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o ™ howiise ‘and br_ rollin ol .and ‘bg rolling 647 :er seventh place - wit Sehmitt, of St. j.ouis. '\ FOR EVERYTHING: - { . & !. LATHROP & SONS 8 Shetucket Street Norwich, Comm, | Teams of ame Place as Last Year ‘With Exception of Three—Pirates Will Train at Jack- CHAPTER - xX1¥—Continyed. We needed no urging to get away 1 did not recognize any of the men on the firing squad even‘ the officer was a stranger 1o me. - - The victum’s relations and friends in Blighty wili never krow nat he ‘was: executed; they will be under the impression that he diéd doing his bit for King and Country. In the public casualty lists his name will appear under the cuption “ Ac- cidentally Killed,” or Dead.” The day after the execution I re- ceived orders to repor: back to the line and to keep a still tongue in my head. " ; Executions are part of ‘the day's work: but the part we hated most of all, I think—cerrainly the saddest The British War Department is thoyght by many people to be com- posed of rigid regulations all wound aro hex Elks’ Tournament. Teams 3 and 5 bowled before a larze crowd on Wednesday evening, Team 5 -taking the first game .and Team 5 n;:e hcké:tzvnxfi and won the sec- - ' ond game. Team 5 took the last game. Ga, Mareh| “meam § is now leading the ieague ik .| with 16 games won and 8 games lost. Somers bowled high with a score of 113. Lucy got.the high on three games zrl;: 1198. Friday night Teams 2 and Tl oL L e d Y New York, Feb. 27.—There will be Boston, at Hot Springs, Ark, March fow s in the locatign of the ma- . |dor league ‘baseball club training camps .| this spring as compared with 19017. Of the sixteen clubs composing tiie Na-|ATHLETIC COACHES ) tionat and American Leagues, all bu* ; r three will return to the camps where| ' (FOB AVIATJON CAMPS AFTER the fire you will appre- (}t‘elyé yt’repmd tolr nt\he fllgm:lmp'\lgr:s To Have Men in Parfect Physical and i .| of Iast season. In the senior organi- d % 2 i‘;v ”"_:""‘"d s aoti:‘cou zation Cincinnati will train 2t Mont- » Mental Condition. New: York, Feb. 27.—Patriotic New Yorkers, stirred by the ine 18, 3 % po eshington ot Angusta, | t l 258 loss Hutchinson Lucy of the evidences of the unfortunate man. . They never wunow the truth. He is listed in the W the “accidenta In the last will. asttle 'somary, Alabama. instead of Shreve- *oMPTLV and FAIRLY. fport Lonin!ma:r u;d Pml.’s:vurg!:" :&T H 3 .'| prepare at acksonvy:] ;- Wlos You're: sure/ S tatvong i As 1 Comnao o vour ago, the Siihten wisre g:.mher of fatalities in the Tinited nies when you insure through us. | quartered at Columbia, Georgic. The tes army aviation camps and hope- 4 9 St. Lonis ciub, of the American League |ful' Of saving the lives of many stu- A ISAACSS. JONES « | will workont :1: Shreveport, W"W-,S,.“;.tm“:&i:' ;rd:y "‘:;““..‘.’.‘ plan, q‘x:x m g y lace of Palestine, Texas. I - R Aero es nsurance and Real Estate Agent ' |In place of Palestine, Texas ' In €v. 3 erica to furnish athletic coaches | Somor Richards’ Building $1 Main 8t |spring training this season at the|Who Will advise the men and forbid|Lyons .. " 2 } camps where they were located twalve {the mto ascend unless they are in|Harrington 248 raonths ago. ne_;f:ct &hgf]cal and ;?ent::emm J. Young 269 RNEYS-AT- . 'A¥ was the case in 1917, Texas and e air division ! i&—&—— Tlorida are the.favorite states for |States signal corps has expressed a baseball work preliminary to the bat- 415 1298 desire that trai be assigned at £ have several i Brown i — i A0 2 - times read sic : nss of } Brown & Perkins, Imms-aiaw | e tor the two major league pennants, ;‘::.."i’sn:‘:m@m’;’ ”i"tt i:fl ;; °L°z;rl;, Marlin-Rockwell League. cowards changio, . to ! Over Uncas Nat. Banl tucks | Between them they draw fifty per J 2 At the Aetna alleys Wednesday ev- | heroes. I used to b it T :gm:;u?u m}i?v:'a, n:;,sx’:, Tfi,’: cent. of the big circuit clubs. Hach "‘r;'::e-‘;fw the purpose can be appro-|. .o it ‘tha Marlin-Rockwell league seemed easy for s ers. but T | National Bank. Teleohone 38-3 |state will have four clubs with Ar-|P! F i the Toolmakers were outclassed by |Said: “Men aren't m: —_— lkensas, Georgia and Liuslana next inj A The idea of introducing trainers in|ije R-Floor Champs and lost _two [ But ‘over. in France | order with two clubs. California and | the ps is credited to Walter CA;np. games to them. Although ths Tnol.