Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 25, 1917, Page 4

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Sy 7RI ' DAVIS iR ¥ a )4 o0 4 ’ T B RS fhe e How You May Subscribe to United States : AL = Jlorwich Bulletin | 5. o onvemss o % G | udeville's Greatest Cycling Novelt gers e great trouble is that they - Va 's Greatest Cy: g Noveity aro not given the attention. that he had nothing at all sinister in TH E v A L D A R Es and Qoufiesd The Atlanta fire, mind. He merely wanted to hand her fortabie things, in the % | Artfuiiy pointed out the mamber bt . Of uncomfortabie things, course of y pointed out the number of 121 YEARS OLD portant that the need of checking these | the pfévious years, that it was de-|good investments in the market. He “ljhty ‘ Im 1917 = meskueription price 13c @ week: 80c o| great losses, which are of course gzhmxllhag; to be IU(-‘::: - M‘%h‘mufi f—':&fi;’f.{?:’;f—' Three Dashing Young Ladies and a Comedian in a Singing and 38.00 a year. mother and s and : i i i xcelled Eop Rl el i E g S R TR S AND PAY ON AN INSTALLMENT PLAN Trick Cyeling Act Which Cannst Be Excefed TOM MOORE & STASIA VARDON & PERRY Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, [ mind at all times. N e Mt Al Lo Bneh oot | had iy St G Conn., as second-class mat! o Telephone Callas in Stsco C%ty died and willed her fif-| Marena exploded. ‘He's making With your subscription yeu depesit with Bullg i Businass Office 480, LIGGOR. ADVERTISENENR. teen shares of stock in the Sfsco City |fun of me!” she cried. “Experience and thereafter deposit $2.00 each week ft 1468, c.m.,',x Satire In a Delightful Vie “THE_DREAM GIRL" Piano Offering - i VOUN)KVT" ROBERT HARROCN " V3% §-Part Triangle Play of Tkrill, Surprise and Bright Roms x months interest attached. 87 TRIAMOLE KoMDY T CONCERT ORCHESTF alletin Editorial Rooms 35-3. A strenuous fight has been made in|bank. As Marena mever had over |and intelligence! And me exactly 2 S Buletin Job Ofics 35-2.| behalf of prohibition in the past few|a hundred hard wrung dollars a vear | He's just insinuating that I'm a green- Interest earned on your deposits.. ating a y i - . 5 =——— couple of humdeed dropping automat- | she understood him, in painstakingly P Norwich, Friday, May 25, 1917. :E::’“":’}“‘:c‘h "":“;_‘:t'::“‘.;*’ sale o | ically ana without eftort into fap | police "and’ Sarcastic language She W";:“g';“,'_'“"" i e at least not for a great many vears.| The of Gibraltar could have | letter, and she banged the stamp to with coupon for S mnlomdow:: o5 g | thet ug B s s e | e o e s e e Tt TOTAL bo i continue to stay wet or dry, a n_ sep- er answe return mail. He as above ........ I fro to the other in aceord with |arated from the of DMarena. It | was amazed. perturbed, at the way ‘z::emg:t:mfm n!othl peeple. But in| Was the mast :’."&m. substgsice | she took the propesed transaction. For subscriptions larger than $50.00 multiply the above by 2, 3, ———— . connection with the prohibitien meves | WhIch ever bad come into her hands | She seemed to thin that in seme wa: 4 or more as the case may be. - ent and in conmection with Jegisla.|2nd considerably more then a pick-|he was trying to cheat her! Noth- Feature Photoplays meng S » T |ax would have necessary to pry | ing wae farther from Nis.ghoughts. THE w'cfl SAVM swm C Orchaestr iates e g et Sl | tueal, when she | Marena, - with . Dirk sheeks: Sho 1 ;8 ( s ‘3 Was natu when she arena, wi ol S, he ilv 3 |ion by those engagzed In the ltquor|sot John Peter ScHimigers letter and | looked dangerous and like s mother NORWICH, CONNECTICUT THEATRE 3 Shows Daily 2:30, 7, 8:3 business, it has been decrsed by cons |Tead it, thet she turned fourteen coi- | bird when a foe threatens the nest. gress that after June 20 no newspa-|Or® ail kb plmnnut face and her A 1;3. Gorrespondence became rapld, TODAY AND SATURDAY ack eyes flashed fire. ectic, shing. n one side it was -~y jJer canving liaucr severtiments| *why, the howtk eia thiug! conciliatory, protesting; on the other -~ e - JOYcE d HARRY MORE can sent In the malls to states | gagpeq out to her anxious family. it was flaming and denunclatory. John 53 B vy . an . or towns, cities or districts which|_he wants to buy my bank stock! Peter brought it to a ciimax. about the cawp Which becams, thejthe ‘pablic convegtiume~-Fvevillsnce g jhave voted against the sale of Mquor.