Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 6, 1918, Page 4

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fasal ik dodiai . o - lorwich Bulletin : » = - b;::’-g. It is g;.?;‘.‘ ”:J:}e& B&r: "{?fi:‘:‘; %mg'm rt';"; “Some Gay," said the girl who likes my. shoulder -and the begms from her and g‘flfit? that an should be|from many of the libilities and ro-{to talk, as she ~stumbied into the|o¥ ‘@gfl.xyflofi Lflfim": Einidn: ke i vrped ; 2 122 ¥ X ry effect | Strictions :g‘tih vhi:hmthw hn,:; tl;:em house exhausted from & strenuous |, and unmistakably plain, clear and 'n mE SILENT sm”am 2 EARS OLD : y L'»md yhich have caused them | day of Red Crossing, “I am going to|vigible. I was rolling up 'long strips A2 = —_—_— e — " ” ol gl 3 eretofure \RL RAY Ty i ¢ oc- by , not_even ve been forbidden burst forth, out and up—and the oc-|of gauze. Nobody on earth, n ; ; ., SUPPORTED BY casion for my spectacular end will|excepting the feeble minded ang thi 5 ; to arrange for a division of business|pe n less than one woman who |infant, could possibly have thought . Y > and this must be made to- apply toor ta pool their rocipis, ~and "conse- e | e, ool ik et 311 The Fighting Trail I i Cmflg‘m Selie e AR of explostven, Wel to IRl Sraty Mg of ecvica Rop|mom under tho loinremion, that shp | “Ehe wds domieWnat ofter than 1 am A THRILL PICTURE __ LsTHE W ~ 40, / is glving ug & beiping hand! ntitled to politensss, but.I was g.3 | Want mo more such affairs as that|¢ample the Pennsyivania can of Elvog s o helolng L aae o] S0 FDHUN to polkensis, BN L wad R olictin Job Othes 35-2,| Which took place at Halifax, espectal- | S0Urse carry, steel and, coal to and §aa. bright, cheery faces that rouse ; "CLADYS BR s ShEciAL ; 4 classic of childbood that s e Ofce, 635 Mala Strest o hon “the Shecerance ot ru | oM the Pittsburgh disfrict very ad-|ghe to. fmstant farv: 1 iovo: besond |1 was Up. i & irep chorries? 3 ’w‘hfio Williman! vantageously and the New York Cen-|measure a cheerful face, but if I'm|Or ghould I iy mention that I Telephone. prevent them. . t'r::ke::dhér; me‘:s:nn;;:m;nfifaw agie 1nd§ctad for g?mtcue the vlctlrxg wu.%own ufl‘:;“:hzvaulu wa.!; “} ——— T ———— S “ icago = | wi 0 down on the coroner's reco g8l eve: one % Norwich, Wednesday, Feb. 6, 1918, | CONTROL OF OIL DISTRIBUTION: | factory manner. There is more money.| ns having Bad & cheers countenance! | om ottt B ity 1 . ol ' ep——— In or:‘l!r to ?ltm:o;tu mmfi:l"; i:ugeigl;twt');ar; o;g! x)yla:vseepser ;{"&‘3 You know immsdhtelym.lhth the «¢-'strips of gauze, Mrs, Bri t!eyfll.' : ernment contro! een extens agre ressi th a t d nstant. the railroads of the country and to|¢ach would do the bulk of the business Proseipn A ek Rt 5”“8{“‘ Iy g .}:. s e wi : i “ ? ! And "—-——"""'——r the distribution of coal. In adminis-|for Which it was best fitted and locat- o1 A% mi ‘é‘é:".;‘flefl& oer Saton o Soine it heautstuity, T JllLl N ELTING tratinz the latter work the results|cd 4nd from the joint receipts take|the multitude! ~ . sure! N this 1ad; Sre far fhom what they ought fo he | oh, = falr ehare the Pennsylvmin's about? : IN THE 6 PART FEATURE . racks would nof be oceup with fast q 3 ts ’ it % aithough there promises to be & de- | Cuisse corroooce whon Tho commbie: Just: when everybody gets in good “She warbled on, passing to the girl TODAY AND TONIGHT running order and the work is fairly |at my left, who was doing precisely 9 CLARA { cided jmprovement through the tak-|ecrying for coal and steel.’ But fear-|rolling out and our foreheads are |the aym t(.’hh‘ 1 was. I saw her al- THE Wflmws MIGHT ing over of the transportation systems|ing the elimination of competition the | creased with our Intentness andl our|so closs her eyes and count ten glso, ki 2w sl KIMBALL YOUNG during the period of the war. _|government has {flrhiddefi the roads if,"‘ grim with our haste, in floats| B®the time that sweet, cheery erea- 3 5 i Now comes the annourcement that|to do this very thing. ~From hamper- | Mrs, Brightey ture had made -the rounds of that oug. rair anks seiNew, the government, as & part of the au-|ing regulations of this sort Dirdctor| *‘Good mogning!’ she cries in a|room every one was glaring, growling, s 9 thority eranted te.the fuel adminis-|General McAdoo is free and he usht | mellow, sweet voice from the doorway |slamming things and making Wu In His Biggest Success “THE MARIONETTES' trator, is to take over the distribution to get results that have been impossi- | where she has paused in a witching | because of the tension, Did she take i e e " of fuch off a8 the sedar tn Wifleh the| ' WBUSr goparate management. attitude, beaming at us. We don't|off her wraps and slip into an apron REGG E BURTON HOLMES TRAVELOGUE *MEMBER OF THE AS! want to be beamed at—we're far too|and get busy? I should say not! i CHEAE ? users of such must be served has been} Another cause of annoyance and ex- “ B s il g busy even to look up. Those nearest She ver does! She comsiflers 5 Part Comedy Drama BLACK DIAMOND COMEDY . |{set forth. The government is an ex-(pense for the roads was that they |her glance up hastily and respond abr | that she Lo done her DIt DY snedoing T ————— The Associated is exclusive, }{ tensive user of fuel oil. It is re-lhave ever been at the tender mercies|sently. ‘She steps in. ‘My. My!’ she|the 1ight of her presence and speaking lu TED w EKLY Coming Thurs, Fri. and Sat. Iy entitled to the use for republica- }| quired for the operation of many of|0f forty-elght state legislatfires and|gurgies, ‘such a 1lot of busy bees!’|to us cheerily, It's the same tone the. - tion of all news despatches credit- {| the war ships and the ~destroyers{Pave therefore found it necessary to|Such a lot of willing workers!’ teacher uses when she says: ‘Now, Coming Next Week NORMA TALMADGE ed to it or not otherwise eredit- H ohich are building will all use ofi so }’0 com‘mmtly on the watch for new| “Low growlings are now to by heard | children, what do you suppose we are MARY PICKFORD ed in this paper-and also the local fl ;0" o 55 necessary to insure sueh| cSiSiation and obliged to keep ready|among those farthest away. - | going to do teday? Can’t you ? . n:‘\vfi- m:ll.x:.hm‘l)fnegg:;h \ o 1| handling of this commodity as to meet at band attorneys to represent their| “We don’t wish to be told we are Why, we are going to have the loveli- m STEILA mms side when regulatory laws should be | commen AR e B flmpell L i Ghosts of Yesterdny - epecial despatches herein are also || requirements in this direction. Prefer-|proposed. -A large number of such bxfl? % grnrihtl:tadpla;.‘o ’;,,E‘“‘B,i;"g“em. :‘l‘o‘n: youlcan lm:!ozfiu&ix 1:1:-':" Ve —— reserved. ence as might be expected is given|men were thus constantly employed at|soft, beaming glance rests on each of | Or the dentist when he straightens = ] to war needs and deliveries will bejgreat expense. Under government|us in turn as she walks slowly about up and tells you jovially that you had . " | made to railroads, ships, public utili- |contrél this need has disappeared for|the room. ‘I just love.to see all of | better have those three teeth out arg ties and private consumers in the or-|No state legislature may regulate in-|you so devoted and heroic!’ she cries|a plate in! K of C. HALL der named and in accordance with the [ ferstate affairs. Hence hos been is-|enthusiastically. She does not stop to — Views.of the Vixlhnhl TONIGHT necessity which exists, AL Bents samionen to- whiny tor en | xplain fust what brand of herofsm| “You love hier in jist the same way. AT 8 0'CLOGK PROMPTLY In view of the experience which has|;ect legislation. The saving under fec{?;uh; mlefls:ubsfiad:?e;l‘ln ez;' g::-;. She wouldn't gef fuzz all over her 2 been had in' the handling of coal, it is|this new order is ex; 5 % velvet suit for anything and, besides, ADMISSION 25 Cents. to be expected that it will be turned|millions annuall isn’t this war just awful she has a luncheon engagément. Raut roceed: 'omen’ rvit Nobody says anything to this.|somehow I feel that I can't stand her Net pi s to Women's Service to the best use in connection with the Those who can control their expres- |very much longer. 8 mi:‘ 13 L’“a DIGESTIVE PROCESSES, League for Yarn distribution of oil, for in moving oii| These economies are not at all due|sions raise their eyes to gaze on this | to haBpen some fine morning and 1 there is the same handicap ' because|to the director general's superior bus- s unbelieveable, bromidic person, fear she is going to be the happen- of transportation which has bothered iness acumen but are incident to gov- 35 By Robkert Adger Bowen of The Vigi- | sm—mm———————————————— . “‘What a lot of work you have the coal movemeént, and’ as long as ernment . control of transportation.|done!” she trillsson, lantes. 