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Bnnmn Bisiness Citica 430, . Builetin Editorial Rnu 5 Bulletin Jol Ofiieo 35-2. Willimanglc Ofice, €25 Batw' Strest | Telephone — Nerwich Fn:l-y, L 1901, cverage . 1903, aver MEMBER OF THE Amewrsfi PRESS The Asscciated Press u‘nclufn- 1y entitled to the' use for republica+ tion of al} rews despatches cradit- ed to it lor mot otherwise éredit- paper and alse the local ed herein. ights of republication of special despatches hereln are alse relfl\'ed | the pmmd issue which should re- “Right is More Precious than Puno" CORRECT THE TROUBLE, MEET THE SITUATION. Even though some of the first! ink- Iings that everything was not pro- gressing as it sbould in the produc- tion of war supplies in this country came in the shape of criticism of administration, and in spite of the steps which have since been taken to bring about improvements, to elimi- nate mismanacement, eut oyt waste and get down to a real and substan- tial basls of adequate production- at the. eariiest possible moment, we are wetting infermation to tha effect that we are coming -far from meeting our programmes and that. as the resuit we _are-pot only seriously handicap- ping ourselves but that we are failing to coms up to what our allies are ex- pecting of us. Much has been expected of Lhil. hig. nation gnd. we haye been confident bat we ocould make good .in this re- i spect. We have raised a Jarge’ army. fn ‘a.comparatively shbrt. time: and - large additions are still underway. We have furnished an enormous amount of foodstuffs and war ‘material for their suppert and’for the benefit of our allies, but there are ways in whith, if reports are trne. we are fall- ing down. Such being the case We cannot af- ford to disregard them. We must face ‘the faots and we rmgust do our utmost to eradicate the defects. It is useless to disregard eriticism by: the claim that it is entirely political. If we are not ‘doing what has heen aimed at and what. it has been wsaid we eould do it ie time to-learn why and do our ut- most to correct the trouble whatever and -wherever it may bs. When we do that, and not until then, will we be able to come up to and exceed ex. pectations. GROSS NEGLIGENCE, In view of the plots which have been carried out in|this country by the agents of the enemy, who in spite of the fact that they are being watch- ed, followed and imprisoned are still getting in the'r work for tHe father- land, it was not surprising that the mayor of Jersey City should he so positive in his belief that the regent destructive fire and explosions which leveled a large warehouse and de- stroyed valuable property and rail- road equipment were caused by pro- German hands. Although the responsibility for the ioss of a million and a half to two million dollars worth of property has not been entirely cleared up there are good reasons from .the disclosures which have thus far been made to think that it was not after all a Ger- man plot, barring the possibility of course that the employe of the ware- house who has conressed is ‘an alien enemy. As the matter now g!ands, with this employe under arrest on the charge of arson, it appears to be a case of gross negligence. According to 'his state- ment, the fire started from his attempt to crush out z burning cigarette butt which had been thrown on the floo: where there was an accumulation of chlorate of potash and that lie was ignorant of the dapger involved, This makes it apparent’that not only was the order against smoking in the building being violated but that due care was not being observed where in- flammable material was kept. Such conditions surround .too many cases where disastrous fires take place and it ean be expected as long as there|’ is a lax observince of rules and. peo- ple are disposed to take chanees thy mixing fire and powder that there wili be frequent repetitions. NEW YORK'S OPPCRTUMN!ITIES. The opportunity for the state of Now York to contribute materially to she relief of the transportation pr After having spent millions of del- lars in improving the camal through the state¢ which will be .capable of handling ten million tons- of freight | pression that the e| Pected and ‘itis to be hoped that it thered haps we'll have a little quiet. T :|the third-time you've.fallen over that thing to-night!’ And, muttering a\few oehev things, highly nncmmfirr returned to his mutton, while Hil- nu;-, wearing her outraged dignity like to the kitchen, and I dhcbn warm, -which, as every one knows, as good as stone cold. AIDING THE NEW HAVEN. © Just what it has been realized ought{he to be done and what ‘it wasyconsid- cred would be necessary sooner or later is now to. be done accord- ing to' the statement from Seeretary McAdeo that the federal railroad ad- ministration will come to the assist- nce of the New Haven road and ad- t & sufficient amount to take its ndtes which fall due the middle of next mon Recent -utments that the govern- ment .was not going to give any at- tention to this system 'in a financial way could hardly be believed. Whether it was hoped thereb to_give the im- Amb se was comvuised with mirth at this. Hc is, you know, orfly 8, and also emitted the peculiarly = rasping sounds which indicate mirth in the small boy. Father adores him, and fondly cherishes the delusion that he is sensitive; hence he has never. been spanked. But just at that moment hnurs glance, directed at Ambrose, was, to say the very least, lowering. He laid down his fork and looked— Jjust looked—his utter disgust, “Ambrose subgsided, and kicked me under the table, as-an outlet. I sur- mised, for hig bottled. up feelings. 1 should have resented this astounding piece of cheek if the air had not been w charged with sulpburic w) ings. It really is shocking—the way Ambrose treats me, I mean. T suppose novel writers would call it camaraderie, and lét it go at that, but as I am near- ly 18, and have had my hair up for a vear, it xs high time he learned proper respect. I shall speak to him about it. “But, apyway, Hildur brought father his dessert with the mien of a patient martyr about to bg sacrifieed in an ex- cellent” caus could almost see a faint halo gl mfl; amt her head. pecting that the pronosed isgue of preferred stock would take cars-of the- situation is not disclesed but-it became apparent‘that the stockholders of the road were not prepared to take care of this matter and that it was there- fore imcumberit upon. ihe part of the government under its contrel -of- the raliroads to step in and meet the sit- uation. Y Bu; in addition to this netice of the axtepsion of aid to the ‘railrdad ‘mych additional assyrance 'is .given by the further xnnounoemem that the loan is | 10 bé made at six per cent, or ong' per cent, lower than the rate fixed for the rental which. the.road- will reccive from _the gevermment - will - not.- only meet the ‘interest om -this-and other indebiedness..but be sufficient to pay cther fixed charges and vield a stantia] surphp each pmeme%t “and othar The anquestionably coming at a time when it is\needed-and: from a source from which it cught to be ex- u Maeterlinck, fvom whom we are £sed a “vuluue of pyre humor,” will*he the means of zetting the sys- tem back upon: its feet even though it s boynd to be.a slow process. THE RECAPTURE OF ODESBA. Some" idea of the ease with which the Teutonig forees walked over the in‘the southern ‘part of that country ‘and eapturéd Odessa 2nd the maval port of Nikolivev is furnished by the announcement that after a matier of two weeks such re- erganization of the Russians in thaf rection as could be made in that brief time has béen able to recapture these valuable. points.- It may pot have been done- without bloody fighting for the |ten troops holding them ‘eould be ‘expects ed to do their utmost fo refain pos+ session, but it is guite evident ‘thay superior numbers 'wen out, all of which gees to show thl';flu hmn‘l: of the central powers thers is muc Jess. than has heen enticipated. Rt s 1 ey trayed by: Sir Henry. The vanqui That being the ease it is possiblé|wore always annihilated, not. he says, that the -same gonditions hold true|in all cases by the mere fury of de- throbghout the ‘territory whith Ger- {structive brutality, but in some cases many has grabbed east of the former|bY stern’ néesssity. “A civilian army fighting front and fhat it is relving (125, \fs comevlesarlat, o barharian upon reputation ‘and’ the fise”of the A rue, 85 tho = iron fist wherevet a hold is obtain- ed rather than numbers to eontrol the sltyation in the east while the great bulic of ‘the troops have been rushed to "the ‘west™ fronf-for the offensive which "fs'now ‘underway, In yiew ot the polcy which' Ger- many. bas. bean cartying.out. in that eouniry it is net surprising that the Ukrainiang are found to' be aiding in the support of the revelutionary forces. They have found those with whom peae¢ was madé hard taskmas. ters _and ha ebably. realized the position into which /they have been thrown. Thus while the opposition and the strength ghown by