Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 7, 1917, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NURWIGH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1917 and the total disregard for the rights of neutrals even when it was not ne- cessary to make use of their terri- tory. The cold blooded murder of ' - & women displaying & white flag shows erwurfl g ullghn the depravity of that countfy and the desperation with which it is fighting to accomplish its purpose, but its ’“d g‘fifil:? worst indictment comes from its own soldiers who protest against being 121 YEARS OLD forced to uhoo:”dyown the prisoners ubseription price = | sroups as i ¢ were so many cat- -:-tlx 00 o m"‘ T tle. ‘Germany’s conduct throughout Eatered at the Postoffice at Norwich, | the war has been far worse than Tur- g on., &3 second-clasa matter. key's because it knows better %nd Telepbome Callss must be held responsible for all such Bulletin Business Office 480. deeds in the days of reckoning which Bulletin Editorial Rooms 35-3. are to come. Bulietin Job Office 35-2. b, T,“'{,‘:‘;T,:"S_.{._Q‘”“- 35 Mala Street.| waAr CAMP COMMUNITY SERVICE Bfery effort is being made to sur- round the training camps of the country with évery possible means for making them. develop efficient sol- dQiers. The welfayre of the men as far as their military development is con- cerned is given every consideration. Careful attention is given o the pro- CIRCULA ~rn:m . 4412 1901, average ..... 7 e quarters, clothing, sanitary locations and the best Instructors. * Efforts have been made to seé that the camps are furnished with recreation centers, 1i- braries and places where the men can congregate for pleasure, but all this has to do with life within the confines of the camp. It canmot be and it is mot expected that the men will not gg outside of the camps. They are certain to g0 to the nearest settlements just for the ake of getting a change from camp routine. For the purposs of sur- rounding them with as much pro- tection outside as within November 3, 1917.. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusive- Iy entitled to the use for republica- tion of all news despatches credit- ed to it or not otherwise credit- ed in this paper and also the local published nerein. rights of republication of special despatches herein are also reserved. as much protection as possiblo in such communities and surround them with such environment in those lo- calities as will be conducive to clean ilving, mentally and physically. This work Is being carried out by the war camp community service which is this week endeavoring to raise $4,000,000 throughout the country te meet such expenses as will be incurred during the next tweive months. There can be no doubt but what it is a worthy service and is deserving of all the as- sistance that it can obtain. The work targe field and s much RAILROAD RATES. In connection with the petition for higher- rates by the raflroads of the » east it is recpgnized of course that nu:w YORK'S ELEGTION. | ‘hey must chow the commission hav Mo Tammany forces in New York's| ing charge of that matter that there gclection have accomplished just what|is good ground for their claim. Thcy they Bad every reason to belfeve they| pave got to furnish the evidence in a could accomplish provided = they|manner suficlently convincing to get were mot forced to contend with &|. favorable decision. In other words united opposition. From the very|tney must prove their case befors moment that Candidate Bennett was|iney will et what they arc seeking. shown to have received the republi- & ehich can momination and the blunder on ::,.n‘:";.' e s e the gart of the fusioni allowed| By: thig is what the roads are fuily their forces to be split Tammany has|,qare of and what they are appar- feit comfident of an outcome that|.niy prepared to accomplish this would be favorable to its candidate.