Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 11, 1918, Page 4

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better use of daylight than is being done just at the present seasom, but the time is coming, and not o far T the future, when a tre ous cuyt in 5 i Sorwich Bulletin | wies s v v w5 || A and from April er 4t can be et Ak . mads Benefit. i “I am going to move!” excitedly be- wnd gmfieé e of gréemt - We should, | oy the woman who was being called . however, not walt until the Iast min- |5, “Do you know of any nice oo, 2 YE OLD ute to arrange for such a change. The | house?’ 12 ARS OL| earlier it ig'decided tbon and arrange- “My goodness!” cried her caller. ‘1 ments made the less the confusion{thought you were crazy about this uw-'mm ® Y53 59 2| hat will be caused and when it is es. | apartment! And the/fay you talked ccuntered at the Poatatdce at Norwich, | timated that $40,000,000 can be saved e e e fhi 7 e Calts: :y.“s‘:;: I:Btiom it 8 80-b€ no |, o as 1 live!” vehemiently ‘cried the Bulletin Businéss Office 480, X I b i 15 belhg cRdae. Rl MR T Hetin torial Roome 35. Cail r 3 v house situated in a large expanse o = Efléu".“nh‘,ob 0:“&35.; COMBAYTING THE ENEMY'S ground entirely surrounded by a ten illimantic Office, 625 Ma'n Street. hote 2103, WORKERS. foot stone wall with spikes and ground Attention has been called t6 many | 1288 on. the top! The trouble with T . apartments is that there are always conditions prevailing in this eountry | siner people in the building—although at the present timé about which little| when they moved in I said I-never had has been done to bring about 4 cor-|séén a nicer pair of elderly-ladies. rection. This may not mean that they “Their name is Merkle and they had m”urm have beén entirely fgnoreéd but unless|not been in their apartment a month steps are taken té aiter the situation|When one day the older Miss Merkle 5 N bell. She said they had word 1 ceejeenneeranes. 4412 little “mprovement ean be expected, | A8 My Ald th ¢ B, RPRTERD. - 1 X 5 > and there aré many cenditions which | that @ relative was very ill and dying Nerwigh, Friday, Jan. 11,.1918. and they should be obliged to leave 920 § | shouid be tolerated no longer than the | {hG ity at oncc for an indefinite tay, 1908, average ....ceee g i time required for jmmediate action to| She explained that they had a lot of furnish the ‘remedy. lovely plants and she wondered This Is clearly brought to light by|whether I would water them while the statement which was recently made | they were gone and please to feel free by H. H. Wheaton of the federal bu- 3’. make n'm' pgssig:.o "Ledl ~wanted o; eir apartment. e S we seeme e Sahon e, "’e, effeoct ‘f"‘t emesi s havgJ a socd deal -of company here mies: of this country, and thereforef o q perhaps it would help out if I with representatives i this country,| made use sometimes of their bed- are spending more in New York in a|rooms. month for the purpese, of inciting un- lawful acts aguinst the. e December 5, 1917...... MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Prees is exclusive. Iy entitled to the use for republica- tion of all rews despatches credit- ed to it or not otherwise credit- o1 have lived for :many -years in than this govermnen: sp f.’. gmrtmpnts and thif vivas alhout ‘Se , through its' investigation hureau and|fTst instance of real old style neigh- :’:: ;llz‘lbs“?;:;rnz:i‘n:.uso the local sécret service together. In callifg at. rgr!igfiiswl‘d ewver lmetl.li I h;d Calways All tights of republication ot ||tention to the fact that fires in grain | o Ear, 15 0 o tAT, ARG Seraway special despatches herein are also cge\'ato‘rs hayel increased 400 per cent, 1¥ had a most benevolent cast of coun- since the Dnited States. entered the]{enance. In a voice choked with war and to the increase in industrial tion 1 thanked her. strikes and the oppesition to the pro- he forgot in her haste to say visions of the draft law, he attributes|anything about her cat. and when I this in a large degree to the wi ¢ | went over the next morning pussy the enemy axents whe have seuns btwined ‘herself about my ankles and foreimn sfihjecis\hera willing to garry meouwed appealingly, so I took her B Z home with me. 1 don't like cats. but out their orders. This directs atten-|(njg cat was Miss Merkle's and a sa- tion to the damage and destruction|cred charge. She was a particular cat that is being caused in spite of the{and simply sniffed at plain milk. efforts of this country to combat ¢ne- | Cream