Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
" CAROLINE e cofio;xusir."' - ‘?* ,fi},’fii,.““i“m T&.fi.&wflfm . Eoruich Fallekn |t} Dol " JACK PICKFORD AND LOUISE HUFF and Qoufied menace | mother ot the family a8 she cleverly |1y eud in sllence—so called. I have| } She lnlxld Sulphur \'mb R o IN Tfil BIG STAGE ‘U“E“ s turned the heel of an lnek.d "thv:t wthuon lfl:“r%oatth lpologoha umduh!u;n‘l’)‘l; e Restore Color, Gloss, ; [ n, n manage 3 122 YEARS OLD : hat remarkable brllance 854 ingen | winter Sut out of harclothes alow: Vouthfulness. o it Rae 'BOOK—SEE THE PICTURE. ind ich the; oW W] ance. It came home the day “ b | Rumeription sice 130 = wests Soe = ey wich o pok thelr parente in To|Eax below pore. . CAsually remarking THE GREAT WHITE TRA“. with Doris Kenyon ..l':ln,d' & Postoffice n Norwieh, | strenuous efforts put forth to stamp | Wrong and drive them mad! 1 love]that it was too bad that she had un& ¢ beautl- Conn, @8 second-class matte out this business. There is no greater | ™, my children, but there are times—" ['been able to get it earlier in the sep- THE TRUTH ABOUT THE GOLD RUSH TO ‘m Telepnone O-In need for law.enforcement and: proper| ., o oou't I know those times!” fer- | son, I dismissed the suit from my mind imed in the woman who was'|as something to be constdered in mfld. A BANNER DOUBLE TURE BILL Buliettn Bullnou Office 430. punishment after conviction tm’fn ;:'fn’m?. eweater, “It 1s amazing |er weather. That child duly “"‘B‘m::mmg;’_g connection with this horrible practice{how coldly detached ona‘un become | school the next morming while I wu f wrecking human lves, f« from her own @:ld when the little|upstairs. Late in the afternoon when Willimantle Office, 625 Mata Street.|" ad i 9E Wieqtrom. hee 2 tch has just downed one in a set- |I was huddling over a grate fire, clad S . Telephone 210-2. who are ensnared seldom get away. x,? Last nightulms:ld ttn.gnnie's;b; in a“h:he a}hth-mkoaou‘l: gt;t'on, tgan!-‘ mm I“LL MAF' fEBRUARYg » B ) removed his so: wet shoes, ne blew in af suit. - & [ Nerwich, m"' Feb. 8, 1918, AEANAY MITRERON ANG W d!d!’teyou wear your rubbers as I told l'i:“ thrown back at the throat in or- u"& Totipe. - 1] . ’ ? . v : o TRIGUE, you to do every time you looked out- | der that the collar of ber ';mmw;u the s P s e VERNON STILES, T mi“g‘,mm ):““ :::nb::;:‘ no | melting snow? Jamie regarded me |nose was magenta, cheeks purple and '1'11 e Tadtons enor stone unturned for the purpose of|With round eyes of innocence. ‘Oh,"| she was trying violently not to shiver. d | said he, ‘you told me o:i * Monda“i -'N‘camm:le!' I axp:odfi:h' ik | —WITH— 'mother, and you never s a wol “Now, don't be fool P ¢l T Wyeth's than on the fleld of battle. Fresh|Ziouine other days! How was T to|my child Tm fust a8 warm aa toast! Y et evidence of the steps which it eon-|gknow that—— I dldfn't hur the rest | Honest, I was o warm most of the day darkens THE B ASS-CLEF CLUB siders necessary to take at/ home is|because I fled.” ;9 that I was all prickly! You've no idea | : fummishon, by the iBortion MBI 10136 ot B oty o o gt n‘:’o‘thgrn“l':rmfl p il s ‘:fl'bm h "5 C resorts to in reference to the number e gets 3 1 - | 8 J 3 2 5t | dampen a comb ar sh an of American troops which Secretary forted the mother of a family. ‘That|be seme special cloth. And you can’t is the mirage with which évery mother | imagine how thiek this georgette crepe |\ awele t & By ;, Yning 1h° i Pamag fhe ey et O WY I st it o b s w-it through your hal ,M’n‘;'“’ Baker declared that this eountry would comforts herself, and it's & mercy she 'strand at -a time. e : BENEFIT RED CROSS 3 blouse is. And it's illy o bundle YOUT | gy hair disappears; .after another have in Furope this spring by 10DPINE | goes, hecause by that time she needs |nmeek all up the way some peopls do. it is v to off one of the ciphers and thus reduc- | comfort! You think that when they application or two restored to its . Why, I never felt the’ cold at all on MEMBER OF THE' ASSOCIATED || ing 500,000 to 50.000 and by the cen-|are past 16 they are going to have |my throat! I guess my throat is extra working against its enemies otherwise soring of the statement of Count Czer-|some brains—well, they have, but they|strong or semething. It's just foolish lightful toilet requisite. PRESS nin of Austria relative to the peace(don’t use them after the little Rollo‘and | to load yourself down with great|tanged for the cure, mitigation or pre- The Asmlntedmuudm- demands of that country so that he|Elsie fashion you had fondly hoped for.