| rime even though they may fesl from Jn spite of the efforts which were| (heir point of view that they had ‘made lo ‘“‘Er_v:):xme this split by the| jone tnis very thing on previous oe- Iepubiican workers in certain disteicts| casions as the evidence which they the unsuccessful pressure Which|present in this instanee will tend to was brought to bear-upon Candidate | yo " Bennett to abandon his campaign In! I: i< a matter which must be care- :fl"’f of !a‘x:i’;r Mitchel, Tammany | ryly looked at from all sides for jus- lougtt & ed opposition, the very|iice is what is belnz sought, but when condition which it desired and which | i is shown that at the time Of as was recognized as necessary to knock | ing for the 15 per cemt. increase in cut the effects of fusion. rates last spring it was figured that The result is therefore that New|ihe operating expenses would advance York can expect to go back to thef s235000,000]. and compliations since conditions prevailing previous to four| then show ‘that they will be $270,000,- Fgars ago. It is in fact a repudiation|ogo, whije the increased revenue has ©of zood governmert and an admis-|amounted to but $97,006,000 in spite :fl:h:n;::gnm:i the Ereatest ity |of the merease that was granted then, able fo the reformation which it bagjit would appear that the roads are standing on good ground in their been undergoing for the past several| [ “"ORE PN sttt oy e ity 3t Sear| "Thers can be no question but what o o B ted o remain ua. | the roads have been put to great ad- il aglle it g Moy ‘organisa. | ditional expense to handle the great -y + just as long aa the| YOlMme of war business that has been :""’w“nu'mor ihat political body de.|tArUSt upon them and when this is fide to pull apart instead of working| 7Ot Offset bi a corrcsponding revenue oether for the common Eeod of that | income it can be appreciated that they e e ok o o e That]are entitied to relief the same as any Toppled over all the Eood thinge that | Other corporation that is getting B RS ronatisa yarts' to oituty hizher prices for its product or ser- E vices. Great dependence is placed on £ ey aove: :_:er:::;:m- and they must be treat- The sensible thing has been done e by the employes at the Fore River EDITORIAL NOTES. pyard in returning to work and| The man on the corher says: Wea- leaving their dispute over wages to be| ther offerings fall alike on ythe Just settlea by arbitration. It would have|ana the unjust. been better if they had resorted to that course instead of going out On a| When it comes to atrocities the strike last week, since it has meant| Turks are not able to give the Ger- the demoralization of business at the|mans any pointers. shipyard for mearly a week and at 4 time when it has its most serlous ef-| The latest information from Italy fects upon the country. Whatever | does pot indicate that the Tagliamento blocks operations in shipbuilding | ts going to be the Marne of Italy. plants at the present :ime, whether it S a fire, an explosion or a strike,| We canmot afford to také any #imply means that the government is| chances with men caught carrying Leing bandicapped just that much in | bombs onto American troop ships. fts programme for the production of alt sorts of things. When twenty- five boarders began to straggzle down | Mrs. he much needed ships, so that the| The federal authorities are right in citizens of this country cam be, | Siving notice that Norwich eannot be- whether they stop to give comsidera.|(ome an casis for the soldiers and tion to tha: point or not, as much ot | Sailors on leave. an obstacle to the government's war Sy Tlans ne the agents of the emems. | ashington will soon have a chance There is, however, enoush of this kind | {0 3¢ what effect the dry legislation of work going on without those who | 5 EOINg to have,in shortening the ses- boast off their patriotism taking a|S5iONS of congress. hand therein. 