Bave bean i | That colleg: bery " ~ my = o - - ege snob is no myth ¥ n | mak ata fense of the coasts of thiscountry bY | jening their efforts In its behalf Is | b Catised mmmm‘”ar anyone realizes who 15 famillar with | places. and . or snbereien el = i ek sl 8 e s, onch iaghrioe tor 1 criet | Gewseal Woolls frieads are nat obtaining a larger number.6f aireraft|indicated by the statements which |to begin with no man is free is | conditions in our. larger institutions of | sufiiclent for every bird, beast or hu- | Shorid, Dave said thé only times he Is| 00 €0 S O EE a8 (0 i in wn- | ly trying to ansiyze the motive for both the army and the navy. It|have been made by the party leaders|not fifst of al. ramster of himself: |learning. Too many feliows Who BO|man being in the territory and thous- | coriect OF Incorrect for all is guess- |C L Vot Tun 0o Came to an arrupt |cansed his (ranster as o > bas been pointed out that many of | in the house of commons relative to|and after tha® the freedom ‘of truth.is |Lirough four academic years together |ands of tons to spgre, accordins to the | BoTle SYery one, and maturally even | o™ Prnarewas “a sharp ciick-—a |redistricting of the country = the largest cities of the country are| ine cetopelon-of (e BOIDt Lo womon, | suMclent not Oniy to Meet rla. every m‘? ed . 33, to each Ltestintony of such an accurate ob- | ¥ Cioug" B Lo Rl THES LISy IS, e | tiirust and a muffled-sound. Ecth bay- |present needs. Was it a noffh 3 Wio. o aliack Trom such wer The | e Or LHE BEIRE G Wit s B0, e i spiricoally other: Occupanta of exclusive. and |server as was Jonn Muir. : adhares o those ol - superatiiong| onets went home,. both -mon s.cad |of showing, the displeasurs. of | chines and that there is need of mak- | heen .warking in. its behalf.or ‘who | [OTeVer. =275 2% ] :Eenm,hl;“l:‘;:n ‘:: mG.vhl .ér =7 fallacies concerning the moon, both as | Fansfized, both fell dead to ground. {ministration over past . semi ~ © |5 ins the'proper provisions which would |'have even beenr lukewarm in regard to e Siassmates in the cheaper dormitories. | hiuckieberries are sepecially abund |to predicting the weathier and PIAnUNE [ineue Twe mon Hehiing & werce biisic | Tarrome resson o aocount Aty A i - = » % nuine o account offset ‘such possiilities. it, but those who have been strongly | It i¢ said happiness follows the|lines of cleavsge run through the |3t e b T Tt Tomorant 50 vears axoe “Wers, thclin the pals mooniight with ary of | change? Some progress has by i man who speaks and. acts with pure e g ¥ : £ thiz direction im the past fow mmonthe | oF roeeenes e an of such » right | thought and 1s as constaut” to "the | GUCES SOFMUNY A58 S0CE) HEURE, | o hair-incn and more in alameterand | Cloud Digser been the past four or Rvalthel d6ad and wounded comrades - | it s to be earnestly hove a2 the result of the part which Aiying | (o the methods which have been cm- | %' man of this King, Beweter 1 So¢ Derpeturated. The "éuts” cam not held | bushes three or four inches to a f0ot | farmer gives the moon's Dfases B mo- machines are plaving in the war| pioyed to bring It aboat. But with | pichsting thy JAathsk B cihst peops | SCAIAIE he fact, winle many of the [RiSNe® (IO OF, UL NSy o e ey faves o oo Dhases men stood up and gased on the sccme |meeting of the ways. We ficross the water.and following & rec- | former Premier Asquith; Bonar Law |as impure, for it {s the.pure who are | (N5 W€ 0N, Feached the charmed lspecies are Smaller and grow aimost| Nome of his-predictions for March |i3 uiter amasemeni—cach forzeiting |best which the countey ewn rrod ognition of the fact that this sovern- | and the present premier Lioyd George |blindest t&° impurfty, man_who | S O D O ciety Masirous | everswhere on the low grounds on|has to this dnte, 30th, proved correct. | AT both in mental and materis . ment has been tardy in the develop- | manifesting a change in their attitude | Can_picture the Hiotives of the wick- | nd bushes fromy three to six or seven feet [There was no “howling old storm" on The fact that-Rear Admiral & ment of aerial squadrons which would | 1t 1s one of the best signs that saalg|cd S0 wonderfuily never does it from | M35 high This le the species on which |“opehing days” no ice.coated tirees, 7| A Pinme ias Seen amnisned 7o 4 % A mit re rt h 3 the native Indians depend most for | fe n Tth.” W T e o 31 267Tic Gor | be Hoped for even thoueh e will o | 5 DAr8 NSO, WROSVEr. B ey b5 D) yhie isuation 1e beimg sttacked in| (05 TRUTe Indins, dipent mest fer|tgnces and wives dfom {107 WS || OTHER VIEW POINTS | il ™ $o masmry ot gt delicious in flavor. These grow on 7N ; ing close around. The night v-a. latter, Now is not the time = Jecades? No Progressive gardener or'| [i2.