Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 26, 1917, Page 4

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o tand which has been taken regarding r ;. 2 Jorwich Bulletin |3 5m mm i e y: \ | "~ Prolonged His Li | and @Gonfied — p:-:;flc:ln:h; »m"."::.‘fu; i . (Written Specially for The Bullstin.)|fourteen years, and untll within two Tt : Couie by the Treie s o aifterent fempera- | Back in October, 1775, it required |years of his death. W's Pepsin 3 3 L rean urage to stand out for one's comvie- : Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Peps 121 YEARS OLD e tond wliih 1l ‘Dasn tsken | SNt dien i ot tions even ‘more than it does in this| Another Lebanon, man. impulsive b - w age of independence. £8 wrbyn, A DU fo tnpine SIARS & -Effective as a Remedy Sul price 1Zc a week; 50c a|by the dismissed premier. had been| i ‘Therefore, when Governor Fitch, of | ®ith momtins year. “of ‘qmbarrassment to 3 > " | Williams. “With tongue and ven and o - the cause ‘of much ‘:n i Connecticut. calied upon his “Assist- | W T el B e \ for Constipation Entared at the Postotfice at Norwich. | 1o goveramen ants"—of whom Jonathan Trumbull, of c o gOve s al ull, onn., as second matten the town of Lebanon was one of the[tS the cause of the colonists. Among. older- pabplé tha vations or- : - iniste: >| During the gloomy winter of 1777,| . Bullga Busmcts o g . the < Y some e s Mominiater to BiliNS o | wi i Neef oatils ang $oid 1o Va gans of the body have a tendency to Ik e ; n e | ' meant chmthing wrave 1o decine. |02 Ebres, oifing 1 ndopenaorcs S o g e i 7 : % a sunny day. The worst is the un- s ould e estabiished he /) WL Office. 67 Church St |policy and in a ition to | O verned e tem] Whi fi the req - | Pay; if not the loss would be of no spml inactivity of the bowel 5 R fges & >a ue of : o = foun mr ti Good health ‘s dependent on regu- t1s Telephone 310-2. de S h permit of the establishment of a changes .'flm.mu into a[ber out of 'the twelve, were found |account to him. # %==" “Saturday, May 26 1917, |finite programme; and it is possible ot ket makes 4 man suberlor | ready to administer thé catn, Trime S With wuch vaen wetive. in, thie: patiic AR T R —_— e Y - _|that it will result In a declaration of|te a dog ability to sup; Bis | bull ‘refused to be present td witness | With i R b LR et 4 eSIn Gion GF constipetion. & NG 1axative : b L ' Y o e o | Rt fces the opng his et e | s’ statute books should contain such should be taken to relieve the conges- T 3 the ‘six other Assistants who. Witk | resolutions as the following: “|tion and_ dispose of the mecumulated h He will be remembered | elin 7 him, stood firm. B At a town meeiing held 7th, Dec. h - waste. Catharties or purgatives should fimw;—.ymm . o c“,..'; and This, with similar clear dnd_cour- [ 1787, a letter received trom the éelect: eals siC| not be emplosed, however; thess are this counf a : s = paser 4 men’ of Boston, as to the Oppressive | ot o » oo violent. in A under -¢he old. regime, a-man who|Snd ot o oniate e Ao e . t0, the Land ruinous duties Iaid on various ar et haveany fun! 1amsucha |is°only temporary. while not putting aside his native] tems s Tand - roars-each conal: | first magistrate, and to have thelt in. ] ticles, and calling for union in some | sizA/with this eczema that people avoid mild laxative such ag the combin- point. of view was able to thoroughly|tion in it8 time and plece being fit and hnmh I:dnm care. Consequently, he mm:r:mo‘fn rgll‘lret‘ubu" i Lo me wherever I go. And the itching lllar; '(‘ aimple rsrx-gvled \Ie“r -E)wrm; L i LE Sy 2 ool - : X § ctman, | torme 4 wn s Dr, Caldwell's Syru e W e S = P e re 0 TN and others walr‘e* appointed a_commit- sl b that I don’t get any | DOBLIT. 1< the fdeal remedy. It is &en- |case and comfort o 5 . - jtee. Dy themselves, or in concert w 4 g tle In its action, bringing relisf in an Idweli's Tt can therefors'de sppreciated in|, The weman who shinks her hur. | Teuwiull had Sreacy hed 19788 mxa| committees from neighboring fowns,| Don't be discouraged! Even in se- |cass, natural manner whhont srping | b droseisis Ithis comntry that the vrssdent ofi.q n "3 Ittle moge earnest |fourteen times represented the mniw consider and devise such measures | vere, well-cstablished cases of eczema, |OF other pain or discomfort, is plens- | oniy Afty cents o China has made an excelient selec- | indulge and means, as may more effectvaly | v 1 . . A3t fo the taste, and cam e oblained |jrations and. ine thought. We should not forget ‘that |as deputy to the General Assembly|8nd means as muy more effectialy | yingworm or similar