|heavy coats and things 1";& because | vention of disease. Honof ail news despatehes credie- || was made to announco just the oppo- | The, just bend thelr enereles toward Circulagion Snowa adjust Haslt. T S THEATRE Totey o B o to it orssgt :&lemihefl‘;g& f;':lf:u:"{‘:: be .t:“:;li;o:;‘:m:g:: ther, and they have so much time to the wou'd:be rescuers of their gaspirng Y o ay n this paper purpo: news published herein. All" rights of republication - special dea;mtehu herein are alsp peserved. A s devote to the operation that it is per- "'Why are you nrl.ng at my feet|countrymen. minds of the German people. fectly hopeless to evade them. so0.’ she continued. ‘Of course, I have| The bowman of a destroyer's whaler But in addition to that German in-| “The chief reason I am 0 sad today |on my best shoes. You didn't expeet|disengaged his boathook from the gar- trigue is at work in every country|is Caroline and her new suit. Some-|I-was going to wear those heavy old |[menis of a water-logged Teuton, whether it is belligerent or neutral | times I think there is a wonderful fu- |tan. walking boois with my new suit. | grasped his late enemy by the collar, ‘We know what has been done in Mex- | ture for that child, if she doesn’t out- | Why, they would ruin the whole ef- |and hauled him spiuttering into the ico, in the countries of South Amer-|&row it. She’d make a perfectly for-|fect! And these seles aren't thin a|beat with a sms!e powerful heave of lu: in the neutral nations of Europe | 8e0US secret .service expcrt, the way [Dbit. My feet are as warm as toast.|his right arm. d in fact ong the entente na-|She Wrigsles out of situation! Up to|Why, you are perfectly foolish, mother, 5 ety and " ju among der. | the purchase of the suit Caroline has |to act so! When—when you're youns- | There is nothing unexpected in the tions. We even have a better under-| ., sorth garbed in a heavy serge|er and like that, why, you don’t need |discovery of important petroleum us Sof es er e —————————— standing of the way in which German | ress and a winter coat that weighs |so many clothes, anyhow!® springs on the.shore of the Red Sea, BAKER AND ROGER agents have been kept busy In this|all the law allows, with a big collar| “No, I didm't argue with her. Life|for the whole of the ecoast of Asia Mi- 2 country. These German sympathizers|rulied tightly about her throat. At-|is far too short. 1 merely locked up |nor.is believed to be very rich in oil. FROM THE PLAY In a Novel Offering “Trampélog: have been engaged in hampering our|tired thusly, she hes railed and in- | the suit in the spare closet and we are |Indeed, it is regarded as probably that |} +\yo WOMEN—By Rupert Hugh laws, bombing ships and factoriés, de- | veighed against the abomination of|getting a taste of t rench warfare, | ETeat oilfield# underline the region and imathitine el || S W YT atro}zlnz property and crippling - our | Winter cold. Bach day when she re- | bombing, gassing and everything, ai|extend under ihe Red Sea ifself well ||l sem———ce—————— agrieultaral offorts. Though we have| turned from school she has told me at|our home just now. I thini Caroline|into Africa Egypt's ofl reserves, of HEARST-PATHE NEWS OLIVE THOMAS od £ of th its which | 1enSth all about Now frozen she was,|at preséent meditates running away | course, haye already been tapped, and et SO R A R Wy Gy In the Fascinating Comedy Drama pretty g00d proof of the resulls Whiehihow stiff were her hands and how|from her cruel, unsympathetic home [their discovery is the subject of & ro- HER AWFUL PREDICAMENT » ™ . they have obtained the letter of In-lpcirifieq her feet. and becoming a Red Cross nurse and |nantic story. A passenger on a ves- ‘“Indiscreet Corinne structions to German military agents| “Suntly eche has reproached us for | wearing a white cap and looking beau- |5el passing’ through the Red Sea ‘ob- Christie Comedy j| sent out from general headquarters|being sot 'bnl:ml as !to pick ol}x‘t this | tiful and pa,theticrllke the magazing Eflr\'ecll ;i‘li float‘mg“on t}; wa%gr, a‘nd CURRENT EVENTS declaring that “Agents to carry on|climate for her to live in. She has|covers. However, I've saved her from |speculal as to its origin. Ny e —————————y destructive work can be recruited|conveyed the impression that if we had | pneumonia!” his conclusions to himself, he returned g among the workingmen’s unions which | béen kind and loving parents we would [ “It's awful when they get too big to |home, formed a syndieate, instituted | must fiy no more. Coming Monday have anarchistic tendencies” makes it |have seen to it that she was born and | spank!” evmpathized the other woman, | borings near the coast, and struck co-{ But look into the face of ome of “Right is More Precious than Peace” | have anarchistic tendencles” makes It| /208 o0 Martner morth. than the | —Chicage News. plous oil springs at 5,000 feet—Lon- | (hees lads, ask him whether ho ever MARY PICKFORD e e ) ::nua:n & ‘:m:":“ . "h&:de A § don Chronicle, “THE TUSCANIA LOSS. felt afraid and weigh his shy answer: . £ use every possible eflon to suppress “I don't remember,” and you will feel in “STELLA MARIS’ | Widespread regret is bound to be|it. Today and Saturday mm VAUDE“LLEY ' UESNE COMEDY 4 Norma Talmadge || " & tim oo e —~IN— BEDFORD & GARDINER Sensational Varisty Dancers The superintendent of the London P na i s T with me that man’s powers of body The Greatest Tn‘-;uph of Her Central Meat Markets repo; or : land mind are still and ever growing. Wonderful Career | telt at the oss of the troopship Tus- B Do AN GLEANED FROM FOREIGN EXCHANGES Meat, poultry, rabbits, ete., marketed |fre Wrights and Santos Dumoxts, the |y | cania engaged in transporting nearly| THE TRAINMEN'S DEM ; = at the Central Markets, the cantre of Blerjots, Lathams, and Farnams, bulk sale and distribution for the sur- | needed better nerves and brains than itestimony of W. G. Lee, president of pius meat produce of the world, ag- \ . 2 the famous discoverers of old time . [go0 to héaven. This, however, is by A General von Ardenne enlarges upongnhase of the French Revolution re- |grcgate 282 936 tons, as against 331161 Oth: e 1d. 3 Let | the way; and to return to anchors, the order of trainmen before the rail-|yhe merits of the German system o:{jeated, The French revolutlonaries | tons in 1916—a decrease of 48.225 tons, 7. new warlds Jie Nefat 35 Ji3* | there is another pitfall closely connect- road wage commission in behalf of|resting troops and changing divisions, | ought to promote political upheavals | Decreases occur in all descriptions of | IS {rust the voung pilats. For tie eld- increased wages for railroad employes, 3 | 2200 American soliers to England and | especially the hundred or more lives, | but it only causes us to reflect that i this is one of the dangers connected | with the war and that we have been It is a serious question whether the ed with them in the ianguage of the and then discusses the German prac- | n all lands. They declared themselves |meat and fooodstuffs marketed: Beef, f;’msterl;xfii;nl;: h(g;ztoz:h !:mb‘.iuk wt!tvn [ that is, the similarity betwesn | most fortunate that suéh a disaster|had the effect upon the commission|tice of maintaining army supplies in| eady to help any people gisposed to|5632 tons: mutton, 24434 tons; pork, ||PetUevable loss, Bul there Is grow-|.yjon"gnq’ “way,” which leads the ! has not occurred before in the send-|and the country that it was expected |=pits of all food difficulties in Ger- | epublican institutions. They vowed |12,372 ton<; poultry, rabbits, eto., MH mflne"" in selfiess effort to a spiri mfl pens of my brother journalists—the | ing of our army abroad. Transports|to, Mr. Lee laid great stress upon|many. He says: vengeance upon any people who ad- |tcns. Supplies of home-bred meat, in RIT have been attacked and those return- h of es—into tual -con- utied efforts” of railread and|, Very considerable voicos have been |hored to the old forms of sovemment. | which Irish figure largely, totalied 145.