| The chorus of protest that immedi- | “Dear madam,” he wrdte, and ex- genter of the Roman expoditions sent |Bu E IN THE VITAGRAPH BLUE RIBBON FEA nto Centr 3 e state of Connecticut into which it|Peter might just as well have offered | Chicago the following week and would P . to poisen Marena at 4 o'clock and re- [call upon her, as he could not en-|early days is a grim concrete tower, |Bridgeport Home Garden committes 6 f S l - . would be unlawful to send throush |0 Polsen Masens - Tore (he atiitude she bt tainet Bz | Shomt U0 Toer Dih which stands on |Rave Gecisnated NG &6 Horae Gative { -] ou rage o1 dueEnc newspaper, contalning liquor adver. |5, eya,: Maver uoted, “that the site of the oid camp. It is sup- |week in Bridgeport. This is-at once a > ~| he's to 1ex 12 tisements, there being a pemelty at-|bank and he v’:m- ‘t’;upd:;arslntlha Marena went around all that week |ed Roman legions in memory of Drus- |reminder that if ons would plant a tached of six months In jail or a finc| outlying steck that doesn't do 'the| with a high chin and snapping eves.|us. Who died at the age of 29, as the|garden at all the time for action is result of a fall from his horse. Dom- | now. | = C P Cor - the law. me a pricel Why, 1 shoulin't| the living room with one of the best 2 Hearst Pathe Weekly | .His Conscious Conscien Liguor advertisements have been ac- | kKnow any place to invesi the money! | dofiies, all because she was so engaged | Ors to arrogate to himself divine Bridgeport 1s achiéving = _valuable St T TSt a5 o i e R e & | et S e WS TR R BB D ring to s v ‘::%eru:“ e gir:ir‘el;;gel;lza::ead‘;;r:elll:{,‘ s:“c:n:a- . 0f course vou O hded her| Ociimiger. Whatover he said, a4 drjOur Tord And Go0 e erdet | d Uy Gih WV NS TECRIIL Tha P s 1 . t o Mainz the fir e s o by 5o St | A B e qenk " niead 08| Sremienedahe was Fosssd ot | s v Soncf o cxpert aavite ana aesiztonce | AMAT. 2:50 itori MATINEE 10 C : introduced | through the committee, and are thers- | @ PVE ' 7 8:30 UAIIOrium Eeve. 10c-15¢ loose ] 3 ‘bri There are over half the towns in the |ately broke I ind! hat John | plained briefly that he would be in oot intoresting memorials of these| The supbrvisore gcting for . the the mail The Bulletin, or any other “He " o fe says,” Marena quoted, “that| wanted to explain. - by devot- |call to & patrfotic duty, an ntle ) " R e e oy e et Five Wonderful Acts of Superb Photo-Play of $1,000, or both for a violatl f | bank an! and that he will ve | Sh it It in h s e 5 g « IVing Toom with e of Gnausted | e an. the firat of the Roman emper-| The Home Gerden committes in cepted by newspapers the same as tock ! h! Mr. = o B oiiger, Whaterer ho et s | S ‘Lord ‘and Godr caused to . be amateur gardeners Who are hav 3 ys been so re . i - tianity as early o always been so regarded. But| selfish When he came she salled into the mlbtiantty wes ‘enrly fntreRaosl | o s TS times larger than that of sny in ch. "It is delivered fo over 2,000 of the 4, ilehbl.lul in Nor-$|after next month, such sadvertising living room, pink and mentally ruf-|into Mainz, perhaps in Brid, § must_stop because the law save so,| Marena snamered the epistie briefly | fled like a small bird He stood by|century. and one of the first bishops |them for their efforts.—Bridgepo SCEAT AND SAVONORY le. a and curtly and Jay awake nights wor- | the table and stared at her. She|St. Boniface, lel = 'gram. £ cent. of the peopl and The Bulletin intends to respect 2) r. She e T el WILLIAM NIGH—VIOLET PALMER in it is delivcred tv_over 500 nouses, rying for fear John Peter Scrimiger | stared at him. e law auch action however Y| Woula in meme mysterious manner.| ~Wh-why-why! the [ the “city today Include the whesls| Hartford should learn its o Putnam and Danielson to OVeT$|, .. siop the consumption of liquor in stammered whisk that precious stock out of its| bank Ipresident |weakly. ‘§ thought|Which the saint incorporated into his|from such fires as that in Atl 13 s e T The Blue trealk 1,100, and In all of these places it the wet towns and it will not prevent| safe place and depart with it. _Any | you were an old lady like Susan Turn- |OWn armorial bearings in honor of [where d his father who was a humble English | $3,000,000 was done and t RS tbe local dellr. those in the dry towns from. crossing ¥ Eastern Connecticut has forty- s money that he might Jeave in its| bush, who owned the stock origin ? i - a1n6 towns, o Beadied whd stiy- 1| nto the wet towns and wettl What |place Who HAaTSTIe ond whent meth Feisin &0 { S heelwrisht, persons rendered homeless, The fire he Photodrama You've Been Waiting For « Long Time they want just the same as they have | ing. When she was especiaily wor- | . “You—vou aren't % bit old!” echoed| During the middie ages the arch- | typical of other conflagrations which loturs With a New Theme, Plenty of Thrills and bishop of Mainz enjoyed vast power,|have swept through many cities in In It five postofiice districts, and sixty iural free dellvery routes. been doing. This new law will not|ried Marena endowed her mental Marena dazedly, and then they sat tures of Mr. Scrimiger with horns, | down and stared again and started althoush the citizens not Infeequently |various pavts of the coutiy and the [l == o= SE RSN AERIAL HONEYMOON flames found their food apparently in S s oo uil ok he B BT ::161:h'neze:fifi?e;:xxn‘:t»oo h::“;:‘:f::‘.’ but otherwise he wavered between a| out afresh. Try as she might she|revolted. On one occasion 500 ci e R e e SR and nalier v . otning in| £aURt 0ld gemtleman with a string not make out that this big ath. | zens- were slain and all the leading|a terrftory very similar to the major Y wide prhibition as long as nothing is| "% 12" chin whiskers and a pursy, | letic, merry eved youns man ans|merchants of the town were banished |part of the Hartford residence dis-, AL WEEKL done to prevent the manufacture Of | heery Individual with em oily ~smile | really a robber. Hesven knom wiag|by a rival archbishop of Nassan. triet. and asthma. Anybody who couid behe was trying fo make out of Marena.| “The zenith of Mainz' glory came in| Hartford may escape guch g fire for- the or-|ever. On the other hand, conditions | — = CIRCULATION importation of Tauors. e sufficiently evil minded to want to get | The bank president won out. He|that perlod which followed 991, average....... - 4At2 NEEDS A THOROUGH PROBE. |hold of her stock must be a hateful | took the shares of stoc ck | Ranization of the Teague sh | are 3 1 the fifteen shares of < ization of the ague of Rhenish|are permitted to exist in this city " g s k back 5 : & : < 4 o I Ty ; 1905, average.... 5,920 alpod In 1234, Tt|which offer possibilities of just such a |use of khaki in manufac e CHILDREN'S PLAY thing to look upen, to Sisco City a couple of months lat- | Towns by Arnoid ¥ y Pe them. For, | was in thai era that the city won the |fire as Atlanta’s or Salem's of several |products. Couch hammocks, for ex- Thers.[x abwasd; & AUFL taw fov pye| WHORCH Scrimiger replied. Wi ther his wife took the Fe amy y 5 e | er. or rather his wife took them. Fo vt} 3 z," T 4 y le, that heretofore have been title of ‘golden Mainz’ being the chief [years ago, or any one of the s ijasgin. s, hergialers. hAve asn hin and apparently that is the went into detalls at some length and | of course, he married M 2. —Ex In Sommection with the re-fhopeq that Marena would comprehend | change. = e of the hundred commercial centers|fires in Chelsea. Such fires may start dotted alons tie great waterway from |in the outakirts, byt in many cases (made of other m“;::hzlfiu;mflbe’: and Sther o . 5 May 19, 1917.... 'y i liner Mengolia hound for the war zone Tasel to the North Sea. they burn toward the business dis- |artl trimmed with HG7c PASNIK CO. SELL FOR 158 Main Street er: """ 707+ Mainz i other chance to help the country when Trom 1797 to 1816 Mainz belorwed|trict and endanger hisbly ~valuable|ather chance to help the country when mn;._m: S B S e e mipofor sl hef mcm. buf In. the Intter-swar 1Elatenertif et maanby et i e sessessessecscessssssssssesses | cording to the explanations wi world the French 2 ow ance, i atter 3 g Ly have been ziven of tho amate by the|| LETTERS TO THE EDITOR || or thetr sconome: moe samenorndn s Was assighed to the srand duchy of & wide shes of stors and factory Bulld- |lican. o . CHILD LABOR LAW MUST RE- |sccretary of the navy it was some- strict and sweet ‘wisdom in refusing| Hesse. ¥ e —1 Post. P h—"“ because | T -~ e - & e i Mainz' chief right to distinction is - Judge Tuttle has resigned becau o waste whatever is fit and good for - he feels that in_ these, the most active | change his . thing which was unaveldable. £ . as the birthplac last resti ere’s another way to give patriotic s the birthplace and la ating | ¥ ¥ e | paen ot nin lite. e cas samm more mon- | Change hia human consumption. To throw away MAIN. As near can be made out, the e 5 BE B South. there has atways B e 5 2 % half or a quarter of a " place of Johan Gansfleisch. surnamed |help to Uncle Sam. Don't buy eloth- ove mon- b * ihere has alwavs been|shell was iike a number of others Hot Water Will Do the Trick. brsad, woila ol O Stale | P his mother Gutenberk, inventor of |ing OF other articles made of khaki.|ev off the bench than the state is now [ of cii¢ mea a strong opposition to any law which | waich have been firad in practice from e o S eihought a erime in | o ble tvpe and. therefore. the fath- |This in the material used By the gov- | paying him for judicial service. o and Tould interfere with child labor. In|a number of the armed steamshipsand | Mr. Editor: No, I am not a pig, but | Tance, How offen have ;:'“",';,‘:‘;:,’,‘ er of printing. Gutenbers was born |ernment for army pup tents and it is| Beyond doubt he fs right, and be-[gnq ajep r that section there has even been a de- | which have been found to contain|®C,Mmany differ with me about pea wee- each weelk? 5 ~ here toward the end of the 14 century. | rushing orders for all it ean get for |cause he feels that he oukhlklo sell his ot yils. bean bugs, ete., T thought per- |, We ale loaf, in France, cut into|Went to Strassburg when quite voung |the men who are soon to be mobilized. E;fl:::nxnr::f‘;‘:”}-uzm.:\u’:ai—h:tq prices | e who nettie termined resistznce to compulsory | faws of some charaster which not haps Just a few words once more on | i B8 e oMt B rea e paeaimid | but returned to his mative tcwn in|The tendency to call for that materi o than 8t cut rates. tho state is and it was here that his first |for civilian use has been greater since | going’ to lose e ser sehool attendance because of the fact|only interferes with thelr .effective- | b - act| o t aubject might held a little. ¢ that it would seriously interfere with | ness but makes them dangerous for| 142 in the oven, is laid in the bottom of | 1444. wi - cientious ing the work of srown-ups. It 1is|used and detrimental to the guns from | very easily controiled, as they pro-|2 Eenerous portion of the great na-[As 147 He died twenty years later. | been cspecilly oo wiwh toe wemen |ant Few SEICR REPICIONTNL (1 og therefore not surprising that the prop- | which they are fired. This discloses | #uice but ons family of\ youns a year. [ {onal dish of the country, pot-au-feu.| Thorwsldson, sculptor of the famous|who have been eeekine Khall $o sltect| SCEMICE o LIS (97 fople whose lo- osition should be advocated by cer-|a deplorable sftuation, one that calls| The bean weevil is the most trouble- | A befter or more satisfying meal does | 00 of Taiwerne, fewigned the Gut- |5 000 00t chaki i mo lonwer |gal troubles he has considered, have tain southern senators for the suspen-|for the most thorough investigation,|S5OMe. as its presence is mever known | NOY EST. . pot-au-feu is made of|ed to her greatest citizen. worn by the soldfers, r olive drab [very great respect for Judge ]'r-,u:e: SOt he federal child labor law. | that the real trouble with them may [NUL R SOMTSRCSs (0 JS0%, | NSSIC| scraps and bits of food that with us seoThere’ Thas been s *Cathedral at|material naving dlsplaced it but it iz [and the whole state regrets that he is law was not obtained without | be discovered and remedied. It should |are thrown away. Let every house- |Mainz since the year 405. The inter- |popularly suj - " | adorned and the dlgnity and usefulness e entombar At el o the first|this is due to faulty comstruction, to| trolied in the fleld. The agricultural POt-au-fou this vear as a patriotic|Ihe THh. 13th and tiwh centurles—a | SCoy MenioCiicee® oo el ding the | New Haven Times-Leader. of September. Against such a_propo- i : as a distinct assistance to Papa | MOst interesting mo; v Propo- | deterioration, or to belng tampered|department long agd exploded the|Z770 22 & Ciof fighting countrymen, as | Periods of architecture. e of sal as has been made the National|with. It is most distressing that the | theory that late planting would pre- 4 % ot e Chila Labor committee is malking a|loss of lite should he occasioned in the| vent bugs If you only Taiee a small |3 heln fo Tmgland 'in her etrugsle| . The extenaive new barbors Yigorous protest but opposition should | manner which it was, but it is also to| JUSRHLY of beana after they are pari | eI0 N0 40, (TURE A8 DUPS S0 | hanced the city's trade which is con- not come from this organization alone, | be realized that such ammunition at- | > 477 Brace then i reiain wntil | dent. siderable in grain, timber. vegetables, The only requisite is an earthern. | chemicals, musical instruments, car- but from the whole country The ef-| fords decidedi; poor protection for | very t—¢ y o ang finten Aeyme Bof e ke | ware pot or pipkin of a size com-. | Pe(s. petroleum and paper in addition GLEANED FROM FOREIGN EXCHANGES fort is being ade to strike a body|those who are using it and mighty | out and finish drying. T find this Dblow at this law before there is an op- | little support for the cause in which| works well, if you watch the beans. I | Mensurate with the family it is to|io the wines, ‘eather zoods and furni- — 1 te thatching ! est tc i i i t H ay ioned One: time we would havef plough, driving the team, thatching portunity to bring it Into effect and the | it is beinz utilized, y0u do not watch them, you are liuble | fe8d. This must have a_tight-fitting | ture already mentioned. thousht T (hinks more improbable | the bain, using the flail: bat her chief are mads existing conditions in the country are| The government officials who are i | o Ret them too hot and kill them for Qv(h'e:"f‘; fing its P';‘ffi, on the range than® to hear the tune of “John|avocation is breaking horses at a|1000th day of course being used as the reason|charge of such supplies cannot lose see% besides making them hard to[here it can coolk slowly fllgg;uflfl“.‘ Brown's Body” sung under the dome|guinea per week. She s fond of P R therefore. but risht down at the bot-|a moment in getting at the root of the | ““gtre netghbors of mine drop the| Into this Dot as a starter, moes HOME GARDENS O O B o | e et o o orte | iy wa fom of it there can be little doubt|matter. The trouble must be located | newly shelled beans In hoiling water, |2POUt two pounds of soup meat - D e thories for IS olaial. aes. | the base viol in Matlock Church. to June but what the real object of the at-!and the blame placed where it belonss. | leaving there two minutes, then dry |3cored deeply across and across. Also e e T St - - ) f tempt is to assure to that section of |1t is a serious matter to have such a| thoroughly. any bones that may be handy. Three Shaws There has alwava been much | Patriotic piot-diggers cager o find gure the country where child labor has|disclosure made while a country is in| Circular 112 of the U. S. bureau of ;11"1;‘,;_"{““:»:;‘“6?;‘;“t';;‘—‘u:“ig; Dt Baveries. uncertainty abou: the origin of thela fresh vegetable that will give quick mea A A pap- : song, but the generally accepted story | crops for “war food” might try the Ania entomology will describe perfectly how hich to use hydrocyanic-acid gas, which is hinese plant been =0 lonz used o continuation var. o | wores than o prepasation st on . | BIE SPO. 8l Lo Saste anil ‘setit. bsck “Tet me euggest that every one|jgs 'peen il it was first sung on | celery-cabbage, a i Y ar in Canada, and by the 12th Massachu-|has become pop thereof for the profit that Mes there- | worse th ; B e the ot s bons e oy | womea than Do prpMSteniet AT equaly s ood as bisulphide of car | closely covered where it Is to sy all| (0 i “or Citivates o marden | oty Te 160 secondary consideration. They seize EDITORIAL NOTES. :::k"zflsmk:’; sure but somewhat | 8% Io it aqd an onlon fio‘;—?«fif’}f,g helps, and helps sreatly, to solve the | setts Fegiment in raarching through|the seed of which seems now o be upon them. however, a5 a means of| With another British drive in prep-|" Circular @. @. 6f the bureau fs just | Slices and tops from any vegetables | probiem of the feedins of nation e s A I e e R o \ aceomplishing their efforts. aration it is possible that Hindenburs |out, succeeding C. C.. and every bean | YOU May be using, a couple of table- | president Wilson. g TEaE hask, inrpravised by Tase Ten | sat -atther: coowed: or Taw. The cels i a The weifare of the nation, the In-|is planning to counter by a strategic|raiser in the United <¥iies ehould |SPoONsful of shredded parsley, a lit- ST o{sliJ)e regiment.”—Lendon Times. ery-cabbage, about the size of a cos v terests of the coming zenerations de- | retreat. have it. Write to . H. Chittenden, in | fle barley if yvou like chicken feet that o e lettuce and cultivated in the same|Zral mand that proper protection should be Y & jgarge of Crop and €tored Product,|[A%e, Jen Parbolled and Seraped. | chien o ihe family ment ase o eas, | The death of Herr von Thné, the|way, is a rapid grower. fit to cut in | wonder a given to the children, that they should| The man on the corner ga: No| Roard of Agriculture, Washington, D. DEP o he s waatnl o et e prown and oceup o Iitle space,| Kaiser's private architect, recal's u|seven or elght weeks, and would pro- | case be prevented from overwork, from|man ought to dodze the epportunity to) C- . : during the days' cooking and that|they are worth while in almost any |little dispute between the Berlln mu- | vide greenstuff throughout the win- [ crippied Sor long hours and from beinz thrown in- | do thing for his city e}y, 42 € P16 gou Will 853, thet cither e scliog = e o | nicipality and his Majesty a few | ter. PO v » ~ o o g oY ywhile theline oven heating or 140 F. hot water|Would be thrown away without the|Zarden. says today’s bulletin from the the before the war broke out. The - ment bure e iy e eney ousht to be|opportunity is knocking at the door. | will do the trick, without the use of |Daven of the pot-au-feu for their | National Emergency Food Garden | or Naving decided to rebulld the| A el _method of commemorating [ made eco n schooi. s country can take care % succulent refuge. Commission, of Washington. [orse- i v % BV o it o AT | & t oigono 3 3 . T A d vers o church who have | ft . of its production in all lincs, regard- | The cathedral of Rhetms which it|”Thanis for your great show of con- | Whin evening comes take off the|radish roois after the first vear are|Beriln Roval® Opers House. lenored| ihe members of the church who have| i less of war requirements, without re- |ls claimed can never be repalred will| fidencs in Wit me. Soup and remove the bones and euch [ llkely to become woody and misshap. | Yo7 TiiCeriin (o prepare the neces- | Hrixton Consremational Church. = A | sorting_to the employment of chil-|stand if allowed to remain as it Is, as THE CLOUD DIGGWR. |DieCes of vesetables as have been put|en. and the best results are obtained| T\ p12, 5" \Unen "these were made | “Liber Vitae" has been compied—an | O T ot JB the meat | D L o ot o (o 1ags Tan | PUblic they were severely criticised | iiluminated volume containing the T and the Obergurgemaster of Berlin|names and brief blosraphies of each dren. The country demanded this pro- jore of the many monuments to Ger-! £mall, and remove from it most of the | 4 ¢ 2ll, v it mos he tection for the citizens of tomorrow |man vandal : A t azing : and no such suzgestion as has been e | Prisoners Should Help on the Farms.|fat Put it back wnthe soup. and [ or e At the o o Ninter OMen | waited ‘on the Kaiser With & view to|man who has lost his lite, It is hoped made by the southern senators ought s , con entirely possiblel Mr. Editor: It seems to be univer- | thoroughly chilied {hrough the nisnt|after yenr in some garden carer, the | Inducing him to consent to certain (the book will remain on the co e IR Seticnc, considecation. rhe the kaiser's call for hin American |sal amowg the fammers of Brooklyn |in the morning skim entefury fr: | rohts being dug whenever needed. Ftgcsced sltorstions. T af WeyEhs |murion table of the church for Rlowy members of congress should, and it is| is¢ iz due to the fact that he has|that arrangements should be made|the top the shost of fat that will have| The plant is propagated from cut- |for my new epera house out of my | time. # s believed that they will, see that such|® 72F"n melar or two by biting off {immediately whereby the prisoners| rice ™" When you want io ve it|ting of the roots called “sets” These|QWn pocket’ wa# the monarch's re- | 750 % - Trener at =10% | more than he could chew. Who are in the Windham eounty fail | Lear it quiekly and pour. ores tne|should be & or § Inehes loak and in |PI¥. “and T don't intend to consult the{ The idea of the “Book of Life" is| Iow ex R & " Do further than the} e it 4 A0 } would be vailable to help out on the | joace in each plate. Nothine else | Size ranzing from that of lead pencil | tastes of other people.” —London | entirely Scriptural, it being the cus. |have done proposal stase. The will of the Deo- n ihe government urging the ,farms. |If our counmtry expects the | [oUiill fo make o perfort Gumibecs | to that of a man's Hitle finger. For| Chronicle. | tom: among the early Ch¥lstians thus [is made clea ple should not be trified with farmers to be loyal and patriotic the | cxcept a little fruit as dessert sng | straisht, thick roots the soil should = |to record the names of those wiom | by Field” off lacs of Keighley (pronounced Ksithley), | the Church wished o hold in remem- | ehd dee prepared. It likes moist 65,000 ving of buckwhzat, it is making! 2 I +officials who have charge of this mat- 1, D o e intly sonr 1D 34" itk yhouifl sen: to 1t pows ot one| of Sac It WL téke the place of u | bs placed on the al- which has given the country a re-|brance in a volum & volume of the | figures) ar. The sole surt FIRE PREVENTION LESSON. % 15 Fais & e é ce to in seessful flapiack | month from now, that under any and | S 4 2 sofl the markable iead In voluntary ratianing. Every section of the country will| sensen. Meril o v T find 1t to be one of the most de-‘hi‘r“pi:_“"‘:d O U e Cloler: comneelad Wit Die Dponts [kind in Drigiany 1 that containing ton | OF ties: sympathize with the city of Atlanta EECE N e the time dwring G &, FOPT. Juent the top soil is stiff or if the clay sub- |family. It was from the recently |thousand names which lay for seven have sa in the loss which has been sustained| =he American destroyers are being|sheuld have first call upon this help so0il comes near to the surface the|opencd raflway station that Charlotie | centuries on the high altar of Dur- [the cause, a there by the extensive fire which de- commended for the part which they|and at a minimum cost, whether the roots may be pianted in a slanting|&nd Anne set out an the expedition to | ham Cathedral, and is 7now in the |nissing and w stroyed some’ = Ifke 3.030 homes|are playing in fighting the subma-;Jjail for the present is self supporting THE WAR Pasture. In either cass be sure to|lLondon which revealed to their pub- | British Museum. come to them and left thousands of its people shel. | rines. No surprise need be occasion. | O MOt R PRIMER plant the top end of the root up. The | lishers and a fow other folk the start- Sy L N D) B it & not the fim: big fire | od for that Is colr whuk ads 0 bt '.'n"‘"‘".a...: it Ie-dmlvy By National Geographic Society. setting should be from 12 to 18 inches | ling fact that Currpr, Eilis, and Acton | Scarcity may send us back to ne- | Hloned” and d p , they ° me and ev- g apart. Half a dozen plants will make | Be!l were really three daughterw of a | glected herbs, for which Miss Man- ;""‘“?'J S e nto the mouth of |&Wards from t > Yorkshire parson. It was at Keigh-[ning put a Dlea too, that the family markeilng|Sir Thomas More, “Many a poor|—— — the roots may be planted between| was done, and the ers bought the | knave’'s pottage would be improved if that/has taksn place ang !t will not be. expected: ory available man should work on the huge eupply of manuseript paper were skilled in the properties of Children Cl‘*j the last cre. Fach dey there is re- - o ety ¥ corded iratances of latge losses of| 1t the Teport ::.t & -t‘r!llk- has been e el on i, Swan Property and even of life when If the| § Drosvess in the munitlen factories|may have been or may be made in| Mainz—Today's war geography bul- |rows of peas. early cabage. or beets. proper atiertion had been given to Sronth it tes, o dbp wbant mare oo | ek vager elISIBIE fall- td. siake |1t Leeusd by the National Gesgra |In ihat case’plan the sets In holes [ Which astonished the statiomer. the burdockc and purple archis, lads FOR tiETe t 2avan o o b J ¥ punched in the soil. i -lime and old men's pep- 5 g have been prevented or at least great- | 4Ustia-Slungary than that country | this aveangement T believe they gre|Phic Soclety from its Washington| P Goriic ‘cloves” should be planted tn| _In view of fhe practioal interest|per. The roots of wild suceory “and HER'S Iy_reduced. was enxious to tell. Cheir o o Fies "SI0k | Neadquarters, gives 4he following in- | early spring 2 or 3 inches aparc in | Which is now being taken by women | water arrow-nead mighi agreeiiie| CS A ST O R | A formation about the strongly forti-|rows. It grows through the aummer |in the cuitivation of the land, the fol- lowing inscriptjon from a _tombstone —_— B = Lacris of ik conn- Shor, (aDact the farmers to JOoW. | fed German city of Malns, where se.|and in ready for harvesting in early L e ’ Don’t You Want Good Teeth? - . Suffclently heavy demands are be- try are deploring the loss which has| Help the farmiers nnd vou will find | qiv, SEERT S 00 reported to have|fall. T.eeks may be planted early or lock, is of interest. It is to the mem- Does the dread of the dental chair cause you to negiect them? Veu a family supply. ISince” horseradish s = late crop|ley. ing made upon Atianta and other cit- , befell many of the people of the Geor- R they will answer your pleadings and . o o h , A ot 4 a | occurrea recentiyr as-“follow crop,” earth being heaped sian capital, they should at the same|is8 O ihe coustey jus ’,’_""‘o“‘“’ o | B e parienls with renewed cour-| ®“igiilated on the left bank of fhe|around the plauts as they —grow to|Ory of & gantle Derbyahire maiden. time give due consideration to the les- < g i age P e respons. R v one Phoebe Brown. aged 24, who died e e e o hine, just below the mouth of the|blanch the stalks. Thev are not ready . . E. KBACH. | Main, Mainz, or Mayence as it is fre- | for use um®t late fall and may be|at Matlock Green in 185¢ son which lies therein relative to (e 3 themselves. There isneedat all times|2 haif miilion dollar fire. Danselson, May 24, 1917, auently speiied, is 25 miles southwest | stored for winter in cellars. S sl s v s ¢ ¢ & Frankfort-on - a need have no fe it esth ™ o care in" the - prevention of dres |y, SPIMEINE motoreyclist who o AT o St SR HalE gonymeis heil HORS Srened " raciea KBOLOTELY Wi F O A, " by or r months Verdun, the nearest mcl strong- * There is no telling, especially in thick- | reckiess driving, Guriae. which oo Views of the Vigilantes hold on any importance. 