skin-troubles, Res. |3t t0 the taste, s {Eciote tion for his new premier. Ho is bound | jove is a suppresser of thought as well |and had three times fiiled the office of | fand to promote - meoiirdgs. | inol Ointment, aided by Resinol Soap, | "MI" Ronert LoForges, 918 Kirkwood |sin That & f to inspire confidence among other na-|as an expresser of it. It is not wise | speaker; had been -chosen Assistant g ‘] s At tions and & man of his standing can- ! for any one to tell e e oty T s Tant et rm-}" Under the oppressions bearing heav- usually relieves the itching at once and _ | poulevard,. Davenport, .Jowa, says ke |well's signat 1 no man knows one- | one year side judge and for seventeen |lly on it as a port, Boston appealed to| quickly clears the eruption away. always had a bottle of Dr. Caidwell's |appear on the ve not fail to e of inestimable service | knows, for Py gy to his country at all times. half he thinks he does, and the re-|vears chief judge of the County Court ' Lel non; and n;la uu;er lown Came| Toctorsprescribethe Resinol treatment, Alldruz- | SYrup Pepsin in the house for the|the hotile is —. — ‘mainder is likely to be considerably o{ Vilndlum le’nxdy ’Ha{ h.ld‘l:::n ;orl::“’ ull sympathy and concert With| .. i Resinol Ointment and Resino] Soap auz on:lmufi y«r:&-na ldhnt. l»y \Isllng :r;;“r; ' the presence of truth. | nineteen vears judge of probate for | it Occasionally as the need arlses, and | wi 1 FHE ¥Q0P. CORNERERS. rret "well-azessed Mo passes for | the Windham District; had been once ! = in this way keeping his health good,|Washin st The bringing of indictments by thef pany (& JEHCOTERCE 116, RNl Torms | elected assistant judge, and for four | , At @ fresmen’s-meeting Monday, |lect, the history of the Trish Domini- federal grand jury at Boston against|ine broker's and the diplomat's stock |times was Chief Justice of the super- |APril 8, 1770, following the “Boston [cans would open my friend’s mind to 88 rations and individuals for | i taan Of Sures o Food husband | lor court of the Colony: four years, | Massacre” of the 5th of March, after ju few hidden facts. corpo: ) n_trade. course, - e D e " | other business, it is recorded that the| It is a matter of history that muitie conspiring to monopolize interstate] tells his wife everything he thinks|also, he had been Deputy ernor. 3 - S Talf thg ‘ofice Lebanon men “met and voted and |tudes- of Irish people were deported er, and suppresses that| He e -office of Governor for P p comiBeTEs. In. oHlom e ':,": A o Taduce e, ety far passed a draft of resolves, or declara- (as slayes to.the West Indies during of affairs in_conmection _wit] wl s for|_ —— | tion, of the sense of the rights and|tho regime of Cromwell and the Py in the end it might prove injurious “to - g an e Pur- ‘ prices and the food supply of nnv B R Bistn,” ‘as oy forbeass ased [Paine that Nature ss sometimes to|liberties which we look upon as in-|itans, as attested by a host of au- country which needs to be fully . fringed by parliament,—and promoting | thorities, contemporary and modern, The Bulletin has the ilargest to . There are truths which it is|laugh at mankind, by giving them so iy say. manufactus etc. whose testimon, t be airily eirculation of any paper in Eastern | thrashed out and proper punishment as wicked to remain silent about as at other times ires, Waved - aaide 35‘"‘:'!-!“110‘ P !h .Idr ly Connecticut and from thres to four §|inflicted upon those who are proved|it i to lie, for instance, the truth |she helr folly by GIVINE| . The text of thess “Fesolv e I e y s hard to times larger than that of any in§| suiity. which would eave another from the|them tyrants, “never did iook or 80Und [ o, 3nirit and tone of the Declaration | Spedking of Redmond, It is to. di Norwich. It 1= delivered to overf| From the facts brousht out by the|injustice of ~suspiclon and circum-|so true” as it does today, and may Y2y SPITR A€ ‘one of the Declaraton |, Chesiting of Redmond, it is to. dig 3000 of the 4053 houses in Nor-£|; . uir; which resulted in the Indict-| stance. Fiction must wear the garb|never again. The so-called nobility | °f [ndSpendence although this was six |2ocp into the depths of infamy to wich and read by ninety-three per £ thi %o deal it ap-|of truth to be recognized as the pro- |and autocracy who have always been _ 3 3 wer pexeale s cent of the people. In Windham §|ments of these onion dealers ap: 2 & found wanting in_ ability - and jedg. | dependence was made. They perpet-{man in his true light, and his descent it is delivcred tu over 900 houses §|Dpears that they deliberately enteredfduct of genius. Tatnt nover thEENE g G DRl e tate the aense the old town had of its |into the infernio of treachery and de- tnam Dan to_overs|int cheme for the cormering of > people’s es, resoives which “have |basement has been at a lightnis P g o Lo . This is good advice: Do mot blame | they are trembling today: and it i6lgone into history, and were embodied, |speed. ~Here Is the man who {5 to 1,300, and In all of these places it ust as much of that product as was ve pra 18 constlered tbe local dally. ’pcsslble. Trsy Tucchined” af - 1w | o0 GONENCSARBEE v, tainle that FAUS T age in which so-called mastors of | indeed, in the men who acted here.