- R e e Ot e | | R deir ey b, “weigh- i e olndigd affeits of heard to say—the utterances hive|But it was an Austro-Prussian army,|096 tons, as against 149,800 tons in uture sappear like | 3% hat is to say, lifted or suspended, | ng to this country have been sunk|bank interests to cause ineMiclent oP-|jztely found expression in pamphlets | with an Austro-Prussian purpose, thaf | 1916—a decrease of 984 tons. Colonjal |th€ moOrning mists—G. H. Perris in |8 " | but this is the first instance where an|eration of the railroads in order to nded condition it is written by experienced officers—that it | set France and the world on fire. and foreign productions totalled 134,039 { ondon Chronicle. :fi “‘; :2’..:"",'3',‘“ " bt a ship does | ecastbound loaded troopship was suc- | discredit certain legisiation which wasiis necessary to provide quite particu- tons, as against 181,271 tons in 1916— , cessfully torpedoed. enacted last year. ‘The Inference|larly good- supplies for troops which not ‘‘get under weigh” as so many 1" can well understand his outlook | newspapér writefs would have you be- The Tuscania was one of the ships 1 i 2 decrease; of 47,241 tons.—London Three ships which took the party of Tondls Tines. which he intended to convey was ap-lare to be prepared for an offensive on repatriated English home last week upon the graceless misusers of decent 4, might just as well say that which Great Britain loaned to this|parently to the effect that the rail-|e large scale. The German army com- | refurped yesterday with the first ex- nautical languages; my own pét aver- “on his weigh!” The country in order to the more speedily|roads could do better if they wanted|Mand has not falled in this matter|changed contingen: of Gormans, The| | have an umbv!un to try 1’,?“" the | sion is for such as talk about “war-|“way” of a ship is her road, or rather move our soldiers to France. It was|to without giving much allowance to| :itherto, and with the support of the | Zeeland brought 198 including the fa* |role of nerial #hserver, now | ahipst instead. of saying “men-o’-|her motion along that road, and one surrounded with all the protection|the tremendoas burden which has|SCil-Sacrificing people at home is still | mous Captain von Mueller, of Emden |world up thére belongs fo our spelen- . e o f e b z war:" llhc latter is a good old British {need only remémbér this obvious i doing its ost in s respect. is i v - | which is placed about British vessels | been placed upon them or allowing for|is shown especially by the fact that fame, and also the son of Admiral Tir- |did youth. ven for the greatest of | expression, bound-up with a thousand Tt O § h [Fan i = v o & meaning in order to :&:;l}tefleomcfiy p 3 n boart 00, were the com- |air pilots, /says e captaln, ere | associaf ons concerning which I could, | such expressis b/ ering way,” engaged in the same kind of work,| the weather conditions . which they |four-fifths of our whole production of | mandanit of the Bleucher, men from |comes a moment when a little bell | but will not, digress at much length; “losing way,” tklng the off her,” | having a British crew, a British na-|have been forced to combat in addi-jheer and tobacco the luxuries which | tho Mainz and from the Falkland Is- | rings in the fearless heart, and by|and X cannot bdlieve that the people|and many such others—Naval An- ! val complement ard a convoy of Brit-|tion. And what he referred to, if he|it is most difficult for the soldier in |lands battle and five U-boat captains, | some trivial failing they know they!who use the word “warship” will ever | fean in Westminster Gazette. 1sh vessels so that the loss of the ship|is right, exists under the government[the field to do without, are reserved | The Koningin Regentes had a similar must be looked upon as one of those|control of the roads as it did before t‘z’;t‘h:cefl%‘et;se;t t::ic{srot?;r !{ohe 1mh‘ nuniber, and the Sindoro carried 449, instances where the ddsperate chance|they werd taken over. poE - THACS “ those on board speaking with admira” attack of the submarine overcame all| Mr. Lee has relied upon discredit- |ond MerYes can be appreciated only b | tion of the feat performed on the other those who have shared the lot of the |side, when they all put aboard the precautions that were and pessi-|ing the railroads in order to get an|troaps. ‘!n!ide % 'e: hom{s.were P ar bly could be taken. It is one of the|incrcase in pay instead of confining o The Prince Consort also visited the prices that has to be paid in connec- | himself to the pregentation of the facts jss Marv Brodrick, lecturing at i ships. Speaking with Dutch journal- tion with war and those who lost their| which would show that the men are|Kensington Town Hall said that trade |ists, the Germans though some com- | lives made just as great a sacrifice as| entitled to what they are asking. And|Uunions existed in Egypt 1,500 vears |plafned of the cold and of the barracks ! if they had given up their lives in the in this connection it must he remem. 320, It was recorded that’ workmen | where they had lived, expressed con- ol bered that it was the rallroads which |C8aged on bullding one of the tombs | tentment with their treatment in Eng- anchas, o S.|of the kings came out on strike be- |land. They certainly all locked ex- Great credit must, however, be given | a short time ago displayed their wil-| cayge they objected to the intfeduction Feeiagly well Th T-boat alfioers de. to the rescuers who reduced the loss|lingness to leave such an adjustment|of Venetian labor. clared -that they alwavs felt it very to a very small margin in comparison | to the president when the railroad em- i " much when they had to sink ships, but to the first reported figures which in- | ploves were threatening to tie up the| Speaking at Vauxhall Sir A. Yapp | “war is war."—London Chronicle. dicated that half the trpops had been| whole transportation systems of the|said he believed that compulsory ra- lost. There is thus much satistaction|east if their demands were not met.|tioning was coming, but if there were| The little dim light glowed on the in the knowledge that every precaution| It may be upon such an attitude as!compulsory or voluntary ration!ng ev- | steel helmets of the Gordons and made and care was exercised, while every |taken by Mr, Lee that the wage com- |erything would depend upon the good » fantastic shadows on the walls as the *108s of the kind only serves to spur us | mission will act and it may be upon|Will of the people. In Germany last \pm’s marched up and down, and . year there were no fewer than 400,000 | gh, f the offi a on to greater effort. the actual facts which will test out. |} 5cecutions for offences against the fng‘,"’:‘.’é‘he',’.‘z,gf,ii Eog fla,mop:;;?, :,:d PROVIDING FOR SOLDIERS' VOTE. EDITORIAL NOTES. food laws—London Ti felt its warmth in their hearts. The TG comely nose of Honest John, with his Connecticut as 2 rule is not accus-|, There is reason to give thanks for! Waldorf Astorinaletterto the Lon- |no-trump face, as the colonel called tomed to special sessions of the legis- | every thaw or temporary let up of the | don Times says: it, glowed with humap love for his lature. The business which must.come ; tellow creatures. before a general assembly is usuaily Four officers who had fought through transacted at the biennial sessions and whatever comes up after adjournment the Somme together—alas! thare are only four now of those who held the is held over until it convenes again at the fixed time. lines at Martinpuich—raised their glasses to each other and toasted the There is occasiomally business which needs to be dome before the next reg- .colonel, who thinks of them from afar, wajtmg for a wound to heal in his N - — = . ] lung, and yearning to come out again ular session if certain conditions are going to be met and that is the sit- uation now and the reason why Gov- because theugh he hates, war he loves ernor Holecomb has called a special his battalion. He is the Georgian q =1 9 gentleman who has appeared as a he- roic figure in some of my sketches, and session for the 19th of March. Under Pibea = 'fiang‘n;m&i"wm the 2 Mr. Fisher's 'suggested course, on the Avotic westhey. gther hand, would ralse points which, talk elieve, must continue to remain trzhtmm::veg: :.sllthu:: they controversial so Jong as we do mot m the cen “k{’o i B have at the centre co-ordination of are seeking an “honorable” peace. thgd various interests. eanwhile. the babies are still dving The great danger with soft co2l i8|a¢ the rate of 1.000 a week-—a mortality which. in the considered judgment of a 1l run out.|minister of the crown, is preventible, and which is doubly deplorable in view After the werkless days are taken|of the registrar-gericral's estimate that out of February there will not be much lthis e‘g:ntry huffl lostdm;fl‘flflm pogntisl < ives because of the diminis! irth- 1622 of the shprloel menih.in the T afo atfributable to the war. ‘Would it . e possible for a member’ of e ZoV- e T e aere, Some | ernment to state fhat 1,000 soldiers PAGHS - Seom **| were dving every week needlessly in France without its being immediately put right? Why should one depart- S — that by the time one gets acquainted with its use the supply the laws of this state there is no pro- march tune of his own clan. vision for the taking of the votes of the soldiers who are outside of the state and who will not be able to re- turn on election day in November.. To wait for the next session of the legis- Jature in 1919 would be too late. The election would have been decided two months previously, so it is necessary now to get the authority from a spe- cial session. This is in keeping with the step that was taken while our national guards- men were at the Mexican border. The soldiers should not of course be de- prived of their suffrage just because they cannot get to their home poling places. It was recognized then and it will of course be recognized now that it is but proper that they should be allowed to vote wherever they happen to be and have their ballot count just as if they were at home and that legis- lation to assure this should be enacted a sufficient time in advance. It is a mat- ter which should require very little de- bate and the shorter the session the Up in the line there was a pint .of hot cocoa every night dispensed from : ) e V. M. C. A, dugout by a great heart- H J t Ar l d ¥ ment (the local government board) be ed soul who once wrote DBooks and ave us : r ve plays which ali the world knows, and ‘When the kaiser says he needs tho|allowed to block a measure which, in ness wou. help of Germany's friends, he must|the opinion of its late president, Tex- paw _ finds.hape! for 8 ageg inion ot 1ts Inte president, x- |hoart ' serving out sodiers - that We now have the largest and most complete assortment of Yerns which has been reali: t ressed only yesterday at Card! - - . . - 7 & Ky et o B e o inte. Totomtnt o a | Aves: D o £o0 to borrow a steel |} shown in this city. It is complete in both variety of Yam and in beauty of coloring, 2 “measure which could not walt until Y for the Oiive NI NIIO o il cm i) M went by meant a gteat loss of child But he had no need to borrow a sol- ""“ are Yarms I every purpose, hm y D“bt vy .fid oxi “d G‘e’ requirement for a rainy day is a rain check. e R e tatis after the war, for every week that which he says smells strongly of hell. lite™ dier's courage.—Phillip Gibbs in The but each day is bringing the bolsheviki London Chronicle. for the aoldiu boys, to the dunty colorings and delicate finish of the yarns used for new trouble at hom “Lazy” Itatian wo wcman, prisoners of . P . A 1 A - o .o Wil ngt ol (or Germary | When at length the British _lighs your own slipon. In poinit of service we are now able to give you the very best, and s e same story. 'eople are fi 1] Th cruisers haul off and ceas ire on 0 ol o T ) - already solemnly promising that fhey | tni rerse o mebeciamy Tron the Tringo of the Geeman _mineflas vexatious delays will be reduced to the minimum. will not utter a peep no matter how|an Italian. For the law has stood for|ihe enemy were huli down over the b X ¢ twp thousand a that horizon, leaving two destroyers sink- BNy nedviSvmmer By e oD AL ImORS LRt Yo | ine ahd Switls of fl ud wreekage, COME IN AND SEE THESE YARNS The people of Germany may some t%‘va Roman el?zte‘?;hi%o ‘when l:ehx:hg, ?;’L‘L a ng:[xi::rs:g ;er 'hi‘e;m ends wfie : R day realize that while they have beeq|they nor any of their house m! e e sea was dot- £es m brought up to obey without murmur- s:a\}md.a] St. Paul, v;he'n his captors zelglglwlthtlpeeks omdfl humanity LADY FAR sess Teeee 39!: a BI.“ ATH?C p . od ““c a Bln i at Jerusalem were about to scourge ng to_ spars 8. Boats i i arments LY atest arn—it's new ing, they still have a right to think. him, rominded }g!& of his ,2“‘“’“"1? .!\:)drn ,3,"’ a:uugh‘ deumg:r: plied nll, A dainty yarn for baby g ory It sport yi The weather indicates| “Take heed” said the centurion to the ong them, bent on e . (e T e e onie# | chiet captain, “take. heed what thon | quixotic, old-fashionsd task of suc-|| FUZZYWOOL ........... 38ca Blll ANGORET WOOL........ 50c a Ball careful consideration to the merits of | 1°°St foF this man is a Romaa! ool i;s,b"g“":'n'{’:h 'm,“‘::’:; Used for trimming sweaters Looks like Angera—at half the price less the expense to the state, the appeals which have been made 0| The threatemed Bolshevik crusade |circled round st high speed to faud off : o el a et him, against the bourgeoiste of Russla’s al- |submarine attack; the. light cruisers|] GERMANTOWN ... ..~ .... 37caBall ARTWOOL, ..~-....%55. ..i. 36ca Ball DERELICT MAKERS. Hes hes a strangs and lamentable tona, | stayed by to discourage the advance of " e N i Tn imposing sentence upon three| .. oW Word comes that Berlin de-|lt is a barking back to the methods of | & pair of Zeppelins which arrived from Both four and eight fold—all colors ew and different for slipons - liberatdly faked Count Czernin's speech | a century and a quarter ago: One more | the eutwa:r in time to drop bembs on drug vendors, Judge Thompson of the ne¢ peace. But, come to think . w &u United States district sourt sitting at sreTianes a regars s KNITTING WORSTED. ... . 50c a Ball || GOLF YARN, zx:ns:::gh:l (hohreilri‘ t*:t :{;tom?}-’ °f “' Xh“ £1%8 (coNKL ypo expect fhom - - Fine (y;!r:vm' both'/service and nty!'. A heavy and gpractical yamesvery strong . ) . SHETLAN! Selie sl ITTING haey i The Norwich Electric Co. o e R et .80 P perniclous business under any cir-| If it is impossible to get them moved In all the newer sport shades ‘Needles of all kinds, fot all purposes Electrical Contractors ASK US TQ ESTIMATE THE COST OF INSTALLING ELECTRIC LIGHTS IN YOUR HOME - - present war conditions.” 1rain and hasten it to the point where _FREE BOOKLET DESCRIBES HOW IT IS DONE There can be no temporizing With| it is needed? such violators of the law, They are men who care nothing for humanity| Why not take advantage of nature except for the riches which they can|and pile up the ice that is available reap through its downfall, and cer-|ROW se that there will not be suffer- tainly they could not be engaged in a|ing next summer because of the price worse business than the peddling of | or the lack of it? Demoralization and_ crime are widespread today because of the use| The people of Ayer are apparently of dope. Legisiation has been enacted | d1sposed to look after the well being rmmmpm I(yn«@fthcyoungmnmnm hmu t| when they turn down the licensing of | saloons._hy-a.vate. of six.