1t is to be expected that there will | ;uint ek, Of Pennies Is keeping the be fair treatment of the employe as well as of the emplover and the country, but there i8 no reason why this cannot be obtained through the| No one fs doing arbitration of the differences. and | ban on German masie ar thone whg with much better results than by re- | are refusipg to sing or direct the sorting to strikes. In most of these| playing ofi the Star Spangled Banner. disputes it is an s@justment that is preid s o required. Such should be secured in| It is ail right for the German press 2 common sense manner and that is|to make a joke out of. the capture of assured by the presentation of the|American troops, but it should be re- facts to a jndge who will deal with|membered that be who laughs last them impartially and see that justice | laughs best. prevails. v e Some of our soldiers have been GERMANY'S ATROCITIES. younded, some heve died, soms have een taken prisomer and some -have ey e e Tentger "I | treneh feet But thers is no evidence the past in the commission of atroci- | °f C0Id feet a8 yet. .« tles. it can mo longer lay sole claim| 1y spite of all that we are doing to that reputation in view of the con-| our restrictions are mot so stiff but duct of Germany on land and water.| what the German agents ars going That nation, in ::lto of its kultur|ghout with bombs and getting inte has stopped at nothing. It has swept| jigces ‘they ¢ aside all respect for reguiations, all :L.‘ bt oo s regard for humanity and all restraint in the commission of barbarous mcts|' If those German letters to Girard in order to make the world kneel be-{are to be beligved, and they only. sub- fore it In humble submission to its|stantiate the reputation which Ger- many has been building for itself, it bad enoush when it sent its|little wonder that that country @oesn't across Beigium, resardless of | worry about taking care of its pris- SRR jiviag (death il Oh Looaghs, ..o their wake, disregardl = ot ‘warfare and not oniy kill- An;r lom )o.\f of its submarines, Germany may be building them faster but with greater success in sinking them and new shipping being more rapidiy produced there ¢asnot e is not. the enly coin of which the peo- ple are experiencing a shortage. i The young man with the purple tie)and sighed. “It's vonderful” he said,|was WHEN THE CLOCK SKIPPEP being arrested for seditious practices trough his speeches, acts, and influ- enee. pow can ve a0 au mn wiowt | AR LI ED I T O FRILI RA %tcg%fg?g%gmg#g\g Well, it's like this: Under o Sl T e A S Uy N T e for anything ne may say in the Sen- le, 'and as to his activities outside of E . ) e v a inquirtes as to whether the house | !¢ = B s rul, i on five, but it didn't matier, be. |he Sefata, that august body Seufe E‘ perfectly wondcrful how much tro- | cause It was time for people to be up. | 'S AnEers o S8 eRTR ST, COSSEL ble an enrgetic*person who puts his|Then he clattercd down again, wak- | 0ar SOWHUSE S (D00 O gon mind to it can stir up! Take me for|ing up all those who had slumbered a , to Instance! 1 know I'm thoroush, but |throush his first assaull. Ho report- | aic who care or perhaps date. 0o —AND ON THE SAME BILL— i never quite realized the extent to|ed that Mrs. Hopps would be right which I carried the thing until the|down. 1 still felt anxious about Al- other day, and when I try to forget | ferd it there is always some one handy at | appeared befoce 1 got away. e et the boarding house ready ‘o remind T tirow any o hing, then. be done to stoy v Can nothing, then, be don stop and Dalsy Hranklin, who aiway#|the mouth of a traitor in high ofice ARTHUR ASHLEY GERDA HOLMES EDW. LANGFOR tiptoed up to Alford's room and |\t § e of it~ Fm not very popular|hissed throush the keyhole. He did| Yes. the Senate has the THREE BIG PICTURE STARS around there these days,l can tell [ not cleanse itself of the Gentleman from vou . Ty} e Berlin by expelling him with a two- “ G e s ome metn v ooy aqa | ST ) b o P g0 | Borp p epellnd i wil's e n T =l N ERIN heaven knows I arisc early enough,|going to be iate on the new job’ T, TRl hnine 51 i e gk [ Lo be e em e oew 0 ! s ST SO S e e e iR Rl & et s SN e an Bone or T Jossed the hande | E¥AD his ciothes A sweet silends |, Well If a pole-cat sot into your MUTUAL WEEKLY AND CONCERT ORCHESTRA COMPLETE THE BILL_ when I wound it. But, be that as it |reigned across the hall where Daiss s B may, little Brighteves was downstuirsil'rflré!