|sive Treland, cheering In the house . Eastern Connecticut has forty- § | fizure kept the supply until the scar-j Doen thrust upon it not so last age in which so-cailed masters of | They reveal the hand of the firm,|of commons' when the exccation of Makc our memories int aine towns, one hundred and sixty- §| o orc, ago that a great hue and cry was|mmen s e e fiery. patriot, William William: Pearse was announced, one of the five postofiice districts, and sizty § | CitY Which they created sent the price| raised against tainted money and it|murdering and robbing their nel8h-|were undoubtedly drafted by many martyrs, who died that Ireland wat fi Iy t skylarking and then gathered in a|would not then have done to have|bors-and one another with as little| hey are in his handwriting might live. peaking of Sinn-Fein- . B e | nandsome profit. They are entitled,|spoken of it as a fanatical fluke. This |sense as the cock and the bMI-doE |0l records.” ers, can Willie Redmond and_ his lastin record of your senti The Bulletin is eold In every}| ;. same as all dealers are, to a|so-called tainted money rightly spent|in the pit. War is not government, crowd of Castle-hacks explain if his || - 4 J g town and on all of he R B gl 0 O pemte but there is me Jus.|can accomplish any Eood thing rep- | but disaster: and the oniy Justifiiablé| |s ghows the sarnestness which pre- [Word goes for so much n Ireland Fedienin. Eanien Commetion o i of heat | oped 3 8 roeiote purperc S5 | nar o 4 ap B detlncs et for Son | vl T s e R U S | Evbon mmn et RS 1 Leoard for the departed i Jor | called tainted money could not in- - 3 the same year, 1770, a town meetis rri Ireland? He knows, . and C )¢ ca CIRCULATION supplies of any Kind of food in order| $3/ 2%, (07004 TUNCE Tnless it was | never before Decause of the foollsh- | way “eaned’ wich referance iy meaing e a egar or ne er that a few may get rich aquick|litepied as a fee for tolerance—as a | ness of tyrants. \ S S el Sinn-Fein movement which i3 ¥ 1801, average................ &4128 |1y gouging the consumer simply be-|check to justice. It is true “money is = mercantjle and landed interests at[Strong throughout Ireland. Skeffing- 1 f beautiful A 5,920 | s be s hepiess. not reauired to'buy one necessicy of ew THaven, to consider proper means |ton. Learse and others W re hutcher= erecting one ot our beautiful < et Tt i uch acts as these which e soul; i i . . and measures to support th e -jed when ey rose for freedom amn i lare. todna: io “ersaie. “the. - condition| ‘he, that wanis mones. ‘mesn and|| Sunday Moming Talk ||imbortation - asrecrone ina " ihe |dembcracs. 43 Washinsion s Jefier: Lo 2 o content, is without Tee alarming conduct of New York in vio- |$on did. ‘Agitators mre the offspring S 10,3504 it cxists 17 jehin ountry =2, the) fenger: Fho fainte, or mortar Sman Tating tho same. R Vo dapotisin and opBression, and. thes artistic memorials. May 19, 1917 . 'y "’"‘“}“‘ e "a‘::“;ov:'_:::‘;:‘:‘ rene| canndt be transterred to money. The s have always boon crucified by their | supply w makes -|stolen doliar_feels just as good on e towraicn votadi voaiaron nd. Living under the flag that is £ ulation necessary, which calls for the | the church piate as any other doflar, HANDICAP - RACING. cend two. Gelemates 1o pmanimously io|the symbol of ilberty, we find those == s |appointment of a food administrator, |and will buy just as clean a dinnet B 1| making choice. of William Wiliams |Yith @ mind shackied 'in slavery, who 7 and from the disclosures which have|for a poor family. llars that start| (Every contestant on the cinder trac] in fair sweather are loud in profession ~ ITALY'S OFFENSIVE. b 1. | honest cannot be polluted by business. | of life runs his course under some dis- | Fooreucmityee Col 11 ComMittee Or 1ot devotion to the fand of their birth, 'Y been made in this instance it Is ev e e representatives of the same. They |2 4§ For the past several weeks, eves|dent