7 “ pazizdes) the pro-German mind slmost human . - ) surveying thef “Thank your stars” said the pati- in the contemplation thereof. There somo step had to be taken to inure | NCU® NaVe known better than the rail- | completed piles. ‘How proud you|ent listend), “that she dossn't do any |, FVeD & pro-German has his lititato %, 5SS SRR R0R (o'5im Hinden- hat (020 executives themselves that the|should he of yourselves! Now, what|work! If she did yowd have it to do|iiBtional maliciousness It 1s-an - |y, 0" o sreat God Hindenburg, in- sufficient supply it is to be hoped that|entire system of American railways|are you doing, my dear?” all over again! That kind exn't take | LFeSting fact that one does not hear| P O Dooqo Totrigy with & truly it will be tackled in time and in such|has long been laboring under great| At this point the girl who likes to|time from being cheery to concentrate | BUCE just now of English shirking and Hun-like delieacy of conception, the a way as to bring the desired results.|legal handicaps. Starting as lines of | talk coughed. on mere labor!” mceapacity in the war. of English in- loyal have driven iron nails of Faith, - but a few miles in'length wholly in; “‘My dear’ she went on at last,| “Happy thought!” sighed the girl|3CtVity and do-nothingnoss. There| oo, ong Charity and the other Vir- AIR RAIDS. gne state, the railroads had gradual- | “chanced in 'this In this cace to be|who likes fo talk.. “Maybe T'd better | V2S 3 time not €0 long ago, when the | o the unjustified air raids the same as|ine new situation hail lacsed far he. | co Y Sloved band rested lightly on!Chicago News. Kultus sould see, o1 professed to be |begins to look as theugh he mirfihst be. °F it does fo the unrestricted and ruth-lhind. In fact’it was only by a liber- | = |.}le to ses, Eugland as merely an in- | The Germad turns cver the word Byng TRYING OUT THE AMERICANS. | less submarine attacks is pretty wellial extension of thbse clauses of the in’ Germany induce them to slack up|houses and garden: On: .t efficient bluffer on land and sea alike, | upon his tongue. and becomes cmg- From the in which the Ger- | demonstrated by the recent activity in{constitution that had been designed ;i s Efracns ¢ moment | v, ") ow the pro-German could even |ously reticent. The vietory of the om manner in wi e on their preparations to see the thing|the village was like an ant’s nest on|> i troubles hi dull, primi- mans have persisted in searching out|that direction. Tollowing the series{to cover stasecoach travel that con-|through to the end. In fact it may |which a man trod*and the next when |imagine he saw this, only the pro- :;’g%‘ 1;"::,3" s tmw:., Atter all, | the point along the western front|of attacks upon England there came |8Tess felt empowered to touch thelwell be tlat the imperial German gov- | every man had found his rotreat ev.|@erman mentality could be expg:;ed Lhkyx s i N e dhde. Sor whiere the ‘Amerioan fokess’ are. lo:|the -ald on Parls..the- first in six reflroad situation at all. Some great|ornment has allowed news of internal erything looked like a place of the|:0 disclose. A tev:' thhy'lzs hav: GD— ] mnt‘h e st g kg cated, it Is evident that they have|inonths and the dropping of bombe|bonic Sxigency liko the present war|gifficulties o leak out with the de-|dead. ¥ Zeppd of Jate Lha have HgEd e e iar hesled string' fho been endeavoring to find out what sort| upon Venice, Padua. Treviso and Mes-| ot this imaposib - sondiios sty {Uberate purpose of _weakening tho| “One of the Tanks came stamping|Pan arrofance with e slight hue of}(f 8 SCUCHIS, I00 i another glor- of opponents they have brought into|tre in lfaly.' 3 or m':‘t gov';r‘nment cc;‘ntro‘lmis to ecog ERTRSS, Artered ”gi‘ i i;:,?n Li}:f t};fllfia T T;b;?ht"';h’“"“t‘fi“" Xlxzaf,izx‘.xpoi:‘t’pm.t‘he gene?al run of | ious victory, T_Mse“sdorlguc mflefi the war against them from the west-| Germany -of course refers to these|tinue indefinitely, the old hamperin; i R en there | uman kind. 3 take on somethi 2 haggard loo Gt DR 80T to' eigtian omm | Atbe s T ris Deciy Cirants | wal conditions WiTGe aMIcH Aferican : {82 ray of humor-dike fosbia suulight hpsien X : 4 instructive sight |€Ven o the Faithful There s 3 point B ;.| railroading has been struggling are | 5 : ckering. through fos. ~ There was| It isa curicus and instructive Sight|pevong which German credulity itself if possible before they have an op-|doesn’t admit that it was the insti- o > sRliug are STORIES OF THE WAR ||such a moment in the midst of the|to sce the German mind exercise its|y,p portunity to get hardemed to trench|gator of this sort of warfare ypon|Sone forever. a e horror at Yontaine. Was it not amus- | inclplent powers of discretion and hu- | ™", ) 0w same old gag is being life and war activities. the defenseless towns and the non-| .., o rtillery acti d ing zt;f v;z;lgr;lh the stupid monster roll gtlit?'