‘;un lived. [ hesitated, and_then Shuviae Guane 08 e put N | Geciding this was no time for i ot oMY AhhT George, the ovliging waiter, prepares | formalities 1 tapped on her door. Illtate for a few mements hopms Ihal at 5:30 instead of 6:30, as usual. me my frugal meal ahead of the reg- | had - fast, so 1 stepped to the | answered. 5 . o ular breakfast, so DD WA Whas is it © the gasped. T How then, i7 the name of fumice| ooy which rang high above the swinging door and called to him. as| vision of wholesome fodd, proper{is mu custom. There was a dead si- it a lence. I pushed the door and a| “It' strange colored gentleman attached | your pardon, Lut yowre going to bg N et s dowm 5o Lars on. the to the kitchen came blinking toward | late me. ‘Geawge. he vouchsafed. ‘he| air’t heah yer!® mered gratefully, stifl half asleep. nls was very queer. George Is|ie right down! Tell 'em to put my |f9et, FIth tho consRtion Toal BwlS r to 1A s 9 . ple 1 ithe mud were listen: e vith similar t> the sun, moon and stars in | ireakfast on, please! th sistors| Driccat, and hat the men ana wo. |ihe, mud were lstening men “with! | nOUGLAS FAIRBANKS OB th-thank you': Daisy etam- |Pelitical toes of every Semator oM |iho heard him could understand a{f YOUR LAST GHANGCE TO SEE nouse by mistake. you ou? But you might very likely hes. TODAY LAST CHANCE TO SEE “MA#O'IF OF ].lFE” to tap several times before she it for you. and common eense can we remove | fOTECN WINCH TAN ¢ Libiletis's expuiplon cortain? Perhaps what he sald was quite in- coherent and wild. Perhaps no man again and I though I'd call you!’ TODAY ANMD THURSDA fect with tho convictlon that publl~| % 0 toter nidaen trom him in|l THE MAN WITH THE SMILE | Tin|cvery staté, that ne will jump to li | oong Gf what e a0 but there in % | ty, and I had grown to| I also informed the ot 54 VERYZODY" e e e, "The® swangs | ard Mr. ami Mre. Jones of the hour|mem of'his’ stote will no_loner be|cf*Ihewr heada to loolc st that sinie N & gentleman had heard of me and my | when they inquired whether anything |“ghneC o8 ZE0L ST, PSSR, e | Bgure with ihe flag. They understood SN TheR, " o3 You W some. | was wrong. I it most Vireuous and | Senatorial Courtemy uwhat he meunt.’ His accuspns ngure |} THE MAN FROM H ;’i}'m{q L@{‘P}‘ " e Voluntecred. o. Cicrsetic Gn_such a @ 2y : : age o 3 3 e Sicepers. 1 should have heen on my | It ie vers necessary to send our| Thcro” wa mo deberate suiping of PAINTED POST @ v “The home seemed oddly silent. 1|way, but I sort of wanied to apole- ia eafe for Democracy, but it is|Stretcher-bearers thouzh they still|§ A Six Act Western Comedy Drama 1 e 6 o, Yer o #ad to go through shell fire. h> Lé began to worry about the recreant | rize George and the trouble his absence bso T vould make little Mrs. Hopps, wno |tLc runs the hou: reckties crooked, curls askew. breath- ———— il PR on fhe Tl 4 ] again to Dalsy for waking Ner | yaly fnportant for us at home to hung around, and In ten minutes < portan s wholé crowd came tumbling down, [ N7k the Kaiser out of Congress! Water Resources of Hawail. WALT WHITMAN PARADISE GARDET A Scven Act Metro Wonderp ‘ “Was Geol sick when he left |EIS‘.‘ aflrs. HOP):, :‘V-l:hpali \?“h hag- Iast night? I asked the other colored | gard, having retired the night before landa carids from @ few o sentleman. With' a sick headache. There was no|| STORIES OF THE WAR |/ ;g 490 fnchee o sear and as much WARRIOR” =, e “‘Oh, no, _sir!’ said y “As I ate I began to worry about to breakfast and there was no waiter | ing there would be a commotion. And | wanted me!’ promptly. | breakfast ready and evervone turned i ¥Eieiorins nisiusiatisinte G accusingly, as thought it were S e wh Lirfaation, tie studycor ous hea duce through irrigation. the study of Five Part Triangle Feature BURTON HOL | i | | iands varies from a few inches to|f “THE TAR HEEL K Roiate e aat g | nance and th cat Ou | | | | fault. . mail%r gf x;:"en illnp?rlnrwfl‘.