that such steps by congress can- | Make money your God" said Fielding, |advantage. We are consclous enoush | qnor€5i0/0 TVEs, 0 (06 same. Thes Summer soldlers and sunshine pa- ! L J | trots ‘hen the ship is sailpz > have been centered upon the opera|not be taken any too soon. The time| “and it will plague you like the devil.” | of our own handicaps, but those of OUT | instructfon and resolve, that the non- neighbors are often hidden from view. importation agreement. whichh had tions of the Italians in their new of-|has arrived when every effort not only o the circumstance that completion of the task which it un-|io stop such operations and to pun- | confess to a stalwart prejudice‘against|ing his best efforts and putting him | oS & Virtuous salutary and patriotic dertook last year of capturing Trieste, |ish those who have been proceeding|its use and a eense of pity for those |behind in the race. It is certain, how- | pIoasire, ~Senerously ' designed = and|fright and even. zo out of their way the important seaport of Austria and | contrary t6 existing law. who are tied down to tobacco by the |ever, that he carries some sort of|geacc’fl'y RGNS procure a re-lto repudiate and deny the prinéiples the key to that country's operations force of habit: but after reading the|weight, and the fact should lead us to iinite sassisi they formerly professed. Paragons of - statement of a woman who distributed | make due allowances and to judge him » S patriotism, they shrink in shame or = The resolutions being unanimously | smoothiy and the seas are calm they Tot £ 5ippic aistars the camemi oy 39-41 Franklin Street, Norwich, Conn they scurry _in terror and slavish ) ian DESPERATE GERMANY. italy has selected an excellent ti - cigarettes to the wounded soldlers in | leniently. . apprehension from the mere mantion & b e Tus B Vs resamptos of this :;vn““l“; The- desperate situation which pre-| France and told the stories of the re-| The Apostie Paul suffered from a 5’,'“?,- 1l‘hc eeting_made cholce oflof Ireland, for fear it will give of- "1‘3‘&!' v:l)n“a‘roti;?uyx sn'éfii ‘v',f p'.u:r‘t- [ ’ i Bas struck while the British and the | V2IS in Germany as to man power isflief they afforded the crippled and|“thorn in the flesh” or, as the margin|Dh. Jobh Clark William wWilliams, |fense. We can imagine them dispie®=|yerned M.np’;“.“m e sl e | ’ ¥ SHoch ire kocpine the G i revealed by the continuation of the|suffering men. I felt a “thank God” |gives it. “a stake” in the flesh. The|JoNah Rockwell Benjamin Bill Captifing any manly or womanly attribute |iuce aaq anbie tha srower 1o sro- | IBOTLON § INEW 1 < keeping the Germans busy | g .o tation of Belglans, in which | Surging up within me for the thing I|probability is that he was affiicted | B.iJa prague, Charles Hinckiey, [if they were in the country that Is Sy y 5 o s - in northern France and while thers | 36> ol b i i Deacori Samuel Partlett, and Ansel|hel, a duce crisp, good-flavored lettu n ~ =z e thers| omen as well.as men are being|thought I abhorred. o one could|with some bodily infirmity or painful | QEason s 3 A ield down by all the forces of coer- | Suce < is much uncertainty existing through- | FOTENR 88 WO AS BT A what|read the taies of gratitude and the | disease that threatened to wreck his|CIATK (Persons from the different|cion. Were they in Ireland who would | “FENe™ /o0 eoq snould be planted out Austria-Hungary, where there is " L sl joy of the men receiving the comfort | usefulness. Some scholars have in-|PArts of the town) “to cbserve and!feel sect in their assoclation, if it| .15 in the season, a half ounce be ) A growing sentiment in behalf of[C3nnot be looked upon otherwlse than|oe o smoke, whatever his prejudice, [clined to the opinion that it was|nSpect the conduct of all = persony|were a question of life or death for | FAIIY 1N the season, a haif cunce be ce eam Deace and where the strons pan-Ger. |(he relief 'of the workmen of that| 254" desire to have them deprived | epflepsy. Othens think he was trou- |TeSPecting their violating the true in-|Ireland surely we migni well pray | S, SIOUSH to plant 100 feel of row. man l.ader, Count Tisza, has heen |COURLTY for other service, or the aug-|of it. 1 wonder if people who find |bled with weak evesight: while others | tont and meaning of said non-impor- |God to save Ireland from such Sup- | o gpinee o mend b to 8 Inahes oonrt forced to resign from the Hungarian |Tientation of the forces which are al-|solace in ways we do not are not|have advanced the theory of malarial | t3tion agreement. and to use all lawful |posed Irish. Are they