Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 22, 1918, Page 4

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NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, JUNE 22, 1318 4—SHOWS TODAY—4 130, 3,15, 6, 8 p. m. » Charles Ray IN HIS OWN HOME TOWN . i T never saw anything like it!” ob-|home, who lived with his widowed Ukraine and by the revolt which is| Of a recent evening I had the pleas- | served the wife of the tall, lank house- | niece, who was his heir. Eliphalet taking place in its capital, Kiev. ure of listening to a singular per- |holder as she turned away from the |had been ane of those sturdy business Allied vietory. could of course be de- | formance by @ cat-bird, a vaudevillien | front window. ‘I mean the way Eu- men who could skin a turnip or bite a bout sueh »|@mong: birdsy The sun was low in the | phemia and her mother malte doormats | nail jn two in the couree of the day's penied uggy (1o britgs § such a | 0 nd the other birds were singing | of themselves f6r that aged uncle who|work, and he had a tidy piece of readjustment in Russia but Russia|WB» TUC N2 Cone PR % *ihnll | is visiting them! To be sure, he is|money. FHe was cresseved and bald ; cannot leave that task entirely o its| yhistier was heard from a mneighbor- | extremely rich and has told them he|and bowlegged, and so his niece felt Six Part Ince Production friends. Tt must fisht for itself even|ing tree. At.first I thought it was a|has willed them his fortune, but it's|tolerabiy secure in spite of his sterling as it has in the past and the quicker |hilarious oriole, then it sounded more|awful. Just now, when they started|virtues and fine character. PAULINE STARKE : it comes to such a realization. and|like & piping red-breasted . grosbeak: |out, first Phemy had to run back for| “Eliphalet boasted about how he had IN ‘ | 3 welcomes the willingness of the allies|and while I-was wondering what the | his cane, then he evidently had for- |no use for women and that he regard- : o A ' ¥ : bish torn foent - the|singer could be in his garrulous way | gotten his handkerchief and then she |ed Annable as the only admirable ong NNOCENT PROGRESS . : to. Teeutablish an ows| nt the | TN eated “Babolink: bobolimk! “So | had to so back for a letter he wanted |of her sex, dilating upon his happiness Five Part Triangle Drama Quicker will it be able to baing ebout | uniike the bobolink itsslf that the imi. | to post! TWhy couldnt he have taken |in thinking that when he was goné M- stregt, | that victery which mu: epen: - osed. This|an inventory before they. s | Annable and her n cou ; S s, (ST L upon. Every bit of action Whith can | Coronmric eoies haanter Jonas a glée. | “Rich uncles never do.” the tail, lank | riding around in autoobiles and have BENJAMIN CH. &ms be secured in that region - therefore|ful life' by mocking everything from |householder informed her. “They | the house painted every spring if they In the 7th Chapter of Norwich, Saturday, June 22, 1918. |needs to be obtained and the quicker|the domestic cat in the yard to the|don’t have to, because there are always wished to. He never loosened up t0 THE SON OF DEMOCRACY — e | the plan of action is determined the|bobolink in . the. flelds. As a time- | plenty of loving relatives ready to fag|let them paint it while he.was living, p b. g 5 Wotter. ~ | keeper C..C. Abbot, of Delaware, dis- | for them—especially if the uncles, like | and if any of the family wanted tq DOWN THE RIVER S RN 3| this one, are creaky in (he joints and | travel about town they aid it on o0t | | se——————————— f | | ; b e iy bt Wi, | have & far-away Jordan look in their | —s(ill it js mice to know one has & CURRENT EVENTS Curse Exposed U-BOAT FAILURE. Boon piaced the eat bird among the| eves! However, Phemy had better | sood time comife. ey i Conditions have apparently goften instrels. which disturd ‘the | conserve her energy and let him run a| “And after she Pad stood him for 1901, average . o the' pefit whivn It 1o ke 1h :’;.”fi‘é':‘:&?éi’.‘é:‘&::l’ e aflold | few of his own errands, because it Is | ifteen vears and Elipiieiet had grated : ! o W and acoustomed to the | extremely unlikely that she ever will | his board all that time and raised Cain Germany that the U-boats are not go- | with the o ust Y 1905, average .. ing to win the war, that in spite-of all | Whip-poor-will. ~ The cat-bird . be- | be strugsling over her income tax |with their family life, what did b..hdo the efforts which they ‘have made and | cause of his hue:entr_lcitiea is an en-|on his property! > :‘;to r;n;:.-matgfl a;swmh:;&: er P dune 15, 1918........ the ruthiessmess to which they have JyRRle nelghiae T realize} without your saving it |and plcked him off the side linee a5 & e resorted en evéry occasion possible = . ug | that he is at least 70,” continue e | 300« ing! e a R! i T hey have not béen able to accomplish | This is going to be what we call @ | (4] jank nouseholder, “and a cranky fie-and eloped with her and, after pur- TR ‘ND%OQISIDINI.IENT the purpdse intended. There- is. no|*hort Summen, AhG VL It MA¥ BAClold bachelor, and that he has promised | chasing her a real pearl necklace and Tha enly authorized film story of facts by eur ewn ambassader, James W, LY = s hree diamond rings on their wedding 4—~SHOWS TODAY—4 cscapifty the fact that they have sent b . | them his fortune every time he has | thr MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED ||many hundrads of thousands of tons |are: Semere we Know no net vary | Scen them {0r cwenty years—nut thelr | irp, he was gathered to his fathers the 130, 3, 618, 815 PRESS of shipping to the bottom and camsed|in this latitude but a few days - in B : 3 TWO STAR FEATURES Marguerite Clark RICH MAN,'NPOOR MAN MAE MURRAY N FACE VALUE Hearst-Pathe News t 3 L ck | ves, he'd made a new will and ail An. - aatod o a tremendous loss and administered a |length. The variation in the budding| ~nere Was Eliphalet Pickens back)yes, hed mate & new Wi ANt U ot I Assoctate S tor tosubiica. || serious setback to the allies, but that|of the elm, the blossoming of the hanging in her spare room closet! Iy entitied to the use for fepublica- || U7 CIE tife real object. apple-trees or the arrival of the oriole tion of all news despatches credit- || is all far from e or the wren fairly represent the vari-|It was one of our own consuls who —_— e to it or not otherwise credit- || They did not count on the fact that |(;;ng of this producing season of na-|Proclaimed: ‘We mean war With @i “and there was Standbars White ed in this paper and also the local || the allies would be able to offer any- |y 0% °B " el i not- “long” or |Capital W.! Where there is vim inlwho had just buried his third wife news published nerein. thing in the way of substantidl re-|«ghort” to us because of its time from | Speech there -is ~usually energy in|when he was 78. He said that his life All rights of republication of l|sistance. The U-boats possess great|frost to frost, but because of our feel- |aCtion—action which establishes pre-|was done and all he asked was to wait speclal despatches herein arg @lso || 2gvantages but how their operations|ings, or the length of time we wear|Cedents oftener than it needs them.)patiently until he qwas called above. . ) have been diminished is plainly dis-|thin clothing. We've had a rather|Precedent is as often a rogue's piea | Wealth, he added, was of no use to 1 C: in Per.|dry April and May, and an unusually |8 necessity is a_tyrant's We must|him now, and, while he would like to closed in the words of Captain Per-|dry April and Way, ayf an WAUSEIY | let them know in Europe we are caba- |keep it in his name the few short sius, the German war critlc who de- | (0, 00 oce temperature than usual|ble of making precedents and break-|months he had to stay, he took joy clares “Every layman knows the U-| it SYCNCER T0C el "5nd we have |08 them. in -thinking how much happiness it boats’ losses are unavoidable owing to|swakened in mid-June to realize that S would bring to his nicces and nephews the continually increasing sharp- | we are gliding toward September and| It looks as though the westerner|jater on, as he had no chiliren. So ness and effectiveness of defense |black frost as though a German sub- :‘;“;"sgg‘: F\«:’é‘ i lfl‘li st eulion ;mural fil!ed‘:'i!gh mth;hkmdueuz emo- Z W 5 - | tions toware E ars, tot~ measures of the enemy which, per-|inatine was chasing s and we Wete|cause we have got “to do our damned- | (ored when S e oo haps, will further increase as the war |%AC upon escaping with our U¥es. Miogii” was a true missionary. Thelteath never did fit and had o nervous prozresses. It is scarcely to be de-|gis TSI A0S, BEE, MNP oo intense, | fuel and food commissioners and the|way of clicking, his nieces and meph-| . nied that our enemies are both CATTY- | e nerer saw the sunsetting at §|State boards of management are dgll- |ews, at great personal imconvenience, | Vice-as may be demanded from pris- ing on the war and living and that it | plolock p. m. In this latitude before— | g us so in self-denial and generosity | ook turns in dropping their own af.|ONers of-war. " . ingly: hat we cannot question the serious- | faj d comi e J. H. GUMMINGS. will be possible to defend themselvss!days never seemed so long singly:but | : airs and coming to cheer up the sad| “ against tonnage needs for a long time|we have thaf nervous sensitiveness|ness of world conditions, or dowbt that|life of the old gentleman: Norwich, Juns: 21 191%, at any rate. From the beginning it|Which assures us the summer is going | the demang for means to carry on this | “Stanbars would have taken a prize = { world-war calls for all the fighting i =39 b ¥as 2 mistuks to undenpatisats; thi] LS shart. world war calls for all the BEWing|anywhere at oid home week because dere S fes 3 he lived to be 92—and at 91 he said resources of our