‘ It is CAUGHT IN THE END, _K;m dy ] g " “ ” stated that the critical period is ap- (G o T e - Ihat saids acu. want, noor. listle Mud “Did Us in. proaching in Hawallan agriculture, CONCERT ORCHESTRA _ D e homas sald "wou |, For it was weather which robbed the |and that the iime has come in the | "N i3 15, €vo. 6:45 and 8:45 | troops of a great victory om Friday, | ulilization of water when it hecomes & Sk and made them suffer the worst mis- |necessary to have all the infors e — Al 5 b, | T had an awfully queer feeling by : hay h Ao, e P e e witriout | thia time amid all the Elares with|¢ries of wijter warfars, and held|icssible” regarding its e i e Seta2 amd>*Dalsy “Franidin® would e | Wiich T was currounded. ““G—Georgs | them in the wmud when {hey bad set|cources | 0 o projests involving tne wse o water 172 Tobnetn AT i sy ] e . = reir T :pon X pri rom any sivecm it is necessary to srape vines an Raatas hesilons wOuNETRER SeRpLe e e manded my | Was the mud which beat them. Man|isiands are sugar, rice, and taro; [have data from which the total flow | Savannah e S Dont wou think’ I sald to the|landlady znantly. ‘Hes never|after man has said that to me on the|many fine pineapples also are grown.|of the stream and Its variation from | oot JL strange colored gentleman, ‘that you | here till 6:30—and it's just that now! (’fl-"fi'ub""‘jdgr;dhg;;ler::;phefl o Rk by for "‘fi‘;":;lpl‘r"finc:;am Droa|day to day. throughout the year can be Let Us Smile Wi - . you | k il “Fritz_couldn’ tuct. > ‘areas pla ane | Chtained. St ovember. 1910 8| Probsbly the fu had better go up and wake IMre | Tnomss Why @lay't you tell Rim (hef..ia an Australlan boy, warming his|depend entirely cn irrigation. Some |study of the sircams of Hawuil has | the e homah s g b b bt el 8 Lyt ' hands and body by a brazler after a|of the lands sre naturally adapted to|beon carried o I [ would be dreadfully inconvenienced if| ~Thomas _erimned depreeatingly:{,ight in the cold slime, which was|the growing of rice but require a cer- | maintained by she had no warning ‘Re “‘Oh, yassir! Right away!’ he an- | prot Ywered cheerfully. Later 1 learned| “I that he never had learned to work his | said L:ain. having confined his efforts ex- “Daisy won't speak to me yet. and gaging stations | rake the wo nited States Geo- | Wl still pastered about him. “It was the|iain quantity of water varying in|lcgical Survey, Department of the 1 ‘”m “':y”* g n.ud which gave bim. a life chance.” |amount Wwith the stage of the crop.|tcrior, in cooperation with the Ter- | fuiedn Biade. “It was the mud that dld us in”|Taro is also an important crop, fur- |ritory of Hawall o caid an English officer, sitting up on|nishing the staple food for a consid- a_stretcher and speaking wearily.) erable part of the population; it re- nevah asked ' me the time!’ ested. 1 done just what he said!’ pass over the next half hour,” the younz man gloomily. Where Talk Fails. Vdrks ‘May | fisye Hot oing b . | nei i1l any else, except. to|%, 5 ‘ i Bl Rt [ l:‘i‘r’x.i(lyhemr:usnhh::eh:-:%; s 2:3::; e S T T T Vi Ent Dogxed ar_}_«hc‘oumnt‘:ea,é i | quires & continual application of wa-| Those Russian revolutioniats who | e iAp e BNe ppand o e iie o | with the barage. gave the Ger- | ter ] v aro s & |who appear to believe government is|SE@NCAARIC 0 8 VE LA S . ) A t4_C] N work on us. was eir luck. 501 ilce i potato. is|out and try their oratory on ti aln poUPHE BCER. Lear stray. dogeiigventng. t e e A young Scof, shivering so (hat his|srown to a considerable extent in the | vancing Germans—Kansas City Star - ——— teeth chattered. spoke honrsely, anmd | United States as an-ornamental plant e = With Whom We Ars at was LETTERS TO THE EDITOR ||ih Professor Muck and the National An-|in 1 them. 3 Mr. Editor: Prof. Muck, late con-|ing Anomaly in refusing to render The Star | pa comminity before the war. was Spanglea Bamner, on the pretext that | catering. to the needs and 1diosynora. | SniPed us when we could not drag dne the national hymn was “musically in- | ciog to enforce an imperial decree against | paming establistments reopened with indiminished -activity and continued (7 !in operation until their leases expired { retused to renew them. i should bave had him beat with solid v 7Y s . 