loval to Amer- | o frinfed 1o stand § to & inches apart | ON SALE / premiership. ~ 7| ready engaged in turning out the|just ‘as entitled to it as if they found |fever. Whatever it was, it represent- | and prudent T shyesy to prevent thefica? If a slave can ever be loyal to|20o:? a¢ least. The plant needs much . = » necessities in the way of munitions|it in our way? I have noticed that|ed an impediment in the great cam- [SiMe: and in their prudence and dis- any country, ves. That man or wo- |pbs! hence th h should be o Al Tuu'y has plenty of men, as is shown H A i cretion when they judge requisite, to yho. 1y WhaLS 5 0~ | moisture, hence thorough should Y 3 s o in our prejudices and conceits we are | paign that was before him. The Apos- e 5 . whatever crisis thelt | Mo 2 q o A by the reply which that country made | OF Performing the work of laborers in| i P Plialy to be led into error as | tle besought the Lord thrice that the|PUDlish the names of such person or | is ashamed to mention thc|Siven. while artificlal watering heips 1/, to the suggestion that some of the[COnNECtion with the war operatlons. |ine other fellow is. I shall not be- | thorn might depart from him, but his|Dereons, if any shall be found, who[name 'of the country where he or his | the ¢Fops In diy weather s have violated and counteracted the [forebears were born and who is in- |t head should be cut for use. MAIN STRE same, and as occasion shal 12 0 its w ) s D - Hbmatng, e vas 0w soact 404 form | require, to | different to its wolfare, Is but a sor- |5 -homaine leaves grow erect and form correspond with the Committees of |ry, s and cowardly citizen. ——— b with o , SR Lo e same way as head lettuce, except that e = & towns for the like salutary the tragedy of it, to think that | Same Wy a8 head 'sHAce. except That| “on account of Germany has done enough to that| e Other feow o 5 : . 4 & than I have, |prayer was unanswered. Instead, he small country, whose neutrality it|pyt I can now concelve that a smoke | was given the deeper understanding was pledged to respect, without turn-|can rise almost to the rank of a bless- | in which all simiar situations must be 3 grace is sufficlent American troops be sent to that coun- trr to fight under the American flag when it advised the despatching of any suct expedjtion to France. It ing to its own use the people of the|ing. | interpreted— purpose and design. e i - = ountry whose territory has been over- for thee, for My power is made per- | PU! zn. men ‘of the type of those who went 4 roat the |bacco, the Whitastone has recoived and has apparently put|SOuUntry whose territory h Tl Tk T et B e “Then——was asked whether he had [to death in Iaster week, did so for |leaves should be tied together at the | JE5% 08 UM SRS into good use an appreciable amount |FUn and devastated, whose property purchased or not Tea of a Rhode I; a 5 J y [0 o SRBmaRICHE dhasr. letves | N o e y 2 nt | 73 business have been destroyed and |ones who are doing most good in the as not Tea of a Rhode Is- [such as these, In closing let me say San.che dnne st | J. F. CONAN 8% Eritish heavy artiliery and its ar- | 310 Phuinest 4nve heen <O % ‘ihe|World. Dloney flows lie water to the| Some handicaps are very evident|!2nd importer: he owned he had tea|this, I refuse to enter into any dis-| 1 mrosrsira. the Duieh Socialct 1 Fra mies are being directed by skilifur} n° have Dbeen forced to mee | great religious and educational insti- |and we hasten to honor one who sur- | fom Rhode Island, etc.. but yct he fon, but 1 cannot make myself | qaqor, had a conference in Berlin with Zenerals as was clearly demonstrated imposition of heavy fax burdens. Fol- tutions, but ever since the world began [ mounts them. When Helen Keiler pre- “Ohu'd kg r{urcha'? any more there, or |believe that the Irish people ‘."!“ al- German and Austro-Hungarian & = o by the recent drive which gained not|l0VInS the first deportations the pro-|‘the best friends to the poor have been | sented herself to take the examination | Otherwise contrary to the Agreement,|low Redmond, and O"Connor | To only vaiuable territory on the way to|teStS Which were presented to Ger-|the poor and people of limited means.that admits to Radcliffe College, even |SiC» and would store what he had,|to dras them any further into the ¥ ' many by other nations, together with|The worst brute in the world is the|her friends were amazed. She could [S!C; and thereupon the Town voted it |mire, so that a ganz of _tricksters, satisfactory and dismisse place-bagge as mean and paltry as Trieste, but caught the defenders R e e e e Rt