Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 3, 1917, Page 4

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T Entered at | Cona., as B! ni zfi- Willimantie Office, §7 Churen St Telt,lmnm o Nfi» ieh, Tuecsday, April 8, 1917, D ] Matinee a1 2:30 Eve. at 7, 5,20 AR Seats 106 THOMAS MEIGHAN & ANITA KING N THE FILMED VERSION OF THE BROADWAY SUCCESS youe b Wihdet Seaviungie 4 Cnvdrant hear (e 2 : The Heir to the Hoorah s some - - . e € - 2 les in the country, where political ap- e 1 ve ex} “m_tnbt. mm-lh mtor a2 3 ' v Twelfth Chapter of THE GREAT SECRET s TOMING WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY : pointients have just been ‘mads for ’ I tei! you.” a pericd of four years. Thoss who 3 ... R S gt T JE. PETROVA in BRIDGES BURNED under civil service just as as a = {that doesn’t r - VL] who have now WBeen included it how e -);nmm:m“umu /i [TR1VA) = but 1 never want to see ether Marian : i y again and as for our be- or " friends, me, _there's ing 8. excuse . there’s the The Bufletin has ceforth 86 clever” = 3 = : AT circulation of any paper-in Eastern ly she s Bedn laying plans| - She reached the phone in a moment. i ” ¥ T f 5 H a orfow Sonnecticut and from tires to fotr O i e atei] sore | for months and has just fured Richard | “Why, Richara! h Tequire| § \ THE MILLION DOLLAR times larger than that of any in$|Pré nE S - |away! Oh, she wouldn't say anything ver. e ) 3 SPECTACLE gce ;:;-&n;fl‘a&v "“;?31..‘: be of omru:nt &o Mmi T iuppose shie et C ? . e com: . That| him e street and asked him the guide our s 4 wich u:o ?flfl by'nxn?ty-t,n :‘;eoum remains to be seen, but if g& ;nd ‘he h::pd m-r::n her trlgm fn 2 THOMAS . 'NOE 8 cent. of thé people. In Win re is thé proper réspect pald to ent—and then asked mm&dmyou.htrnm - |early ‘onionay T £y L g dver 900 houses $| the civil service tests and if the high :”:h. some .bo:: ‘he had spoken :: . busy, you know. Yes, I'll e t tomatoes, winter “Ol\ll I—lZA lON” Putn f s timy came—and when evening!”™ ions, 1,100, and in A}l of these places it§| Stand man is seleotsd for the @PDOIE. |brought it she made something extra| She turned to her interested frisnd ture before next fall. The Most Wonderful Production Ever Cenhesived by the Human Brain is considered the local daily. e 1 Higtisst. Who good in the chafing dish—it's perfect- with the pearl earrings. F the ‘ 5 A PLEA FOR PREPARSDNESS. Eastern Connecticut has forty- §| of the several sl e s [y easy! I? tlie truth were known I| “Well, anyhow,” she declared. < spaces 2 nfne towns, one husdred and sixty- § | come the nearest to satisfying the ad-|have no doubt Richard Doo: was perfectly right in deciding some- FORTY THOUSAND PEOPLE TEN THOUSAND HORSES five postofiice dlstricts, and sixty §| ministration in his poiities. “there is|fs at the telephone this minute say- |lhing bad happened to keep him away! ints Arranged Music by an Enlarged Symphony Orchestra tural free delivery routes. no grorunfl for any h:;:narenc' on the M;‘Y::.“EV:'I:M rllhbo at your house .\‘h‘nd they might have dome those yatd. The MATI 150, 25¢ 5 EVENING '8¢, 25¢, 35¢c The Bulletin is sold in ev. part of the senate. e postoffice pa- nner t!" Before ngs just as easily as .not- ita growing veg- o o - T Y . M. town and on all of be R. F. P I o tct fHe things whien |I'd do a catty think like that Pd——" |shall watch out for them _ just the|c:ables HOWS DALY 2L 2 1.0 routes in Eastern Connecticut. congress ought ‘to be glad to get oft| I should say sol™ agreed her friend !same!”—Chicago News. CIRCULATION *Tat the ¢ e : 1801, THE PRESIDENT ON THE WAR SITUATION. What the outcome of the new move 3 3 will be remains to be seen but the iag for' sscavatdrs in Greece. . Some average president thus far'is deserving of com.