2 fomburg has several manufactur- | 570Und ~bemeath us but we ail 2o R’y Bl f /, 2 Muck, establishments, the chief produc#s Stick in the bog, and he came out of e dactor of the Boston Symphony com: | being machinery. 'leather goods and b iy o D “;ft “"“';““ex,'g““fie{{ ¥ any, exhibited a strange _musical o us as we tried to acrdss the shel Rrom fhite lead, buc the chieh Dusiness of ||cles, all filled like vouns nonds, and - 0[‘ Some Consolati Ve are at war wit there was no warmth in him except|and is popularly known as eclephant’ the five In bis eyes. "We had a fear-fcar. o0 th clgars. cigarette &nd tobacco |Kaiser: also we are at v L e N e LiE| . Do maling plans for bower, Imrigat [Lotng ups sohers Ty efiece thal|Gernians Who supnort the K B o e e 12, S00ner | shate of mud that kept us back. and | tion, municipal water supply, and oth-|us in the old duys, the fields are still iiwaukes News n , [the Germans took advantage of it “Whenever we got near to Fritz he surrendered or ran” said a young scrgeanit of ‘an English battalion. “We occupied by Austrian troops sent 572, and the Prussian government of ailing visitors and _ their|leS after the other.” rtistic”” Ons might think that his | healthy companions who desired live- Stretcher-Bearers Fired On. i ip Fee. > == %@,&j}fig g symphonic ability mighi have distin- | Jv entertainment. guished itself ir a superior rendition | G the patriotic tune. Doubless. the | professor would reckon Die Wacht am | Rhein a purely classical composition. TTis writer is not a musical expert but | notes a correspcndence between the | professor's name and the stuff he Secms to be made Of. all our protestations that we are not 2l war with the German people, our German peopic here let no opportunity pass to express their fealty to the|By kaiser. -and their antipathy to our Tt is deplorable that in the face o!‘l KICK THE KAISER BO5 I W S 2 e cherished traditions and ideals. (Senators and Congressmen are As in the present insMance, this man | now at home with leisure to learn the Muck would sooner throw up a lucra- tive and respected position than per- way. It is more than deplorable that this Muck is not a startling exception, but that he is a sample of the common and Is = fields, and o shot of ours went over H B R [ Come | d S eT h ange rk Uiidige of Those from whose mmtelh | 18,the Kaer n Consressy | iem’ But onour side shots from com nan e s n (] gence and | community of interesiine in the Reitchstag in person. But|our stretcher-bearers were hit cntiments of their Constituents.{ Away on the slopes of Pasechen- form a small patriotic service that|Would it not be well to let them|dasele his stretcher-bearers could be same simply and nattrally in the line {know, once for all, what patriots ot his professicnal dutv in a public|ijink should be done to La Follette | fag with stretchers and ambulances Our men were spent after all thati night and day in the mud and all this fighting, and ncw dusk was creeping o down, and it was hard to see who was Views of the Vigilantes friend and who was enemy among the ‘ - 'ures that crawled about in the siime. It was the turn for stzetcher-bear- ers. those men who work behind the er up the human wreckage off it. WAN QUT OF CONGRESS! (£ 2% ‘herolsm . they had worked all i day under heavy fire, and now went Lowall C. Frost of The Vigilantes. | oY o otking without thought of self. They were. visible to the enemy, and their Red Cross armlets showed their mission. seen working. tgo. One body of 200 men came out, Waving the Red Cross the other allies of the Kaiser?) |and went glearing in these harvest German- snipers were still flying and ot Y 1 hi compiiment o our | e 12 represented in both places very | Three of them carrying one stretch- DEMONSTRATOR IN. ATTENDANCE EVERY DAY UNTIL SATURDAY free democracy that men with such still unhurt—but it would he a better | o token of common sense if, even with |y that Who woull dere to reprosent him [ them dlrecting th E gall as Professor Muck can pass alon | ;- the Congress of the United States? A A R er were killed, and the officer with capelle was_fired with a_flame of an- t obert M, LaFollete would dare, |ger. He seized & Red Cross flag and 4 X _even wi Qared, and will dare, not merely | made his Way u O S atl 1 A their present feeling. they displayed | ;% epresent the Kaiser in the halls | aheli: hol:uw;?wa‘rfirayu'::lce'r(.l:m;‘:rp::xf e er ln r Yy a more considerate attitude mwl!;d of Congress, bu: also to give him aid |tion. and, standing there, this officer this' beneficent nation. 