she insisted on—and cream she my operations and puts emphasis |30t altheugh my family has used half where it belongs when it is instetea | milk since ‘;‘;wa;a?ef:;‘- Wit ous ¢ g orts that greater elorts eusht to be puth, . "3ither All %ho baskets with fqrt:. in beHa!f of bettex: protection | vines were hung so that if you tried { against such workers. We certainly|to stand on the flcor and pour water sho}xm be doing as much to block|into them you gat most of it down eif efforts as the enemy agents arc|your throat, and if vou, stood on a doing to carry them on. handy chair you broke it. And the s s rubber plant was anaemic and T had A SANE DECISION. to sit and hold its hand and worry over it and soothe it and feed M. n_. 4 is. a preposterous proposition | Whenever my family wanted me and which. is put up to tiie federal fuel ad- couldn’t find me they at once repaired ministrator by the mayor of New York 10 the effect that that city is not get- ting its full supply of coal in order to take care of all its requirements and asking him to shut off the sapply that is going to New England, and hold up such priority orders-as he had given in order to furnish some. reiief to this section; that New York m Smal of stature, the Boy Scout, like be supplied. This would mean that|Zaccheus, has established a new stand- the priority orders which have been is- fard of altruism. A lady in quest of sued to the effect that 300 car loads|butter found the shopman was :b_ou; = of coul go to Neéw England daily be|to sive her his last quarter-pound an buflaing additions to tae oid factories 3 y bel end away empty the smail girl who 7o the purpesc of metting the facili- | oncclled and that a priority order be|ps e i E had waited longer for the coveted Yea for tuming ont the goods ‘f’“ed to the effect that no coal can|agoas. “She was hete before me. Give the speod and in the guant, be permitted to get past New: York|her the butter—I'll -take margarine,” shred ¢t hes alee besn mecessary us“lo?», as that city needs ‘any. said the lady, waiving her seniority in ——e s MOUSES FOR SHIPYARD WORK- ERS. The impreesion appears to prevas in some ecircles that the government “then it entered upon its shipbuilding mrogramme could hot have anticipated that it would siso be required to pro- ide the houses for the emploves of the shippards t Hve in. That it did not is perfectly apparent bLut that it ¥y pRin. It has converns which taken war contracts that in afigition e erecting mew plants or > @ 3 It s fot to be supposed that New |years. And ‘when she apologized 16 cuneitycl homes for the many new | york isnot in need of coul, but it s se. Yoross the tea table for bread and mar- fiu\.m'eu wizo have been broadht there. | oo doibted it the need for fuel is | ¥arine it was with the triumphal dec- An# If the crders were for foreign laration, “And I felt like a boy scout— govermment: thasa countries nave been my one good turn a day, you know.”— called upen to advauce neney cn London Observer. the contracts that was noeded for this eenstruction wor The conditivns were the same in regard to the shipyverds and there is o reazon whydt chopil not have been anticipated that the money for hous- ing the thousands of new employes would not have to -he advanced by this government. Monty was ad- vanetd to equip vards, o why noc te build houses. The'vards are handi- capped unless the employes can be accommodated with housing facilities. Such, however, was hot planned for. The shipbuilding programme is seri- ously held up as a consequence but it is time to realize that all speed should be insisted upoh now in overcoming the trouble. The money put into sup- pliés is bedly tied up until the ehips .to transport them can be provided. el b S THE SINKING OF THE REWA. In eonnection with the sinking of the hospital ship Rewa attention is called to the fact that Germany gave ite pledge in Saptember that it would not comtinue such practices, but that néed cavse little surprise. Germany h#s been persistently breaking cach afd cvery pledge that it made whether the premise was given before the war Wroke out or after, Pledges to Ger- many are only seraps of paper. It thinks no more of dmsregarding them than it would of reversing itself on ady trivial matter. From the conduct of that nation the beliei is justified that it never intended to keep its pledge when it made it. In this Jatest instance there was no more justification for its act than there was for the torpedoing of other simi- jar shigs. The