enemies.” e 4 = .. [mand; and the burden is made lighter | that the ivon jawed . : ter . o Jawed. determined l2dy 1l STORIES OF THE WAR Germany hoped by the submarine| ‘Acsording to an intelligent writer|py the interest and lift of all the Deo-|of indefinite vears who was the H warfare to starve out England and to|UPon asricuiture Pugland is suffering|ple Necessity never rode such alfifteenth housekeeper they had hired : £ in the war, Tt has failed in both|ifo™ ‘latifundia” It is not a disease,|,rancing steed the world over before, | for hi h 2 g win the war. a2 failsd in ‘ous| ity RATH! and doublless sl pations, | Din8, Steed tho warld over before im was the mate he always had “Right is More Precious than Peace” jand the chances of success in either{as well as individuals have bad habits | Snc, 1O WIEnt Wb U mote orazen’|longed for. And he let her “marry direction grow slimmer as time ad-lfrom which they suffer. The writer|Goos Wilnelm Hohenzollern. Tt 18| s ;thfnehafihmt?n?duf: & when Great Work of The Surgeons. MUCH CHANCE FOR PREVENTION | vances.. puts [t In this way: “While We|strange that necessity should be “not|cleared cut those deveted mewhews| (Corrsspondence of The Associated suffer from “latifundia,” a large Por-|only thé tyrant's plea but the patri- W) 3 = . y ¥ and nieces! Whew! v W t Press) : However the prosecution of thel MEETING LABOR SHORTAGE. |tion of land in Germany is divided up|ovs defence and the safoty of the|sweeping away fi:eckggge.‘w b s]ir‘: i i e ‘ be jthp T graft cases which have recently been| . myo 1hor situation is one which jg| Nto Small holdings” England needs| gtate INecessity is a slave-driver s v e Marvels are being performed by t found terminates it is quite evident " on! are evener distribution of the land, , Slave-driver| town several months later. So you|surzeons attached to the various En- e that there has been disclosed a de.|EIVin€ more than the United States|ang one outcome of the war will be | imon s the mother of invention and|see— | s e tente armies. By _exerci théir termined effort in severa] diections ug| MUch concern. In France it has been|the breaking up of big estates and the | foie SSneration can sense as mo oth Pooh!” said his wife. “But they |skill they have restorad to the fighting ; 4 4 Pt point of the game that young person |whole divisions of men who in other 1o have been made possible- by the[(°T farMiDE._operations. It is like. |Doints out there is no reason why Ger. P : wise impossible for the women and|Many should feed 33 andgone-thir i icose method of doing business. This| i 0 T T e ® O hat 1a| Per cent. more people upor¥100 acres of course does not by any means jus- & " of land -than Engiand, or other coun- tify the acts, but on the other hagd|"c°ded in order to furnish the needed|rieq do, which is true. England today 4 ized that it is impossible for|creation of workmen's houses with|ywr, 4 didn’t have Phemy as a buffer against |strength of the Allied nations each i get a big fat rakeoff from the gav-fioo o i O u Yith| We must all be equal to the demand |a matrimoni f 5 et e ernment, all or mest of which seerns the men in the army to be released|comfortable gardens. This writer| necogssity puts upon us. rimonial fate! If there's any|year since the beginning of the war, : and can’t guard him|wars would have died of théir wounds or would have been crippled for Nfe. ; ,‘_‘Isai;lxadme tall, lank house-| The recent gigantic battles, as the FOUR SHOWS TODAY——LM, 3.15, 6.15, 8.30 Sunday Morning Talk holier, ha in arder to furish the:neede ol ! gort " of forgotten | result of which more wounded men " supplies and to cultivate ail the avail- |js ppeaking -up millions of acres of emy ! guess he's safe and in- |than ever before have received surgical BNk the e it e SulltY | able territory. The resuit i that it| grass lands to increase its crops and terned, all right!—Exchange. treatment within a short space of TOOAY GNEY, ALL-NERT WRRIC: d 1 has decided to resort to the empioy- |it is entering upon a scheme to build Toaking such things impossible. b (o] ment of Africans and Chinese for | 500000 homes for relurning soldiers| : : Ttans Sich ihings Impossible fn thel cuch work, and there has arrived at|With gardens. The Gardener is the FISHIN' WITH A WORM: - S8 = time, have demonstrated the immense MUSICAL COMEDY BEN LORING i ridss made not only in surgery but in the methods of removing the WITH THAT FUNNY JEW THE IRISH SINGING COMEDIAN ng i i useful man; and even large estates | LETTERS T wounded. from the battle fields and those who have taken advantage of| o Poncr oy 2 aarse Britlsh | cannot do without him. The land hogs | The college professor who took the 0 THE EDITOR transporting them to hospitals, So SID ROGERS AND HIS OWN COMPANY: the government, however much they |\ R MR, B o e for. this [Sh0uld ‘give Way to land cultivators. |above title for a delightful essay had . §§§§§E’,fi. ‘asuéhth?:i-oim“:int\-}’:l;g;l: AND BIG GIRLIE SHOW ASSISTED BY may have profited, but thefd:is aldo|> 5 R found the secret of happy angling. 1d_physicia: need of seeing that the samb oppot- | ' Purpose. These laborers are 0| ,ji-English’ ‘clergyman says: “Up|He demonstrated that the essence Of e e and - those at the hospitals in the rear i Eoe be used to maintain production in that | "y, ¢ 18 every person should|the sport is not dependent on equip-| Advantages and Obligations Alike, |that an immensely larger proportion \ tunities are not left wide open.. fa[co Wl 0 Ba MRS Prodtction tn A1 to ' the age evéry person shou g NELL SHIPMAN - MADALINE BUCKLEY be primarily a subject of education,|ment. The farmer's boy with a bent S s of the wounded recover than was ihe 1SH NIGHTINGALI m_;‘n. fting business 1 are to return to their own country. |and mot a factor injinduutryl' There|pin and a freshly cut hickory sap- m(;l’iz“sE%xlmrh Snm:thm-‘- like two |case at the beginning of the war. —IN— THE 1NN MIGHTINAALS < frafting business has been di$:| “yyhat France is doing is much the|isn't a Captain of Industry in this{ling may have sometimes to teach | UGS o0 allens of military age in} Men whose less or arms have been el e ot oniaection With the aWAM:| ame as what this country s dding,|WOrldWho does not know this is a|the city chap who arrives with hiS|ininc uhout The arate epench the |l resiiels AOW are restortd The' Girl from Beyond THREE COMPLETE SHOWS of contracts. It has been foumy § i pipe dream, or that being a factor in|fancy split bamboo pole and his book | ;i < s D reamen's .1 TN that a quartetts of employes had :vr;dk!:r it:ethsame ‘r:ahso;] f}vled ne{ed {pnguury o, et i::alngy i P prt €ves of the nation to a glaring injus- | time. This is due mostly to the fact MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, FRIDAY found that the government could it Sblapgematati s A + ¥ i tice that had escaped general atten- |that they ive isepth A A -| But, really, the best part of the na ey receive prompt antiseptic REA’ NSHINE C Y mads o pay its bills twican. Becsusy| 1€ Mmaintainance of the railroads and et T o e e b o inits application. Most of |tOR. OF perhaps better stated con. |treatment and surgical attention which A-SHEAL BU ,N i YOU ALL KNOW BEN of the lack of proper safeguards-biue- [ OF the mining “‘f s 4 The falling | ikgly " to make men more hseful or|us, if we fish at all must go “fishin’| STnirated g e e o Lot e s e LB SR His Neighbor’s Keyhole SN EICOMEGAT Kagtoia e ff in immigration has decreased the Killful, “Whi Bducation?” | With a worm.” There are plenty of | (o noo C 2 stiffening artiiulation, eir re- prints which would bs of much value ol more skillful. at is }ducation . A 2 i¢ | the nation and leaving aliens at home | covery is rapid in the h itals be- - ber who would ordinarily be|Mrs. Sigourney says: “We eak of|times in life when neither our bait et S g T D 0spitals be. 10 the enemy can be removed froni| "™ . urney say e spe by i ik s to take positions that had to be relin- | hind lines where they can be treat. e o cailable for such work, and the re-|educating our children. Do we know |Dor tackle is just what could be de- ish s oit 5 e they L FE ey ———— = their storage places for study or other VAl a1 £ ” Lor Guished by citizen soldiers on the call{ed under comfortable conditions far » ult is that laborers by that our children also educate us ”|sired, but we must use them just the |, it L I : g use and according to charges tansgzof [ oo 1% that laborers are o be brouaht e O e e vatin | same. An Item in the personal phils | 1o, &S In certain districts of our | from the nerve-racking sound of the | rernal idiot T've got two boys in the |brings about coheston of-thought 'in meat unfit to eat have begn ‘warked 2 2 ot »! n phy that most men have built up |12%S Iead: Up & eny pEung.. 3 ... | navy and another mear crying because |the community. -You can keep ever- o there will by ¢ th more than books, experience rather : large percentage of citize tic Seldi e ¥ '8 Off on the army and navy. i S 3 Suspension of IN€ Pro-ithan persons, are the prime educa- middle life is the conviction that| ;® PRGSO FUuens, practic | Seldiers have been inspired with|he g too vouns to help lick von Tir-|body Up to the “working pitch so These are situations disclosed whigp | 51008 of the immigration laws rela- | oro “Lite is the great educator; and |ideal conditions do not. exist. Such {jon, “SVRE the Community in the|confidence in the army surgeons in|pip," much more easily if you keep them in 7 Oy tive to the literacy test and comtract|(n. example of parents upon the im z possibly, rule in some planet e any Share in|the great battles around Verdun and|" gy, went on with his face beaming|the habit of talking Americanism. 'ught not to exist. The government ) % p] P! D 7 . the responsibilities that arose throygh|in the great G i ive which 1 SRR S04 thiat thove (nvolves ere | labor and the exemption of these men | pressional mind of the child gives it he Milky Way, but not in thatlng war and with every —advamieo |ibpei 5 erman offensive B fand his hat in his hand. rather than politics. oy made | rom the head tax and following the|the impulse which lasts, and which|round ball named the earth. The av-|gpa, b ah0 With every Ze | began in March. “Flags coming along every ten sec- o e e e i but ¢ | ime when the labor situation has ad- | prompted Beecher to say: “Lducation | erase man ceased to wait for such | iizen from. trade “ind Toaastry. and | wowsmen e ‘mas meon ShBent, 7€1onds, Lig and litfle ones, and I don't - ptation to engaZa | .i.q itself they will be sent back to|is only good culture: It changes the |conditions, realizing that he must do |, a -hes Y laim to let one phbs with my hat on in, such frauds which must to some |irs 4 b : : my head. That is my flag and _the degree be encouraged by the ease with % . e flag of my Dboys. If some of these which it can be done should be elimi- | fanded by :"“,:‘:“;“5 £ e vmiion boohs along the ourb don't take thelr nated. There is apparently . great|Shouwd brin ek relief without | naif the business on“earth, and greatly and at the same time doubling his 2 Bite, olt muén- (gl 81% -dowh—-t AR, opportunity for prevention. causing any barm. increase the drones. The worid needs| The mistake is to imagine that per: |advantases in trade and Industrs. No | near the AEMNE s e poreibls say | Sireet #ets along here “I'm going to —_— more efficient workers—better_trained | formance' must wait on perfect prep- |higher premium could be placed on |ten or twelve miles from the front. and | SnOCK them out from under o From the way_those United States A DEFTER Bl Tioak EDITORIAL NOTES. men and women—snd cleaner hearts.|aration. Under that plan most of |Ron-naturalization. That thousands | o send all caces fheve for trentmont | DALE, see? . N Thy th .S > great undertakings of history|ol aliens were not uvnaware of this|When big battles o » d £ hos. | o ihe flag reached our sector and my |it may possibly have pentrated 0 The announcement to the sffect that [ The man on the comer says: Sum- would never have been completed. |advantase was shown time after time |pitals were overcrowded and - awing | (FieRd stepped close to some men i1 |Mr Hindenburg's cranium that the allotment of 30,060,000 tand of oal | ¥ eibed t mot 2 In how few of the triumphs of = the|when “don’t have to g0 to war” was|to the delay in operating there Were |Thes ai the fag. They failed to take | LICTe, MEY be a thing or two doing which was ‘first made for New Tng- 8 = . | the world is in no mood today ever to|human spirit have perfect conditions | Ziven as excuse for failure to become |many cases of gangrene, totanus and | o o, e by “the- timeasmilllon="6fthose. fel- Jand and then changed has, been ra.|, JAPAN'S armies are said to be ready.|hug them. But we couldn't hate the | prevailed! How offen has the hero|naturalized, has been quite com- |other infections. that resulted fatally.| opunt: He crowded clos lows get into the trenches~—Meriden 5 - BeeB Te-lang there are several places where|Germans if we desired to for there is| newed his war through the battle of |mon to refer (o 1 lttes 1 : o oAl resulted fatally.| “Hats off while the flag is passing, | journal e e e o 10T | they can go It the word s given, . |nothing heathly about hating, Which | iifa with no assistance whitever from | Deing “the second largest city . the | bars thr Torp Ot Hesitate to bom- it you pleasel” he said, and waited. 7 which is in every way just v i e iade il B e & = e bor A 3 ! 2 y i the|bard the hospitals either with the ar- > = VIT IS ¥ e iy way Justifeg Yoy ol is defined as “madness of the heart.” | “the biue blade that the" king's son|World” im relation to a certain class |tillery or ‘from alrplane. Sometimes | iy PVt e Ml came off on the M-| gye seem %o biln for a-necessary s 13:| Shipyards throughout the country|The fact is we cannot hate any onelbears” Alhost any piunt ‘thing will|of its population, for instance, Chi-|a train-load of wounded men woud | S2nt, He leaned closer. <am | Rousecleaning, ‘and a most emph: By far the greater part of the indus- | stiil continue to show the nation that| ®ithout punishing ourselves. The |do, if wielded with resolute purppse. |cago, referred fo as the “sixth larg- |drrive only to find all the beds sc.| . Who do you belong to Uncle Sam | fBHSURE ORS00 & 005 o eehood tries of New England are engaged in | e ; penalty for hate is the sinking of| = i it t G RS 2 A A ¥ 19 Ang & 6, beds 0C-| or the Kaiser™ he asked in low D AL 5 - e where there's a will there's a way. [poo®Y ik oo g Notably is the truth illustrated inlest German city in the world, the sec- | cupied and that they muet move on|{mnes. The man looked at him and | Promulgated in''some’ uudrters thas- some way upon war work. .To deny e ate mgsly lower than those|the matter of human happiness. 'At|ond largest Bohemian, the second |to another hospital. Atahed his Bat off this is a “rich man's war.” Before them coal melins to cripple therwan| - After the president has said politics ated. We can set our face against|few points do mortals fool them- |lcrgest Swedish, Norwegian and Pol- A prodnetion and handicap the secring left the field to the alien. It needed |segregatin : the 9 g them in classes according something of this kind to joit the cit-|to the nature of their wounds. This izen into a sense of the ‘injustice of | was not generally done at the begin- freeing the alien from responsibility Ining of the war. The plan then in feuad Han Il b st Ak 0| e but mot_ the - sotts T keep|his work with faulty tools and under ico. It is a step whi s de- | ervbody out of industry for the first | lmitations that forbid a perfect prod- 18 vears of life would be to hamper | Uct- OTHER VIEW PQINTS A few sensitive souls are telling us we must not hate the Germans, but : t X Most of this difficulty now has been |~ «rrpcl, by thunder. but T'm a|the war ends the 'Jcomparatively e the evil and brutal conduct of man|selves more completely than in the including, ‘we take it, both-na- | overcome. When woundy i ncle Sam, by thunder. but T'm 21,1011 proportion of ‘wealth:that has BT e i o Y ing ?;eh:dlzxxlnned rx‘;n:s(::vee;ida}nwr&fi and make our disrespect for it per-|notion that elaborate equipment is re- |turalized and unnaturalized residents.|the first dressing sul‘:on"ir“%:i’d'i‘;n. 1ty "“"f g‘“fi.‘fihc”‘gmfl‘l‘;i‘d QUie | f4iled 'in patriotism will be ~made SR by the e and br SRLED putting ard’for a third | manent in order to preserve our own|quired. The stream of life must be|Just what the eitizenship numbers as |bulance they are divided into. cate. |Ect YOU &t first/ 8 - |to bear its full share of the- bur- with the full allotment New' Ehgland| - integrity. It was More who said: “If | fished, they assume, with a big and |compared to this statement is not|gories. Thos slightly wounded are| It 158 good thing to let everybody |dens and discover that it~ has mo . 1l all New' Bhgland i AN WY I wanteg to punish an enemy it would | costly outfit. Such experiments might|iven but it follows with this array |rapidly dressed and sent to conva.|5§e Whose man you are” sald WY| priyWelzes denied others.— Bristol ' Wil secure no more fuel than it prop-| ' Even the Germans must realize that|De-bY fastening on him the trouble of | be convincing, but for the fact that|of alien population, the conscription |lescent hospitals: Those crippied are|friend —with the German -name.|precs . v erly requires. . the 50,000 men lost in the failure to| COMStandly hating someboby,” Hate | most of the fun of ihe same appears|law Will take from ' trade’ and indus- |sent o cripied depote. Men who have | Having a German name I have to be 1S In connection with the supplving of | reach Compeigne was a serious blow| Lol 20ides in @ disagreeable atmos- | o lie with those who use eimpler|{ry the greater portion of the citizens, [been gassed 2o (o special hospitals |2 Mite more eareful to show it than| 'y .. woiiis (o be arregular th any section there is the GeAtlon of|to their reserves. s phere, and it radiates discomfort as | tackle. leaving occupational advantage to thé|and those most dangerously wounded |MOSt men. but it is worth while fo| ® g 00 i ou; icense® production and transportatien.'ts be i '{.‘o“‘s‘;":‘eyp::so;“‘:m ooilstes heat.| “Children are our sreat teachers at|alien, freed from every responsiblitk |are transferced to hospitais nesrby to Keep, your brand where it s easily] g < Sfter “auy records nutomobile fuestion about the former if the lat- | fore it started that it Was not wanted|one could do so - without becoming |finest way, much made out of little, A |o. the eitizen as a business or wage |dangorous wounds receive brompt|Men was right. This is no time to|dnd gylity.nar i T ter can be solved. Better conditions|in Italy regardless of the door’ at|Prutalized. “Vengeance is mine!|soap box will do for a chariot; a |competitor; it is equally unjust to the | treatment in the advanced ambulances ||¢ave such matters In doubt. ~Let|ProBerty Comagefe . (ten SeaiSh are being shown on the railroads-and| which it knocked. gaith the Lord” and I will repay.”|saw horse for a charger; bits of|nation that provides the opportunity | where operations are performed and | YOUr meighbors know whose man ¥ou |.’ yisneg® “Shich 4 mesns driving it is an encouraging statement which ::M*;‘H";“’:efflethls,wnrglins asainst | cloth raised on sharpened shingles be- |for advantage. iess the responsibllity | wounds disinfected before the men are |3re; Tt is a wiso: precaution, Alo. | without - the proper. expérience. . So 18 made by the shipping board: te-the| Reports from Russis give inidication | Him o 1t @ oo and Ietjcame the white eails of an argoey. |of defending bis awn interests. g b Sy v B e S ness. fo some gelatinous spine near ({4r no serious local accident has effect that a large number of _the| that a new storm is breaking in that > Here is exhibited a sift that any of | e Sriticiam (st attends this sit-| By these divisions of the wounded | POt 10, SON0 W0RCUSNE (P hoya|eome abopd. from . such slawlessnes, | v omp i 2 < sk e = us may well covet for mature years.|Uation is clearly directed to our con- |into classes, it is rted, that ¢]You - At-least-you.on % 2 i e wooden ships which will be completed | eountry which may be the bey Did think : . Asaqried, that gres the to-those on the way and |Dut many sight anes fasg occurred. by fall will.be devoted to thidea Finning id you ever think when you are|Probably paremts never do greater|Sress that must have been aware of | papidity .of surgical intervention is | OVer -there, to-those ¢ Ly Bl_mgepml.r a8 é o th&bal car-|of another record breaker. vyearning for a good- preacher, that|violence to young lives than when |the inequalities in favor of the alien, |achieved as each specialiat deals only | ROSe to come, that vou should “stand P rying trade with the idea B etting there is nothing the preachers in the | they submerge all these imaginative |but with the vote of the foreign-born | with casec needing hie kind of kifi |Solidly behind them, not only with Ahe supply to New England:¥bich it| The person who offered the govern- |PulPits yearn for more than good|powers under an accumulation of ex- |Citizen always before too many mem- | Then. the patient is removed to the|YOUr money and your. goods, but Kasier. to. Wear Big-'Splash. needs. These vessels will GiEble to|ment a hunfred acres of black wal. |Nearers—hearers capable of under- | pomsive toys. bérs of congress, the dangers that|hospital at a distance of not more | With your moral support, At least '65. ships will*Be launched carry from three to five thowgaif tons | nut at any price it saw it to pay can|St2n9ing what thy say and broad| The people most to be pitied —aFe|ROW are so anparent were iznored for |than a journey of ten or twelve hours,| ~Dr. Hexamer ‘is reported as having|on the Fourth of July in, response to sach and proceed at a spdbd whichnever be rated as a profiteer. ::wsh‘ to apply the truths uttered to|those who cannot extract the . fun |political profit. Neither of the great|where he receives attention from ano-|said to the German-American Alli-|{ne“apneal made by Charles M. Sch- A B s ] emselves instead of to their neigh- | that lies in simple and even in dull |Parties is frec from criticism on this | ther specialist working in close co-op- |nce, when he was its ‘head. “Be ; y X wab, director general of the Emergency : bors.. It isn't half as important that|gjtuations. They miss a lot of enjoy- |5core but congress has the power to|eration with his colleaZue in the ad-|strong—be German! i them it necsssary to guand- against| Somehow Germany mugt have let|we should know when Bill Jones or|ment along the s it Ny | T Vet Bl Shitevos | caabie |t SR olisen ATe we going {0 be less outspoken | Biee e orporerion T -!-fnhadglv::afi:nu s IR Sliarine sctviites 4 up on its strangle hold ~when the|Mary Marlebone are hit by the Gos-|poleon ‘the Unamuseable’ Talma|may be directed to it by enactinz| This system of segregation of |in our own land, for our own ideals. o ships that it will reach the sars This seems to brighten (K8 @tlook | OVt refused to let the Russian|pel, as that we should tealize when|might play before him, and a pitful |legislation that will cither exact full | wounded and co-operation &f doctors|than this German in America was|fne German emperor. It will be the for New England perceptibly agd in. | SPiPs be used against the allies. we are ourselves wounded and should !of kings’' his vassals, form part of|service responsibi : : from the alien |is said to have produced mervelous re- | for his? apply first aid. The pulpit never has|the audience. but the conqueror ex-|or send him back to the Iand from |sults. z Do not bé content with saying it | o638t numben of ships-ever sent into e . the- water in any country in one dey. Germany, it is claimed, expected |3€med to realize that long sermons|iracted no gaiety from the perform- |Which he came, where it is fairly cer- — once or a dozen times, byt say con- are getting to the point whef tfl:co-lqu ViGtars k0 A Sliok: Descs s th do not -produce good listeners; and|ance” That is the Nemesis that fol- |t8in he will give military service stantly every word that will carry m:hfihr? “udxre?m. nggat: Fosiilt of 'Its reaent diives. . Ghrmary !{:; .9::5 i}z‘z‘};? l%ee?x?l;g:e;'m thiy& lows a selfish or an unappreciative | Whether he iikes it or not. The writer the idea of intense loyalty to Ameri alized. It foe: : y = 'S wort t spirit. The churl who can enjoy his|did not want war; none of us want 3 can aims and {deals. Preach the t . Bowever, overcome e negegeitgoqe| 2150 expected to rule the world before|if the sermon s short. The minister Tade possessions is rioher than & king, | War.