5 Fa-soLa. |And 191 Norwich, By National Geographio Society. Homburg—*Many English travelers will read with deep personal inter- est the news of the bombardment by aliied aviators of Homburg-vor-der- Hohe, the fashionable little watering vlace 12 miles by rail northwest of Frankfort-on-the-Main,” says a war geography builetin issued today by the National Geographic Society on the Prussian town which is reported to have been rcided by airplanes at a time when the Kalser was making it mint running night and day. but that|Fis headquarters a few days ago. “Before the war Homburg, which had a popuiation of 14000, was viait. ¢d each season by that number of travelers and - health-seeker; Fully a third of the visitors each year were Englishmen, ond its bathe rivalod Eiarritz in the favor of the late King Edward VII as a resprt. “Homburg is delightfully situated amid the spurs of the Haunus moun- tains, and the bathing establishmenss are most elaborate and commodioh The springs attracted many who suf- Lored from. rheumatism, - infligestion skin disease: more than two centuries Hom- burg was the —capital and faverite place of residence of the land graves fous was butit by reasncs 1 ia || WE HAVE DIVIDED OUR STOCK IN THREE LOTS 1680-55, and was refitted. in 1366 as a 12lace for the royal family of Prus- sia when the town passed :nto the vossession of that kingdom. It was LotNo. 1—6 SUITS, value to $47.50— doubtless this castle that the Kaiser was using for headquarters at the time of the air r: il b,’:',:c.‘;',r‘z_“‘m: Lot No. 219 SUITS, value to $38.50— ard easily reache way is the famous old Roman castel- um of Saalburg, s back to the Ind and 3rd turies, A, D. It 8 Compiciely excavatad two vears arier |l Lot No. 3—27 SU!TS, vdlu to $26.50— Homburg became. & Prussian town, and it is ome of the most popular show places for visitors who come for e rhe late King of England not e late ll' of was the only per iyho “teok RNy 0 ol g ot Siam crected 8 apecial’ ing_for his own muuupdmnn ‘here in 1907, comfort wherever Fe goes,|of the R. &. M. C, shouted out & : Man Club Members are aiready using their SCIENTIFIC STERLINCS. Co-operative Buy- ing means a saving to you. Do it Now! . Blg Stdling Club Members share in the savings and advantages made possible by comk ?d buying power of 16 peop! Just as soon as the last one of the 16 Scientifics Glearance Sale [l| =i At ol o v o G FOR CLUB MEMBERS ONLY v 1 Fall and ?Imtar Suits Easy Terms of Payment OV“SIOCKED is the reason " We Buy Your Old Range Double Guarantee Bond 1 . Cooking System Free | you will be able to purchase a most §11 ~ Cook Your Own Foods and Save Money With all cooked foods selling at such enormous prices, many imcre women would be glad to cook and bake to save the big difference in cost be- tween cooked foods nnd the materials to make them of, if the kitchen range would only behave itself and do the work with certainty. The up-to-date Suit for less than manu- facturers’ cost. Starting Wednesday, November 7th, continuing to Saturday, § November 10th, we will have a FOUR DAYS' SALE. is so easy to runm, so dcpendable so economical of fuel, many housewifes have told us they 527.50 would .rather cook their own foqd and have wholesome, palatable meals for their families mso 1 than depend on bakeries and delicatessan shops AS FOLLOWS: even if the money saving were no obect. S 6.50 A complete GCas Range in a Complete Coal Range PR l pvumflhuuof.umdm!—hthmmemgetha!mk y..‘”.m 2t hm’. afln{,@l space. You use both gas and coal heat in the one oven Sale Price. the with eith orco-l There is no other r fike - 4....,.:‘%::'.:.. o e g e Tt § bl 4 g The Speci ty‘g,hgp_- -~ GHARLES ©. MURPHY 140 Main Street, opposite ( ’s New Store mm NORWICH, CONN.

Other pages from this issue: