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UFAY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 3 KEITH VAUDEVILLE S ‘313;,13',4 X [A lSW‘ Ml TRIANGLE FEATURE PLAYS Jorwich Bulletin i g lbg oo i LER0s presidopt OF fhe’, compeny (Redeter 10 bs ey peout vt s My Pulaski Hall, February 22nd|} | RUTAN’S SONG BIRDS . . g & » mar] " arn . 8 ' » and Goufied 3 fouble respo whith - rests | Dates ~apout thicty seeoads. Faiing :m:}?:‘o,,, Wby in many weys and I|DAYE POWERS ca. YOUNG GOULA || Neturs's Swestsst Warblers introdusing “ROUS 1o ROSETTA" o ARS OLD upon the shoulders of the operator.|to receive any response, he puts his | thi thav'w'rfll make a fine man| YOUNG Im?‘r Biggest Little Btar ‘audevil Soc R AR R B gy ettt irod o TR G R g d LA MMERING HOWIE || = S VINGENT RONAIR AND WARD 3 unf e i i ) v | o, i e s [+ s il Sl B e e | O o v || wr e fare dusin | i Jome ke s Conte s seoond-slass metien o e aften e he <hmged to | Other ead of the wira. The president |ly he is in need of, and, ab, send his ervsy - BAY - GEORGE HERMAN DEZ in UP OR DOWN laring at the office manager family a service flag. We must keep| Door open at 7 p. m, Show starts at 8 || . 5 Part Triangle Western Drama With Lots of Pep. Telephone Callas responsible for thoss who are willing | SRSAKS, €l : o ittan ifare Bulletin Business Office to taks chances but it should-be B | * oo pre i) P g g, CONGERT ORCHESTA iy alized in each and every case of reck- | gather. Well, when he does arrive he |keep in touch with him.” i ed: Ihad ot o Bullin St o pom 4 : . : ‘ ¢ Bulletin Job Offics 35-2 | |4 sgnes that there Is & penalty which |can go back where he came from. T've| The, manager of the office: “Great|SSTVice conscript; there's a lof of us CURRENT EVENTS . about.” “Ugh!"” was the oversea man's 4 Willimantio Office, 625 Maln Strest.(cen ne reckoned upon sooner or later.|put up/with him just as long as I in- |stuff, Wasn't it, the kid being under- | Sttty “ul® oS08 T8 OVEHEH TENE) . : ¢ | Telephone 310-3. Safety first should never be disre-|tend fo. When we want a young|weight and then going to it to make|jorth and. thereafter left the novis Cormng Next Week B m.u rwich, Friday, =F=-b. 22, 1918. garded even though it does mean a |banker around here to run errands we |it up and lying about his age and all? | ooyptryman severely alone. Just as % g - oIz sacrifice of a littie time. can get one. In the meantime, an or- |Say, I guess we don’t want the com-)they were léaving the ship, however, e —i— .1‘ zfljn..ry wgrk.\ng office boy will do. lt:.?y to Ido the whfil:nugn:.t :oo ;l'l; Jock ‘touched his neighbor on the * E Find one! ows. I guess we" an! cl seve, “ a2 got alarm laddie,” N UBE POSTAL SERVIGE. The manager of the office (a few|in and do something independently, g ‘.l'm only .fl"lln of &0 e CIRGULATION For a long time Postmaster Gen-|minutes later): *I don’t know that I|what?’ = © Fleld Burvey Company—1 — thought : : eral Burleson has been doing his nrt- blame the boss much. That kid is the - ol i Pk o o o ) 1901, average .......ceeseesss 4412 fimost to have the pneumatic mail|limit and® I've certainly given him ail! The manager's assistant: *“Say, d0|think he was a shirker” An out- T : ! H‘v. You tubes which are used in the larger|the chance that's coming to him. He's|we? I guess we're mighty glad of the | gtretched hand expressed Colonial ap- Em A‘H 1905, average .....eosesees-8,925 || cities of the country for the better|smart, but—" chance. I had a hunch that kid would | provay’ handling of the mail abandoned. He| , The manager’s assistant: “Well, for make mighty 'good some day. Some February 16, 1918..... 