Rewa was not only egrrying the marks whieh @esignated it a ship of mercy, but it was fully lighted so that it was evident that no ajterapt was being made to slink past i the dark. Tt is thus apparent that no elaim can be set up that it was a mistake. Too apparent is the intention when it is declared that the missile which destroyed the ship, causing three deaths and endangering the lives of hpndreds of human beings aboard, in- cluding the sick and wounded, struck the ship at the very point where the rad cross was painted on the side. It is stmply another case which dem- onstgates the savagery of Germans and the desperation with whith they are fighting to carry their aims to suc- cess. But every such instance canhot fafl to blot that government with the ip@ffacable mark of the JFun. any greater than it is in New BEng- land, and it takes wuch longer to sup- ply the moeds-of the six states of the nvorthrim than it does to get coal into New York ey, . There ave already in- | chauffeut- ang the pifot of an acroplane stances. where New York has seized|is an aviatér, what is the name for toa! wilch was intended for the re-|the men who work and fight in the liet ‘of suffering in New England, and [tanks? The French have already vet there are those in New York who | ciristened them. The ‘man in a iwfi .- 1§ the driver of a motor car i a| are sctuzlly wasting the fuel for -dis- | (8 “a tankeur Plav purposes while New England in- a es are crippled. and t!i‘e"a people| The war makes us acquainted with shivering with' the cold. ugly practices, and for some of them Nl 3 finds ugiy words.. Among these “de- hf' Administrator Garficld was not | featist” has a place. The dictionaries awed, however, by he demand of New | know it- not, but it drops from the York's neW thayor. If he hasn’t dons lips of the politician and the pen of 80 befors he apparently recognizes now the needs of New England and he was entirely justified in declinning to ac- eede to the demand of Mayor Hylan. It cannot be expeécted’ under existing conditions that one section is going to be given 4ll it wants and thereby make the condition of others worse. EDITORIAL NOTES. It is a grand and giorions feeling when you hear the rattle of the coal being shoveled into the bin, the publicist with frequent facility, and it seems destined to find a per- manent place in our vocabuiary. It is cne bad thing. which we have taken from our good allies the French, for by it, in its French form, is designated the traitor who- seeks to undo the work of his country and to defeat the vbjects for which it wages war. For three hundred years the inhab- itants of Jerusalemn have cherished a prophecy and -a hope that their city would be taken by a friendly and be- nign power; that it would fail without bloodshed; that the conqueror would enter it on foot, and that his name would signify Allah and his prophet. That prophecy has been fulfilled; Gen- eral Allenby entered the Jappa Gate on foot. There was no bloodshed, and he entered as a friend. . Then his name is significant. .“Alle” is obviously Al- lah, and ‘“nby” in the Arabic stands for something very. nearly equivalent Even though we mow have a funa|'C Probhet or seer. . . without the trouble of going to Pales- tine. These are fragments of the tem- The man on the cosmer says: Com- mon sense will save a country. while red tape is getting it all tangled up. Sl Sl g President Wilson can now be ex- pected to fall back on that eft repeat- ed phrase “Wise men change their minds.” Open no one appears very anxious to tackle the job, Th ples of Solomon and.- Herod, which ¢ parceling out of coal .by the|wiil be found fixed to the south chan- bag Is simply increasing the number |cel wall of St. Paul's Cathedral. They of middiemen which the consumer is|were brought from the Holy Lana by obliged to support. a former pilgrim Canon, and presented — — to the dean and chapter.—London bCo-l “slated for New England” woulg | Chronicle. e welcomed with- a great deal more| .