- ; e e I e topreaeed || - OTHER VIEW POINTS mendation for the action which he has by the Barbary Corsairs, was taken to e, 3 taken. 1t should result to tha credit % the holy city, whenge he excaped! to of the départment and the country. i - Wwrite a_quaint rw { his experi- . ences. But it rem.unoddfcr sb‘:d{u‘:h- 1[: 1s rumore that Gov. ’,}F}f?mf? i 2rd Burton, that English embodiment |willgveto the Sunday law legisla OUR RELIEF SHIPS FOR TURKEY. in a Prohibition State. number of languages spoken. It rur“l.::y ".‘;."‘ER;. “.;"T'“m""“ o4 |or i ‘3’.2 talents, in Elh- middle of the|passed by the Gencral Assemb.y, and, Although it fs mpossible to imagin=| Mr. Editor: The following is an ex- |WOUd Fequire the keen lingulst Max |rapldly in the past four years; and|ast century, to set down for Engiish|while it hardly seems possibie thal @ any £00 reason why the central pow. | tract from an article which appears fn |MUller to differentiate the variousiihe dismemberment of Aslatic Tur-|readers the whole story of the great|man of his experience would 4o 50, W8 ors should refuse safe conduct to the [the current number of The Literary lects. The key has now n—if the recent|shrinés of Arabia. > must remember that in some ways n?r United States vesséls Des Moines and chlest: i c;;e:;;.lon of the Kingdom of the Hejaz i “Yet ’v‘wne hl‘;eh beer:! nyedtl?l set Lh; Gu‘:'ern:lro!ll‘ ‘\;e;yw-‘\;‘rr‘n;, rffidl(;(n:w _| “Is a iocality ‘dry’ when it prohibits shall stand as a permanent result of |line where myth and tradition endjand ou ouc ife. ‘Ha ¢ g:lf:‘;nnw:::.hch“:x":h‘:;u;;‘ ::i‘e:- Sra. sl ot-ml‘h?vflflnloy m’{"‘nuv- urch B the present war. The statements|and history begins. The Moslem leg-|been for the “rotton borough 01('!;:”37 gaged it when the liquor is flavored with ¥ 000, ‘hris- | which follow have been prepared by |end is that when the primal pair #% | ization of our legisiature this modern- ization of the obsolete Sabbath ob servance laws would have taken place many years agd.—New Haven Union In one of the Ilongest addresses which he has made to congress, Pres- |are on an errand of mercy for the ? This query is made pertinent ; Budhists, | jssued as a _war geography -bulletin | Adam fell upon an island in Ceylon ident Wilson presented to the joint|carrying of relief to the peopls of | by various recent news items, of which f,:f,“";w_’ Shin! Confu- | form _its fheadquarters in %umnnom and Eve at Jiddah. After a hundred session called for that purpose, the|Svria and Armenia which should have | ! following from the Baltimore Sun |“71 Gnekm—en:n?hm-:”?i A “The Hejaz was a province of Ara- ?a.n flnn":‘;r:‘b:m’ro?'& e::‘: hard, cold facts relative to the situa- :;zcze:“fis‘:;fmgn last gm.:‘ ’Emfi:“@. . Feb. 28.- St the State church, of which the Tsar ::n‘“t:le coast of :e“]dx::, Sea m‘.’: ;a;c!:‘n'lc'{e,‘::ld l: stand upon a spot tion which exists today between this |30 Would taee B -m"'fi"’“ e g | pecome the demand here for a certain Jas the so-calied -head. It is a vast|the head of the Guif of Akaba to a|exactly beneath God's throne in country and the imperial German gov- i Droprietary medicine which contains 25 | trven ot o ipioe oS astical preroga- | point about sixty miles south of | Heaven. and where was set into the ernment. He recognizes and direets | AMericans who are entitled to the|per cent. alcohol that the city police |51 ui \;!_flplfltu.ll, and therefore | Mocca: its eastern limits are elusive: |foundation a stone, then white as attention to the fact that G {3 privileze ‘of leaving the country. Jdepartment has laid the condition be- um""m“" -cruel towards those who | ind its northern frontier is even more | Snow but now reven-black and made 't ermany Further cause for approval on the|fcre the prohibition commissioner. An |no 451 m.n_-hu.nh.lm Anno Domi- | shadowy, because nobody can tell with |€o by the sins of th pligrims who conducting warfare against mankind, | part of the central powers is the ex- |investigation has just led to the dis- |yuniy ¢ Christian church was a|certainty where the great Arabian des- | haye kissed it that it is sulded by nothing but its | pressed willingmess of Turkey that|SOvery that during Saturday and Sun- | oroy pere, with blshops in cen- |.rt merges with that of Syria. Physl-| ‘Some mcholare have S rs e own selfish purposs regardless of hu. | this Telier chould be recelved amd the|(4Y Mmore ilan seven hundred botties [Home and | Comentmoris . Thess |cmLy It I» unproductive and unaticac: |anCIont B ot the Seripture: and s man rights and that the armed neu. | Americans removed, but Germany. ap- | " “rhe-poiite Tan be ana wipomeld |both assuming to be the head of the D iy fE e coun e | rea that: whateVer ’ D , trality which he ursed in his previous | Parently doesn't intend to vield one |arunkards this week than during the | cloicl; Decame in time rivals. The most important be- |thelr blood is pure. Their religion, address fs entirely Inadequate to meot | 10ta from its submarine policy re- |sntire month of January, and each man | LiCLOR, Was completed when the Coun- it contains the two most ven- |however, has not passed so cleanly he sitaation. There io therefore no |F2rdless of what the reason for It|admitted that he became intoxicated |gron of alcedon 451 exalted the Patri- |erated shrines of lslam—Mecoa the |through the centuries though at may, be when this country is directly [on the medicine.” onstantinople to be The Su- |birthplace of Mahomet, and Medina, @ina the faith is held much more other course which thé country can involved 11 : S This news item is real interesting in preme el:end The Roman Legates |where the Prophet is buried. A still | yrimitively and fapatically than at with consistency take but to declare | "1y jo uite evidont therefors that|V)SW of the fact that Virginia 18 a | she basiny ormotlon more ancient place of sepulchre, though | Mecca, where generations trained in that a state of war exists with the prohibition state, and coming as it does beginning of the separation, |jess revered, is at Jiddah—Mecca's |procuring their livelihool from the the only course that was left open to which after ears German government, to take measures | this govérnment was fhe scceptasics on the heels of the statement by the | versy was cl:""l;!{mzd = of contro- | seaport, though some sixty miles away | Plous pilgrims have had a corrupting| 4. ¢jme has come when the super- ‘hicl i o . ; °* | prohibitionists that where lighor has |of po y the Bishop | _where Eve's tomb is exhibited to the | influence upon doctrine as well as|,.,..gent of streets and all the offi- whic prevent the wrongs which | of the offer made by Spain to carry |Peen abolished the jatls are almost|re ome Felix Il excommunicating|credulous. practice. The present revolt of the |, ., ", ne public works department are belng inflicted upon our people |these relief suppliés to their destina- |empty! the eastern branch_ of the Christian| “The possession of these holy places | Shareef, however, will doubtiess elaim |\ " 0, oo oneible for street condi and our rights, to use all our power|tion. Whether Germany is actuadlv| c. ¥ |[church, [Future effarts might have|has given the Hejaz a position In the |10 have its real origin in an endeavorions in this city to get busy. — Wo and resources to bring Germany to{PACK Of this sugmestion, dr whether 1t| Norwich, April 2, 1017. feconciled the two branches, but for | foslem world where the Sharcet of |to rfclaim lelam from its impurities: | (oo a few well paved streets and 1 originated in Madrid or with theSpan- S ' ong controversy over | Mecca has frequently not hesitated to |and from Medina and elsewhere there| ... ¢ those are dirty. We have a ;;md‘s'dw b"n‘am an end the under- | \ ;" mpagsador who is looking out RUSSIA E‘l’-’\-flmfllm“.bfl hfin tphr::“fl?l;-nm‘ challengo "the claim of the Sultan at |will without question, be large acces- |jot :‘n‘““"‘ S Sare full - gb mmett nded acts and intrigues which have 3 n.” Up to the fifth cen- | Constantinople to be the C der | sions to Hussein’s following. 5 i X for Amerfean affairs at Berlin is not| Mr. Baitor: : tury the standard creed said, “Wi oy Rt sy { oles which are daily growing bigger been used against this country for a | g - r: Few pecple can gauge i of the Faithful—and during the Tur- “The revoit of the Hejaz destroys i v ine” Is 4 s vet disclosed but it s to be hoped [the deep significance and meas leve in the Holy Ghost...... repea Tu H BilsL 0 BULEh T8 _TRS aSvés nine. long peried and to do our utmost to| that when the transter of the suppiles |far-reaching influence of the reyoiu. | Ceedeth Yrom the Father”, but when K;}xt:r'-mf'm;:r - ey madé 'z..‘& ::.:; e Time ,‘,?,,,&:5 from g::"'“"“' il mn"al:; ‘sock 2 St motts end the war. is made from the Fovernment vesssls |tion in Russia, uniess they know |the Pope sanctioned in 1014 the words |ialian agents to. mduce the Manean |lo the holy ~cities and desigmed to|Scrikinghn B0 1t J0c8 SO0t G S0, 7 In ,calllng for the addition of an|to a Spanish ship that it will be done |Something of the vastly intricate cir- [ 2nd from the SON”, to be added to|ruler to rise against the Osmanii pre- | bring the population of ihe Hejaz IMt0 | q.partment. It should be. Some army of 500,000 men chosen upon the | With the nnderstanding that after |SWmstances preceeding the event, and !.:e former phrase in the Nicene Creed, | tonder. The Allies hav how sue- {touch with the Empire without the | PEPITRENE b " ars in bad cond principle of universal liability to ser- | they have been deiivered they will r :it?;;-“hm-“‘mmn‘ut e B b g J.:fifi'éa"?"ffifi"a“"" the lceeded where the Italian failed; but |necessity of passing over forelgn ter-|iion in spots because public servi Vice, the full equipment of the nevy |.CCIvé Such distribution as was in- |the Tsardem. of Museovy compmecss| The Patriarch of Constantinople Is | oy ‘nacuptful If thelr arguments were BATTY CamatThis. seadoHEIMRteA. in | coTporation and_ citizens aliowed to . ded and that ths Spanish. vessel on 3 = the h. us potent as the Fmp: n uce tear up the pavements have not pro- and_the extension to the governmont | on only 37,000 square miles, ten thousand |BOt Now the head of the Greek church iy the Sh: 5 mind thy »d |the fertile mind of von der Goitz, the b W its return trip will be permitted to|square miles smaller than the sta in Russia, but only over a section of | 1ns it arcr iy mind by the repeats - perly replaced what they tore up. e of the most liberal credits he is doing an te of m of | ingults which the Youns Turks had |German organizer of the Turkish arm- inspectors to see that pavements bring away the Americans who are|New York. Now it covers 560,282 |Asia The Greek church in Russia is | jrunched againat Hls beopie and which |Jes. Whose pluns for defence of the ({0, "EPSrl™ T plofed 1o condition us se Many people are beginning to the advantages of universal milit: training who never saw it before. If every one has to do his share, no one will have to do more than his share, i the slow man has to toe thé mark the prompt bne will fiot have t6 stand slone. 1If the stacker i4 made to do bis part the patriot won't have to do it for him and his own, too. If ail are train- ed for military service the burden 1 distributed and the organization is so strong that the- load is light| It makes a fellow strong and courageous to feel that all of his countrymen are standing with him and no particular ones have got to do service and make sacrifice alone—Waterbury American |.\grea that, whatever their ‘descent, in any militafy operation, but | plant extracts and denominated ‘bit- tia 000; Mohammedan: the National Geographic Society and {from their state of bliss In Eden, ( only what the occasion demands. Tt|anxious to leave. Ruch would simy ed by a * P 3 . ply | Square miles, or nearly three times as |8overn y a “Holy Synod’ same min: ign rsecu- | Ottoman Empire included the con- y o is a situation which must e faced and | be insisting on justice. large as the 48 United States, without |38 in Greece. This is composed of all | ion -:7:-:“::4 arabe, co‘\’:pl‘;: with | stroction of reat siratgieal iines D it tus Youbs 1o e that oo not dodged, and in this connection he — B o TERLIE W RenSt of e I Rty (he s [tne humliating siatement thaj . the fWhich would enabls the Turkish Sforces well paid inspectors have been so lax 13 1 lais = E TE: s = - 'pre: ers to be m zed and concentrat ‘wit] y v makes it plain that we must not nes. 'DITORIAL NOTES. e e g ity least | This is the same in England whers | e b or s i, Bt deem | Creat rapidity. In the troubled days 'S thelr work. Why. o G Nt e Ject the service which we can and must render to the allied nations al- ready in the fleld through the furnish- ‘The man on the corner says: Spring, The Russian empire and the British the King is the Spiritual Head of the | i) « [ W i preceding” the downfall of Abdul N i of course, at this stage has the privi. |smpire were practically contesaporan. |State church. The doetrinal differsnce | in, s 25y, Guslities bevond those Bos- | Hamid, and i1 the montas of the War |hoDe Mayor Campner Wil SVe, the lege of coming and going about as it |€aus in their expansion. In 1568 Great | besides that on the Felioque are eon- | oot o aoto s ana that Constantinople | With Italy, this road demonstrated its | o0 and make it very plain to be a service of inestimable value. The president makes it plain that % pleases. Britain was “the tight little isle of 121,- | Siderable, in wording at least. The military value: and whatever succe: sar ot it fmpilien whishi ;.:Q and e 000 Sapans miles Son = hamater of pos. | Russian hurch rejects the supremacy | Naf, tired of hearing from the Helaz|TITUY, YLl ally futile invasion of |nore owho have Charge of H e Yeon 3 . s is bound tof th April showers, the wild geesc[PlS Today it bas 12.000.000 square ‘:.5,3’.:&’;"'1.“’4 °‘3;e"°"fl Purga- | 2051 N2 "Honsetn Ton Al looked |E€YI if the present war was due in |jU80 USH, ota,fon, “are much im- ,000, people. " ug] ey ve In & pur-l,.., this as a mean_return for his|no smal regard to its lines. Ail fhis, proved. The people are grumbling and robins on hand, it ought not to|™ gy railroac o recent growth of the Russian do- |8ation after death, baptism is of in- he v as with th ilroad a loya! be long before we get the dandelions = Joyalty to the Youns Turk party, al- |however, whs s e {ana with reason. There is no minion practically began in 1848, when | fants, but by triple immersion, dipping [ 90U} e “haa” been an. Dmperially |and eager tersitory: r -] ‘whereas now the '®{excuse for such neglect as can be seen time, in the pame of the | (OUSH, he had been ap = mperially i mascus railroad is in hostile hands | STCTRS 0T NECR SEECEL A7 U Metreets we cannot refuse the challenge re-|and fiies in overabundance. Peroffsky marcbed on Kazals and con gardless of what it calls for, but he quered the hordes of tribal folks on the | Father, of the Son and of the E —_—— Pinces the Tesponsibilty for the action | , AUStHla wante to retaln the friend- |Rorthern, shores of the Caspian. Then | Ghost. Thus retaining the original|uny bt fost Jittie time. in PRGGIGMMINE | Ninoteon vouns women carpenters|' . prudin e B v B D States and stil 'sar's soldiers the Steppes, q aiways and every- | {30 jnaependente of his 1and and his|have been sent from London to France| Abram Gole, 104 Ulster county's which he calls for upon the imperial ey mibity. Thia firma- | ©O8 ted arm ont resi * Lowe 0 where means . - V. German government. and not the Ger- | ourcr Pt grad s %, g | Amoor rovince, Sansisting. ot the |tion is wiven Ttk TS Daibatem, pvas royal state. Hussein is reputed |t build huts for the British y. lota dent, dled at Zena, N. Y man people. He draws a sharp line| faced friend. whole of Northern Manchuria, was ab- | to infants. They teach transsubstanti- and few o ‘:lrscib?i':?y e il sorbed in 1358. The Khanate of Tur- (ation and the adoration of the Host, ({00 GO0 DOt TWE A8 W (0 TIECALTR between the two and b oy T S kestan was added to the empire in the |but they give both bread #hd wine to e war should result to their| Althoush those submarines off Mon- vear, Samarkand In 1868, Kuldga | communicants, even to children, using |10 benefit by the ending of the autocratic | tauk proved to be patrol boats, it is|in 1870, Kiva and Bokhara ' in 183, |leavened bread. Priests and deacons | . Trc Feiaz though best known of ’ government which prevalls there today | shown that the undersea hoats couldn’t | Khokand in 1875, Mery in 1884 and |are allowed to marry, before ordina-|.,, eiden B (oRvaier pr apane even as it lias to the people of Rus- | remain on the surface long without be- |JPa( remained of Turkomania In 1885, | torn, but bishops must be celebates | yecca, jtalargest and most holy city has _always been held as forbiddem sia. It is necessary for the future|ing detected. Neith minions the last 68 years. Before the er man nor woman are allowed | . .05"¢0 the foreign foot; and as peace of the world that democracy —— war she had absorbs the hols f |to marry a second time. shall prevafl. It is all right possibly for Germany | Westers Asia. excent. Percid, Asiatie |the Virgin Mary and to Saints are o S s B g otk g by ol # The poeposes of this nation in en. | o talk about where the reponsibility | Turkey and Afehanistan, and it looks |common, and while pictures are com- | T umissed by that eminent historian 1 ha s h s’om for war between that country and this |as if she will add a few million more |mon, images are not allowed, except | Tith the assertion that ‘our notlons of tering the war are clearly set forth. that of ti : lies if war comes, but the facts are|acres from Turkey including Constan- e e o ot it et 0ot | bians; as no unbellever is permitted to We are not declaring war but we are tinople, when the war ends. have the Saviour Instru- \aking. full’ saphiiance ¢ the cangt | Rk Ly, T he Sromten Fmpire may be divided |mental music _is not allowed in|”hier the city. our travelers are Dms m sflks afld linings ¢ tions which Germany has so unjustly| With talk in the reichatag about|into five parts: 1, Russia in Europe, |Shurches, but ‘vocal music “Yet Gibbon was In error. : ’ - forced upon us. It remains for con- | FiSINg up against the German govern- |Including Poland and the Grand Duchy | 70 %30 S0 Svesiua thelma, a Bolognese expiorer, was . e T e e e tor S0~ | ment the xaiser has reason to foar tha |Sf Finiand; 2 The Caucasus: 3 Siberla, | ihere"an Sarny’ 28 the sixtesnt Con- Corsets, Gloves and Hosiery, 5 ; -y 5 force that knocked the throne out|Manchuria. The heart of this vast|iS the most ‘wonderful a. 3 oo etiter T "o People pray stand servations that they mill serve for H - empi y ng facing the East, : empire.1s in "the Fassia "inEurcpe | Pesple ptay standing facing the Eaet | 350)300E 1t "sa o 'hone of Pausan: Muslin and Jersey Ribbed Underwear, W .mfnklng a start for the expendi- |heart. European Russia with less than {Dastic orders of Both sexes abound | Dres: 'etticoats s'“ ers. ure of a large sum for better roads|two millions of territory has nearly | Where the rule _— = N Se O‘, d New Jersev makes an, cZcellent se-|94,000,000 of people, while the other |®d, never eat meat, and poverty, chas- 2 Hou S| P al ] t s Etc- lection when It puts General Goethals|Rearly seven millions of square miles tity and obedience are imposed on all. - 36,000,000 population. HENRY FRANCIS ADAMS - FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN b The great variety of races involves a| New London, March 29, 1917. We Never Sacrifice Quality For Prices the preparations and thers can be no question but what the country stands solidly behind the president in the present crisis. e is taking the proper stand and the nation will respond loy- ally with the firm conviction that it is right. - When Germany tellss Rumania that | diVersity of languages and religion. CLARK THE SPEAKER. more of its people will be seized fis i SoySnment of such a dominion Ovpegsaion of Mon. In spite of the closeness in the po- | hostages unless ifiterned Germans are f,";;‘:.“’.‘,.",'fl'{.}‘,‘;};fi;{’.fifi’&“;fi:’.‘?fif ,,;fiz"{,‘,’nmu““'m: Eiold awti- e 5 2 litical division of the lower house of | released it is getting ready to extend |ucation Of an army Of AIDIOMAts: Tho | g we SUsPest e Defmce & e - —OUR PRICES ARE THE LOWEST AND WE GIVE congress there can be no sufprise in | the tactics used in Belgium. population included Slavs, Bulgarians, {man will not oy i - the fact that Champ Clark was re-| Caechs, Serbs, Swedes, Finns, Karel- | ca oo " L o v e \ ! olacted speaker of that body within a| When the king of Depmark said |ians, Esthanions, Mordvins, Votyaks, comparatively brief time following | 500d bye to the Danish West Indieg| Ichererisses, Lapps, Samoyeds, Letts, the calling together of the extra ses- | it ‘'Was a different farewell than many u. ithuanians, Ar':.e.l.zhu. kug. ‘P‘g: sion of congress. For some days this | countries have said in parting o ‘manitests = d 1 A ? tlon of consress. Fyr same davs this | countries have said ix pereie Erelinne, Totgnaina, Tartirs “Usbegs, X & 101 MAIN STREET cause of the opposition which had de- mucks, Buriats, Tun; ‘Mongols, ; a veloped to the republican candidate Zimmermann says Germany cannot | Gypsies, Yakuts, K Esquimaux, Congressman Mann, the minority lead. | be Blamed for trying to add to its al- [ Kamchadals, Chinese, J: ese, Kore- 2 S. > h fi' CITY m w = mmdmt; thomuu mession, who falled | lies; by sending the note regarding|Sne 204 It Wil be & swpnice 1o MROY| . . % 3 P. S—Reptintng o ORKS to e united strength of his own | Mexico. It simply shows. h W o o race, t eeling may be due to an y F Dasty_ ARG Who. thazetore could mat ax. | what Germiny was delng to Cur. Back T el Pauth T R S atak b S Seeer. OB French Dyeing and Cleansing pect to receive support from all the|while it was making quits different|ruie of the new Bascian republic. Bv. | Whet Brvar has 1o ey of the memns independents or any of the democrats. | ropressatations to our face, -~ |en this Met Goes seant Justice to the

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