Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 3, 1917, Page 4

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ment which if adopted will give the Bay State, voters. the right to partiei- pate in the choice of officials or to ex- press their preference upon any ques- tion which may. be presented at any gnru ich gullmpp o e ncigh they 38 not hap: & pen ta be in their L clty -or town.| Who caun realize wr;lat is-to be wisam | s e R T R e third. quarter of 4 AVhat‘the pésple of that 'state are call- | peace comes, when il e great flying ritten Specially for e Vulletia. i isd. qus er of _ant Gouvice ©a upan to o is to approve or|engines ef war are tarmned fo the uses | In his informing account of the e the eighleent century by Samuel : T r v of trade and travei? .1t is a great feat|velopment of silversmithing in Con-| = 2 Sy 3 a ——— 121 YEARS OLD e e i make a’iriy around the world in vecment the late Goorss M. Curlla| of Thindas Bragey; ~othors " marked e . a ravel forty | : ard LY pattern co Suiecrinion nrice 13 a weels Soega | Wil rest with the lesislature to ar- |1t d%R 00 T Seas but. the Sext % ;"m;"";:a,::;‘,":,:'":h,:;‘:ngei.;,y from 1780 to. 1800, madc by Thomas monti: 3455 8 ve ranse, but in view of the many who | half century 1s Nkely to see ships of | cratesmen worked. Norton and bearing his mark: the | n aie Q =N Eatered a the Fostorfice a1 Nerwich. | are aiways away on election,day, and | the air cross the Atlantic in twenty-| A silversmith of Colonial times. he Pattern with the so-called coffin- . cond-class” matter. Particular’y mow the mamy who are|four hours by .making the speed the | teils us, probably used a lathe worked |Shaped — handle—{369-1815—mads by S, S away n ariy camps, there appears |latest Itallan airplanes have developed | by ‘foot power, not for spioming. but |Jehn K. Trout: the (pnec pRotrn ness Office 480. To be mooa-resdon For alopting this|ard fiying around the world in as many | for shaping and truing a porringer. a | Used After 1810, made by Merriman & torial Rooms 35-3. " ays; and the undersea boats engaged | beaker, or a bowl, after the hammers | Bradley; the type cymmon after 177 4l a _5 | policy of permitting everyone to have b to 1780, made by Joseph Loring. of letin Job Otfice 35:2,| POLICY of mermnE Sver O oer he|in hunting the depths for tréasures, Of nnd anvils had done their work. This % 625 Matn Stredt > SITH ‘nh rever hel 0 " greater knowledge of fish and |is plainly shown by the mark left by | Poston: spoons of 1800-1815, the work may be. Tt will therefors be interest-|their habits. It is not too mueh tolihe iathe in the centre of these ves- |f Barzillai Benjamin: types of 1500- ing ta note the' @xpremsion of: the|expect pleasurs yachts which may dive | sels. QNS My by Siaihantel Shivman ", " E Massachusetts voters on _this ques-|to be free from the violence of a storm 3 - - which bring the interest very near to — tion. 3 or of automobiles that may rise and iy | The metal was hammered while | Norwich: while two illustrations show 3 across lakes or bridgBless rivers, as|cold, and many times during the tlie transition in the bend of spoon MORE PIGS. boats rise today from the surface of | operation was arnealed: that it, heat- ";’""“ in the third quarter of the CiIRCULATION Dot oo =z kea | the water. Fifty vears from pow ined in a charcoal fire, to prevent brit- I3th century the curte being very - T o e s BV o h:'“l‘r:" the glance backward lv.m- will appesr | tleness and: to make it’ tough. decided betwen 176 1801, average . S ... 4812 c can to have_been a very slow world in our| With the planishing hammers and e 905, ave PR R alraaye cmation Stk R ¢ auvlie, roften’ stone ana burnishers, a [, OTaments on, the back of seopn |} | Variety of new models—splendid styles and values—smart, 1905, aver: should. a : ¥ i > That he was advised mot long ago to| The first chic-a.dee greeted us ‘on|jroduced that can never be attained |3ies forced togehor by drop, presses. youthful coats, fashioned in fine Velours, Zibelines, P irow bigwer orops and ther was a|he eve of Oct 20th, and the songless|by a modern workman using a buft- e L T » b 19T Detober 27, 1917. 552 ready respones mady. o, M;;".ppul 2 {unco, "oF ¥iuW: bird, came two daye|ing wheel. - g i gl Pom and Ulster Cloth. All sizes. Colors Brown, Green, 18 shos Y large supplies avail-|.