« FreT T P “The Doll’'s House,” South Audley atistaetion when {I\gets here if the|ieet, which has been acquired by a membet of a well known New York slate were left out. = 1 family, now fighting in France, i3 the If the government is going to make | smallest house in Mayfair, but not the! as mu: of a.fizzie over. the control |smallest in London.. This distinction of oil as it has over thée coal contro] | belongs to No. 10, Hyde.Park place, | it betier piop hefore i ‘starts. one of a row of houses on tHe Bays- - water side overlooking the park, built Wilson and |OVEr a Passage six feet wide, between 7o wpoken the Ger- Nos. 9 and 11. Although it has astreet mans have v e wores shont th door guarded by an iron gate, there is the” tobHs o ¢ orer ghout thanionly one room in the house e This architectural oddity was built about 50 years ago by an old lady named Jupp, who lived at No. 9, for close the schools | 0ccupation by one of her servants. She ve on_the coal sup-|had a number placed -on the street ply, but there oughi to be eneugh in|d00r, and so endowed it with a sep- the home to kesp the children ‘warm | Braté existence as a house. und welk ¢ .-l : SAVE DAYLIGHT. As the need of conserving eon fuel, food and other things ie being kept to the front it is but proper thet se-|is in full control should plan to keep |the e illian, King Loui: rious attention should be directed to|a sufficient distance f‘;om .Villa'z Xfi. :t‘pg‘rr‘:-n:éafig D:Pé> Bndg ‘egdi? the daylight saving plan whith has{stamping ground. . nand of Aragon met at Cambfai to been in force in Buropean countri form a league for the overthrow of for several years and which has at X;nicet %det'n;he thruslt of the Byng different times teen u i ys at Cambrai is: helping to save country. Where the ne;::fnyl:ld ‘:;: Venice from more sinister enemies. prévail heére in previous years as it does now and as it will continue to 28 long as the war lasts, it is neces- sary that we should not overlook the help whi¢h wé can give ourselves b taking full advantage of daylight an the expenses which it eliminates. All that is called for is a slight ad- justment in the working hours. The shifting of the time of labor so that the large amount of fuel consumed in The war is full of odd colncidences, the latest of which' is.the prominence of Cambrai and Venice together in Those Mexicars who ave zoing back home under the belief that Carranza When congress gets through with the investigations which it has started it gnxzhz TDM some time to good pur- pose in looking into the postal ser-| Nigh 1. i * - ght-caps—of the material kind— vice which the Country is getting. seem to be coming into vogue: again. n 3 The boys in camp ‘have proved their As was to be expected.the peace|value and given them a good start in plans of Premier Lloyd George meet | popularity. Colds”in the head have with enthusiastic approval through | RIMOSt ceased to trouble the M. O. the entente nations. 'Germany of | 5iRCe the night caps have been in use . in the army. A medical man was em- e hasn't read or property digested| phatic the other day in declaring that u.:;r general use would (;lu'evem the . i taajority of influenza colds. During - With the arrival of a large irgo|these abnormal times, when &0 many providifg light can be devated to the|of raw sugar at Boston and with oth- | heads are popped out of windows and production of power for increased in-|érs on the way the. annmouncement is|foors in the night ho‘r\n's.‘ night caps dastrial effort. While we are en-|made that by Febroary the household. | ShoUld prove popular “for-the dura- déavoring to save in many other di-}ers should have no trouble :e!_.t:& su- | tion” if net longer. 4 rections thers should be an eagerness|gar. This is au encouraging and'let| The ppod h Combrai % 8o v in regard to duplight. us hope a statement which, will DPove | Its merme, for 1 was fest ARG aLtoteg M may be possible to make any ! to be a fact. SN s ; o e “AUDITORIUM THEATRE EVENING 645 AND &30 'THEDA BARA ............ THE ROSE OF BLOOD A Picture Up to the Times, Dealing. With the Subject,, RUSSIA'S SEPARATE PEACE WITH GERMANY. IN FOR CHIRTY DAYS ........ MATINEE 2:15 TONGUE IF SICK CROSS, FEVERISH to the Merkle flat and hunted up the rubber tree, for they were certain to discover me sittin; nxiously beneath feeling its pulse, “And yet I did not make use of the rooms. It was enough satisfaction just to know that I had ’em—the same]} feeling that prompts you to wear your old tailor suit with a glad spirit when | you know you have a perfectly lovely. new one hanging in the closet al ‘We kept on erowding ourselves even when the girls had company, and weeks went by with no word from the Merkle ladies. “Finally when the girls were hav- ing three old school friends.who had come to ‘a banquet epend the night, So after five weeks of peaceful vacancy the Merkle flat was invaded. My two daughters went over there to sleep—and you guess the WHEN CONSTIPATED OR BILIOQUS GIVE “CALIFO! Christie Comedy . e w+veesssy . Current Events WILLIAM S. HART ................ DAKOTA DAN NIA SYRUP MUTUAL WEEKLY Look at the tongue, coated, it is a sure sign that your little one's stomach, liver and bowels need a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. ‘When peevish, oross, listless, pale, doesn’t sleep, doesn’t eat ot act natu- rally, “or is feeverish, stomach sour, has stomach-ache, sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold. give & teaspoonful of ‘California Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all the foul. constipated waste, undigésted food )md sour bile gently moves out of its little bowels without griping, and you have a well, playful.child again. You needn’t coax sick children to take this harmless thaey love its delicious taste, and it al- ways makes them feel splendid. Ask your druggist for a bottle of “California_Syrup of Figs,” which has directions for babies, children of all sges and for grown-ups plainly on the Beware of counterfeits sold To be sure you get the genuine, ask to see that it is made by “Cali- fornia Syrup Company.” kind with contempt. they struck. breath bad; Y. M. C. A.. Course of Three- \ LOTUS MALE QUARTETTE FLOYD FEATHERSTON COMPANY CRAVEN FAMILY ORCHESTRA. COURSE TICHETS $1.00 Course- Opens Jan: 21st, at the Y. M. C. A. REE THEATRE TODAY AND SATURDAY The Warrior Starring MACISTE A Magnificent Screen Spectacle e e FEARLESS EAGAN HEARST . PATHE NEWS Prices During This-Engagement Matinee 15¢; Evening 20c: (INCLUDING ‘WAR -TAX.) at 2.30—6.30—8.30. OWS SATURDAY. “At :6:30 the next morning my bell rang and-there stood the Misses Mer- kie, just as tired and cross and dis- gruntled as two elderly ladies who had been traveling all night possibly could They wanted their key. got it and amid apologies explained, that my -daughters were sleeping in their flat T thought they would ex= I suppose they had of those beds and sleep ever since they started. AND SOLOISTS. “fruit. laxative;” KEITH VAUDEVILLE The Biggest Attraction Yet Honemura Troupe 5 Japs in a Sensational pire on the spot. “What, might they ask, did T mean by occupying their rooms? ful, resumptuous, Yhey both talked at once and each one faster than the other, and maybe T didn’t tear over there and get the girls up and out, so sleepy and bewildered that they thought the house was afire. the Merkle ladies following us around and spilling a few more adjectives they had forgotten at first, their “oe-- nets more and more on one side. They didn’'t give me a chance to rem¥nd them of their ancient offer to hospital- When at last I banged my door shut and considered the matter I saw I could do nothing about the plants tree, which would But T led to veto, although the copper roofs have been removed from numerous public including Christ Mainz, the railway station and the li- brary at Giessen, and the museum at The tenderness of government ‘for the property of the ex-tsar is said to give great offence to public opinion.—London Times. * Piano Aczerdionist GRAY & BYRON 4 In a Vaudeville Frapp “A Girl’s is everything in most things, and that is the light which il- lumines Lord Grey's reflections, “Don’t you make me out a hero, whatever you do,” were among Lord Grey's words to Mr. Begbie: “Pve loved every hour of my life. I've enjoyed every minute. my work, it has enly been the sowing of seed as I went along loving every- I never thought to change the world or to get up a new order of any- I only wanted people who be- lieve in the principles of Mazzini to go on quietly working for them, know- ing that oné day they are bound to ARTCRAFT FEATURE ELSIE FERGUSON In'a 8ix Part Picturization of flourish in spite of me. the back door the cat, all sic-*. and expensive cream. shooed her out and away. I was bosud I should have When they phoned about three hours later about the cat T told them airly idea where their fat from my some way! The Rise of Jenric Cushing From the Famous Novel by Mary tt: impracticable and unprofitable to carry passengers beyond it for a five-cent fare.—Hartford Post. I hadn't the pet was, and—" Replete With tender human touch- “Oh, dear,” sighed the injumed lady. as flashes of natural A business map might.say to him- “I guess nothing ever happens to a They are! Here I lie'on my |self: “This is a time of patriotism and the | self-sacrifice, so I will give up my mo- I'm not allowed to]tor car and walk. this year, as an act enter it, but there it is before my eves. | of national service.” After the war the people of this coun- try will enter death bed—looking CURRENT EVENTS Promised Land. SLATER HALL- BENEFIT CONCERTS FRIDAY, JANUARY 11TH isn't going to last long!"