|ihat the streak of yelow turn | NO ECONOMY Alibama are last on the list with one |the veteran football coach, Wio has|pgyers had o larger total pinfall than| @l white: 1 picked up the bit | IS club apiece. The complete list of 1818 been asked to engage at least ten, X the Champs they could only et one zame out of three. Clinton of the Toolmakers had high three sirings. while Smith of the same team took high sinflie with 108. The ccores: Toolmakers. ) Remgmber, there's one item on which Henlnghcan‘:;m. ”‘h;{‘he ln.gr:ruxl(mute | you [CANNOT save money by buying |dates when the majority of the pliyers t ; v report for their first workouts, is as fl:sp.. and that is BREAD, POOR follow: b bread, soggy, burnt, sour bread costs] ~ just as much as light, well baked and and not more than fiftcen, such train- at salar'-~ ~" 54 a month. A nnd of $22,500 for paying the train- ers’ salaries .o. . wionias, or until National League. congress can act, has keen started. New York, at Marlin, Texas, March | « The statement is made by the Aero pany, -the semntries who guarded poor fellow, as weii as from my observatios ¥ dig net the whole of his story, /but after a week of investigation it stood out as the wn club that each student" flyers * death | Clinton 39 83 106 ‘| my native West in the spring sun- delicious bread. When you buy OUR llhromlvn at Hot Springs,] Ark,|means a loss of 23,000 to, the overn- | Smith 80 ¢ 88 10¥— 27€ : ghine! Tt impressed me so much that bread, made by experts, every loaf eh 18, g " |ment, divided as follows: Cadet in= -Eull:-'m . g T wrote it alt-dewn in-rast hillets on appetizing and perfect, you pay no S t surance $10,000; cost of training $5.-|Brooks b odd scraps of paper. The incidents [ mbfe than for wretchéd, tnoigestibis | Maren 1o 2 SoB Antonis, Texas, |G cont of mashing $5,000" The traln,| Meads .. \: 94 [ re, us Ty every bit true: the feel = 5 3 9 ers’would be required to regulgte and ings of the man are true—l know | loaves. Get the' BEST, for it costs no u;.‘;';‘ci;l;lw, Montgomery, Alsbama, J o oL B T e sthaent g 2 from all T underwent in the fizhting | more than the WORST. Boston, Miami, Florida, March 14, |Watch their hours of cleep, give them | B Floor Champs. over in France. ¥ ” Chicago, Pasadena, Californiz, March | calisthenic exercises and report 1o the [Matady o7 We,will call him Albert Lioyd. That SUMMIT STfiEET' $in Pittsburgh. at Jacksonville, Tlorida,|condition to fly. Casy s R6 Albert Lloydd'\vas what the world March, 18. i —_— . Carpenter . K terms a coward. 4 nfih_ilude}np;;i:hnlt_ St. Peterspurgh,| AMERICAN BOWLING TQURNEY, |Mol! 9 In London they called him a slack- rida, 5. er. 190 Franklin St. 1S THE PLACE TO GET A NICE ROAST BEEF AS WELL AS A NICE PIECE OF CORNED BEEF OR ANY- THING IN THE MEAT LINE. eveland, at New Orleans, ia., VAL.LUPPERT 'DR,R. J. COLLINS || Filldtimia s sackeon DENTIST 148 ‘Main Street, Nerwich, Conn J Phone 1178 American League. 449 1352 New York, at Macon, Ga., March 12 Detroit, at Waxaachie, ‘Texas, March 462 YOUNG BLADES HAS BEEN " SIGNED TO FIGHT HERE No Sensational Rolling. Marked Wed- nesday’s Play. in_khaki. Cincinnati, 0., Feb, 7.—The bowl-| ing in the two men and individuai events at the American Bowlinz Con- March | gress tournament today produced ne | se tional playvs, but the near-lcad- e were changed in several instanc: J. Mackay of Cleveland, displa; Porida. [ed the best form during the & by bowling 655 went inte a listing, being alone in the world. hav ing been educated in an:orphan asy- lur: “and sthere beinz n0 ore depend ent upon him for support. no good position to lose and ¢ no sweetheart ‘to tell hi lips to go,. while her e him to sta: Chicago, at Mineral Wells, Texas, ‘| March 18. St. Louis, at Shreveport, T Matehmaker Sullivan Has Signed the Wooncockat Lad With an Usknowr to Fight Here in March. on 0! in Marel te who he but it §s understoo: 2 boxer who hes made in Connecticut BSo: .geant he'd slink around out of sight. “with a terrible fea way to business and back he passed many. he would pull down his cap and look the other way. to get away from that awful finger pointing at him, under the captios “Your King and Country Need Yo or the bor- ing eves of Kitchener. wlich burnei s very soul causing Him to TuThS set a bout with a certain Connes tboxer but that person has heen ste. ar of him for e CHIROPRACTIC | 2z a hatural health method which en- ~ables nature to .restore your health % ‘more effectively-and premanently than ¥ known health method. No medi- %, ¢ine, surgery ‘ar osteopathy used. * Chiropractic Institute MARKET WAS BUOYANT. It Was Stimulated by Industrial Divi- dends. A sagar pf e Sugar S pr Securities Hom 100 Caba 540, 0 Cuba 3800 Dist Eik Fde Erie Erie Frie two fighters. Bright For Penn. Pennsylvania seems to be assured of the championship of the Inicrcol- legiate Basketball lsague, but Syra, cuse appears to have the best five in the east. Ed Dollard has a knack of Then the Zeppelin raids—during New York, Feb. 2 ided by sev- eral increased dividénds and stimulat- ed by pools and. related profassional intérests. today's.stock market mate- rialiy augmanted recent advances in of his boarding house cellar whim- pering like a whipped puppy and call- ing upon the Lord to protect him. Even his landlady despised him. aithough she had to admit that he was % a number of special issues developing great teams for the Orange | “800d pay. § 9 O.Zimmermann, A.C. 4 Continental Capn directors i {and he never runs short of materiai.| He very seldom.read the papers, % ed the common dividend from Syracuse some time ago defeated|Dut, one momentous morning the , | Licensed Dr. of Chiropractic per cent. annual tors was an 3 per cent. ations and Chandler Mo- Penn—the lone defeat suffered by the fyom 1 Triti landlady put the morning paper at Quakers this season. Next winter may : advanced :221 Thayer Bidg., Norwich, Conn. und with red tape. But it has a! by bit. from the cantain of the com- | clear in my mind as the mountains of | He had no good reason for not en-; He had' Every time he saw a recruiting ser- | the corner; gnawing at his heart." When passing | the big recruiting posters and on his ! them he used to crouch in a corner | i His country had been at war nearly | eighteen months, and still he was not ! | 1 1 GUNMER IN FRANCE AND WENT. breakfast. the flaring headline, Passer and nearly fainted. his bedroom, with the horror gnawing into his vitals. of sham sickness, meals there. #han with the fatal paper. he, Albert f.oyd, was ordered -o re port himself to the nearest recruiting He because hLe was station for physical examination. reported immediately afraid to disobey. i The doctor looked ‘with fection, and thought what a amined his heart twice passed him as beating so fast. befor “physical fit,” Copyright by ARTHUR GUY EMPEY his place before he eame down to Taking his sea:, he read ‘Conscription - Bill cus- ing himself, he stumbied upstairs txo it Having saved up a few pounds. he decided not to leave the house 4nd to so he stayed in his room and had.the landlady serve his Every time there was a knock at the door he trembled all over imag- ining it was a policeman who had come to take him away to the army. One morning his fears were, realized. Sure enough. there stood .a police- Taking it in his trembling hand, he read that approval upon Lloyd’s six feet of physical per- fine guardsman he would make, but ex- he | W owas T ~ sergeant replied in a somewhat bered tone: - ‘ - “Oh, them’s the guns up tHe line. ‘We'll be up: there in a couple o' days or so. Don't worry, my laddie, you'll see ‘more of 'em than you want be- fore you get ’ome to Biighty again, that is, if you'ré lucky enough to get back. Now lend a hand there un- loadin’ them cars and quit that ever- lastin' shakin’. 1 beliéve yer scared.” The last with a contemptuous sneer. They marched ten kilos, full pack, to a little dilapidated village, and the sound of the guns grew louder, con- stantly louder. ¢ The village was full of soldiers who turned out to inspect the new draft, the men who were shortly to be their maies in the trenches, for thev were going “up the line” on the morrow, to “take over” their certain sector of trenches. . The draft was paraded in front of Battalion Headgquarters and the men were assigned to companies. Lloyd was the only man assigned to D.' Company. Perhaps the officer in charge of the draft had something to do with it, for he called Lloyd aside and said: 3 % “Lloy vou are going to a new com- From the recruiting depot Liovd|pany. No one knows you. Your bed was taken, with many others. in!will be as you make it, so for God's charge of a sergeant, to the training{sake, brace up and he a man. 1 depot at Aldershot, where he otrer equipment. He made = fine 100! shrinking in his shoulders hunted look in his eyes. At the training “depot 'Windy.” In the English “windy” means cowardly. The smallest recruit in the barracks | looked on him with ¢ontempt. and was not slow to show it in many way: Lloyd was a good soldier, learned quickly, obeyed every order promptly, never groused at the hardest fatigues. He lived in dcad‘\'! Ue was afraid to. fear of the officers and “non-coms' jover him. They also despised him. three months after his enlistment Lloyd’s company and the names picktd were ‘When his name was called he | did not step out smartly, 1o the front, and answered cheerfully, He ranks, and was amid the sneers One ' morning about was paraded for the next draft to réad. Frahce “Here, sir” as the 'others did. just fainted in the carried to barracks of the rest. That night was an agony of misery just ! cried and whimpered in. his bunk, be- | cause on the morrow the draft was | to sail for France. where he would| 1€I'i see death on all sides' apd perhaps b b “; steamer, o aim He could not sleep re lLitied himself. crossing the Channel n the afraid of drowning. Arriving in France he and the rest On the were huddled into cattle cars. ide of each appear in white letters “Chevaux 8§ Hommes 40.” base of Rouen. At this place they were put through a week’s rigid training in trench war- On the morning of the eighth day they paraded at 10 o'clock and were inspected and passed by General fare. H-———, then were was j&iven an outfit of khaki and drew his ing soldier, except for the slight| and -the| it does not take’ long to find out a man’s char- lacter, and Lloyd was promptly dubbed ! Army two paces he would have jumped overboard to escape, but was After hours of bumping over the uneven French roadbeds they arrived at the training think ‘you have the suff in you, my boy, so goodby, and the best of luck to you The next day the battalion took over their part of the trenches. It | Lappened to be a very quiet day. The artiilery behind the lines was still, except for an occasional ' shell sent over to let the Germans know the gunners were not asleep. In the darkness, in single file, the copmany slowly wended their way { down the communication trench to the front line. No one noticed Lioyd's white and drawn face. After they had relieved the com- pany. in the trenches, Lloyd, with two of the old company men, was put on guard in one of the traverses. Not a shot was fied from fhe German lines, and no one paid any attention to him crouched on. tae firing step. Y On the first time in a new recruit is not required to stand with his head “over the top.” He only “sits it out,” while the older men- keep watch. At about 10 o'clock all of a sud- den, he thought hell had broke loose, and crouched and shivered up against the parapet. Shells started bursting, as he imagined, right in their trench, when in fact they were landing about a hundred yards in rear of them, in the second lines. One of the older men om guard, turning to his mate, said: “There goes Fritz with those damn- ed trench mortars again. It's about time our artillery “‘taped’ them, and sent over a few. Well, I'll be damned. where’s that blighter of a draft man gone to? There’s his rifle leaning against the parapet. He must Rave : | leggea it. Just keep vour eye peeled, Dick, while I report it to the ser- geant. 1 wonder if the fool knows he can be shot for such tricks as leavin' his post.” Lioyd had gone. When the tremnch mortars opened up, a maddening ter- ror seized him and he wanted to jrun, to get away from the horrible din, anywhere to safety. So quietly sneak- marched to the|ing around the traverse, he came to quartermaster’s, to draw their#gas hel- | the enirance of a. communication mets and trench equipment. trench,: and ran madly and blindly At 4 in the afternoon they were!down it, running into traverses, again hustled into cattle cars. This|stumbling into- muddy holes and fall- time the journey lasted two days.|ing full lenth.over trench grids. They disembarked at the Town of Groping blindly, with his arms Frevent and could hear a distant dull booming. With Enees shaking, Lloyd noise and nearly dropped when the asked the 'sergeant what was, the find Syracuse in the league, even if Dartmouth does stay in. other industrials companics :re con- templating similar action ‘were cregit- ed because of recent large returis Additional factors of favoruble im- port included the improved state of the iron and steel industry, as indicat- | ed by the marked increase of caipaci s of St. Paul. heavvweight. clearly out- pointed 'Gus Christie of Mélwaukee in NOTICE their ten round bout here tonight, but failed to land a knockout. 1 am going to New York for a few days for a sale. From now on my | blace of business will be on Vergason Avenue, Norwich Town, Conn. ‘H. YURMAN, Furrier st THE CHELSEA SAVINGS BANK . Norwleh, Conn., Feb. 4, 1918, Mermaids to Mest. i Barly in June an Australian gir! | swimm#r will reach this country tol show her prowess in the water against i the best of the American girls. Miss ! 2eported by thio United: Biatos Ste e | Fanny Durack. world’s amateur w o :”":& :“n"’, Rginee (f;'r"‘;-" A Elden N i s { man swimming champion has nev been beaten but in view of the which gave impetus to the strijes made by the woman swim- | mers of this country. followers of the sport want to be shown. Booms Kansas Gily. Ebpets is one of seVeral league men who believe that City some day will have a club one of the biz circuits. Kansas 1 City, in the American association last {vear, made plenty of money. The |samés drew large crowds all season. Some time ago President Johnson of the American league put in a boost for Kansas City. declaring that it ought ito have a franchise in major league icompany. The only drawbs is Kan- ager Pat Moran of the Phillies is try- | it A A 5 fiok Yo M caailopHihe: vetarkm sl the 1and baseball is reorganized Missouri’s 3 | prosperous town may finally get i ler to some minor league club. 'fhe fhamed circle. g S Barrew Sox’s Ninth. Edward G. Barrow is the ninth man- ager secured by the Red, Sox since they came into being. Connie Mack is the only manager the Athletics ever had. Seven hosses have issued orders in Washington and eight in .Cleveland. Chicago has had seven and Detroit six, while New York has records of eight leaders and St. Louis-one less. sion. + Transcontinentals and coalers were| the foremost features of the rails division at gains of one to t ! minor issmes such as Missouri \ 'rze Board of Directors of this Bank |fic preferred, Wabashes and Brics havé this day declared £ dividend for "u’mmmum:-? o monda e i } the current six months at the rate of |ugual, interest centering in Dcople’s {foar per cent. per annum, payabl Gas, Consolidated Gas and Americar | . PAYEDIS O% | melephons. - Motors and tobaceos were | and after the 15th of March. Beavy av.allstimoasihe: Iatter 2 FRANK HEMPSTEAD, ing two to five points in connec onl feb12TuThs ‘Treasurer. | with gtock issues. g U. S. Steels sharp reaction with ——1 y in ¢ Lavender Sliding. Time was when Jimmy Lavender. | the old Holyoke pitcher, was consid- ered a mighty valuable major league asset. But now the major leagues : Hummel Worrying. John Hummel is still worrying about ! that $150 which is due him from the +Buffalo club of the International lea- i gue. The Springfield man is also con- | siderably up in the air over his place iof labor this coming season as he didn't know whether or not he has a right to dicker for a contract. coppers brought some irregularity the 'last hour, leaders ferfeiting one to two points. Steel closed at a net loss of 1 1-4 points. Total sales amount- ed to 723,000 shares. ‘Bonds were irregular, ' spetulative rails showing heaviness. Liberty is- sues also eased. Total sales, par value, aggregated $4,050,000. Old U. 8. %s declined 1-4 per cent on call,'but the several Panama is- sues rose 1-4 to one per cent. s L 25 re 1 Resta.to Race Again. Dario Resta, 1916 speedway cham- pion, will be in the auto-racing game again this year. Resta. will complete in several California races this spring ks Lichter Breaks a World’s Record. Chicago Feb, 27.—Lichter of the §5 Well, sh b e exponte ‘o"a tyw e« ey you san ‘own e o ji if - Chicago Athletic Association’ broke the the. best Victratps n F Seab A and later enter speedway tilts in the [ o faB? [0 R i€, ISSIOHET FORE o2 e ;e g ol i St Adw ~ Bast. He will drive a car of his oWn | ' making the aistance in 15 3.5 (PLAUT-CADDEN BUILDING) 206 Adv. design. seconds at the annual C. A. A. scheol 195443 “Wain St Norwich. Comn. e RIEREAY swimming meet tonight. The previ- lease catalogue and list e Federal Still Kicking. ous record was 16 3-5 seconds. ;m : For a defunct orxmmiz:flon. that ex- —_— Federal league certai can make a i i . 8500 dm lot of noise. It keeps butting into the Lavls OutbolpnLanafond 20 100 Amm limelight in a fashion that lads one | Buffalo. N. Y. Feb. 37.—Ted Lewis, 1000 Am to suspect it has as many lives as the | Welterweight champion, had the better 706 Am proverbial, or w. k. cat. of Willie Langford, negro, in a tehi- e Heian T e round bout here last night. Joe Well- . 2 ! ing, the navy lightweight, stopped 10400 A Dr. Alired Richards e S Minskd Outpoints Christie. 'Eddie Dorsey, the negro boxer, in the Superior, Wis., Feb. 27.—Billy Minske eighth round. DENTIST Office Hours: 3 9-12 & m.—1.30 to 5 p. m. Wed. and Sat. Evenings 7-9 Room 305 Thayer Building Tel. 299 Residenc.; tel. 1225 v T YRR DENTIST DR. E: J. JONES Suite 46 Shannon Building Wake elevator Bhetucket Streen entrance, Fhone “ome HINC 13 Come o 1000 Amv 400 Am. 200 Am 7800 Anuconda l 300 4 43106 Tald 7200 Bal — “THE PALACE 78 Franklin Street 55 e RN N co*r-ron.w.u New York,- Feb. 27.—Spet § cotton quict; *middling 32.45. Cotton ’futures opened firm. March 3135; ; October 29.3 December P. SHEA Chi 3300 C. M. ; > MONEY. Bowling- THE AETNA- Bilkiards | & 5.2 New>Tork, Feb. 37 —Call maonay E g -2; low rate 7 ALLEYS Phone Conn. 6 TABLES | 130 C I B e i Majestic Buildi_ng, Shetucket St. mc R last loan 4. ey Norwich, Conn. 560 Chino PUINR o gged 0 i o . Bowl and play Billiards for exercise | 1o oo oo & comN— Weh Low. Gl . and recreation e s TN E L T O 18 DO aavertising medium 1B ] 130 Coni et e on e = P o LA S Eastern t egual to The Bule | 3800 Corn s8% . 80 291, i Aetin for pusmess resulis. 13860 Crucible a9ty 2e s SOME BOYS, THOSE CHAMPS! SPORTING NOTES Dick Hoblitzel will be examined at Chillcothe on March 11 for a commis- sion in the army and then will go to Red Sox until he is called. George McBride is under contract with the Senators, and Griffith plans Mec- Bride can be used for regular duty if any of Griff's infielders cannot play. to use him as first Heutenant. ' Fielder Jones has lost the three left handers who were counted upon as likely winners a year ago. An opera- tion forced Wellman out of the game, Plank retired votuntarily and Koob has enlisted. Musser,gghe new pitcher of the Chi cago White Sox, was a strike-out-spe cialist in the minor leagues. Row land is counting on Musser and an- Schellenbech to other recruit pitcher. stick with the club this season. Koob, Wellman. Plank and Hamilton last came out of the trench into the village, or what use to be a village, before the German artillery razed it. Mixed with his fear, he had a pecil-, jar sort of cunning, which whispered to him to avoid all sentries. because if they saw him he would be sent back to that awful distraction in the front line, and perhaps be killed or laimed. The thought made him shudder, the, cold sweat pouring out in beds on his face. ¥ On his left, in the ' thenches he could make cut the shattered forms of trees: crawling on his hands and knees stopping and cruuddled with fear at each shell-burst, he gradually reached ‘an old orchard anc hid at the base of a shot torn apple tree. To Be Continued Tomorrow. ALWAYS RELIABLE KIDNEY REMEDY For the past twenty years we have | been selling Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root and our customers who have used it found it a very valuable preparation for what it is intended. I have taken Swamp-Root myself and obtaincd ver: satisfactory results, and [ balieve it to be a very reliable and valuable the southpaws Who were with the | CoCIne: ! P L Browns last season, will be missing Yours very .respectfully, left-handers next season will be B. I. JEWELL, Drusgist. from the club next summer. The team’s “Lefty” Leifield and Nick Cullop. It looks as if the Red Sox have lost First Baseman Dick Hoblitzel, for the: latest report is that he soon ex- pects a commission in the army.® In this event Manager Barrow. will play Stuffy Mclnnis at his old position at first base. During the recent Ameri- cdn league meeting in. this city Man- r Connie Mack was.asked if Mc- His reply was very characteristic, for he Innis could play second base. said: man.” “Stuff is a great first base Hans Wagner's birthday will be duly celebrated in Pittsburgh this week by and among the speakers will be Ed Bar- row, new manager of the Boston Red Sox, -who was Wagner's manager in Dutchman went Fred Clarke, for- ‘mer manager of the Pirates, and John- ny Evers. Bvers is quite popular in ! the Smoky City, and a few years ago the Uriversity of Pittsburgh honored of the Pittsburgh Stove league, Paterson before the to the big league; him with the degree of Doctor Philosophy. President Barney'Dreyfuss of the Pirates was cleaning out his desk the other day, and he foumd the original the Louisville club to Pittsburgh. The most striking part ‘of the contract was the statement that only $25.000 was paid for Hans Wagner, Fred Deacon Phillippi Claude Ritchey and fourteen or fifteen lesser lights. This is some- thing of a revelation in these days. when Charles F. Weeghman attends baseball meetings armed with a $250,- agreement of the transfer of 060 bankrool. BELL-ANS { Absolutely Removes | Indigestion. Druggists refund money if it fails. 26¢ June 12; 1516 Concord, N. H. Letter to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. Prove What Swamp-Root Will DoFor You Send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample size bottie. Tt will convince anyone. You will also receive a booklet of valuable information, telling about the. kidneys and bladder. When writing, be sure and mention the Norwich Daily Bul- letin. Medium and large size bottles for sale at all drug stores. John & Geo. H. Bliss Largest Assortment of 3 DIAMOND JEWELRY BROOCHES | AMERICAN HOUSE Special Rates to Theatrs Troupes Traveling Men, Ete. Livery Connection Shétucket Street FARREL & SANDERSON, Props Phome 734, ’ stretched out in front of him, he at! |5y ARTHUR GUY EMPEY | ® AN AMERICAN SOLDIER WHO SERVED AS A MACHINE