*'§ WOBHBEREr cants and Bunt- - Accurate measurements show _that 3 ihie in this country, but that does|sa jn the perr. tree and o nuthaich | e rl; ‘g:;h" m:'l‘:mg SR eimens ieat | these ornaments were not hand-work. Plum, Burgundy, Navy, Oxford and Black. Values to “ant By’ any means Indioate that his|iworked bunsiipsly at the sunflower | fvpe of rat-tail, made by Jeremian |for there is not the slightest deviation $25.00. EWMBER OF THE ASSOGIATED || responsibility ends there or that his|pods to increase his daily rations. 1|Dummer, aboat 1§90<—or about thirty | 7 Aignenaions. = opportumities ‘for helping have passed.|roticed a group of three English spar- | vears after the settlement of the town The il " Coloni o PRESS ©On the other hand much is still ex-|rows assafiing the caterpillars’ nests|ir Norwich—for Rev. Noadiah Russell e Rl of oolonial o Chben Patis fo sl pectad of $he farmer. The country is|upon the crab-apple tree, hunting for|ond his wife. Mary Hamiin. These | $27rie little manufactured 3710 the uee for repubiica || expetioncing a merious .shortage of | L€ WOrmS and taking the webs away | are now owned by. Miss Mabel W.| W23 e e ! news despatches creditd TN A T te keep their winter nests warm. These | Wainwright, of Hartford. A eome- | Stafes, to take to the smith the coln Aespatches credit tfraric g caliig atiedion So this Bt aarros have also beeri: seen | whar eton e s Tof rat tail ‘dated |which it was Jesired to have fashion- Otherwise credit. i| condition Food Administrator Hoov-|feeding upon the darvae of the elm | 1695, is noted as “made by W. G.|2d into plate. These coins were mdit- T - er says “Every hog.is of greater value|beetle. They may appear to be pests | Types of the rat-tail of about 1730, f€d in & crucible and. poured into a e lication ot || to the winning of this war than a|in the pea and berry patch, but they |rcade by William Ward, of Guilford. |skillet to form an ingot which was ‘atches herein are also ]| shell” That means that every farm- |certainly take a hand once in a whileiand owned by Mrs. C. E. Francis, of "‘6? hammered ‘into sheets of the cor- er has a.sreater duty to perform than | Killing ‘injurious’ ineects. The white- | Dunham, have the mark W. Ward, in Toat gauge. the The It th Ttion 1 throated sparrows have flown to -wilder. | script, in the rectangle. This explains the usual practice at - Hc er in :kmun tion factortessy L g C O the Dluejays stay With us, > e that time of valuing a vporringer or a i m the pricos which pork 15/ang the sparrows, snowbirds, gold-| Other types of spuons pictured are | tankard. or other plate by saving that commanding he has, the chance to Se- [ fnches® starlings, and & few other it contained so many Spanish dollars, These coats vak 3 cure as -attractive remuneration for | biras will remain in the. sarden. al | ———r————————————————|or English coins are values up to $35.00, in the best quality Ve- v 3 winter. i - A < t:emsélves and directly trying to and Kerse: oadcl - The fact of the matter is that there| S S aEe goats o bther. tolis Ve must Probably most of the early plat lour Kersey Br oths. The shades are the winter’s has been a falling oft'in the raising| There is quite a differsnce batween |be right to kbave things go right—|vas fashioned from Spanish dollare lorin; [ F otk quite ax serious aa the aeciine | dictating pehes” nd suing for peace. | we e do Hht to e dgne Too | ce oo enerally” in “eirculation” newest col gs, some smartly trimmed with fur, others “Fin €hd -shy a ere is a difference between peace by | mucl inks is just as bad as too - y ha: .1:3 Tact et::tlnt‘:-:"drehn:fia Pt o |agreement ‘and peace by compulsion.|much worry, and too much pleasure Sierling = standard, being only 900 ve novelty collars, cuffs and belts of self material. Sl i Woners® theen| There can be no _satisfactory peace|df any sori, s as Injurious as too | Rarts Tne while sterling i 425 fine Fon hae o from conditioas which ake com-|much serious meditation. Every wise | Nevertheless, early plate scems to be should have been mere hogs raised|promise necessary. The peace the cen- |person guards against . excesses of [ Whiter in color than that manufac- there has been a ten per cent. decline | tial powers of Europe are inviting thed every nature. We cannot eat too | tured today. in ‘pork production. There Is no won-|entente to is an ackmowledgment of [much, or sleep too little -or talk too|; Perhaps this ls the explanation ress der hérefore that “Mr. Hoover says|their own defeat. /The entente have|much. or look so- sharply after our |hand-hammered or forged silver must we need a pig movement in this|DC White feathers to exhibit, but they own interests that we neglect our be annealed very frequently, and .in Gountry. < We certaliily do and the|have an all-world couse to carry to a|employer's Interests, without losing ek this” was done with the farmirs of , Connectlcut ~and | every | triumphant lssue. H. E. Wells is right | our grip. Lifs is no go-as-you-please 0ot beliges in the gpen air, lnsiead p ) Sl R SY°lY | when he savs: “My own belief is that | walking match. The just and tbhe un-|Cf In 8 furnage. as s done today. As -~ = r part in|js poth sides were to do their utmost|just must livepiong if they are tem- |2 Tesult, a flm of oxide of copper pushing It - along- we and our allies could ultimately put|perate in all things, they do not live ;m:l‘{:’:“&’e :m‘c";: xXt'; ;fi“‘(‘“efl fiy - < e uD ten fighters to the German one, and | cut half their Gays if th Jdefy Na- at is _call- THE ENEMIES WITHIN. . . FOOD CONSERVATION. each of ours a better man. than he.” |ture's ldws. .Jgnym\ul ;ey m—dc’x:ly = eG a pickling bath—a hot diluted so- 1 B Sk ik 1 b Tt is not surprising that the food|The triumph of right must be-accoms| Nature is orderly if he would do most | fution of sulphuric acid. ~This op- Sample garments—only one of a kind—made of beautiful silvert th, fin eccmmitteed against the laws of fh'; administration expresses its gratifica- | BliShed. The nope for peace is strong]in life and get most from life. ewunlxfi“uensm";m-:e&e :Drf;e“m f""ug? velour. stal cloth stone cloth e e T e ] tion wt the. mianner. o which . the] [, AlL our hesrta and it shonld grace . e e D S, Cry: oth and duvet de laine. - Coats are handsomely lined with siil Been made with much success to erip: | householders of the country are pleds- | °1¢ we bring thia WAT o & *n , celor. and warmly interlined. Exceptional styles ond values. ple the part which this country canfin§ themselves to -effect: .savinga}ing now: we: Wil be more: I 153 . 4 i} Piay in giving aid to its allies and in| Vherever it le possible. That of course | years on than men fhave ever beed _,Sunday Moming Talk Most of the ancient smiths impress. carrying out its own preparations in|OnIY refiects the patriotism of the peo- | xince the world began. First they wil ed the plite they made with the the conduct of the war. much attene|RI® in another way. They have shown|be free from the tyranny of the mili~ trademark. The earliest marks were tion has had to be ziven to watching|'hat they are willing to loan their|tany llnln:dlm x‘:iu;-dwhodu bxl'gu!uhl: up. DA ;‘n“‘?‘! n'k':l a Ihnpehfl‘ ’m’{," or in a e lg ,m/. % ok AL and trained and fed and paid, like a . {Eeart, with some emblem above or be- ::;’:l;:n:’ Bt ooty wno sebiy) o th nmgflm;;?;fi‘;:? hangman, expressiy (o kill_other men FRIENDSHIPS IN REPAIR. Tew. e o y. It is = ooy 5 That G a mors cr lees erre of cer.| CeESCUl war, they are showing thatCollaine. devalopment f s Seuntis|Thes frinds ‘how Wast, and their|namecin 3 plain or sbape” or en tainty where these enemy aliens aré{(he¥ areé willing to part with ‘their| which is another way of saying what adoption tried. eraved rectangle, or oval. In the B hes T e e e e g (gl i e e e Tl o e SR et it nsone Bk e e 1 i, 12 ore Silk and Serge Dresses at $] 50 certain extent the local and federal| fedf od - mu'nllale oxl’ymned through | ‘Your money or your life’” 3 AR e it “thy ok e Jpeq, “Cdin™ vas afded,_and abont O authorities have information regard-]tatinion’ avs. only to be expected — 2 fut” do mot dul v ‘palin’ with en-|1865 the word “Sterling” was employ- e the sentiments of iheas peomie as]that the¥ will he willingsto help the| Did you ever carefully examine the tertainment é ed to denote the correct standard. New models in tailored Serge Frocks and Silk Dreases for street and in o whethen hen T are metines be hel.couniry by ‘practicing ecomemy, for|Wren-house after ‘the hirds have|Of each new-hatch'd, unfledg'd com- Th street and inform e ey T e 0 ] a5 in the €ase of the Liberty bonds,|fown’ Our wrens had a spacious houss tade. Mr. Curtie explaine that whon the wear. e styles are fetching and appropriate for women and misses. Valucs In & peaceful manner. ¥} sueh ecomomy works to.thelr advan- in lflll'l. a room 6x9 inches, which was Alongside the celebrated advice of United States Mint w: ablished, to szs'w Bt i view of the extensive dam.|tage as well s to-the Bereit of the | PEATLY tWite as large as is required: | polonus.to Laertes put the cool res- |in 1% the stapdard of g‘“‘e" einesw = B it Mas been caused, with nev JUREeE. » Pt beihgs B i st in lalution of . Dr. Johnson ~ “to’ keep = 900 2 - n ol omato ecan. 't proved to be h o the. standard was raised to .900 {ine. b vidence of the work of plotters be. |, Thfoush the sugar shertage it has|furdished with a thousand twigs: and | {tiendships in constant repair.’ The|jherefore “Coin” stamped on plate Ing brousht to lizht almost every | PSen demonstrated that ‘we can get|how much more work they had to do i Dhilosopher had realized that, as|dges not indicate .925, or “Sterling” - dax, it cannot help beins realized thagf8lons with much less then we have | hecause of its size to furnish it. Thefife advanced, ome prop after Snother|rre. sstablish the most careful watch up- | {rimental. effects. boing experienced, |the mosi supple twigs and {oush | iicndsnips should not fall was to]bronineone (0 sofiectors of old il ! | 3n all such peopie at all times. It 13| and-what can be dene in one direction | ST2s%es formed s cup shaped nest Which | 1Gekc after them.with deliberate care.{ ot oo n tocdimons, fanering them : Tich 8 view which the local and fed- | an:o0 dome in others. The food con- [ 15% DRIt Rutci Gown Betow ihe sus | 1% spifitual grappling hoops must| iyl 'to’the TSrering in Snonces i : tral authorities in New York have|SeTvatien plan Simply meaus that We|fice of the nest was & tiny flesh-col- | P¢ constantly renewed in strength. 5 3 taken in undertaking a far reaching| e a8ked to make the most of what]ored egg flecked finely with reddish In the series of illustrations in Mr. surveillance of the 55000 listed ememy [:¥e Have, to make our supplies go fur- [ brown, which had falled to hatch. And |, T° $9me it may seem a profana-|Curtis’ beak are shown some of the T n 000 Jinted enemy. | her by eliminating the waste which is | piaced i among fhe mass of twigs | tion 9f o fine 2 sentiment as friend: | most striking types of other exampies I2I-I25 N\ s T Sotonghs. characteristic in many houssiolds and | TefS Coares Frase horse-hair $hip to regard it after this caleulatlof mid-eightesnth century plate, in- ainmn treet The danger of too much lenfency]| by adopting mew standards of living|RoCtiets and the silken escoons care "of themselves. ‘wo say, they can [ GUODE & DECSNAPS] (ot Poy & Petr through the extension of too much|¥Rich Wwill not only bring much reMef: ingy hardly be of the true order. We are o - at. an- 3 Irecdom to cnems aliens ot o time 1k | © the pocketbook but which is bound | walkea over. And. LivIE i the hox | Sien | willing, oceasionally. to put|{c SHEE 8. tabkN With - damed | emm— | cm—— o) — o) i0 have its geod ..effects upon ourlwith the wren was i @reat, 'gray,|.nondship to the test of meglect, to| Gpn these types the ornamentation is RS Lbor troun foh are nandio]|Bealth. It is thus.apparent that it|striped-back, hunting spider that spins | *€¢ if it will éndure An attachment|very simple althousn naturally show- Z 5 cappliiy the srations of this|1S 2n opportunity for helping ourselves|no web. but comes out and hunts its :;'i“ :fl;dle; ond :‘llul [ m':‘cuunt Tnk a greater tendency foward elab. | (Yuriev, Dorpt, Derpt. Tarto, Tartolin, [switched to ovember 1. and Hal-|made it possible are - sy _operations of this) L roll as the government, apd a mat-|brey. The wren secma (b be's friend |Of Periods of separation and silence | oration” than on types of the century |%nd Tehebata), a fact which racails its |lowoen or the eve of All Iallows— |1t is because of these 1. g ooy ien tolter in which everyone who fs mot do- | L0 If. not an enem. And ‘thls work | e le’?fie“do'mfl Seree meant 1o be | Lefore. tempestuous history ~during the 16th, | All Sgints—was naturally placed as|are sending the flowe : 2 2 It b g e 2 " [ was a1l done in the dark and well done, |17 18 ine e survival of 17th and 18th centuries, when it was a | the 31st day of October. While the day | ho gl s and obey the iaws and if such cannot) € uld be anxious to partici veritable shuitlecock city, being tossed ¥ | baad %o fizht an enes the e : 3 R LN In the same category appear exam- Lenfi e o hihl ecock city, le na;; ossed | after this is a sacred church holiday— | edges no law of God 1 from thesn théy should befls. 3 A bright English clergyman has s 3 - | ples of three types of pepper casters, | Pack and forth between contending na- | in the olden days the people going to|its own lust to win; whe is certain that they : » g Friendship is no rhore a haphazard tions which made ¥he Baltic provinces | the cemeteries for ds 3 rtain that they can 1 EDITORIAL NOTES. ventured: to assert thas we ‘are.-all| i omn e it ta mochazardcxamples of cream jugs, cups and | tons s for devotion and ho lay- | against our soldicrs wi B e it I ot T 3., ED ound in the bandla of 1fe” topether | STAr than anything else in the world | ieakers, pepper baxes With 4 singie | their battlegrounds It ls sunposed to| has nothing churchly about it 80 far | encounter of man to ma sl e “iih_below uero weather reported|for better, for worse.” We cannot |\ 0 ittic ¢ Sl awentndirsenale. a twa-handied cup of a type|have been founded hLy 4 prince offing of flowers an sraves—Hallowe'en|of the assassin in the 3 a4 in: Denver, we certainly: have some-|ger rid of the evil influences WhICh{ prineiples are to. be. discerned. e | frequently repeated by later smiths, Kiev early in the 1ith century. Two|as the American nation can discern— | Too lons, far too | v R s T to60 ~For vl 107 Etronnd s or ot our pare. of ihe|Pprinciples are to be discerned. The | 'jiVer can or mug minus any beak, | hundred vears later =the Teutonic | New Britain Herald. country given loeway fo ¢ NORWAY'S NEW NOTE. Ty e S . o nsitiite Tt . pemacd - wodon keavenly art of.music, for instanece |, 4. rather ornate porringer handles, | IKnights arrived, and the year follow- et et ond haid 0 note which has been | ‘Tt "egins to Iook as 1f the notse of |of those .With Whom-we live and act R %!;wm;n;l“:yu%s“ugi;f in conventlonalized scroll ‘or leaf de- |In% their advent the cathodral was co- | ° Uncle Sam is just as helpful to his | nave individual . bes the. ash sitte i he laws,of naure do mot recognize 2 3 . fsizn. Hisd L i s s In arms in a time of dis-|{tc ememy sen ian Ships| that of the. abetved o mmwar? "7 | the” independence e srrokats ta aur- | L Jpontancevs ARG IFresponmibie AL | pitioricelt e, pSiEnteenth contury, | GBS0 LU TR 18 Ewiaen'Sein: | far Buseli Iohned bl e ma | SAEUGE, oLl @ 0 e 7 3 v o d St Tkt o tea ToR | ook o 582; n - | ful. Russia learned this some time |aideration uite ives of its sail-f: < e M - P i (checlare the In-ltraction of ons coul for amother is| . hich must Do the delight of it |24 the town in 1600; Poland retook it|ago, and now Italy understands it. She e ed that that e man on the corner says: What | ject s wWhich we muet abide subject to law. It has a mechanics|gunere heart. In general, it is of the | i 1603; Sweden was'once more in pos- | faces serious trouble, but that does not | or a pro-German mu a tired offis going.to keep all the idle hands Targely. o cempany . affair, for of its own and will flourish only when | .7 '"{ohe “ popular at that era, and |Session in 1625; Russia asserted its|prevent the United States from ad- |acmission of the £uilt of tment inficted upon hEUSY ‘after the knitting fad dies out?| the ;,,a 1aual of himself cannot guar- | 7a Trren S roan pecret, il siairen fVRIle_the lines are rather severe al.|Claims in 1465, filloweq by a long pe- | yancing hor 3230,000,000 as an evidence confession of his own se: Fyrin = pppers ghlont] iy et olom R rianal of Mmaeic cannot uar |- A rieh ‘mmu ohes “bu tmx:‘_c urch | Hhough extromely aracerul. the hand |riod of Swedo-Russian activities which | of- good faith and confidence.—Bristol | jation and vost resrct show ita| Fhere ia afill time to get the bad|himself or his family. ~Organization |gtructed as not e hos | ornimentation fn - striking®y. beautiful | etulted In ‘umis's making sood \ts) Press. - Americans of German sossible any | Skigwalks put Into. passable shaperbe- | Was not a creation of man-but an 1m- | i emig e g E: 3 o taavely made WA does not ‘aeny pfore: the siippery ‘And sposhy eason fitalion of Hature” for “the wasps and il ot M T o e | these | cxamples of | late| BATL of the Roplation was Qeported ta bravely made E e it concay arsives. e Dbees and the ants and -many p ntury wal s picture: o o - : b tween the rest w B i & e b Plants were demonstrating the value | 1o’ onch. expectation hecd. be eher |2,Punch bowl by Paul Revere, who. as |, On® of Derpats chicf claime to (s Views of the Vigilant fren who wd hips hostil 5 3 of arganisation for comfort. and Dro- genérally known was a craftsman of | tinction is its university, which was g1 es Germany hs ) plainiy states that they were forced Those. who are dimposed to, kiek at o1 qrEanieation for comfort ayd pro- |ished as resards our friendships. In | Eicus Lefore he won iasting fame by | founded by the great Swedieh monarch aver he ba, the m Into the acceptance of such protect] Fent enough. o comprenend the - | ot e menme” leut asts ama | Big celebrated ride in April, 7. and general, Gustavus Adoiphus. It ARy admits by mplic because of the conduct of the German Vantage or worth of it g‘:’fmf:"e Ym"‘““"éme '{h“,g ‘s“:l’é Shown with this is a tea pot made | Was suppressed by Peter the Great in would willingly sha 1t es and now other v 3 T 3 - 5 about 1795. which is of & short, rather | 1710, but was reopened by Tsar Alex- af her manifold ture will tumble in time, unless per- ander 1 at the bogi f the 19th | PO WE WAR WITH ¢ @oesn't do much This is_a jate n..gw,,., But the | Hommea e hnd fortfea How | S0Ualty and inartistic shape.’ some- e 8E (3e Gewinbing o dthe condones rapine a : pite of the fact th "} Paesibly Emperor mrhs i8 won- vm-ma is_sure to_recognize that It is|many of the sons of men mourn the | .InE on the pagoda order, with ugly eentury, when it was-decreed that Ger- ¢ THE GERMAN PEOPLE?|ccmmits them Amér o Teeaai to, bt it dering what- penalty “ha will have to “Public, edioation o .be #ood enay ot human. fellowships | that | 500Ut chased handle and’ its bowl|man should be the language of the — German parentage who e % Tl met apiy fpmy sfor calling_on:Emperor Wilhelm | ™ ., be._eAucition of. the, whole man |might have surtived in strensth and | 330rned band evidently of some flow- faculty. e ehle e force until | By Robert Adger Bowon of The Vig- |imprisonment to fight S views concerning the viola: [ "‘"w aua”.not entsely e ralsing of |beauty, throush a little stiention! o desian. threadea By = waved rib: | FHE, SOen BUse A e ate: oa- ilmntes, many s not only a trai o il - D i ok-worm." e book-worm - Has|. 9 ars advi l - 1y all that the Germar o the ciples of the fl,emiom N s o & with the IgnaBecome about as much of a pest as 1\.?1?;7::?““:}"0:‘:{;“.. Tt ‘g’;c ,,,:"::,,,3 Doubtless, many readers of The ;:g!n!hyl of the Lutheran theslogical| ¢ has been with a shock that has | himself capable of 1 of the hich seas by the inclusion of, which® gives indicatl the hook-worm. The !guud -m that Dr. John: hiiselt had found | EUlletin possess treasured silver of | faCHLY. . : « threatened faith in humanity itself | what those, the least of | B CAit oF the Goein us 2 Aoy m % !onr ¥ iadion thay on that | mist he something than P A donin. Saster - Sutn than in Colonial times which will answer to| “The astronomical oleervatory of|that the realization of the Gerr#.n|shrink from,writinz him rone and by sinking of neutral °';n P lhnch of mmlz His aaue.uon is Zme, as most people. Tiog" are | the “description of these tvpes des-|the Dorpat university s famous. oW- | character has beon forced upon the| Never more than in i ehips not carrying contraband. . »‘ i e "’ M";“’ : of | eesity and. HEhOY focmed them, in |oribed in Mr. Curtls’ valuable manual, |Ing In large measure to the =distin-|rest of the World. Bven with the re- [ been true that one cann This Scandinavian country has bee: the _bugksa; rostrim | the very exuberance of our lives of THE DICTAGRAPH. [¥ BHMHE wha hage. fme | jeated evidences of its brutality the|God and Mammon—never | T a‘check to !he large Jsewh i b to time been .its directors. Chief of. % 3 i s great safferer from the acts of Ger- lnus o h dite in . hunting big %'i.:ea:c::a%-n’fl,l :‘;."’2’:: e certain smsociations Tul,” otnere ata these was Gustay Friedrich Geors | Ly, °f maakind reels under the | fretor e “anpalingly " ¢ = ned no tle. e, K 3 -. - . s y. In sa e ppallingly ¢ and it has occa 1 no iitile|ighme, hunt ‘:u-lgut ProAt by adopt- |any exlgenc)—muuuh_r Pl | s L B Sl L OR *]| Wilhelmstruve, who was noted for his | umqzement the world asks how can|there are among us on at it has tolerated it £1 in the Ister years t(o-rally con - contributions to the world’s knowledge n . -0 _trench warfare, | Sonteel. y ~of. . education | dence again, when hopes have’ often o tils thing have come to pass So | those who seek to just t has in view of the lcss in]3: Fene ) ORI ube we o Reen AIeappointed. and thust Detixyed. of double stars. Struve's sons and|jong had we been told of the German |niore or less openly. 1 iives und shipping, but what is more H_ i ;, pledge | makes o pons &umgtlwll, is JAIl the pore - reason there is for i EheQfeoRes Wity Meo_noted sclentlsts | honesty apd sincerity and tender love | cans can no longer affard to prising in connection with the re- ¥ B -n-? ‘The great man/m: keeping in -full vigor that which Is i S toriorpat and 'n other European|of home—sc iong had we heard of | them. orway and Germany i pbel. B the second part is carried | knowled| of mu as - well as nt tried and trge. .- .- < ety e :“;’a"&k i 1a | Gorman kindliness of heart, German Fvery instinet of since “nmouncement mage at this time|Gjt as well'as the first “ ought to be houhi and also.the .gepius to proper- Ll T e e ek o e enoTia | love Lof the .beautiful In nature and | aemand of alty ‘and gr to the effect that the Norweslan gov- | @& skceess: -flllux his learning, fo galu it of use n itself is a sublime friend- o5 A i sl 4T or | In_art—that we could not believe in | {hose who are going fort Rt is kseping SHERE about T ;.,4“_*_‘__‘ to _feHon ttle Jearnins | .p and Is to be so regarded, It can| “Dorpat is one of the important|the 15th Svmy corps © Russia. It has | the German lusc. to deapoil and befoul | to lay down_their lives = = g B o ! =3 is a anxrro ing,” for it hias made] onl. come 10 it Dighest .estate | conters of population’ in the Baltic & Population of 50.000 and .ever since|.ng Jestroy. We could not credit its|and liberty may continue arransements to resume the shipment|?;Now thut"d T€d headed man fired |igute of men who mIght have made | ShrSukh. onr corsclons attontion. . | province of Livonis, which les on the fthe middle ages, when it was a mem- | arrogant pride in the accomplishi i, | Upon us who remain | 1 to Germany at the rate of: li'flr*hirmflwtln France there sppes e e e oo with God _to be open |Hne of advance of - the German of- | ber of the Hansealc League. it has en- | its self.justification through the 'vi- | uhcertain display of our o 100 tons a month after the first of W in <the Teahead — to his suggestions, to be in daily | fensive in the direction of Petrograd joved considerable trade with Pskov|.,ous slogans of Deutschland ubar| tions. BT The Rialiiag Of Auch. inw- nity. until it is determined just| Thers is’a good deal te be done in} fellowship with ITior—this is Fe.|$ays a bulletin issued today by the|and Nevgorod, The agricultural fair|Alles and Weltmacht oder Niedergang.| One course and one alor lerial over to that country to help it| what th &‘ & $ thie world, and It iv up to all of us to ligion. It ought to go.without saying phic socfety from its | BEC In '“G't““ °“°t¢hh o GareS l“?- We know it now. Murders om sea |deem today the man of ¢ ntinue its past conduct doesn’t in-|. + | try to do our-partrofiit. ~A" that, such a relationship requffes cul- | Washington headquarters. Zrboapdy <k e city's - life In|,pq land; deliberate slaughter of wo- | Of the fact that he is e Jicate that Norway Is-as sore about its ‘Germany may be only carrying out | D® provided. fer.tbe least- to tivation it it ig to thrive. There ls no| . ‘Bitusted on the south bank of the of pesce. men and children. the wounded and|must be held blameless. la | giiariebe -1 g s thi§ {iéive as a pesce thove, though | Dit: In this matter of raising Liverty | guarantee thas the hish exper River Bmbach, which flows eastward — thase that minister to the wounded: |cannot be if ne upho == — wn 4t but_na ¥ effectiye | 108D ‘8 host of patriots are barred out. | will persist in ' spite of éemes ‘slois, | into Lake Peipus, Dorpat is connected dishonor in diplomacy as in war; | Germany in her 1 ¢ ABSENTEE VOTING. 