—Exchange. But at the end of the year he might.find that the re- who | of the year he might find that the re- jaughed at me as a dreamer will see|sult of his sacrifice was-the loss of so that I wasw’t so wrong after aill But|much valuable time that might have there’s still work to do for those who |been put upon useful productive iabor i and Wwith | that the whole stood at’'a net loss to muych opposition in their .way; all the | the nation. same, it is work right up against the{omy we must practice. Joy rides, care- My dreams have come true.”— |less [ Tondon- Chrenicie. GLEANED FROM FOREIGN EXCHANGES It is not this kind of econ- unnecessary But we must -put the must eurtail. h 3 T RS motor car to its greatest uses ever in A letter from Berlin to‘the Neue|ine matter of conserving ¢ur national Zurcher Zeitung gives an account of {time winter life and Christmas shopping. | American. The shops are as full as ever of dolls| * and. toys; toy soldiers and “war toys” generally have now quite gone out of fashion, and war conditions are repre- sented, for instance, hy dolis at work] on farms in East Prussia. The sweet- shops are said to be doing a good trade, although a box of sweets nom costs as-much as it would former: “to poison a whole girls Tobacco queue: a great feature. The dres Zare’ said to : the women of Berlin ar finding considerable relief in the fact that satin and silk can still be houg vithout clothes tickets. the best and has always been popular Shakespeare lets us know that it was in use here in Elizabeth’s days, and in George Il’s it was discovered, to the national horror, that we were sending 200,000 pounds France in payment for it. Acts of- Parliament passed under which anyone wearing it or selling it except for.exportation was liable to a fine of 5 pounds.—Lon- don Chronicle. us.—Bridgeport Standard- Jacques Thibaud THE GREAT FRENCH VIOLINIST e incontinently TRAVELERS' DIRECTORY $1.25 To New York $1.25 CHELSEA L TO NEW. YORK FREIGHT AND PASSENGER SERVICE BETWEEN NORWICH AND NEW YORK From Norwich Tuesdays, Tkars- days, Sundays at 5 ®. m. New_ York, Plor, Bast River, Street, Mondays, Wednesdays, Fri- days at 5 p. m. Effective Oct. 15th, . : Margaret Jamieson THE NOTED YOUNG PIANIST Net proceeds given for the benefit of RED CROSS Single admission $1.50 GEER - FINAL REDUCTION The Spec ~ ON ALL | Suits, Coats, Dresses, Etc. Navy cocoa, which Princess Mary thought might be good to eat as choco- late, is known aboard ship as Ki. served out in the first dog watch every Thursday, and it is drunk whenever circumstances (in other or policeman) per- own a liberal chool for a week,” The men grate quantity of it (for Ki is less concen- trated than shore cocoa) and drink it mixed in basins with sugar and con- | densed milk. At sea a special cauldron of Ki, prepared by the ship’s cook, is sent. round action stations in nies,” or large pitchers. Midnight for the guns’ crews of our fleet is the hour when the Kj boat arrives. London Times Brooklyn Bridge, foot Roosevelt The Piano Tus 122 Prospect St.,| Dhone 811 OTHER VIEW POINTS ! ‘ $1.25—F. V. KNOUSE, Agent—$1.25 Superintendent Tinker -was probably right in saying that many children will find school rooms warmer than their The follewing story comes from a idland war hospital. “We've just’got a chap in who has lost his voice, and the M. O. says he won't get it back unless he has a:bit Second Orderiy: “I think T'll give him First Orderly: true alone of the poor. best houses in town have been colder or than the hotels In New York many rich people have taken up temporary quar- ters in hotéls because their houses or apartments are cold. Many people in this and other ecities flock to the mov- comfort they find through several hours of the day and evening.