it comes as a surprise.thers can be no ques- tion but what those backing the revo- Jution are- able to come back if they are disposed to get and held together. home. n Maeterlinck festival in Brussels Hve years ago and the bestowal on him by King Albert of the Order of Leopold failed to goften his estrangement. But the events of August, 1914, were more powerful. He wrote at mce in pride and penitence, offering to um. 2 is a grim commentary on Bol- shevik rule that the lon of one-third of the Russian r may mean a saving of life. Tt ig lmm}s:lhle to esti- mata the cost in bleed of internal war is. data. from Chinese statesmen of the nllt rank. — lTnbky'l glan of extermination re- sembles must perish. together of starvation.” The Bolshevik massed murderers have little commissariat, their swarming victims none;’ there is not enough food for either! Dickensians will be interested in tb® change of rectors.at St. George the Martyr, Southwark, for what to many js merely a familiar tram terminus, is to them “the Church of Little Dorrit.* ‘blckens knew St. George's well during his boyhood days, when,he lived op- posite it in Lant uu—eet during his family's confinement in the adjacent Marshalsea prison, and in “Little Dor~ rit” he made the old church the scene where “the child ef the Marghalsea” was christened, where she and Maggie found refuge\one night in the old ves- trywremn.lmn; to this day very much as he described it—and where at last she was married to Arthur Wenham. EDITORIAL NOTES. Thers is .no serjous shortdge of dough in this counfry exgept the kind that is made from wheat flour, The Library of Gray's Inn, which furnishes Camberwell with ~a new chief librarian, is centuries older thar the oldest public libraries. The exact data of ils origin is unknown, but in 1655 Robert Chaloner bequeathed his law books to his cousin, Robert Nowell, at Gray's Inn and secured there by chaine.” The-growth of the collectior was slow, for towards the close of the 17th century it numbered oniy 320 volumes. . Today it ranks amons the best legal libaries in the kingdom ——e e There arz still a great many Mis. sourians relative to that long distance gun which was used to shell Paris, — The Ukraine is alresdly beginning to smart under the presence of the Aus- tro-German troops within its borders. e Every cool spell at ' this season of the year only ‘whets/the appetite for the coming of the kitchen garden sea- son. Whe has written the best poem oc- casioned by the war? A ‘company of us were goinz over some of the goo” things that had arisen out of e events. One of the first fo be m tiored as “jn the rinning” was Pu pert Brooke's famili: sonnet he zinnine, “if T shonld die. thipk o»™ this of me.” " A ‘discriminating crit! reminded vs cf.the faw noble fra~ ments bv JTulian Gronfel. But {b- best of all! We claimed first place fr “Lengtlh of Days, to tha Early Dead )' Battle,” by Alice Meynell. What a lot of business. the firing squads would have if things which go on in this country took place in Ger- many. % UL These are the days when the ad- vance of the British in Palestine gets much less attention than it ordinarily | " would. The greatest surprise in connection with the finding of & plano in a Ger- man dugout'is’that it was classed as “P"'th> carried oft”from Liberty Hall by ¢ T lady_the wi East There are indications now and then fli?:g myxm”'dez: m:\; as y:‘ ‘that even the bolsheviki do not take unfurled, many tradesmen in Dubli kindly to-the idea’of having Germany{and elsewhere are playing up to ir control Russia. There are hotels as well as beardir- 3 s hom'n“nt w!;:eb n;otesql th;‘ faith o It isn't safe to-do much rebuilding|SPeclally welcomed. Sinn Fein notr fn northern France until it is certain|P2PeT: Tepibiee . Calendaws. e Tast Pre) & - that the enémy is.not going to travel llme;:oelw{ioszz are ;:l?i i: :'l;‘;r that way again. on the quays, A haberdasher adve- tises, “Shirts made by Rebels f- The man on the cerner says: Those| Rebels." who go in for increasing the food a R e ' hould ha no rms ‘woul ave gone frow b s i 7 prefudice] g ngland to Ruesia will Bud . thow against . freckles. selves in American hands. Quite » interesting catalogue’could be writ Now that ' the -Philadelphia- German | ten of things that were to have ber editors have been freed in a treasen|shipped - through perilous Trade follows. the flag. they and, though the Sinn Fein flag ofiginal ‘Big drum. by the way, e seas .t case they should not constrie it as a Museovy. Coffee, for le, is bet iicense te extend their activitles. ter, thanks to one such item. A hand sarhe. of .coffee-grinder All that was mecessary to bring tmmrm'hwmmgheeanh the fact that others had inven;ud gh nd today 5“"'" ‘Whose c E o which wilk ghoot farther thari the B R e was the putting into| mixture creditaBle to themselves an operation of this great wonder _gun. m preduct of that my soup was luke-ito GLEANED FROM FORHIGN EXCHANGES “to be pleced in the Library was unwnchsd Fas getting c il One wu umbles “T stole a clsuee ~at mother, who, with the most face, was con- ‘suming the coneoction on hel dessert plate. ‘Parbarous!’ T hnw!od myseif; internally, you know, ‘to is{have have things about that people fall over, Just like Aunt Celia—just exactly like Aunt Celia. Why, her living reom is gly erowded with layers of carpet, three, I think—one t ous! menully‘ T felt comlmted "!{fldur stumped around the table. She looked very black. I had visions; of unwashed dishes and dusty rooms. 'T trembled. There was just exactly 50 ‘cents in . my purse, the last pathetic shred ol my allowance, and it was Tuesday.” When Hildur came close 1! humed. I have a particular species} of beam that always pacifies Hildur. “I caught her .capable’ hand under the table and the silver piece and I panted. “Father was supplying ‘Uh-huhs’ at exactly the right places in ther's s;eadv stream of conversation and did notice, “Hildut relayed,. insensibly ; lifted her feet as she went out. even smiled a trifle. “I breathed again! “That goes to prove what I have al~ ways said” remarked the polite per- soni who had been listening attentive- ly, “that it is not necessary to .go to France in order to achieve high ad- venture,”—Chicago News. she She | the machines which should have gone 1o Russia, v—— Two Canadian soldiers were tdiking. One said, I hear the Australiars were ir. Jerusalem on Christmas day.” ‘To which the other replied. “Bercher the shepherds watched their tlocks that night.” 4 The term, a ertime,” which the Australions use to describe a cheerful leaye, comes home to its birthplace, little altered. “Bosky,” with a similar e e THE mrwnm»fl i IN 7 EXCITING PARTS DRAMA—COM! JEDY—THRILLS . OUVEW IN BETTY TAKES A HAND | A DELIGHTFUL COMEDY IN. e ————————— ' CURRENT EVENTS Mat. 2.46: ds 1ife i As he he | protecting -another. Entirely barbar- At S £ And haying thus relieved mysell.% matum to Russia is reconcilable with o the programme which was agreed be- tween the-Chancellor and the Reich- stag Majority when the Chaneellor took office? ‘The uitimatum means the {1 complete vic of the onists. Either the Reichstag bloc. with. " its policy of agreement, is powerless in o changed their eourse. Our poliey must be honest. ‘How can anybody ‘talk any Jonger of a defensive war, or say that we do not want to take anything from any people? ~German troops are to serve. as- police in Russia; “1‘1.13 01 tolerahle that German soldiers Dbe the executioners of the Russian Re. volution. We have broken our that we would not interfere R sia’s internal affairs. The Ukraine Treaty b“m con- cluded with a Government that does not exist, and the Ukriane will un- doubtedly. join Russia m It is impossible ~to reggrd . ‘the Ukraine |" peace as a stage on the road te gene- | ral peace, -The -“frontier rectification” in Poland means noth- land. stories uamvnit.\u, Whereas in real- ity revolutionary order Finland. - We' r playing the part of a liberator among the independent and mature people of Finland, which has long had universal suffrage for men and ~Lon- don Times. meaning, was in English colloguialism in’ the eighteenth century. And “bos- ky" is still current slang with us, but lmvifi;\{ 100 generous use of the wine- eup. ere Is one phrase in the book of slang which s decidedly pleasing, “Australian grip.” _ It stands for that best of greetings, the honest, hearty hand-shake. We use ithe werd ‘“coupon” pretty. t | frequently nowadays, perhaps, without realizing what a pewcemer it is into Engligh speech. The credit of its in- troduction is given to Thomas Cook, of tourist fame, who adapted the name and the thing from the French in con- nection with his excursion and hotel tickets. TLong ago, however, we had & similar word, culpon, derived from ‘mediaeval French, which signified to slice, and also, strangely enough, “a slice of meat”! He put an interesting possibili Buppose that instead of the Alli d Sovereigns capturing Napoleon, Napo- leon had, as was possible in 1813 or 1814, eaptured the Allled Sovereigns. “There would have been no question of Napoleon's immuring or exiling' the sovereigns of Austria, Prussia or Rus- sla; their countries would not have endured it. ceded provinces and fortresses, and Tegained their masters in exchange.” ‘Were the sovereigns of those countries, with their military supports, now safe- ly in bondage, would their people give a pinch of land or a handful of mor- tar to redeem them? In capturing Jericho General Allen- by’s troops have trespassed on a por- tion of the Sultan’s private estate. It has always proved a difficult city to defend, since its dramatic fall before the ramghorn offensive of Joshua. One excuse for its frequent defeats has been urged in the humidity of its at-| mosphere, the town lying in a hollow, but that circumstance could hardly account for the collapse of the walls. Many theories have been advanced to obtain credence for the Biblical ac- count, some asserting that the Eng- lish version is too drastic, and that the walls merely gave way under the continued shock of tramping hosts, sufficiently to make a breach. An- other view is that the walls, “high and fenced up to heaven,” toppled over of their own weight, under that steady tramp of armed men. An appellant, named Albert. Cox, who ~appesred recently ' before the Pensions. Tribunal, had in his time been:— Sheep farmer in New Zealand. Rough rider. Petty officer in the Navy. Detective in India. Sergeant-major in the Foreign Le- gion before Antwerp. Employee at a whaling stotion. Machine Gun Corps instructor. Ordinary driver. It was said Judge Parry, who heard the appeal, ‘a most romantic career. Cox, Who was discharged from the Army as medically unfit owing to de- fective hearing, attributed his deaf-| ness to the noise of machine gun fire.! The judge allowed his appeal against wecall to the Army.—London Chronicle. JIn the course of his speech at the mieeting of the Prudential - Assurance Company March T7th, Sir . Thomas Dewey, the chairman, described a re- parkable chart whizh had been pre- vared showing the rates of mortality »f the whole of their male industrial wlicyholders during the year 1913, 915, 1916, and 1917:. He gtated that before the w; in ‘913—the mortality experience eMctly ‘eproduced that of the ‘latest Census “able, particularly at. the military ges. At the age 3f 21 the mortality ate in 1915 was five times that of he pre-war experience; in 1916 nine imes; and in 1917 12 times. The diagram shows. that in 1913 the ote of mortality for men of 21 was -ather less than four per 1000; in 915, 20; in 1916, 38; and in 1917, 48. Ast year the rate of mortality-for aen of 20 was equal to that of men € 46.—London Times. This quotation is taken from the eichstag speech in which the leader - the Socialist Minority, Herr Haase, Dmt-'td the N Their subjects would have |g German an- THE DCCTRINE OF NON-RESISTANCE By RAYMOND 8. SPE ARS of The Vigilantes, Russia adopted the pelicy of mon- resistance and of turning the other cheek. They fourht among . selves; over itheV. They dlsslpuefl their strength and they listened to with Germany, who had to them the doctrine of unpreparedness. At -the same time Pruseiapism had gotten itself into perfect posture for offense. were heralding their successs in dis organizing Germany and making mu- tinies among the German gun-makers, a fine strike scene was etaged. That scene sent ten million Russian pacifists into a great ecstasy of joy—The War was Ended! ‘Within a few days, Germany cuffed the asinine Russian pacifists on both cheeks, as offered, wiped the abandoned Russian forts off the Russian map and proceeded, to invade the land where the fools predominated. There is no traiter so unspeakably asgerous as the one whose good in- tefftions go' no further than to keep his own skin, or-the skin of his own |spawn, safe. In Russia there stands the example of the Pacifist Nation. Germany is \propaganda. Then they undertook to | make an- equable treaty on these lines}| swarming over Russia’s mést valuable terrain, planted with skiliful proga- gandists and blind pacifist traitors, Now Russia must fall back: its habit of peace thought must be remade along the lines of natyre. With half its resources in the hands of a bandit jnation it must begin the task of driv- ing that bandit nation from its fairest flelds and most valuable facturing resources. OTHER VIEW POINTS Greenwich has a dog killer who is most active. . His record to date is eighty-two dogs in three months, At that rate it would be perfectly safe to raise sheep there~—Bridgeport Post. ——— There will be no reasenable dissent from the ruling of the Connecticut pub- lic ulfl’t&y commission favorable te the six-cent_trolley fare. All .the public is_entitled to is the desired degree of efficiency. Recelving that under the prevailing costs of production, they can have mo just quarrel over the ex- tra penny. — New Haven Journal- Courier. By glancing at the calendar we feel that it is now safe to venture the &s- sertion that spring has come at last. FEven subsequent climatic cendi- tions attempt to prove the fallacy of this statement, we can still lean back on the good old almanac for correb- oration. Besides, there are signs aof spring _all about us—the infallible signs of spring. Of course, the robins have arrived and the tulips and ero- ouses are beginning to peep through the ground. Then, too, the members of Co ss are sending out their an- nual s ;%Iy of seeds. But there are other and more convincing signs. The children roller skating on the side- walks, darting in and out, while the aged and infirm shudder, is ene proof. The boys -are spinning tops and the girls are bouncing rubber balls at the end of an elastic. We also see the boys playing “megs” eon the side. walks and the attics in many homes are being ransacked for last year's baseball and bat. Added to these are two other sure enough signs. 'We hes. itate to mention one, but it is whisper- ed that the newsbeys are ‘the alleys “shooting craps.” flgmcn:bllr How Jmph in the o gypt laid es in m. of prosperi p-u‘ifi. times of adversity? up YOur resources in War- an- Stamps. manu- | pr .gathering -in The other | WALI»-—TDI fiwmiu' flfi M UESDAY— 2 : hrwmmbflm m-h{imbh ‘New York comedy success. Full of w-nd ginger. play that made Margaret lllington the Don't RSDAY—' 5PARTS THAT YOU WILL ENJOY talk of Naw York. Showing ohe sister's great sacrifice for another. . “m"h- great play by David nee 10c and 20c. M InnDll y CN%L?OPINC FRIDAY DOUG. FAIRBANKS In * %CODE memsemiy “THE EAGLE’S EYE” WILUAN J. YNN Recently uwo!u.a. SECRET SERVICE ~ AUDITORIUM TREATRE FOUR SHOWS TODAY—1:30, 3, 6 and 8 Tommy Levene 4w us Dancing Dolls THE BIG LAUGHING SHOW ' ARE MARRIED POLICEMEN SAFE A VERY FUNNY SUNSHINE COMEDY —TUNEFUL TUNES “IN AGAIN-OUT AGAIN” BREED Today and Saturday ViVIAN MARTIN THE SUNSET TRAIL CHARLIE CHAPLIN, “THE CHAMPION”" Latest War News in Heayst Pathe Weekly BAY THEATRES? : fave Bee B&d"“l‘z‘t‘%w ¥ wmumumsuow At the moment when the bolsheviki|: BREED THEATRE, | April 1and 2 It is the well-known New Britain Herald, 11. spring fever. One trouble with some of our food conservation down the line is that if one of them finds a: variety of food he persondlly. does not like, he condemns it as superfluous, and a waste of good food timber. Pastry has suffered from that trouble: now the doughnut is dragged in. The doughnut is rich, i digestible, wasteful of precious fats, unfit for the human stomach. - This is the indictment. If it is proven, vale the doughnut. But they have been geeking to prove it for a good many years and they have not made much ogress. ; There -are three classes of “fried cakes,” as they used to call them in 22 GRAINL 'rmgum in Al “Smileage Books,” issued by Faderal Milltary ntertainment - Council, pro- vide freo admission to these jheatres. Sina one To YOUR soldiervor to NY soldier. Price sl For sale at the fellowing places: The Porteous & Mitchell Co. Hughes Co, h?thbones Druag Store. cker's Druz The: Lee & 058000 o The Wauregan Hotel Office. Mara & Eggleton. George Madden (Cigar Slur.). Engler's Pharmacy, K. of C. Rooms. Rlnx £ msk Druggists, C. A, Office. H M !nrmx J. C. Macpherson. —_— (Bonon the country—doughnuts, cruilers and sinkers.” Two of them are healthful if properly. made, and, also if prop- erly made, less expensive than some suppose. TRhe mere “sinker” of bad cooks and of commerce, a: sporge for grease, is, of course, unhealthy, and should be unpalatable enough to kill itself. But the rightly made doughaut or cruller bas all its grease on the out- side. Its light consistency repels the boiling fat in which it is fried, and cooled and used again for frying.— Hartford Times, DIAPEPSIN FDR IHDIG!STION : Stops Indigestion, Dyspepsia, . Heartbum, Gases, Sourness and Stomach Distress Eat *‘Pape’s Diapepsin”’ like Candy— Makes Upset Stomachs feel Large 50 cent case. Apy drug store, Relief in five minutes! Time it! fine THRIFT CERTIFICATES 0 : AT 4 Per Cent ' WAR SAVING STAMPS, 41/3 Per Cent THE THAMES NATIONAL BANK STAMPS F INDEBTEDNESS permits substantially all of it to be !