9578 / - | Pel's sake, get somebody that knows |folks around here used to slam him| Bt there are other persons in Pal- e rEed It before congressional SOM- | enough to mind hf own business. Of |quite a bit, saying he was too’ tresh|estine besides the Jews. The most Aiiens a0t be voou! in his| g} the fresh rubbernecks!” and all that, but I always thought that | numerous element of the population annual reports. He has even threat-| rhe gtenographer: “So the béss has|kind of smart way of his was more|are Arabs. Most of them are Mos- ened not to use the money appropri-|ecanned Dick, has he,. Well, you can|kiddishness than anything else andllems, but whether Moslem or Chiis- ated for leasing the tubes for that|take it from me it's ;;on:l ltotl) ;o:n. T've :.gx.t 'hden fillmflu::e" come he'd deliver|tjan, they have m( gk‘%‘ee for Turkish SSO! purpose because he is so set against |seen it coming to him rig] Sassy | the goods ght.’ misrule. I have oftén’ been astonish- MEMBER OF THE A CIATED their contimuance. and independent! Say, he was the| The stenographer (her eves slightly |eq at the _attitude’ of - detachment PRESS Tt i#*therefors tter of mueh|limit! Did I ever tell you about the|red and her voice shaking: a little): |shown by fhe - Arabs towards the Associated Press is exclustye- || i ot e commit o oa | other day when I asked him to go out|“Say, did you ever hear of anything 0| Turks. Bven in Damascus I found it I mmu 0 06 Nee T rovu il | [e et AL the sovimIS damet O3 get me some aspirin tablets? Say,|grand? Honest to goodness, I come |prevalent. Turks and Arabs are alike s despatches credit. || COnETess to lock into the whole ques-| what do you think he says? He says, | pretty near bawling right in front of | Moslems, but the Arab considers him- tion o Sy S m’:mm credit. || tion of the mail tubes has decided that|Say kid,’ he says, ‘don’t you know them | everybody when I heard about it, and |gelf greatly superior in intelligence. O o Tee the focal || they are an essential postal facllity | things is poison:' he saye. I ain't|then, too, and all, T felt go kind of glad | Between the- attituds of the Turk i .,b'“fy“ ;';‘..",‘,m‘ and that they should be owned and|going to get you no dope like that’ he |and proud, it made the ghiver: go all |and Arab towards their religion the ; “A'_fi. pfl m.J of .nnfihunupn ot ||operated by the movernment. Post-|Says. And he wouldn’t do it either.|up and down me. There's no question | difference- is ve: t. Though the / "3 speclal despatohes herein are also || master General Burleson may have|Say, Was I mad? So fars Im con: |but what Dick was the smartest kid|Arab of Sytia not possess the Wholesome and .Euberhminfi, reserved. A b Dbeen opposed to the expenses connect- cermed, I'm tickled to death he’s gone.” | we ever had around this joint. Say,|fiery fervor of his brother of the des. “Right is More Precious than Peace™ THE TOWBOAT SHORTAGE. The calling of tugboat owners to a naval conference by the commandant of the fourth naval district for the purpose of devising some means of providing tughboats to meet the com- mercial needs ‘and at the same time supply the wants of the naval authori- ties indicates the shortage which ex- ists at the present time in this class of vessels. Before thls country entersd the war many tugboats were ‘purchased for foreign service. Since then this coun- try das commandeered not a few for foreign service, for mine sweepers and for government towing, while the demands upon the towboats because of those taken away and the speeding teleph operator:, “Well [about the aspirin tablets I asked him|It js an Arab religion, born- of his by no means been his chief objection. w’i!.‘:: do ‘;f",’ lgxl::w ak?out that? Well,|to get for me? 'Well, the kid was right | country and race; its sacréd books are Any Child Ci He has claimed that they were not|it's a good enough job all right. Ihope|about it all right. The doctor told me|in his language. The Turk, on the a0, efficient and that better service could|they get a kid that ain't got his head | the other day I gotta quit taking the|other hand, has never taken his re- large - |did I ever tell you what he says to me |us girls are going to get togethet and|atie; his race has never produced a ¥ less ofn “&biic?tcflffixmfi'amo the other day when I ast him to take|make up a comfort kit for him and |religion or even a heresy: he becomgs the already badly congested streets of the board for-a couple of minutes?|we're going to write fo him every week | conservative as to what he has re- h fifteen minutes,’ he says, ‘and | thing. Say, it'll be awful lonesome|He remaing a Turanian. While the If the opinion of the committee is sttty m‘:m then the yblnmed without him, but, my, it's grand to|Arabs have produced many forms ol ' it you ain’t back by A |adopted the acquisition of the tubes|hoard can squeal its head off for all|think of him doing it the way he did.”|dissent, it can hardly be sold that the | says just ljke that ‘and I ain’t got time| The telephone operator: “Some kid |The Arab independence of view as :35,, ::::{g,:“;m:?:::g tn: t‘!:a ]:m:_ to fool arg:md with this board while |all right! I bet he looks swell in his|shown amongst the Wahabees, the Se- | mittee has decided that if the gov-|YOU 80 out there and doll up for three- | uniform! Say, Mande, I got a pair of [nussi, and other dissenters, has al- tal service which the country requires|just said just as dignified, ‘Now, you | with tHe pair you made that don’t quite [result of the divergence of attitude be- MATINEE 2:15. EVENING, 6:45, 8:30, it cannot give up the tubes. This is ;ust sit Bk (i it s Bt match, either, and send ‘em to him?|tween Arab and Turk has been to in- —.ls__—_.__'__'__ in accordance with the attitude taken|board’ I says, ‘or Il squeal on you.|Say, I'd love to, wouldn't you? And,|crease their mutuai hostility.—London MAKING THE WORLD sm FOR DmocRACY y 1 u! He stayed all right. Of |her dandy fudge and my kid sister L — - ¢ i g e e e PN c%‘\?ruey,o T westit aobe moren fiftetn |makas the grandest peanut caady you i.t‘.”. ks go byll:r“ urf-u; sountey pars minutes. I never am,' I never stay|ever tasted! [Ill get her to make some vhen neither coal nor paraf THE WISCONSIN SENATORSHIP longern that unless maybe now and |of that, too, and we can all get together |are obtainable. This scarcity of fuel then—" . and knit him a sweater, working on it|is not so badly felt in woodland dis- p I the situation . in° Wisconsin where| - B o T taking turns, don’t you know, so's we |tricts, but here again, owing to the owing to the death of Senator Hust-| Two days later. can finish it real soon, and fix him up a|8carcity of labor, both cutting and s ing that state.is represented by only| The president to the office manager: |box with the candy and the sweaters caning are difficult, and wood is dear BY CAPT. EDWIN BOWER HESSER. one member in the upper house of|“I—ahem—understand that the lad|and the socks and all. Say, gee, I can|to buy. Cottagers can buy three kinds I v ’ 2"_Chicago News. |0f the stout branches of the trees cut lette. Because of the stand which he|Very slad to hear it! I think we havelhe gets’em, can you 4 {ulo- thres or four foet lonstha: Roubs has taken and the opposition which taggots, which consist of thin, crook- he has shown to the government in S are usled t:;- ug‘hung fires, mnlg Ithefie z 66 99 that that state should have an out P are almost entirely twigs. Kiln-or “ by te and out American aa its other sena- GLEANED FROM FOREIGN EXCHANGES bush faggots are rarely cut nowadays. m. o, riart m € riacer tor. War has raised the price of all this : Supported by CHAS. RAY : er tell you what he says to me | ert, he yet takes his religion seriously. il ed with the tube service bu: that has S el t L) Aeripoaly Ever, Adult &flfld_},‘ be rendered by the employment of a|all swelled up like that one has. Say,|things, and I'm going to, too. Say,|ligion seriously, He is a Central Asi. P i sweater and every-|ceived, but never questions -its truth. the big cities. Well, he says, Say, he says, I'll sit|and send him a q would reduce the cost of operation |of me’ he says. ‘I got work to do,’ he Turks have even invented a heresy. e ® . .- S ? Well, ks that I made that ain’t quite|ways taken the form of returning to A d t ; t ernment is goins to furnish the pos-( SNEeFS nsovfarlanl‘:iour:omlm him. 1| mates. Couldn't we put *em together |the simplicity of the early faith, The {8leil orlum ea re # " v, te. by the respective communities in|I ain’t here to be sassed by fresh kids |say, girls. T'll get ma to make some of Chronic! 1 To Wives—Mothers—Fathers—Sweethearts Much attention has been directed to congress and that ope Senator LaFol. [Richard has—ah—enlisted. Well, I'm | hardly wait to hesr what he says wher of firewood; cordwood, which conslste The Final Summing-up of the Aims of the World War B ———— . , . ed branches; and spray faggots, which . Extra Added Attraction—Everybody’s Favorite and out of congress it is the desire In order to fin the vasancy for the kind of .fuel, yet it is not the wood- wan, b remainder of the uncompleted term nan, but rather the wood merchant ir farmer, who gleans the extra profit Governor Philipp of that state has| Naturalists tell us that the missel-|quired to undertake, and the new de-|Cottagers have, unfortunately, to pay asked the legislature for the power|thrush, as well as the skylark, is somg | partment is to be congratulated upon |dearly nowadays for any kind of wood COMING—ALL NEXT WEEK to appoint and in order to give that|times heard here during every month |the businesslike nature of the terms [m - Sl g Rt oo COLUMBIA U. S. A. GIRLS body some inkling as to the one he|in the year, and this record has all|and contract. faggots were 18s. or 1 pound per 100 A MUSICAL COMED TH VAUDEVILLE up of business have been’greater than huyln mind for gm pla::e he hueuh;. but been kept for the last 12 months| The government are to pay £8 10s|bundles; now they are 30s. or more. e 0 Y With ever. It is not surprising therefore|nounced that if he is given the power |in London. He was silent in Septem- |per ton for the total crop of seed and | Bpray faggots were 12s. to 15s. per 100, that a serious shortage is now being|that he will num- e Coi Le ber, but was heard in every other|straw, and as a fair yield i& from two|now they are 26s. Cordwood was 18s experienced by the gove: ent as well PR A month, and in December, until theto three tons per acre, and the seed|to 20s. ,now it is 26s. or if sawed up Tam s root. As an Amgrican there can be|post came, he was almost in full song. | for sowing will be supplied free, the|3(s. a load.—London Chronicle. es by all others. no question regarding Mr, Lenroot's|He began to tune up during the thaw | prospect of a profitable return is en- It is to be seriously regretted, how- 0 qualifications and there is little doubt|last week, but the renewal of the frost |couraging. A feature that will In-| Thers is nothing in Sir Douglas HEE < Today and Saturday ever _fhat steps.were not taken a long|but what the people of that state|silenced him, and he will presumably | spire confidence in those ‘without ex-|H; last dispatch to show that the MONSTER DOUBLE BILL time ago in anticipation of such a de-|would reelect him to the office when|be mute now until the time of the|perience is a guaranteed minimum al of our armieg hds. heén any- ficiency to at least make good the|the regular election comes around, He|Singing of birds is here—London,payment of £14 per acre for all 1dhd |thing but superb tiroughout the war, THEATRE £ the |If the last phase of Cambrai caused Josses sustained. The need of tugs,|has a record for standing by the ad-|Chronicle. : suitably managed irrespective o phase both of the seagoing and the harbor|ministration’s war mm:reu 80 'that The Rewa is the sixth British hos- i o e ::,agiw\f:;;’ el::g:']; T: sth:n:la::“w'f‘glfi M ARGUERI I E ‘ LARK types, is steadily increasing. The lack |Le cannot be opposed on that ground pital ship known definitely to have| The German newspapers still unearth | which the German positions were cap- of them is causing serious embarrass- | whatever his politics are, been torpedoed without warning dur- |from time to time Lutheran sermons|tured. This easy success certainly , ment in the handling of goods which| Whether La Follette can Influence | e tho i N ing the last 10 months. In each case|which far outdo even the blasphemies | caused our troops to become careless, €6 N 99 are moved in barges and the shortage|the legislature .to block. this plan in|the crime was eommitted hduringlthe of thsa.t knése& h} th:' }f&\}x}rs@hnt a ba::;‘ :lzend ;ev‘erelyttl'fiag pal? to; 1tl: '\;ut &Pg: THE VALENTINE GIRL makes it - | order 4 night. The following are the previous | mon ukarest, a8 8s0n is no eiy to be lost. BiEation iy whtar aa 5 rea SUEL| hih wuh Bt b e | B T 8 : printed and dlsrlbuted to the German | question’ whether mumbers aro ' main: A 5 PART PARAMOUNT PICTURE Asturias—Torpedoed on the night of | troops and has now reached the Ber- ned is not one that” can be discuss- Fandicap now thev will steadfly in-|remains to be seen. The governor is|Tedical services and crew were killed; 2 o auty on th £ 18 "B A 6 PART AMAZING MODERN M ELODRAMATIC COMEDY WITH 12, .including two women, Were miss-|roth said: c duty on the part of the govern E crease if something is not done to |endeavoring to prevent the expense of | in» ing, and 39 were injured. The Asturias| . Peol:}e ar-;’ h,lktinf’1 abt:ut ‘;eace at|ment, w‘lixich alonerknows the ‘rfilctghs.nfl FIGHTS AND FUN THAT WILL MAKE YOU GASP AND LAUGH ked off Havre on Feb.|any price—even at the price of renun-|can produce men from our still abun- i‘,‘dls;?;,e nbunt"geezo&edo ‘mlssed its | ciation of a grenelr and mlght;er h-r da%;.‘ reserlves wh?never it s:‘ wills. LATEST WAR NEWS IN HEARS T—PATHE WEEKLY x therland. The millions of the best o ¢ writer's view two years . S ——— trol. The outcome will therefore be m(a}ll-:ficester Castle—Torpedoed in mid- [our people are to have bled and died {was, as he stated at the time, that we SHOWS AT—2:30, 6:30, 8:30—FOUR SHOWS SATURDAY awaited with more than ordin: in. | channel during the night of March 30- |in vain! My Germag people, the blood |&hould have added 30 more divisions Y by the whol ary 1n° 31, 1917, All the wounded saved. of your best sons wduld cry to heaven |to our armies in Franee, and had these | e From all accounts Spain is sfeadily|terest by the whole country. . Donegal—Torpedoed on the evening|for vengeance. For me it is as if all|been present at the Somme battles we é A % b : 3 SRS Dew- Kivuhas Tof hreaiing off EDITORIAL NOTES: of April 17, 1917. Twenty-nine wound- | those who rest in the cold earth, un- [might have finished off the German |thus enabling him to compets with|chance to re-establish water accommo its relations with Germany. For a 3 provide more tugs and at the same time more barges such as can be used in canals or inland waterways. PLOTTING AGAINST SPAIN. a_special election at this time and in Wisconsin the fight is bound to be over the matter of.La Follette con- 2 ere presumed |der the banner of loyalty, were rising |@rmies in the west when they were |them in securing labor. The country |datons like what we had. in the long timo it has been experiencing ex-| From all indications a large amount a‘lo‘év‘:."e& s Bt lol G from theéir graves and miarching|crumbling under the lossés of Verdun |has its attramox; l_mtx glree or four | eighties.—~Bridgeport Telegram. asperating treatment . from the U-|©f fat should be disclosed from the| Lafranc—Torpedoed on the evening |thréugh the land with appealing ges- (and the Somme. It was the Gletmans |dollars per day for eight hours has 1 o N British | tures, #aying: “German people, it will |Who added some 700 000 men to their |E8reater, - A New Jersey Anti-Saloon-léaguer boats. Tts ships have been destroyed | tr¥ing out of the Hog Island charges. Pl e ation | not Tast much longers hot out but 4 | Rehting strenaths, while we did little| -Agriculturs has been considered by |predicls the ratification of the fed- without warning. They have been| iy, man on the corner says: It|were drowned, and 152 wounded Ger-|little, and the final vietory and an | or nothing, afid for this reason a year |many as a minor occupation of man, |eral prohibition amendment by May, looted and sunk not oniy on the high| ,kes fack Frost to administer a switt|man prisoners were rescued by Britieh | honorable peace will assuredly be B e N tEAL fn B0 Ehman G- BT i dn She Loy Thati OuREINIg | 8 v l:l,?‘M:‘:“ o ;;";:”f:fi seas but in its gwn waters and in ad- 3 ‘hich the Znminent |ours.” . Yes, for me it is as though |YVicions e, ng them, our g . s P . 1H6n Dehen SnaswRE:: ok tave e nios. iy Teatises A ambitiouy ik 0% boios hemasiven to;pgi‘oed. Almighty God Himself were marching |armies in 1917 had to fight 131 Ger. | It is true many of the farmers have | thres months from date. A Connecti- also been sinking the ships of other|"2"3¢HOn Dover Castle—Torpedoed at 6 p. mi|through our Jand, polnting to all the |man divislons witli less than half that sutomobiles, but thiey were acauired|cut brewer recently said that tho nations within the territorial limits of| A taste of war on May 26,1917, in the Mediterrancan. | innymerable signs of Hi¢ help and |number, gad the whole explanation of |by hard work and selt-denial and not | yedrs Norgriblgirog Bt Spain. There has b tant di i mer weather makes a | 3% ¢ 35’ "' “ht as again torpedoed, | salvhtion, and making against us the |the failure to reach a decision it these |by attending all the movies, , 80 y pain. ere has been a constant dis-|eold snap dreaded more than ' ever, and afterwards sank. All on board |terrible accusation: “What have I done|two campaighs is to be found {n the|and paying carfare, instead of walk-|closely agreed as to the outcome. regard for the rights of this nation|even though it is realized that it can. were saved except six men, presumeddto thee, my German peopi fact that we never had thé men to|ing a few rods, as the farmer does. It ‘might ‘be better if the country in common with those of others re-|not last long. Tilien B3 e skolinlan, - have 1 wounded thee, that thou te-|do more than was actually docom-| If you think, Mr, Cummings, the|could reduce its -consumption 50 per gardless of the protests, promises and i s On Mdrch 30, 1916, a deliberate at-|wardest Me thus with want of faith, |Plished, "It is rather a question wheth- |farmer has a “snap”, come out on the |cent. in two years and be unanimous assurances of reparation. Fuel Administtator Russell in call- | tack was made on the Franco-Russian | Want of courage and faint-hearted- |€r any other armv would have done so|farm and lon:w us g—&m 4 ;émm.w;g‘; 5‘“1“‘ n{;m:“e:“: b;m nc:oulregdwm But what appears to be even more|ing off the heatless Monday has ap-|hospital ship Portugal near Of, in|ness?” much—London Times Military Cor-|D. m, for a few months. n its ability to s up so suddenly. serious is tta recent disclosure con- S propaganda in Germany’s behalf but where, according to the evidence pos- sessed they have been contributing to hi the city, but |— p can. parently acted in accord with the de-|Eastern Anatolia, and the vessel sank respondent, ::t !tl:dgr ;t; h 2{; &aigetfvamee X u{d At ‘Waterbury }Sepubu cerning the activities of the German|mang of the people of his state, in less than a minute, over 100, includ- | At the Central hall, Westminster, re- - profits. Experience is the best lesson,| In #s brief filed with the public representatiyes in Madrid where they i ‘TtT—«-;‘-A—-,;‘ i Xn;m sy wlmenh:’:in% kfllfl:-r o :iengt;ytm}nerall Boothbgedle‘atfig s ibut there is & class who can learn by |utilities commission in support of have been not only carryin on a er al e experience which other e hospi ships Braemu: ngent of male members of tl alva- 1 ther. o fare - . people have had the gold bricks and |2nd Britannic were sunk in November, | tion army who are leaving shortly for LETI'ERS TO THE ED“‘OR ik et L N e monéy making machines are finding 1916, but the evidence at the time was|ambulance work in France. All have LESTER A. MAIN. |ticut Co. offérs the astonishing ad- just as many easy marks as ever. not considered conclusive as to wheth- | seen considerable service in the .or- Preston, Feb. 21, 1918 mission that *its whole theory of e prattice 1s predicated upon the . er their loss was caused by mines or |ganization, several as many as 30 e harging - *he support of anarchists who were| o = the in hich L torpedo.—London Times, years, and they have been ocarefully s ; mfl'“’fl& uterewwmch‘ :%T;edl? srepared to strike at the Spanish king. ay . loyd lected from Salvatio t . & rng . ;| George continues to come out on tep, i f it O s Toon SEy Sl ons . Li OTHER VIEW POINTS ||order that other pa may be The German secretary’s letter which | 10, quits, svidaos. fhat €, »| According to an article in a Leipzig|in different parts of Great Britain. the Farmer’s® Li givern & greater service than that he was o unwise as to send along ent that the opposition|paper by Herr von Breitenbach, Who|While coming under the British Red 0 Mr. Editor: J. H. Cummings’ lett ; instead of. to him has been greatly magnified. -|until recently was Prussian minister of | Cross and being under the recognized of ée 163:’".“"18 ik l:nemv':f; e u:f for which they pay. And ad of 3 pressing 4 desire 6 egualige railways, the number of women em-|conditions of active setvice, they will|ing, 1 wish to say I am a farme St b+ relaf . servi American battleplanes are going to ployed by, the, Prussien state railways | retain their distinctiveness as Salva- | theréfore ought to know something B wond Bbe Lkt there 1o & Very ‘g‘,m“'m“)‘\’.“,nm“?,‘;”:' H e g ey i ? the war front months ahead of ex-|is now 100,000, compared with hardly |tionists and wear the badges of the |about” the finanelal end of farming.|gne opportunity now for the ectablish-|of retaining the old &ystem of pen- e situation therefore 13 even|pectation which means that’we are|10,000 before the war. Herr von Brél-|organization on their khaki uniforms.|Th ment of fast freight boat service|alizing the short haul passenger in worse in Spain than it was in Argen-|not lagging behind in one direction. |tenbach says that in purely manual| General Booth recalled an: observa- s between this city and New York, not|order that the long haul passenger tina following the disclosure of the —— e labor the efficiency of women is from|tion made by Queen Alexandta on the n to mention other points. There was & |may get the benefit. A 4 actlvities In that country, It may be| General Kalendines is reported to|50 to 76 per cent. that of men, that)occasion of an inspection at Marlbor- 8 tme when Bridkeport Tiad the beat of | 1: 'is diBeult to sse how the com- that Spain is willing to overlook this|have committed suicide, but every eage |in WOrk which requires a combination | ough House of a previous unit.of Sal- |labor 1s very scarce at any DrIce, oW- | rcios bt that aeadly curss of con- | mission oan decide in favor of the matter and to be satisfled with send-|of the kind ivhere prominent leaders of mental and physical abilities women| vation army ambulances. “Your idea|ing to the number who have gone from mnd‘fl",m With the determination to|company, on the merits of the argu- ing- the guilty representatives home,|of Russia are involved only arouses|fas wumearet sorme of iy Srcih {,’,:,,;p’:,.“f":;,m':‘&d’[‘:; st 4 ,,’;g: the, taind L“;gn;“funéflg‘w:i inre |StAMD_olit Water competition in_the | ments ]prelu;med. Jnless, ts ax is but having recelved warning of this|suspicion, women are perfect substitutes for men. | kind’ of ¢ars: you afe alss sendin interest of railroads, lost us this great |more closely attuned to the needs 4 o 3 £ |18 a larger percentage of farmers in character it would appear to be suffi- % oL iy ‘ over the right kind of men to drive [the service %: Uncle Sam today (i | 2dventage. That we miss such service corporations than it is to the rights of clent to call for prompt and effective| The! government atithorities have Flax growing was at one time very |them” The Salvationist drivers|propottion to their fumber) than from |.® evident every day. There is now a|the public.—Hartford Post. action, had sueh g6od results in searching|extensively practiced in this country,|would use the many of 1 pportunities | any other industry. Even these do not % e ——— the Dutch ard Norwegian ships that|and it is understood that the new cen- | which presentéd themselves of im-|show any more patriotism than the - B ELEVATOR FATALITIES. none can expect to escape the comb- |ters will be chiefly situated in thosq|pressing the men placed in their chargt|man who stays on the farm. working It is impossible not to be impressed by the danger which surrounds the op- ing in the future, v districts where it flourished in _the|with religion. The Salvation army cars|from twelve to fifteen hours per day, eration of elevators both for the opera- Siadiece s n et . |past,- viz, Yorkshire, Lincolnshire,|alréady at the front carried Some- |trying to produce the foodstuffs to That was ho small compliment|SUffolk, Fife and Somerset. A nucleus | thing like 80,000 wounded ‘men, some |feed the nations. tor and for the pasfengers by two fa- talities which have occurred in New for the new industry already exists in|of whom had been converted by time-| Judging from the tenor of Mr, Cum- D F c J D D J C l fomich Was baid to the United States| e Yeovil district of Somerset, and at |ly words nad prayers.—London "Times, |mings’ letter 1 belleve it he wors T.I'. L. ac‘ison T. V. J. 0y e e influence which it. was admit- | Selby 4n Yorkshire. At these places . obliged to show his patriotism in X York city wheré girls who have been| co. itS Tepresentatives had upon the|the British Flax and Hemp society and| We are udvised by & temperance |either way-he would be a “squealer.” 4 loyed sengers and 1 supreme War council at Versallles. |the University of Leeds respectively writer to drink “horse-neck,” a potion| If there wers no farmers Mr. Cum- oy g i e e have carried on both the growing of |made from lerons. But lemons are 6¢. |mings' would soon cease fo exist. case as an operator have lost their| There are a Iot of other people in|the crop and the conversion of the Moreover, if the desires of all | While Untle Sam gives a reasonable lives. In one instance in view of thethis country besides the striking ship- |straw into fibre With marked success|hearts were made known we should |profit to many industries, including ifact that there were no witnesses to|builders who ought to be confronted |for eeveral years. Other centers al-|probably find that ous flying men |railroads, we.see no similar protection b4 the fatality it was impossible to tell| with that question by President Wil- |ready decided upon are Staddlethorpe, | would be glad for us to leave lemons |to agriculture. If manufacturers are where the fault was, whether the girl|son, “Will you cooperate or obstruct?” [ Yorks; Crowle, ‘N. Lincs; Pinchbeck, |to the Flying Bervice. The lemon to be guaranteed a 10 per tent. profit. operator had been taking greater % — * | 8. Lines; and Leslie, Fife. to furnish part of the liqui@ fuel of the |the farmer should demand the same chances than she should have or| It is a hard luck otitlgok for Ger- |, It is estimated that iflm&lmeu will | aviator's linmmnlm economy. “Hot' p ety whether she was not fully informed in|many after expecting so much from |03, Feauired to yield what the govern. |squash, plenty ot hot lemon squash = ment needs, and land for the purpose |that's the only thing to -kee ou + regard to the working of the lift. In| the Ukraine fo fiad that starvation is|must ho found and suitably cultivated | warm,” says one who flea s Big bomb- Children Or the other the young man operator with his contribution to the anafchists, has even fallen into the hands of the Spanish authorities. CROWN AND BRIDGE WORK, PLATE WORK AND EXTRACTING Bas beco el O & ‘sharge. of man. | wores f0¢ Passin 146 Gorhany muk| eee b i L ot . coetre] sy it s i etk A0 FOR FLETCHER'S 4 een held on a charge of man-| worse & Yy m und ing it is essent 0. secure P 0t 84 L as hot 9 slaughter becanse the young woman|come first. X the co-opu!ulon of all farmers living|ana as often as you like.” c A S T o R 1A 203 Main Street, Norwmh, Conn. messenger he was carrying was in the neighborhoods referred to. The - : caught between the floor of the ele-| ~Hindenburg is bolstering up the tysaia that are to.be offered, however,| Coming over on leave an Austral: vatar and that of tho bullding, al-|morale of his armaies by laying much|do not indicate tiat growers aro ex. |lan soldier found himselt mext to a| oo o o : Office Hours: 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. ; Telephone though the exact responsibility In the|stress upon the ‘importance of the| SHEEC ° ROV, B o Fine ordinary |8 bore the letters F. 8. C. “Say, ¥ . case has mot thus far been esteblish- |tanks and a new mysterious gas in the| i the project involve. The he inquired, “what regiment's P coming offensive. He may, however,) indeed, is’ e by compari-|that? Never heard of you Mm"l . [ e sucorised.at his QWR.Zame. 'mon_ with, many that farmers are ze- 1% . the Scot..‘Tm a foreiza ¢