—Waterbury American. Some of the than the schools, and theatres. of a shock.” I can put him right. some of that ’ere marmalade in the morning, and if that don’t bring cut a few words, then ’'e’s absolutely hope- This Christmas season, even more than last, is one of Japanese and Eng- The new cuit of toy-making over here has made great advances in the past twelve months; and its pro- ducts are often pretty and quaint with- out exhibiting that ingenious freakish- ness which really appealed more to srown-ups than children. plores the disappearance of-German toys; they were clumsy, ugly, abomi- nably colored as a rule, and, in the worst sense, ‘“cheap.” T#emendous thin, to coordinate the w: country and corresp success are confidently held out to us. ‘We are not blunering on: we are pro- gressing with marwvelous speed when wo take into mands made upon us. a cpime to prate about the past. is time to realize what is being ac- complished that we may take our part in this mammoth war that the world may be safe for democracy and democ- the world. The rocking chair fleet is dismissed—New Haven Journal-Courier. are being done Sho sources of the 1Ging promises of consideration It has become Isn’t it about time that we rid our speech of the feminine “ess”? We made an end of “poetess” long ago, and “au- thoress” (almost more dreadful) fol- writers, ever describe - themselves - as on their title pages? Wasn't it usually “author of” so and s0? But “manageress” and “proprie- tress” still unbeautifully linger, and is creeping into com- Why not “girl conduc- tor” if we must define the sex? French “ette” tas) altogether probable, that the Connecticut Company loses money on a great many of the passengers transported begause they are carried so far for one fare. there is no reason to suppose “‘authoresses” “conductress” mon speech. ‘Hartford or ary other darge Connec- carried at a a five-cent fare. doubtedly ‘Is a~zone of heavy travel radiating in all directions from City within which passengers could be carried at a profit for five cents. Competent observers believe that such a zone would extend pretty nearly if not quite to the city line in every Qi- The city is on safe ground when it raises the contention that it is unfair to penalize the people liv- ing within such a zone because it is DOMT BE BALD Make Hair Grew Strong, Thick and Lustrous on Thin 8pots Few of us get bald in a day and we all have ample warning when our hair ig thinning out. Parisian sage is a most efficient hair grower,/'but to immediately further loss of hair and quickly start a new growth it must be rubbed into the scalp so the starved hair roots can really absorb it and get the vital stim- ulation so badly needed. surely be delighted with the first ap- plication for your hair and scalp will logk and feel 100 per cent. better. Parisian sage is not expemsive. It's a scientific preparation that supplies d on .to a noun is a mere abomination, and fiads its apo- theosis in the vulgarism, “novelette,” which can be defended on no grounds French tops, the other hand, which are almost equally absent, al- ways had the finish and taste, the sense of style, which is so eminently French mechanicai toys, for example, were always far and away the best. just as the deadly “seventy- five” gun is really beautiful—probably the only beautiful modern weapon. It | has balance, Compare it with any German field gun, and the difference .between the two races is appropriately illus- trated.—London Chronicle. $14.95 $22.50 | At one time the Germans. were con- the public mind. Four centuries ago |Stantl g ] it was Bismarck who reminded them that before they must cultivate, -lamong other virtues, the Engli: respect for laws, his public ‘spirit, and his fear of God! “I recommend to those who are so eager to seek ideals beyond the Vosges,” he said; on another oc- casion, “a rule of conduct that distin- English and ‘ths I mean the ‘proud sense -of which does not -so easily or so often, as is the case with us, lend itself t« countries for exal tation and admiration.” Few Odd Dresses $5.00 BON-TON CORSETS, M. & P., AND ROYAL WOR- CESTER CORSET 10 % OFF. GET A DOLLY VARDEN WORK BASKET $1.39. THE SPECIALTY SHOP Opposite Plaut-Cadden Co. | guishes --both national fhonor, ples worthy of,imi- antiseptic liquid that is guaranteed to give you perfect satisfaction or money The German government asked to explain in the reichstag why it does not take the copper roof off’ a chapel at Darmstadt, which private propertv of the ex-tsar. eaid to be a very good rodf, and its confiscation has been -duly proclaimed by the general in command of the de- Good looking hair is half the battle in any man’s or woman’s personal ap- lifeless hair and finally baldness, while & little attention now insures thick &nd lustrous hair for vears to come. No matter what your hair troubles try a Parisian'sage mastege tonight— you will pot ‘be disappdinted. 140 Main Street, 1 pot of the 18th Army Cerps. But the there, is made in many other places Hessian governmént has entered alOsgood Co. will supply you.

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