4 OTHER VIEW POINTS A Jockey, coward, and musician. CCNSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE Iy wsettled districts, when what may | gnocked down and seriously injured a “The town owes its present-day v importance largely to th ) Rutton, the m“fl:; recards of o e s b i e this lady’ “She undertakeés any kind appear io be a trivial blaze will de-|fve year-old girl but falled to stop, velop int: flagration. It is use- N trad - it is the head: Biey ‘smier such congitions to expect|"t O MOe than é GMred. et 1 s SAckaeS Sather Soariark of manual labour, as helding the the fire fghting forces to do the Im-| Inasmuch as fhe Fyench mission re.| THE PATRIOTIC SOUP POT. niture Andustries. The town numbers Another ratiroad has been allowed — k - . inhabitants, in-|to retain it 1] pass- Docaible. Whatis meeded o o fl rec-| turned home without any reference | By Hildegrads Hawihorna of the | Chosins th subsche sng o amsion bz | & TSR it7 ships under the law pass- He Almost Fell Down. St .&'.'.I Mo 4F G Binios 1 ksvi Ly ng e to eir movunlnt.l upon Vigilantes. 8,000 soldiers. The city limits now |mission having learned that the pub- A. M. Hunsueker, play D- | leaving these shores, it doesn’t leok embrace twice as much area beyond |lic interest is served by the operation |Miss. felt 8o rateful becaise of ing the fire hazard at the minimum. |as if any censorship legislation’ for| Our hearts have been thrilled by the | the old line of fortifiications as is in- |of the steamships which — give ~ the |ing frecd from pain and aisiress thot with all he rep- | cluded in them, this growth having|Southern Pacific railroad its marine |he wrote the follewing letter: “I was This can be done by keeping the cel- | the American press was needed. visit of Papa Joftre, lars, alleyways, hajlways and property Pesents of French herolsm, courage|taken place since 18Tt extensions from Galveston and New |suffering from rhes sm, kidpey and in general free from the accumula- Maxim and Marconi are both claim- | and W one of us but “Thére has been a settlement at|Orleans to New York. The opinion :wu— trouble, alse dizminess: would tions which are always dangerous and | ing that they have devices which will | wents to win this war of free-| Mainz since Celtic times. The Ro-[seems to have the elements of common |almost fall down at times. 1 started require little encouragement to start a | overcome the effoctiveness of the sub- | 30m. And &s we look about for was|mans recognized the stratesic value |semse, but not more 80 than a flat de- | taking Foley Kidney and two = - n by - to | 1o G0 s0, we find that patriottsm, like | of the site and Drus, Augustus Caes- [cision would have that railroads that|boxes gave me entire relief- Tis. fire, by using care with matches, | marines. ey cannot be put Into|many enother good quality, begin at|ars stepson and younger brother of |have paralleled and supplemented | ordered kidneys give warning by pain smoking material, lishts and stoves, | operation any too soon. Results are | Turl et the peror Tiberius, established a [thelr land lines by operating -water |in slde and bacik. FReUMSLIC ae Sore by Jnstalling the many safeguards|wanted now; the talk can be safely| It ean eves egin in the soup pot!!camp here as early as 18 B. C. Na: |tracks” on the Great Lakes or costal |mmussies: swoiten ftnte which have been found to be invalua- | delayed. : Long before this year of probeble tive and Roman traders sooa settled Ibays and sounds are likewise serving eves, tired snd languid STERILIZED INSTRUMINTS CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK 1t these appeal to you, call for examinstion and estimate Mo ¢harge for cansultation BR. F. C. JACKSON OR. D. J. COYLS DENTISTS (Successors to the iing Dental Ce.) 203 MAIN ST. NORWICH, CONN 04 M. tc8P. M Lady Asistant

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