-but we had to have war and we Views of the Villl'nm doetrine in the simple way of taking ¢h ld*r‘en' .OIY waving whercver possible, .. . | nOw. 2 who preaches in blank verse would it Into your casual conversation, as FOR FLETCHER'S — 3 he ifi leave hi only | must win the war, therefore, military S et etetin s though it were the most vital {asue | - ook inlife to you as it showa be. ' CCASTORIA dicates that the government agemcies —_— Py snrrd achieve more by going a-fishing. | with a bored mind. service is recognized as a duty to:the RUSSIA'S FUTURE. == | It is to be hoped that the letup in|The truth too hot, or facts too prosy, nation in a specific sense and as a e 2 the U-boat activities means a con-|d0 not fit most congregations. A g oo duty to humanity in a general sense. = :‘i: o'm;c:"m m firmation of the report thlt:na atm ul:e popular preacher once said of him- | The gift of appreciation is one that|we did not want cong'cnplifln: the “WHOSE ARE WEF upon o 3 self: “I always roar when I .have|iS more and more to be prized with|yolunteer system did not meet the 1 i ing the Russian sitnation. M underwater boats, at least, has been | notning to say.” It has been said: | the passage of the years. During the| requirements of the S oation tail ot E7E = Nienman Genius is not essential 10 g00d preach. | first part of mams career he is 1e8S |Lad to have it and with that under: of The Vigilantes ' : t l B tl t ‘ :h h | ing, but a live man is!” The same|dependent on it than later. In earlier |gianding we are for it, but we so| We had a parade in our city last en ra a < u.rc June appears to be endeavoring to days, the sights and sounds of earth g : 7 may be said with reference to a good further than the original demand and |Saturday, a long. jointed parade, each bring about the consumption of that hearer, are apt to be more vivid ba’“! i"'f" in the first draft and insist that every |joint made up of some organization UNION SQUARE €oal whieh has been stored up for esting than they come to be in after|man who is within the borders of the |engaged in war work. I sicod on the 5 » next winter. There is iittle chance| “I come from a country where they | times. It is when westward of 50, for | Unjted States for profit through trade, | corner.of two of our. principal streets when a man-of 1y acquaintance came A ; Wi ¢ 2 along. He has a German name. His 2 5 i sounds zood to me, however it may |Mortal career is to be still full Of|yice for the protection of the nation |father and mother were both bdorn WHAT | T“E wm'fif THE t is strange that those who arelgound to you: Precedents have been |freshness and benediction. that has given him his advantages and | over there, in Hunjand. A supporting the insanity, defense in the|the disgrace of law-makers and the| A habit is suggested, therefore,|his nome. Enemy aliens are excepted | ‘Looks good. donm't it, H—?" he 3 2 - O'Leary case didn't make some move |courts. 1t is ciaimed the preeedent|that is worth anybody's cultivation.|from this proposition. To exact mil- |said to me, as he gave me a real grip CHURCH IN THIS CRISIS? to have him restrained before he zot| embaims a principle—it oftener holds|It is the habit of making the best dut|jtary service from them would be of |of the hand. “This should open the . g into his present predicament a handicap, which the actjon of men|of dull situations, of seeing the best|gyestionable advantage to the nation; |eyes of some of our ‘dumm' Dutch- 8 i ” o~ E = 2R in high places bave made manifest|in indifferent people, of liking “a POOI |ty return the enemy alien to his na- [men, eh = Guess they will begin to x The “at all cost” orders given to|dUring this world-war. This Ameri-|Jest better than none” in a word, of | tive land would be to recruit for the |learn-who we belong to, eh? ~To me ! Mot e | can_ Colonel was telling the English | utilizing to the full all the resources|enemy service, but 1t does not seem 1o | the Surest praot -of the absolute in- . e 3 mn WM i idn't | people that forgitig ahead beats look- | of any kind that are at hand. This i8|pe out of place to demand that in any | sanity of the Kaiser is his fool notion of | bring any greater resulf behind for precedents to death,|the humble, hut useful pBilosophy | other direction . that fairly could be|that about nine out of ten of the men same orders given to the Austrians nts based n a single case |suggested by “Fishin’ with a worm.’ fl? for the ] plains. a s R e s T THE PARSON. | right of the aatien to exact Fich sete| Loknomiedse. (BAC he owaedde T £ however, in most cases. make precedenfs,” a Canadian Col- | instance, that one must give himself|profession or industry. be compelled ¥ B oL ok onel told an English audience. This|attention, of the latter part if the (o give his full share of military ser-

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