5" ,‘,fi,a be ‘iaken to bring to.| CPEWnd is making the most of the 25.| Under the guise of ma.mp re- | by rafl both Reval and Riga and cunning, low trickery, and self-aba: ciime against the ri r . !‘m“ the Itallan facts ad gent patriot, and_he ‘has taken-over|ligien s made . soneasts. undec. |alko has a tri-weekly steamboat ser- m VIEW POINTS ment! The heavt sickens at all of the world. ' The partir At different times throughout the lan lons. five milllon war loan certificates and | standable. ;.eo are | vice connecting it with the trade cen- vile, degrading story; the mind stag-| ways betwee him an sountry there have been strong cam- Bt keeps. taking .them. - When the nextfonly for mlmu mpued but fellow- | ter of Pukov, on the Velikava, one of gers —at the knowledge that behind | must increasingly wid o Sife conducted in behalf af absentes v :{ Aive billions are ealled for in this coun- |giip with a’person may be compre- t’htw-m connecting the Baitic thelr. conscienceless rulers and the | willing to denounce and voting with the result that a number . ,in & formiv. | try let us Mope the war certificate for [hended by - a’ child. .“Ye are my|With soutl Russia. The distance to instigators of those loathsom: creed that the rest of t L . 1 g the pveryday latorer will bo invited to | friends.” said “Jasus “to His "disciples. | Riga by rall is 156 miles in a south-| vy, ; is | 5tands a proucly united people follow- | hors and loathes SE B Siates have-Sauctsd iaws which doy -its -share. - i ite) Was lotier iE. eer Gomferred on westerly direction. while Reval lies to e wonder what the philosophy Is |y, Tineir Kalser's e S L QR sutes 45 Fhie wistige ft the - ’ scheme o provide 30o: 00 homen for | men? Conaci G T N e O Doy O e Hreasury e ires | Do We war Wwith the German people? Rl T they o TGN soldier, A% the cotablish. | owy can they merit the henor. ‘Exeept for one or two ehurches, in- | 0T, (0 "SLUIR aRY of the Tagney L Bad RN 2 g . e sn election day. I: has been adopted | 1 With the Farusal of the Serman sol. | Ment of 10.000 new v s depend- clyding the cathedral which crowns And with all _men and ‘women, in order not to deprive those who have | giexs. i3 “Beisium -to “fi;‘_ mm:-“:. ing upon tnmm o do thal “Clouds ma Dombers (cathedral hil &nd. the cas- | loc m,mCney and it has got it WhY | | jether they be German or American, | With peace terms do not weem ¢ busine un- el 2 . ere are med- [T 3 tify, them. n this war there can somebody Visit E e distases oF | feler s | siir “#fll Wdvantage of every such dertaking. - The ‘uubn and | But A B m'nmnp ‘wl:xwut “an ?.‘:.‘5 bulidings iz the town, owing to e etoany no. eoncesatan. for 4t ix & | With peace terms.—Kansas Cit D T e el el et me& the ‘enamy | d:mes of America -are: mall i ; 4 en ‘was almost There are few who will begrudge{ moral war, holier than any Crusade ~ B NGRS Exeat Micrifics or ex- mil B e And a mgfim-w'_- pevsr pndene, S cuv aomw by five I 1777. 1t | the bays and girls their fun on'the eve | that was ever Tare juatied &5 T Won't Change the Verdiot bt ‘my squl had from conflagrations on | of in y. These fest '3 | other war has ever been meore i e senatorial Investigating In recognition of the justice of such l: there is danger of the Boston 3 i3 occasions when invading | have been going e each year since [ fied. Any wavering, be it o:""m tee will hardly be able to give ar r and the wisdom of preventing mphony Orchestra mited but into our 1 P d it for its barn n. that memorahle in the nven(h m hte: 10 admit that wrong is|cision in the LaFollette case ut voters, our H n 2 fartification century when cho uu.np n ight, uun hmur u h\mm-., that | upset the popular verdict alread chusetts, is a ciive o-mm ln dered.—New York World t of 'muun. t ou'!y is \ r to e ‘fought - — t.ho lm uutu out o- mu- tront. It in to. bo| Broken Hill miners have dc fihfi wa. foaght . whersver thoss foroes which!thetr atrike at an end.

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