man_ whose success and fortune has [nelther sec the examiner nor hear his Rince iESe, b Dear dnd gy s = 2 eghoscalte ~Ithat very thing would not be resorted|led him to hold in contempt those|voice, and the subjects were Greek, ere ogh, s O TaahErty,, oners were taken and the counter at- =y o who do not succeed. Tt seems to be|advanced Tatin, and the higher math-| Commenting upon which, the His-|«nd the brase band in the ffties. Red- SATURDAY—— tecks which were launched were fruit- | i there was the return of certaln of | 1) "C¢ Tature that good-heartedness | ematics, Her ld teacher might have | torian Hine writes: ~This was evi. 1 Sose. the people, but the need of getting . : = Pk oL h jobs. his own firm filling lu- 'S: hel R hich of does not flourish among those who |communicated the printed questions to ently a hot place for tories and half- Briti : This country has much hard fight-|™°re help, and help which of course| worship Mammon. The true riches of | the blind, deaf dumb girl, but, out of]hearted patriots.” e Britlsh contracts. ‘Fhe. ganie ing before it in order to carry out its| FCCCIVES No recompense or mext to|the heart only amass where a spirit|deference to the rules of the institu-| TFrom that time on, there was-no Srot gnithe parlixnintaly Jeell object but it is prepared for it and|T°thing if 1t receives anything at all |of helpfulness abides. One pure, good{ tion, this method was ruled out. A |town in the country which manifested Disbcnest ‘fien, Rever bohave, in 18 THE LAST DAY OF in this new offensive it has been giv.|Das forced Germany to return to the|hearted woman may do more for a|man was found who could write the |more activity along the lines of pat- |luman honesty. They helieve every ing an excellent account ot itout|deplorable practice. poor neighborhood than all the mil- | Braille aphabet and engaged to put|riotism and preparedness than did |man has o8 Ropmani het 1ok Tialy has done much in the war aag| Such injustice only adds to the|lonaires of a town. It takes a Car-|the questions in that form. At the|Lebanon. - e R biece with IaEVifTe B wrongs which have been done to that|De8ie to throw arcund millions for |appointed time, however, it was dis-| With men of such ability and firm-| 3 ST L gives p of doing much more | ro8S O e debt which Gee. | libraries, and a Billy Sunday to radi- | covered that he knew only the Amer. [ness and distinction as leaders, it was s ¢ 5 etoPieal towards the crushing of the central 80 p P ate truth for good's sake, and there|ican system, while Miss Keller had |rot surprising that the place became R am of meny el facts, which, perhaps would not look 0. 1 : the two | conspicuous in all colonial affairs. or many must pay when the day of reck- Vi § need be no comment upon the value or |been trained to the Englis! e A B L R L T powers. 3 it oning comes and increases the demand | the abundance of the comparative re- | systems being. in thels oo ement | that it should have furnished a Gov- | ¥¢ PEIBL S JUDGE TUTTLE'S RESIGNATION. |for the coming of the timo when a|sults. It is sirange that i this world | quite different. To the Simemiy of|ernor to whom General Washington |POInt: What's the e By the letter which Governor Hol.|S0Vernment which descends to such|the people who do not belong to the |the abstruse subjects was now added |cowld turn with confidence, when Ma- | Acoiion Aray 54, 1617 N oS- comb has sent to Judsze Tuttle he has | COM0UCt atrocities and vandalism as|aristocracy belong to God. that of reading a strange writing. The [ tional conditions became grave, and Lz o M HERE YOU WILL FIND REMARKABLE VALUE £ all intents and purposes accepted |l }mPerial German government has| . L. o arl. erja T pe i ey eaind | Resiie R e his resignation from the superior |¥¢°" SUilty of will end forever. knaiw,” is & Detfer Tellow than. thel|time -ihe Sared. cire to Mo sty . = COATS, SUITS AND DRESSES FOR THIS BIG E r N BT Nees { man ‘who has mot the honesty of his| topics had been inadvertently Jefi ai| The dignity, solidity, resources, HOME GARDENS i i | convictions. Agnostics are few by|home. With only her instinct as|Promptness in aid of Lebanon aston- in that position. Judge Tut- Uniess the weatherman changes his! profession, - bu! multitudinous injguide, this wonderful young woman |ished those visitors who sought the tle is 2 man of high attainments and: ici h B Bai demonstrated that ‘he‘sn‘:,_ tactics, summer furs will be more | real The criticism of Carlyle, “his| kept track of the passing minutes and [advice of Trumbull in his pain, but U 55 ernor made a wise selection when he|POPUlar than ever the coming season.}religion at best is an anxious wish—|at the end of the examination period | Wonderful War Office: and the passing a . it }like that of Rabelais, a great Per-|handed in a paper that emrolled her [©f the vears does not diminish the Head Lettuce-Rom mamed him for that position. By hiS| e oniy shortage which should cx. | haps” fits thousands of church mem. | triumphantly with the entering class, | wonder which arises, as in this day| “Let me suggest, that ever: resignation Judge Tuttle will depriveiyss a¢ any time in the food supply isj PET8 Who adopt the symbols of reli-i A victory like that calis ou the ad- | men look back over the events in|creates or cultivates a garden helps, the state of the services of one Who|ipn.s which is too often food for the| SiON. Dut remain unmindful of the|miration of the world. We are less en- | Which the old town stood out so prom- {and helps greatly, to solve the Drob BB E it vioicion, bt 1 e fact that they are in the mighty push | thusiastic over thousands of less con. | inently for its independence, initia-|lem of the feeding of the nations.” President Wilson. 137 sll.'ls sad 313.75 810 3 311.75 » Values to $38.50 Values to §8& moveriheless that he should ad.| 13 of righteousness—they do not push|spicuous vietories that may be in|tive and sturdy patriotism. vasice the reason which he does for Te- | mhe man on Phe Sarner savs: High] DUt Pécome a'dead weight. ‘I Jesus | process of heing won all about us, be- THE DICTAGRAPH. — man on the corner says: High|were living today he would be what |cause we fail to recognize them. ~The A particaily shady part of your gar- turning to privat ctice o tr e bt . ? : the WE P e rhice of the jaw. |prices have mot cnly encouraged Cardinal (Mercier is—a llve wire; orwonder regarding & multitude of the den can be used for growing head let- tuce or romaine lettuce in the warm When he accepted the appolntmentiart of cutting bread thin, but thy - ight be like Billy - | son. i v it was understood what the salary was | ing ‘of the randwich alse. . - | | Borspower dynamor Ther was 56| s siorie bar et iy et mhansa || LETTERS TO THE EDITOR || o sova e buitchin Foam:tae in connection therewith. There was| o ke it vatied i moping In His life—it was all doing |all. When we <ake Inte accotnt the Natignal Emergency JFood Garden no salary raise promised and none The slackers are the only ones who | When Mr. Sunday told the professing | various physical maladles, the mental Commission, which is cooperating with which could be relied upon. The gen- | will ofter serious objection to the day. | Christians of New York if they .did | twists, tho inherited crotchets. the. in- this newspaper to urge more food gar- crai assembly has not been inclined|light saving plam . of . pushing. the |00t Serve their country any better| felicities of circumstance that play dens. to indulge in the practice of ralsing|hands of the clock ahead an hour. . |than they served God, their country |thelr parts in human affairs, we are The Slave Mind. The quality of lettuce is apt to be salaries without reason and in takinz S e o e B e o I [¥oen surmplsed at Oiiuve sdd infinitely ] = Mr. MBditor:~Whe' cloulc of ‘cHbiclom, | IENNed in hat, dey. weather: For I R b e 8 = s . e man who is meekly - |more appreciative of success. A ¢ as i on i reason some sort of partia that view it acted in accordance with| That German: submarine which bobs|ing to be saved and does not become | thousand ships Would be faster sailers | vies ning: Mo eotiomed toirte = | is desirable when the plants will not the sentiment of the state. up frst in the Pacific and then in the | conscious it is a part of his salvation [If some clumsy defect of construc- |iias a-Ballagh, omitted a few words|mature before hot weather sets in. ":K;P:-ryeu;; e :;‘Q(In'x;btr but ,\m:zm s as' cluslve and, umcertati|to Frorkc for the redemption of others, | tion beneath the waterline could be|in his or her obloquy. Why not ac-|Hot weather coming early in the life Judge Tuttle is secure | as the fellow who hit Billy Petterson.|has a light grip upon righteousness. |remedied, and a million human_lives |cuse me of poisoning my family or|Oof the lettuce plant is apt to prevent a much larger income from his pri- —= might forge ahead if the hidden hand- | plowing up the Rocky Mountaing? [ it from forming any head. vate practice, but appointment to the| Full credit must be given to the| When Abraham Lincoln sald: “the|icap could be-removed. While my brain is not a storehouse| When the garden is not shaded the bench is a life job, with a Sood fat|Dolice for the prompt measures which | Plainest print cannot be read through of Inexhaustible knowledge, and my | lettuce may be artifically shaded in salary up to the age of 70 and half |Were taken_ to apprehend the diamond ‘:hf“,‘f“':g{:i E:‘l;.‘fm‘vmmr::d nl:-:‘} *;'Ve '---d:-v b-‘hfmegflfi' IScos” |memory may not be o bazaar, in ::;m;‘;f,:‘;" C’;,Yee*;e;,"\;;‘;]“b‘; oo [y “ Y n . We must perceive wit] er- |which the intellectual riches of past < 1 b =t amouot for the remainder of Hllevas it 6 Sl e IS Blind in every walk of life. In busi-|son that life invests itself with in- |ages e e and “heransed “in | Shaped frame made of light strips of Beve e a4 M coteree. N £ A s ihe, supremely seifish man is a |evitable conditions which the unwise [marvelous and brilliant assortmeny | Wood. The sides of this frame should Soihe fhtat e Minttea :fid §udz: There can be no question but what | bioek. G0y a:nuh:mx; a ;:r;;lb‘l;x;: gl;‘;l;.tot:::ig:.e v\;;‘;:h o= a‘?d ano!.ger having seen much of mankind, I have|Dbe 2 or 3 feet wide, and the frame c st b . 5 ¢ otyre “ 2 Tuttle in this respect unauestionably | the Deoble of the city of Atlanta will| ant. As has been truly prociaimed | they do mot touch himm; bot the bram | i mueasome s Vear Scons understands his own case best, but|Eive much more serious thousht tof ‘seMishness is that detestable vice is on his lips, the conditions are In |scienco, and. homest purposes in life, it would appear to have been the|he importance of firs preventlon In|Which no one will forgive in others|his soul If he escapes them in one |my mind will ajways rebel against in: B i . i et e futiiva: and N0 one e mithout himselts Tnis | part. théy attack him in another more |justice and oppression. It this 1s agi- v 5 =1 part.’ tation, make the most of it. t is proper thought when the appointment| vom the offering of peace to Rus- | J¢rlies. all his villianies and makes | But let the handicap never in God's | pleading iEnorance of facts to say .- Tas offered o him two VEArs or 0| uia ana the internat troubles which |Die redemption mecessary. It cannot|world be held as either a terror or an |ihat o movement arranged and rulsd ago. By his resignation the state will| \uoiin yunenry fs having all is mot pas m organization or co- | excuse. The Apostie’s “thorn” philos- |by a group of trained politicians, who lose an able judge but there appears | AT Tungary is having oll s not|operation whatever its form or de- [ophy is not an easy one o reach, but |nave duped the Irish beople for yoars, f6 o no alternative under the ol | 1o e T e PO Tt e athe ome fault|it has girded with strength those who and are now about 'to betray “them st 2 - civilization promotes rather than re-|hold it ‘I will rather glory in mine |again, will brine peace ‘to Ireland. — Augtria 15 now anzious to malko | {Fosa Iiself from. The S-orDion. Stngs | Bomar St IChue: may iy wea o |Ferhaps jt. might as well be known " v =) g Sy stings | power rist may rest upon me. |that the ple of Ulster are as mucl CHINA'S NEW PREMIER. beacs with Russia. tho weakest of the | itsdif and dies from its own polson: | Wherefore, 1 take pleasure in meak. |in arms Pagainst the present move- Because it has always been inter-|allied inations, fbut §hy not make |and man professing better things, dles | nesses, In Infiries, 1 necessitjes’ |ment as thelr nelghbors. of the south. ested In the far east and because of|peace with the whole entente group |2 Victlm of-his own wickedness, Sel- | Only such a spirit ‘could comprehend |My friend calls attention to the sub- % to be in the individual|that paradox of the divine -di: Celt—] o ostablishment of a republic infand the world? fnasmuch as the warll, “jittle fauit; but in the masa it in & | which Frow lioites on h..‘s"ev’;-“m:: {i@i‘ofli’"c",‘;é,,-?e'.ffii‘i’"mi‘{”m:‘lfm’.’.‘ OTHER bargains in store for you. We give you just what we advertise nothing else, which naturally means » sufficient. to the wi SHOWING Skirts, Waists and Furs. Buy these Of Summer Dre: for “Memorial Day.” Aiso showing Graduation Dresses a LA Ferilerze ANTISEPTIC POWDER special prices. WHERE MART” STYLE MEETS MODERATE PRICE Wauregan Block 194 Main Street China, this country has followed with [started there it would be a ftting | 2aris L2 o : i deep concern the many changes which | thing that the end should besin there |~ 5 B 0l Spciu I,’,‘L‘u;"ufl‘z B e pomanl I e oSamplea§he have taken place there. There have |also. | Perhaps the saying of Tom Paine THE PARSON. |the dullness from said friend’s intel-

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