. d’xtx re:inggp;m;tv;zn:sgucgi ngf wr; ed" o0 unmd‘;mes We There can be no question but what|combatants, but try as it will it can- w Sk eHon . ane up the h sireet, where there was |the traditional elepka - " e St they have succeeded in finding the |not escape the responsibility for its|om she TreerSrons i prenl actity 7 19t - aigle’ living Gileshon Jof? 16| sell upon 3 ‘feachy. ‘Fheen f some- e 3;‘?73%3",‘.'3’&?;.3 el e American soldiers and in giving them | acts. For a long time the allles re-|swhere the initiative seems fo have % Tank Warfare. bl f‘:o:e:‘txeg:wrg:ge L Z:h;:xiafn;fit Dy Sapon the. biatan | Soldlers are in France. The subma- several baptisms of fire, but it must| fraineq from responding in kind to|passed entircly to the side of the Itali- { (Correspondence of The Assoclated|could find no vietim. The bores of |arrogance of his tongue, The fact|rines have eeen to that. It will be bah evident ;:: u‘;et)lleld:;u ::él“u‘oldl;fi; such air raids. England aithough im- |ans. Thes:fg&léant troops assisted by Press.) its small guns snouted around, and|that the Anglo-Saxon, to say nothing] g‘:ln’b:‘::t":fge -’-g“fmm‘;‘“g:;’;fi 6 Parpiiei thimeln ¢ oy | lored by its people to retaliate re-jhllied re-enfoi€ements have retaken 5 k . |fired as if they could find thing | of the French and Italians and others 2 Bal { not succeed in scaring the men under| fusea io. deecand 10 the level of fhe|the two most advanced points that i Pank PR A Jerlkes the Ger | living, but always too high. And so|of our allies, has been able to bring |and the pro-Germans in Amarien General Pershing. Not only did they| Hun untll it was-made cvident that|Were seized by the invaders a month | o e I ribed bY e |they went clip-clap up and down the |this about is the mepsure of the mil- | least, know better The bIuff ofythe return as good as they received but|something had got to be done to bring |25 and furnished the best vantage _ologne Gazette in a story of the fight- | street, like the festival car at earnival | itary preponderance gained over the ‘{3/? g '«! tulook‘ sob”k'ud the American troops Inflicted much|home to the German people the kind ground for the dreaded inroad into the|ing around Fentaine Notre Dame dur- |time. The Silesians peered out into|Teuton in his own chosen field of ma- oyes.!, “d g ‘3"u- : "‘gw = 3 more damage upon the German de-| o P Dlains of Venetia. British, French and ing the Cambrai offensive. The writer |the side streets. As soon as Tank |terial efficiency 2nd endeavor. What and forward, fs it going ave of of treatment which its government|Ttalian artillery worked in perfect . - e o o & év | he has been pleascd to call a rzee of | thesé adherents of the superman the- than the Ge! di he < owed snout at a sireet corner they ! ” s e Germans did upon the| wag inflicting upon others. Alr raids|unison and Austrians taken prisoner|declared that many of the German|ghowared him awith bullets, shopkeepers and iedger-clerka has in|9rY? WIll thelr intellects casting off erican line in France, and though | gince have not been confined solely to|report the frizhtful effect of the cross|private soldiers look upon the Tanks| “‘But where are the Tommiss? |three vears, from the point of abso- | the swaddling clothes of. their fatuous it may not be known to the aggres-|; hing military posts and fortified|fire that assailed them often from sev-|With a feeling of terror. He says: asked one of the Silesiams. Indeed, |lute unpreparedness. beaten him at|lovalty, take &helnr:dtitpdludnsie}ep: sors the American gunners won high{ ,wne “they have been made upon|¢r2! directions at once. These prison-| “The village is still suffering under | Tommy seemed to have lost his Tanks, | his own inherited and scrupulously |Of an independent individual opinion? praise from a French observer for the| gorm “cities and from the protests|SS, Bave also confirmed the reports|shell fire; bouses and men are mingl- |for no English infantry ventured into | cultivated prime object of life. Even|Now that German has taken some accuracy of their fire with the big| cpo ip Tal A L do | that Germany has been shifting troops | ed in the same ruins; whole roofs have the village. But was it not suspicious |the seraphic self-complaceny of the|American prisoners she has revived guns, o e German people have made|from the Rusgian front to France and |been lifted through the air like feath-|that the terrible monsters should wan- | Teuton must feel the qualm of an in- | this canard, and starts another stupid. This makes it quite evident that|.t 15 2pparent that they do mot like|Belgium duribg the armistice. The|ers; but for the moment the storm has{der up and down like thie—here theéy | credulous amazement that such things|Are her dupes going to ask behind the the Yankee ti are there for busi such methods any more :h‘n other {method has been to grant furloughs to|gone beyond the unhappy place. blind or were they——? ‘Yes, that was [can be, closed doors of their minds how, if e lreons or busl- | hoople. soldlers in the Fast, replace them with| “From a cellar in the main streel alit, they were afraid of the Silesians.| Let us make a feeble effort to Jook | 1eF® arc no American soldlers in ness, that they know something about| "1y jts desperation, however, Ger-|troons of poorer quality and order the|Silesian rifieman looks out. He $niffs|And now arrived one of these critical|ay tnis stapendons diberepancy in his | FTance. American soldiers can Lo tak- the game and that they are now to be many declares that everything goes.|furloughed men to report for duty|at first for fear of gas, then he stuffs moments when neither. generals nor aceounts ‘ffom the angle of the Ger. 1% prisoners with all of their simplic- looked upon as a powerful military| Ryles of war amount to no more than |S/SéWhere, whence they could be trans- this mask in his pocket and looks|guns matter, but only the heart of|man ms an. & ,;g,im whose ity and ignorance as to wh,v they are uhit in connection with the war. Ger-f"ireaties and it is therefore apparent]icTTed to the West without technical-|around. — Heavens, what a street! \man. If the Silesians had withdrawn |Goa is ;‘f,_,gemkm Whose prophet is 4| LERLING altruistic Germany? Can ev™n “any will yet have a chafice 0 Te- | ynat the allies must v £hs e 1y being taken from the eastern front. = 7 2 consider the contempt in which it has held the part which this eountry will play in the war even as it did regard- from the village—which no one could|conseienceless megalomaniae, and | et of lieg produce s0 curious an countries just as £00d as, If N6t bet-| A4 1ot there fs on the west an|ls Tommy Atkins coming back! Thai - ing Great Britain. :Lln‘;fcetsak::e a;r!:;;:,sg u;xvt:ivl'd{};i cittc.\l:}':z-’ whose great virtues are readily ‘Intg- g‘a‘:‘tfit;te,:,"‘ fonl el Ratrpr o8 Vickn. i I \ == e ve 3 e the ter than, they send and only by 30 do-| American sector. Ever since last Oc-|iS the question, for the battalion has|into enemy hands a the first rush. ee}x‘;fifif:b}fr ft?«re e :‘:;’ Nandals ing will Germany be brought to 2a|{oher American troops have been in the|orders to hold the village at all costs. “But, no,'the Silesians began to]whose legitimate descendants the Teu-| , & statement from an sutkoritative realization of the enormity of the|trenches but the war department has| “But Suppose Tommy comes back|match their wits against the monsters. | tons are, finds itself ch Japanese source, quoted by Reuter’s g o A crime it is committing upon innocent|never admitted that this was more|With the Tanks? The word passos|They grew bolder and boider, ANNE | aestiie matcren ahomas e ayons| Correspondent in' Tokyo, save that Ja- MUST BE NO LETUP. humanity. . . than an advanced stage in their train-|from lip to lip. It has a sifister{and boming the Tank as it Wended|nhand by the pysmy races of the hu-|P2n has-not moved, and does mot in- e B R AL ing. Now, however, the statement is|sound, as when ore in a cloister men- |its way hither and thither, probaoly |man kind. Degenerate France. con-|l°hd TOVIRg, troops to Kharbin, Viad- W SOl ot the atlled D EDITORIAL NOTES. authorized that they have actually|tions the Devil by name. In the big|waiting for infantry which did not temptible England, barbarian Russia, ivostok, or eisewhere. B sy e alted A z taken over and are defending a section|thrust the Engligh used 300 Tanks,|come. The Silesians fired rifie bul-ithe sunny dav fighters of Italy, even - than they dia -4 st 29 It would be useless to try to eon-|of the front line. This lies in Lor-(some said 509. Thé monsters were|iets down the barrels of the Tank's|neroic little Belzium, and Serbia, and ol ey regarding the speeches|yince Finland now that there~is any|raine southeast of Verdun and St. Mi- |said to spit flame, 5o that no one could [guns and threw bombs into every Rumania refuse to be audited accord- || were recently made by the|goog in the bolsheviki. hiel and close to the German border.|approach them, and to crawl over|gperture. It was finally captured, |ing to scheduls and the forms of thati| TO BELIEVE CATARRHAL ehancellor of Germany and the for- - There had been little = fighting here|every obstacle. A Silesian rifieman|But if the Tanks, as mo doubt was bookkeeping whose pages are sheets eign minister of Austria-Hungary| Of course those who havent any|Since the early part of the war when (Who stood in their way _ would be|the intention, had been supported by |oe dishonor written upon In the bleod DEAFNESS AND HEAD they, must eertainly be disappointed. | coal are not obliged to assume thie re- |the Franch after initial successes on |Crushed like a worm under a steam-|infantry, the village would have been|of the defenceless end innocent. The|] - : The councll looked the matter stralght | sponsibility of saving a shovelful a|Oerman soil were driven back to the|oller. ~What could a poor soldier do|taken in the first rush.” rivers of Burope become rivers of NOISES in the face. It is concerned with the heights before Luneville. This posi-|but scuttle out of the way? It was TESh blood which spell German defeat—the Sihsbiition o fhie wak Aot it mamly] ! Sn ey spunatiz Reld, seaiaar g | Ong e Sem T imans i) e frightful assaults h el bullets woul 0 rou; the decideq that it must be continued as| The man on the corner says: Not e R rar ppence ol 2 K long as these spokesmen for the lead- ers among the central powers come no nearer meeting the peace terms which bave been set forth by the na- o N WHiST AND DANCE pected to run into #Right is More Precious than Pelce;’ ———— e Gradually the rifiemen creep like mice after a halilstorm out of their cellars. = 1f you have eatarrhal deafness or . George Clemenceau, the pramier, ngu",:"’v::rem?;’;:'e afilfluti}dmt:wm head noises go to your druggist and many people dare to complain this|coincident with the Battle of the|only to huri borgbs at it and the Tank |told a little story to the chamber in |2 get 1 ounce of Parmin (double year because February is not a long|Marne and soon thereafter the % 12 oo bad that the Germen end| - uis ehl sttos bri ick reliet i the rifiemen at the barricade climbed | urgent need of some thousands of men 8-t00 b2 o S e e heas notbes As much as Germany and Austria|coal line will acknowledge with due|WDhich the Americans had their first re! a the pro-German should be given pause | from the distressing head noises. . troduction to real trench warfare, but | UP on a damaged roof and peered into|to do certain work just behind the first Clogged nostrils s ufii open, breathing might like to bring about a slacken-|thankfulnees the interest which Mayor in the di . - 2y by these things and made to take ing of the efr Of their enemies in{ Erown has taken in their behatf, it is quiet no longer. As was to belthe distance. Over Bourlon <vood to- |lines, he would have to cail out men i i dined in Paris. Certain other|deafness or head noises should give the admiration |swarming forward in light firing Mnes|on the jand. - They would be needed |t have d 3 3 fria the people of Belgium it will have a|even of the French veterans, and the |Under the fire of the guns. An Fng- |for, January and February, when their | PUts have not been cracked, and cer | this prescription 2 frial. Lee & Osgood is the time to make a compiete job | Strike which it will never get over. [infantry in the trenches, though suf-|lish airman flew down to a height of of tke undertaking. There must be|/ no letup because of the labor unrest month. ; armies entrenched and the lines have|it did not stop? own confidence in ‘the peasants of | Jentally, there are other comsidera-|and just a little sugar as directediin per £ -{ dropping into the throat. It is easy o troops, they began shelling the lines|Which the flash of sheils could be seen.|men of 46 and 47, who had been re.|Sone copclusions. Several Christmas and therefore better prepare them for| - AS soon as Germany treats its own|yigorously. “Brought up in the midst of -peas- — It is well to remember that your|warfare, are easily holding their own |after fireball so that the Engligsh ar- ing unesiioms.” n #hcso seen peasants in my native Vendee Confidence in Peasants of France, |Marne the Aisne, the Donajec, the the kaiser himself. This strugele was|armor of the Tank and that we had two | Would stop and catch fire. But suppose | Paris the other day to Hiustrate his|Srasp 0f Teuton supremacy. =~ Inci-|strength), and add to it hot water : been practically statiopary ever since.| “In the menatime the infantry bactle | France. He had just told the house | 005, a";‘;’;i‘?; g;‘}u'r";‘i;";‘;;g;’hg“ :mg:‘—kas& Take 1 tablespoonful tions of the entente group. Everyone who has to get into the|Here then was “the quiet sector” in|flamed up all along the line. One of|that, as the commander-in-chief had | %27 o . | four e85 - 5 become easy apd the mucous stop expected, once the Boches located our |Wwards the canal lay & sea of smoke in|of the classes 1890 and 1891, that | Stock and, perhaps, re-adjust his fore i order to give them a breathing spell ) byt the Kai prepare, costs little and is pleasant to The return fire of our|There were the German reserves|leased from military service to work|cS Dave Eone by since the Kaiser was|take. Any ome who has -catarrhal a greater offensive, it canpot be|Subjects with the same severity it has|artillery calls forth sanctioned by the war council. This il g gty SR tain things have cracked that made{can supply you. fering the losses inevitable in such|about 200 yards and dropped fireball = e . soa £ ants,” he said, “I know t{leit]d;.vo. income tax statement must be made [against their more experienced foes. lery could get their mark. e was |tion, courage and great souls, ve - ¥ or the peace agitation which may be Dol ' 1 before the first of the month. 1If T a bold fgllow. Hurrah! The German you're late you are likely to be s A notable instance of suppressian of | German ttleplanes swooped down|who have had four sons killed, a fifth MAKE YOUR OWN sux OR CRETONNE fl'!ADE‘S countries where the governments OTFY- | unfavorable ‘news is seen in the Ger. |ilke hawks on a dove. The Sllesians|made priconer and a sixth still at the < bave not as yet shown their 4 { From-all indications February has|Da0 announcement that the Turkish|Would have clapped their hapds for|front. One of them came to me, with WE HAVE ALL SIZES OF o ) willingness to put down militariem, cruiser Sultan Yawuz Selim, former-}{joy but they were holding bombs|tears in his eyes and said: g mt respect humanity or show a disposi started out to attain a record even as|ly the German Goeben, has been suc- |ready to fire. fonsieur, is it all golng te end i ton to rl 4 . “| the two preceding months have. It islcessfully reflogted after grounding in| “Suddenly there was the cry, “The|well” And when I s2id that I was sure P put world peace on a firm basis | nevertheless a most unpopular effort.|the Dardanclles. Two or three weeks|Tanks are coming! But where?|#t avould, he said: *Then 1 will give 5 the fatees, A ago in an action outside the straits|Where There, on the hill, don't you|everything. » p The time to accomplish the purpose| The strike fever is spreading|against the British fleet the Turkish|see? Tt was quite true. There was a . of the allied nations is now and noth- “It would be an insult to sucly peas- throughout Austria as well as Ger-|Cruiser Midullu, the former German |White trail of smoke on the slope of |ants” continued M. Clemenceal, “to ‘many. Court martial may be used Breslau, was sunk by British mines, | Bourlon Hill, and just as the dark out- |supnose that they would haggle over :“rzmndy but the real antidote .l: ‘while the wounded Goeben managed to|line of a ship emerges from a fog at|the six or seven weeks' work that we peace. . limp inside where she grounded in the | se2, here and there a dark, crawling ° . termination than ever until the fight narrows. But Berlin makes no-men-{monster was visible. The number of men wanted is un- e Ol'ch ec o. is won. This-is the unanimous vere tion of the total loss of the Breslau. £ ing must be allowed to check their Now that it has been declared thai “Then indeed even the most hard-|derstood to be 200,000 and their werk dict of the war counmcil and It is the ened veterans were anxious. ‘Good|is generally thought to be preparing 42 anflm' Sh’eet right one congressmen are subject to the war| The Bolsheviki activities In Russia|Heavens! These are monsters!’ Ev-|defenses against the expected greit super tax, grounds for a change in|while unsuccessful in obtaining terms |eryone looked down the street. The|German offensive in the’ spring. the jaw can be felt to have been es-|from the Potsdam military party are|Tanks would have to come down it it THE BLAME AT HALIFAX. After what must be looked upon as tablished. furnishing them great anx#ty as te|they wished to get through the wil- # thorough consideration of the facts the uitimate effect of the Russian rev-|lage. At the barricade a signal arm NS A’l‘lon The order mot to talk to the mo-|Olution on the working classes in Ger-|Went up. Nobedy spoke. Everyone surrsunding the collision of the French | torman places the whole burden of ex-|Many. News of strikes Jeaks out in|held their breath. ‘Tanks in front. ? = = in serious spite of the rigid censorship. They are coming straight toward us’ s the big mub.le 2 D Y w t G d T th? munition ship Mont Blanc and the| PINRINE (he Goal ehorlage on the oon-ang suburbs were in wide Confusion |was the next message. Their number | [ sidkeess— causing fepeamion of on t ou an 00 ee w! ¥ r:“’i:fn‘n;;vm’emwzml ln .:t occasionally seen on a car. - l,:uu:::‘e ';'ll.‘t:::_ milktary wae forced | was feverishly counted. 'Six, fiustered g, : acsinzig Coes the dread of the dental chalr cause to At the same time |one soldier: elght; nine, twelye’ stam- imperfect vision, los of > Py mu-’ nxx & large part of that city, the killing A . need have no fears. By owr method you o, SRS the sociallst press is becoming more | mered another, with fixed cyes. Look, oor sleep, lass of appetite, ed Y WIT! T PAIN. &8 Biany. hundrsd Dlevls and tHe in. ‘Whether the ground hog is right orloutspoken against the military party.{there are more stm:ué:?y have over- Fvieh < Pomiar course of g or exteacted mefl& not, it will be wise to kéep on saving |In particular Maximilian Harden in|run our forward posi A Juring of thousands of others, the com- |3y fue1 and the food for the winter |Die Zukunft regrets that the speech-| “The Silesians; ducked their heads, mittee of investigation has *decided CCNSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES is bound to ‘be I ough eh of Wilson and Lioyd George were {for German shells wereé firing straight| i STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE T that the blame rests upon Pilot Mc- .m‘dnmeo \n;kb::: ;:,,eg ;.;e';: only received ¥n Germany “with a rain |over their heads. Hurrah! One was -.7™ BTERILIZED INSTRUMAZNTS Kay who was taking the munition ship| proken. of invective” and adds that “thought- |struck, and then another and anoth- into the harbor and the commander of a i CLEAN Lrw s ful conscientious.men must read quiet-|er. But the others came on without “!"t"‘ DRINKING CUPS the hip, Capt. Lamoder, because they | 1t as claimed there Is 1o be a short- G R R e e R o B e B et W LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK ooy £uioe road, 4 age of ammonia for ice making pext|tainly things are being said that|the Sfiesians sniffed the sweetish smeil ey S thess appeal to you, € oxaniinstion and estim: . to take the proper precautions.to as-| summer, why isn't there a big effort|months ago nobody would have want- |of the sugar.white smoks which the whares t emnaten . ” e sure safety to their ship and to the| being made mow to take advantage of |ed to say and only a few weeks ago|creatures breathed. The foremost community and in fact were navigat-| present conditions in order to 2void|no‘one would have dared to say. Yet|Tank fired like mad with. flashes’ of : the PR. F. G. JACKSON fag their vessel with less care than an|the threatened shortage? the possibility of a sueeessful revolu- |flame. The riflemen on the barricade opdinary freight carrier should bave ¢ i 4 OR. D. 4. COYLE ion in Prussianized Giermn.ny s .r:‘- :t;odh;:vud to ng;: :m i“ur.n' man DENTI'T$ { L From reports we have been told that|mote, for all ablebodied men are who caught foot in the rail- ‘besdache, 0 heart s A ; o The prosecution of the two officials Germans have been seeking out]|ihe army and there is 20 one to rsbel dnd uscessors Sing Dental and the censure of others who were bt elder men from whom the power e | g o 0 ©AIN 8T, of initiative has lar passed and SAce ‘women hildren. aiready At 3 cmtm’lnldlbo—fiflfllu——)fiayw-mq w Lady Asigtant & 1] m their posts . _NORWICH, CONN. 05, M. 208P. M mprs of trouble with- ) ness—fled /fro

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