% 5 %oth sides in the trenc spites to be avenged. We fohal George Eliot, says: ““We must not did have snoy and rain betw. :“w B ] eBoay® 12,2 | less be some time before the women|inquire fop. aeriously into .motives.|dead _carnest. however,- in a large|tics, beating them Into a Daste, pross- | twe periods, (34 and. ith. which he ! | past going o prevent the @erbplanes of modern wonstruction, | Ol il4f Country actually-get the vote.| They dre liable to bégome feeble in |number of institytions and_a remedy |ing the paste into cakes albout an .nch |fafled to forecast. It was not cold from asking for the ser wpesdy and eIl he b DG, "] The one big cause for elation at this | the ~ utterande: the aroma. is mixed|W/ll yet be found for it. One of the|thick, and dryirg them over a slow fon St. Pat's day as per prediction S distingulshed men?—Me: Sracted T S . have béen com- |y i that the bill which is getting | with the grosser air. We must keep |livliest movements of the time is that|fire, to enrich their winter sures.|Lut was on the 18th, There was ng| When the alarm of war is sounded for which will relieve many of | o5 yieideration shows a decided liber- |the germinating grain away from the |toWard making ous colleges more |Saimon-berries and service-berries are | “biz storm from 20th to 24the and |Over the country there will be a wild| Educators and frierds of the shortcomings which have existed | oitotion of the prevaling condtions. | IEht.” The Iove of good and the fear | democratic. preserved the same way. his “at least two élecrtical displaye” |Scramble for enlistment. The young |interested in a bill before f in tie past, but such a step has been oward of evil, the Jove of gin and the fear| The spirit of emobbery is not con-| The same Inlians gather the fruit|have not vet arrived at dat fellows who anticipate this event will [ Jature which wotld prevent taken none too soon. e e ey Jowaris Ths Xoallct want, the.fows e oacure ed s | Ained to collegc hails. It-is Aoubtent If| of the widl apple to Aavor their fat|mriting. e of thIa | e 80 much. advantage on the late|ployment in . bustess of * . This was plainly demonstratéd in|gne caues - uEh fOr |tear of gloom are powerful factors in |&NY¥ Of us can go through an ordinary lealmon, intuitively recognizing the MRS. T. |comers that thelr chances of promo- | girig umder - 16 years of Ag | the runming down of the rumor that| ‘D¢ C3USe. Dut in this conmection it|the lives of us all and prompt us|business day =~ without meeting it|hygienic principle that sour twings| Voluntown, March 30, 1917, tion will be doubled. “First come, first | the sc4ools-ars in wessiof | Gerinan submerines were sightea om | C2n Fardly be claimed that the im-|too often te act for self regardless of |Somewhere. It spreads its poieon [should be eaten with fieh. served,” has always been the rule in | effect raises the agé &L © Mostauk Point. The nav: ick. | Proved situation has been due to the |the result upon the well-being of. our- | through all the spheres in which men e ——— the navy. Under those blue jackets of | school attéendance fo 16 year E v vas quick- | militent methods which have been [selves or othiers. ~Motives are too deep [1Iv® and work together. Some of it| Then as to climate—en the shores the sailors there beat hearts that are|in the opinion of those, we £ ly o its job in this respect and it im. S e 1 h be di: d beneath TH AR uman inspection and those who |May, perchance, Iscovere eat of the mainland and the island off the true and everlastingly American. There | nandesirable. Our ammur mediately resorted o the use of hy- | *mPloved. Rather suust it be looked |3l e Do0d "t ‘motives of others|OUr own personal hats, If we 'ook |coast, the climate s remarkably tem. iE W, PRIMER i not a_finer assembly of men In the | now graduate many bo 1 droséroplanes as ome of the quickest o R .hmv ae | are simply disclosing the impurities of carefully emough. < -ate, free from extremes of either By National Geographic Soclety world. There i8 no braver man than |14, Under the proposed Is und best methods of doing this work, efforts W] 3 ‘6 been ma their 6wn minds, .“Judge not lest ye| The social snob is ever with us. He, [heat or cold throughout the year. It the, average American bluejacket. The | children could not go to work but it was necessary however to bor- . 4 be judged,” is a scriptual warming. |OF it is as likély to Ve she, can see|is rainy, however, only about ome-| . . |mere thought of becoming part of this |years. 1If, therefore, their fow fthess planes of the army. yior g Y okl ~A g ‘mafiner in which they| ¢ . e o ot | titular “set” There are ities |and sunny: but the great round sun- Sensational Battle of Ygres. no excellence in anyone mot in 4 pat- |third of the summer days being clear T great fighting branch of Uncle Sam’s|were unable to send them military forces should be enough to|school, s is- many times ihe y would be compelled to rema wherever they are needed whether 0 the war aemands, |their rights and.more. .about their|in Which a new comer, even of ir-|days of Juiy and August surpase any-| A yivia war diary by Aimor Avzias|Stimulate recraiting throughout the|ine: reproachable character—yet Iacking | thing known elsewhere on garth. An 3 R o entire_country. The navy forever.— |jdleness, certainly far less de they belong. to the army or the navy, duties this would be an aitogether | corain conventional passports—may | Alaska summer day (s a day wi-nout |36 TUreénne, a student at ths Harvard |UEFe P00, CUP than to permit them to g0 to W Boe it ia miade glain neverthélem ¥ e ~ different world- to. them. There is no ot 4 Law School now living in Scattle. v.ho B She mavs fv Rot Drovifed itk the EDTPORIAL NOVES hetter way for any one to prescive | Weas suyden thir witn tha srone By | 28Rt e lost his right eye fighting wit the is the view of leading educe: ipment whi The man on the corner says: Spring | their rights .than by religiously at- he postm: The legend s th: > 2 First Canadlari contingent at Ypres,| The discovery that a number of un- | the state that this equi ‘which it requires for scout B pring | | > and the po: lan. e legen: that In the Fi Neorth, at P B hardship on many members work isw't the only thing which is filling the | Sndine to thelr .duties; Al of - usiiy some of the aristocratic households |, " the Far , at Point Barrow, |is published in The Harvard Alumni[fit men secured appointment to the su- B n e o om vrwaston | Gigt S would be much better off if we thought | o¢ the Athens of America this hymn |0 Sun does not set for weeks and |Bulletin, extracts of which toilow: pernumerary police force under the re. |in thet it will prevent some. ci el i< - S ? more and talked less, and loved more | 0" oS40 VTN | oven in doutheastern Alska, where the | I had completed my st -« tr 4 the | bent emergency expansion of that body | ecoming breadwinners for the 5 A DASTARDLY AGT. s and . hated less, ahd did mesw ‘and : majdrity of tourists go, it is only a|Law School of Harvard Ui.veristy.” |emphasizes the importance at this time | If not for others af a tme No more dastardly atfempt has been | iion Lo e aroone Dut and | critiscised less, ‘and walked more and |y am srom Hoston, few degrees beiow the horizan at its|says Mr. de Turenne “and was spend- |of subjecting the qualifications of all |5 necessary that they sho made fo interfere with aad bam ing|iiled two devilfish. Now - for the|grumbled less. We are Drone to do | e o, Do ihn’ pean and the cod, |IoWést point, wrile the topmost colors |ing my holidaye in Canada wnen the |applicants to the most careful scru- | There is a general séniiment ass ighly commentanly poriiag balk the | ruthless subirines. the, things we_ought not.to 4o, and | where the Cabots. speak onfy to|Of tie sunsét biend with those of the | war broke out. Memorics of Lafusette | tiny. This applies not only to the su- |the DUl which seems Hkely bels dered By 10 <h &8, i s to negfect the {hings-which would in- R wells sunrise, ieaving no gap of darkness|and of the help given by Francc to|pernumerary body, but also the city It certainly should be killed e Sy by the Red Cross in| Every day not only brings the beau- |crease the privileges and An the Lowei's speak only to God. | PeL¥een. America more than a hundréd yoars |guard and the home guard, and not |it 18 desirable that afl childrén relieving the sufferings of those Who | titul sprimg nearer, but also the open- |life. There i1s o reed . e . . The highest summer temperature|ago, the great coming-strugsie ot de- |only to fitness under the strict letter [attend school until they are bave engaged in battle. than that|ing of the lohg amticipated baseball |human nettiés of ourse v i £ atrict. | ODSErved by Miur in southeastern. Al- | mocracy against autocracy..afl thaf,|of the law, but also to ftness under | not possible in all eases and 4i is | which has been brought to light by the | season. o s ‘His 1 l;’l‘;‘,‘h“;'w';"‘;f A og::""’:”‘;d T e |aska was 76 degrees, and then thejand more, flashed through my nund, |the peculiar conditions which exist at|Wise to seek to compel it arb statement made by Albert W. Staub, 2 “ Ge sy g} s Prg Bagime people | VeIvet Softness of the atmosphere was |and I, an American, decided 10 erist. | present. Membership in any of these [—Hartford Post, -] 5 : Som gfiee. 1% & nary peoble | remarkable. The winter storms up to| It ‘was on Sept. 4, 1914, at Va car- | bodies, carrying with it the right to director of the Atlantic division of the th the pians to complete all of . - round about him. Before people can |int end of at e ta| e T dfs A the battie cruissin - wittin thres be of signifl i vhtne T e = December were mostly rain | tier, near Quebec, one of tic train.ng |bear arms and .the privilege of free. North Dakota Amierioan; RedsCross. years, > e o e e al must | 8¢ & temperaturs of 35 or 40 degrees, |comps of Canada, that I enlsied in|dom of movement, would immensely |nearly nine-tenths country Director Staub takes occasion to |it looks as if preparations were being | know.” More people magnify IMAL- | have torn oaaid upar o T He|®ith strong winds which sometimes (ihe Fifth = Battery, Second Ir gade, correct some of the charges attribited | made for the next war. ined rights thae hesrtily tackle rec. | lave been placed upon = them. roughly lash the shore - and carry| Canadian Field Artillery. After re- B s iy Ot Shek il in which the Ge: Pl Il e T T e e B o Egiana. o forgs ot 25 006 ¥ have been found to his knowledge om ‘the way in e Germans | days : ., and if we : - anada. for nd, a_force of B : 8o bandages 'm:h "h“';" been | 2r¢ falling back, it ls rather unkind [meet them with a will we shall havel, o, dabes iy The long -nights are then gloomy |wen, as members of tle F rii Cana- Saepedsin poleoti, but, e says, at- | 0L h5, TFidh Brigaded to femmind thiem | no tims v Vrodd-over eur omn trit- the dic | eremhiing yollow cothr Hise ot | oo o Butsbary Bile - T 2 b/ 4 . - B g 1 rances or handicaps. -3 2 ing yellow ires may | c.icamped on isbury Plain for a tempts have been made to have band. | [Nat It's & lons, long way to Tipperary. v - R e n?:&:n":’k:w' 16| be_finely appreciatea. reriod of four months, which ~-was | Dowacren sass went whrond oruor'sh| From sil-indieations the . weather | nat ihe Ongosite. epialonja 'sternas| OF, oo, mews Covictions and vea. | any” Eaat Geptns in CHat localite; oF |icens, ARd thencs We went b Ernte BRMaa 5p 1he woundh of aolds man is pushing the spring rains to|It may net always confrony ue, but It|Sons Take him aitogether, the $00b i yie lone. to the firing line. It was no ur.tij the 5 Bich acts mMight e sapectes fru Sep. | the front with an fdes that that is the [may in reply to a metting eri is a rather pifitul It is said that only once since the |first German gas attack that we sot a p £, P~ | best way of prevemting droughts later | come upor, one like a saber cut. The | P2RItY- S -+ lscttlement of Fort Wrangell has the |real fdea of warfars in all its Eor- e Specia ore fesentatives of natlons which are re-[on . power of withering 3 T .g::u been covered to a deptn of|rors.” sorting to the commission of all sorts e i et Py nothing can sure him of his Teet. After a short account of tke battle x of atrocitles, but it is almfost incon- remark s |Shos tedness and conceit save such of Neuve Chapelle and the firs: Lse of "I o ) 5 ceivable that such attempts The action of the Germans in at- | eagily matched drens|an awakening .as came- .to a certain | The mercury seldom falls more than the Germans, Mr. de Turenne aoqd ; E Bt < would be | tempting to settle on 2 new line hasn't fieh born household 15 New Hngiand. | fve o s ograce Dol ihe Irormine | Eescaven the vatiie of ¥pres: Dress S, Silks and I'mmgs’ made in a neutral country- where the : e ©| caused the allies to doubt but what This family was entertaining & cul- | point, unless the wind blows steadily| *Ahead of us lay a long feid, 2nd . have been made to serve hu-| oy can continue to the enemy : tured gentleman, a. university gradu- the mainiand. ian o e COMMIE tebee: Dy rilir s (e Corsets, Gloves and Hosier manity in general. These attempts it L ‘ : shoula be fufly underst moving. , , whose -baptized mame was Cool-| Back fro mthe coast, however, be- | Yser Canal, then further on|anodier & B 5 any & the 'onm:e‘;a ;:; a but who was by birth a full- lyond u”ammucg:-mmsv?nur ng‘au.- plain mdl.. little hill. At n"l.r Wt‘n::e'fi{ M l- d j Ribb underwear Bivmanal blooded Arapah: are very cold. e Stickeen River, | vantage I picked up a pair o an ed % | Cross stations, but appeared in pack- | THE life of Nick Romanoft will form What wle | eXpatiated to Mr. Coolldge at Glenora, léss than a thousand feet |glasses -and, -looking along the Yser usiin ersey ’ 3 + @@es which had been submitted to the | & i - : ’ja | donable pride un the glory of being & the level of the sea, a temper- | Canai, I could ses black linss inovng . Red Cross from outsiders, but which | N8 vears, but former czar wil direct descendant of ome of the Ply- ot from thirty to forty degrees|up a hill. The infantry was charging. Ho“se Dregses Pettwoatg SWQaters Etc 5 ‘with all others abou to be sent abroad | IDsist that they be not put forth as mouth Pligrims. The- Indian gentl zero is yot uncommon, which | Occasionally the black lines would stop 4 ’ 4 o were carefully inspected and the | f2iry tales. K > man did not seem to .be profou: ly is' as cold as a tend:rfoot |and then continue again, lea every OMEN AND CHILDREN 5 oot Setore. there mwaa o — ‘Connecticu: would care to have|tme black dots behind fhcm —tlese FOR W( L chance for it to have the détrimen-| Fvery Bit of progress has its han- v S, - wers the "‘““..‘.2",:“?:{’,‘“;.“.‘, Plsht 2 b : R stetts which had Do plasnen. |Shesn ey O ot oamiury the e 8o own shells: explode. Tnere were here We Never Sacrifice Quality For Prices Such work, however, cannot receive | Police authorities of the country were | oo o 7 g he May, 5 Arapahoe, ruany batteries beside my own fi*'ng thered’ with auto. poignant 166 severe condemnation and every |Dot particularly bof g m 2 3 he they got the order to do S0 LOWEST < m effort stiould be made to de- |mobile thieves. ‘words showa’ himae t o talphonte i OUR PRICES ARE THE AND WE GIVE “One about 10:30, the gun- who is respomsible for any A 3 Fee . ¢ { g stich method of handicapping the re.| With the laiser declaring a barred ‘asnamed. : b bt I A I ROYAL GOLD TRADING STAMPS | . edveryiof the wounded. Sanein Arctic it looks as if he £2 o in. £ . P T had inte an ‘agreement with ing by, but far off, and novody was HUMANE WEEK. the frost king to take up the blockad- - = b ing attention, t 1 0 : PomTT Bt i R R . 101 MAIN STREET tlamtllm.ml!unfi? sisell come. It to come stralj ointies | o where | wes udeing by S mind; || P, S Recetving office for CITY DYE WORKS

Other pages from this issue: