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that in the bombing of German cities civillans have not been killed, but that was not the purpose of the al- lied raids. They have been concerned with the destruction of establish- ments of military fmportance and this is not better illustrated than in the recent attack on Mannheim where it is claimed, according to reports com- ing out of Switzerland, it was a most terrible raid wherein five peo- ple were killed and that the popula- tion of the city was panic stricken. Though the allies claim that the number killed must have besn at least four times as large no authority for it B o Raot:, 35.3. |19 iven, and even with & score kiied Bulletin Job Omfice 35-2 [ it indicates that in a city of Willimantic Office, §25 Main Street.|that size the raiders’ attention was Telephone 210-2. directed to destruction of military im- Em—— portance rather than the_taking of !ife, which being on an extensive scale would chuse quite as much con- sternation among the people as the killing of women and children, and e of decidedly more value to the al- 1 SAFETY OF THE HIGHWAYS. The growing number of automobile fatalities M Connecticut gives cause for much concern. According to the report of the state automobile com- missioner there were 67 fatal auto 2ccidents during the first six months of this year, In which 62 peonle lost their lives, This represents only one more fatal accident than in the same period of last year while it is known that the number of motor vehicles has | shown a marked increase, but there is an increase nevertheless and at a time when it was hoped and expected hat a decrease would be shown. This hope was based unon the re- sults which were expected from the new legielation which had been passed for the purpose of increasing the safe- ty of the highways. There is evidence to the effect that benefits have been vhtained from the new laws but it is likewise evident from the figures pre- centefl that the handling of automo- bies is not what it should be anl that there are still weak spots in the existing lawe which need to be reme- died With the growing number of motor care it taust be realized that indi ual respon he'part of those using the highway or crossing streeis | is proportionately increased, but it is/ invariably the -case that the automo- bile fatalities would not have occur- red had there heen tha proper respect shown for the laws regarding the use of automobiles and the rights of oth- ers. The figures for the 1 1 SHorwich Bulletin and Qoufied 122 YEARS OLD Subseription price 12¢ & week) 50¢ o Eouth: $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffice €oun., &3 second-class matter, Telephone Callar Norwich, h, Friday, July 5, 1918, CIRCULATION 1901, average 4412 ..5,925 JUNE 29, 1918...... 100’94 1805, average MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ociated Press is exclusive- 4 to the use for republica- of all news despatches credit- to it or not otherwise credit- and also the local nerein republication of “Right is More Precious than Peace” = — past six THE MOUNT VERNON ADDRESS,|MoOnths make it evident that stil g "l greater efforts to increase safety on Once again taken oc: that there has President Wilson » emphasize the fact n be no thought of let- the high: s must bs mad A FUTILE CLAIM. ! ting up § as been Ehdé-taxen esent war or of| ACCOrding to a report which comes com this he plainly set|from Berlin and which is designated endence day address|S semi official an effort is made to r'ace the responsihilitr for the sink- g of the hospital ship Llandovery Castle upon a mine rather than a sub- merine. This of course is an admis for not a single people but for mgn- he declared that we today ars|<ion that to sink a hospital chip is a foing _on! a4 have|“ross act of injustice, a deed of bar- done in were con- | tv, hut the effort to shift the cerned this coun- | me to mine is the same sort of a try R of | of every & with heme which has been emp! previous ocecasions. Germany, howevi such claim, establ vessel | anpea of whic claiming aboard an ved on| , 1s fooling none| for it is already an| ned fact that directly after the | received the fatal Llow there | bmarine. the commander | zht to fustify his act by| org wera that an explosion on the i ship as it was sinking indicated that| of law, based upon the consent of the|ihere were explosives in the hold. governed 1 sustained by she or-|Thus did the commander show that| on of mankind." he was trylng to cover up his foul resident supplement i deed. There were of course no aviators| aloard and there were no explosives, any more than there were guns aboard or troops on other hos- e president but one is- 1 There Bt onas vould be tolerable. | No ha! isfon is concelva- | ble we seek is the reign decisi said at the war mu to a successtul concl occasions ed ion. There must be an end to Prussian militar- fsm. Otherwise the iples for h have been torpedoed, | hich we ’ annot be car-| It simply meens that Germany is de- L and freedom of | termined on theso outrages - an effec-|on etery possible occasion and that swer negotia- | it hopes to hide back. of claims which tion propaga break _forth | cannot be substantiated and which in from time {21l instances have been disproved by | = {the evidence at hand. Germany re- AN EXAMPLE FOR LABOR. |vratedly gets tangled in the meshes cf | its own schemes and its assertions | simply makes the deed which it com- | mits all the blacker. What a magnificent en set to la on of the exa has in every line by the! farine Engincers Bene- | the American EDITORIAL NOTES. agreement wh ; Baivs With the| The spirit of the Fourth of July! shipping board to the wfiect that|should pervade every day of the vear ! strikes will be barred during the pe S i0d of the war It was a celebration of which the Tt been agreed in the interest|entire city had every reason to feel of uninterrupted and rapid operation | PFOUd. BT e, | “rev=| o one has as vet put forth a com- observance of the ru s decided upon should plaint about a serious shortage In the | potato bug crop. at once be submitted to the shipping board for adjustment ol hipping board for adjustment aM| wmoee who, celebrate too stremuon that violation of the agreement con- ly never come to a full realization of ces will it until the next day. sociation. lisposition to set- basis of fairness. is shown to the result in Whether at the point of manufac- ture or elsewhere TNT and fire make a decidedly bad combination. The man on the corner says: Those who are trying to help the kaiser didn't get much sympathy yesterday labor to do e meet the pose h hing in its power to aation by refusing to im- re entirely un- necessary. Selfishness is pushed to| one side that right and justice may be given a ci It is a most It may be that the Germans are ionging for peace, but Count Roon of | s Prussia with his list of demands| ommendable attitude o makes it evident that it will not be a and one whi ht to be taken by| gy B Bo o e o | German made peace. try. The country is taking those of 2 Sikis o lling them. what| 1f there is any trouble with the de- e e B livery of the first clasy mail in the larger cities some excuse other than the scrapping of the postal tubes will probably be assizned likewise direct ing capital but labor is permitted to volunteer. T'nfortunately there is no respect pald to this consideration in t00 many instances, hut the marine engineers have 2 the wisdom and necessity of rendering a patriotic ser- vice having full confidence that they The second half of the year certain. | Iy opens most auspiciously In the way of new ships. It is to be hoped that will be properly treated. It is not|each month's output will far outdis- | only a laudable position but the only|tance the previous one. 1 cne that labor should take. | The commander of the U-boat that sank the Llahdovery Castle made a| great gistake in not taking off those ! American aviators who he claimed ‘were aboard the hospital ship, THE MANNHEIM RAID. In connection with the air raids which are being conducted by the belligerents on both sides it is plainly indicated that they are still being sarried out on vastly different limes. From the very beginning it has been the object of the Germans to strike whers the greatest execution can be done, to hit at the centers of popula- ton, where mén, women and children are congregated for the purpose of lerrorizing. They have not of course refrained from doing damage of mili- tary importance where such has been possible but they have by no means confined themselves to such an effort. They have been concerned with blood- shed and because there was less dan- ger in it they seem to have preferred to_bomb the non-combatants. * Without seying how many we are going to build, but dec: we are going to build enoush the war, the statement by Chairman Hurley of the shipping beard has the right ring, | Probably no one is better acquaint- ed with the fact that the Amer: 1 Bained their objectives and were re- | strained with Qiffeulty from going | farther than the Germans who torc | the brunt of the attack. There can be no guestion but what Baron Rhondda, the British food ad- This is in direct contrast to the air | ministrator, sacrificed his life hy the sctivities of the allles, regardless of [ manner in which he devoted himse!t the reasons which they have to retal- [ to his task just as truly as the man SMe. This must not be taken tomean | who fell in the first line trenches. | they tonk it in succession in the ba Pen ns | - T've got to paint my house this year, mourned the Woodlawn man. “And T can’t decide on the color. T see you have a pleasant time be- fore you" commented his friend from Hyde Park. “Whenever anybody men- resistable reminded of the tragedy of tions the afilictinon you are in I am ir- Mrs. Kitterbark, who was a lady of strong will and a passion for gay col- erbarks lived in row of four little houses. built in a block and the block was painted a modest brown with white trimmings. just enough life to it to prevent your stumbling over it if you were in a hurry and no thinking about it. . “This was when one man owned it and the tenants rented. Then with- in a short time all four renters be- came owners. Mrs. Kitterbark decided to_paint. “Henry Apps got home first that evening and as he approached the mod- est little block he reeled, grabbed his head and then ran with all his might toward the Kitterbark portion of the row. Its whole front was painted a gorgeous scariet and the porch and window casings were daintly picked out with yellow. “Smith and Howiger, Jjoining him shortly after and being equally arrest- | ed by the calamity, discussed the situ- ation with Apps. It was plainiy im- possible to accept Mrs. Kitiarbark’s dictum and become the laughing stock | of the town. So Apps, being of a reckless nature declared war. “He said he had a brother-in-law in the paint business and he was sure that he could get some job lois of paint cheap and if Smith and Howi- ger were sports théy would beat Mrs. Kittsbark at her own game and in- cidentally cure her of her mistaken ideas in art. “First the Smith' house bloomed forth. It was a sort of Dutch bycinth pink and the porch was poison green picked out in purple. When you look- ed ot it you felt as though you might be crossing the English channel on a particularly rough night. Howiger chose a raw violet for his domicile | a hard, | and he painted the porch bright blue warranted to set teeth on_edge. fancy full sway your Apps gave his agile and when the coat lof cerise was finished he put polka cots of pale lav fini fect son. nder all over it and ed up the porch in a striped ef- of black and baby biue and erim- Germanis kultur, but Germanism may have a past, but has | no future, 1 }: may be that these conclusions are ifalse. It may be that even the Ger- ran in A &nd has se tell you, people poured into that town by the dozens and scores from all the villages roundabout and the large city nearest sent a spe abiding in gloom. He said the row instituting a brand new system o house painting which was going to take the world by storm and all eredit {should be given Mrs. Kitterbark, who had_originated it. i “Never, he declared, could they be thankful enough tos Mrs. Kitterbark, who had wakened them to the fact that most- people went through Lfe without realizing the uplifting beauties close at hand, dependent merely on the | twist of a_willing wrist_and the ex- pert agitation of a paint brush. { “He said he thought the lady’s photo should be printed and sent the re- porter around to get .one. The Te- porter was a nice young man and Apps really felt sorry when he considered with might heppen to him at the hands of the infuriated Mrs. Kitterbark, who had remained right at home during all the surge of crowds and ‘Tiotous | excitement in the town. He had heard | ) somewhere that ridicule will break the proudest spirit. But he had never heard of exceptions. only did Mrs. Kitterbark jovfully give the re- | porter her picture but she gave an in- terview and e ed herself as im- mensely gratified that she had been | able in her < good and arou beauties of “And she n ply nothi | Howiger to do licht to burst upon | but to bu residence back into dis- | crest brown and white, leaving the scarlet and lemon atro to shine | forth painfully—which it went jdoing for ten years, freshencd every | body made anythicg out of th affajr but the brother-in-law who own- and Smith and that Apps had to boom the fam- | |ily business and nobaiy in the row! spoke to anybody else or borrowed leups of sugar or darning needies or janything.” i i “You're a lot of help!” grumbled the Woodlawn man.” “Your tale hasn't| left a single doggone color to paint my | house!"—Chicago News. in Wil Thorne's confession house of commons th: in week that_he never had t'me to go to school. The late Will- iam Parrott, M. P.. for the Nermanton the on. told the writer a si Not a member of his‘femil” knew much es the alnhaher Ha tried help as a lad, but with-the pir s sounding at six. ne found his task pessible. When he grew to manhood he was ashamed to o to school, 80 he and a dozen I'ke him each paid the village schoo'master sixpence weekly to give them private lessons ell till they came to the fir ction sum. “Substract 199 w301, said : e, and he explained the me frem one, you cam’t: borrow ten. Now £o fto_the next column and pay hack one.” Poor had suffered so greatly at the hands Wil Parrott knew 2g of units, |0f Stein-collectors that he had tens and hu Tethod did |GTiven to pr operty not accor ¢ commer- | identifying it with - fal m “We had bo; n the German his rowed ten and were anfy paving ba _to of markings, ha lone. To this dav I have reearded!found i bottom, s as rather a shady husiness.” | “Stolen from ertenbers.” rom Crete. Ho island of a hundred e : no three towns, and two of these, nd Canea, find it neces: 2row’nz pains. to destroy ancient mon uments to make space for modern im nrovements. Hanpily there seems no disposition vet to co'onige where lie the remains of thot thousa civi ands anl tion_a: exalted as the world has ! ever That old civilizat'on makes the culture of ancient Greece The “Rheinisch Wastfachlische Zei- . < excessive in the violence ssions, today finds pleasure ting its rage upon Franmce. It eams: The force with which the German tempest rweeps over tne French will awaken echo in the German empire. With this onslaught we are on the rizht way, for ail pelitical considera- tions demand insistently that the French should feel the strength of our arm. Well-considered strategic reasons Prought the push to Amiens to an end. We shall not critise them. but the po- litieal point of view cannot be sup- nressed; even if the Fnglish were thrown off the continent the war would not be ended: thev conld. after leaving Calais, land beh'nd the Loire, or retire to their island and carry on war at sea, The great arm with which England fiehts us on the continent is not her own army but that of France. and it is now a cuestion of beating hat decisively. Without that nothing can be achieved. A North Londcner’s dog story: “In a road at Hampstead vesterday I saw a dog leaninz out of a window anl barking loudiy at a passing postman. to friend of vours” He replied: ‘Oh, he's all right, When I don't deli a Jetter at his house he alwavs watches fo: my return to remind me of the fact.’” Many reasons. social as well as re- linious. have beer assigned for the de- cline of tamily pravers to which Sir Toseph Maclav pleads we should re- turn. An ingenious observer noint- ed out a few years ago that familv prayers reminded the order of the day #0 lonz as the whole familv break- fasfed together. Disruntion came in, he asserted, with the institution of a hathroom in houses. Up to that time peonle tnok thelr morning hath in their bedrooms. and eot downstairs simultaneousiv. When room, breakfast hecamae a series of tached menls, for the first ished hefare tha last had ha- % the family cirele thus hrok- = pravers eradvally disan- Cleanliness had ousted godli- fam neared oo The parcel vost to South Africa has vesumod fthis seeelc Guite a ro- Tt is 2 pleca of orennization that is little appreciated b those who dron their 'etters into s hoves en route for the auayside Tha maile are grouned according to colors. They are handled on board. ofton enough. by men who carnot de- ohor Enelish; they are collected and rried achore at distant ports by 2 who cannot read at all. Tow is it managed? It a coolle sees “ack with two broad hands of red tied upon a grey ground. hie knows that sack stripes appear,. then the con- ment is bound for Svdney: GLEANED FROM FOREIGN i There is a toych of iron: in the news! Knossos. | vhom 1 remarked, ‘That doz is no| ance attaches to the distribution of { eur overseas malfls, is for Melbourne. It two sl while a blue and a red indicate Queensland. EXCHANGES numter 1 ar to he distributed, President Wislon's Arthur of Co House ion as to which it ig | oce: hi i Pri |president. 1n honor of was served, a itry not possessing a iher of the appropri cal saloonlkeeper |lend a dozen or so. { e oon I ked the sioned to id keeper, howe “l received more kindness in Amer- 2 than I can ever repay,” said Dr. Jowett at the dedicatory servi at Westminster ( ight. " “Durinz my seven v York I found the ald Gos cient for the needs of the New World. 1 Dr. Joweit added that he hoped the | ' in which he preached might be = a shuttle amon bich were between It is with mixed feelings that read of the withdra ¢in May) Tondon’s last h drawn fire en: {No doubt the {more efficient. but for picturesauen, jand thrill what s hid Tond istreets to compare with the engine o ten v , with its =uverb white hor at ton speed? Tt was the nearest th! ceive to the modera could con- ariot of Achilles “If T had heen a bet- he said, “T should have lost the ‘entirely erroneons v I took of war's effext on our l- brary.- At the hezinning of the war I thought it would halve our werk. Tn- siead of that, we are issuing three times as manv hooks as before the | war. tion, as ever, has a predomi- nance: but war books and v travel are much in demand. simply must read nowadays.” by heavily | passed a long column of American soldiers, writes onr war corresnond- ent. They were prettv baked after a hard, hot march, and their packs wore heavy loaded with full kit: bhut they came with a swing, with the lune and their heads up, and keen eves Iooking ont of the white mask of dust through {which their sweat ran in litfle chan- nels and dvkes. They eemed to have everv old thing in their packs. which |are much longer than ours, and T no t pair of field hoots, slung outside, with ad that, in addition to extra water bottles and shovels pla somn of them had pri particwlar pronerty ried on this “Pj £ One of them had a guitar tfe his nack. and another a hanfo, and nother a violin-case. Obviovaly thev were on the move with all thair ha- lonzings and not mersiv an » ronte march for the sake of a liftle evar. rcise .on a hot afternoon.—London Chronje! Harr Georn Barthelms, former Wash- Ington corresnondent for the Coloenas ette in 17th letter of reminis- cences say: “Till it €411 He possthle tn make the Tnited States into a_really inde- rendant American state? I do nnt know. Many of my German frionds thoupht it poseible, and ome of them asxured me that he will not emigrats, painful thoueh everything has hacome tn him, because he intends now more than ever to taka up the ficht for a tree America and for a srend Tee- laration of Tndenendence. Manw things have hannened sn differsntc in theea i that ane moet submit to aheti- nence fram a dofinite nninipn. Ona ear onlv draw econclusions of which he premicag tie 4n historv and evneri- snen. These nremises. indeed, djsnlas Germaniem in Americs nor a< ham- mers, bt ne anvil: they show thar and tin | [vate and wrhich they car- to e | Children Ory | FOR FLETCHER'S ight on | political {inay be thut Germanism will find ; {unity “the streng TR e e e e Ta|gecure to It the piace that fs its duo] nostar, o 5 S Ly i t and by story. terview in which he asked Wiy DOt|so ey it m make life gay and sunny instead of |tha it will not be so. American Ger- ' manism a fertilizer; they ghow that . ica has found hiz soul n that Toyal service and impetence are not enough. It which alone can 1t may be not. I am almost afraiz is deomed to powerlessness. t suffers, and goes under. That is the igreat tragedy which tears our hearis, while we cannot alter tate. Memoi | Americe honors the men the Civil sides of | tercession gervice at attended b by thefr consul, aves ueenst: Ameri: S, a tod in_the rial Day—the day on whi who fell War—wag observed on bot! the antic May 20. An i Liverpool w 15,000 Americans, heacs aid flowers on the of the Lusitania vietims own. can soldiers’ graves at South- lampton were similarly honored. while | viati Line troops * at 's statue Edinbureh | in Oid Cal {ton Cemétery, erected to the memory ! {of Scottish-American soldiers who feil | vil war. Preaching at the Cily Temple, Dr. Fort tions Harold Beghic writine of the S |t rmy flag--the s “For they had stood |eise, its followers balieve more paint | the redemption of the warl for *an power of love to work the utmost mi racles | ine the said that the secret of this flag's pov eor all over the world is the sreat w of its to do and to . has do dark cities; we are bazinninz to hecr| i e | chat it is dofng for cur soidiers and | Buatral force —whick, a: s all r the worldi—wonderful | Dation is a herd. thines, as I know, in Egppt— j_But that ething 1 nould we doubt that the faith MAnnEs nbamision s iy : X ieh it stands. the nowsr of love,|ED3land, in Ausiralia and in Cheerine news that _American Ay not vet become ihe faith of ar|Africa. The great fact that we are »s stand ready to bloek ‘the| ind”> Tt mav mot ba the Salva- | Ul oue rises, before me Iike a moun- on Parls. But we greatly ! pricon. i minlees {his fails the '« n evolving t through smoke of | doudt if the old slogan of “hoia ‘em” | umanity, but ‘his fla BE 2 . |®ill be found as popular as “smash|should have state Acs. o Hamo Clear the wav (hat all may see it. We are find'nz what kind of reat procession of the b asime des the Ienatiangl gny me\scrapher our Uncle Samual is when h wh E2 SIR3 Te = ans, the Engil. and e Au-|gets het up.—New Have ournal. harl 1t) goesyupito ithef Temple stralians and South Africans massed,|® P & - the mails are!{Peace to sing laudamus for the fo 5 different | eration of the world.’ icle. THE ROAD CF LIVING MEN [Writt mous mes had this flag befo: he turned as a psychologist to e: en spe (Fenry Enstish writer Nevton, using Memorial Day n illusiras he war a day ‘should be set apar holy and tender, on which the free vho have fought together might {unite in laying flowers on the graves {nf the men v | mij be free. ion suggested that after died that the worit flag of hoy thiz flag, more than anvthin in, and wou'~ lay- down their lives for, unquestioning faith n the soul of ma: mystery of conversion. Gereral, that the first thin saving a man i to love hir make him know that you lo One box . power. have all heard what this flag e in the courts and i allevs o —~London ( eyes By H de Vers St v for The *¥ Ver= Stacpo ana Hedingham de astle "SEVEN YEARS” . Philadelphia, Pa.—*I sufiered for course ol goven long years with a lame back, it.”—Mrs. MARGARET NEsS, 1&?3 Hazzord St., Philadelphia,, Pa. Women who suffer irom displace- ments, irregularitie: ulceration, beckache, aches or ‘“‘the biues” should not rest antil they have given this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegatable Compound, 2 trial. complications exist, write Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mas: special suggestions. The result of its long experience Fer a Chafed Skin Over 100,000 people have proven that nothing relicves the soreness like Sykes Comfort Powder roves its extraordinary he Fleshy people take notice, 25¢ at the Vinol and other drug storeg ‘The Comfort Powder Co., Boston, Mass, not as an a; on_the ¥ |man does not hesitate to chanze when <nows What or_even fancies he sees, in- | feiter tn; future. or collective ¢dvantage in nd dead men are s destroying ancent ndmarka. 'Fn“.«l | Auditorium THEATRE BENLORING and His Own Musical ___Comedy ACompany___ WWS | “An American Live Wire” ADAPTED FROM THE FAMOUS irregularities an pain. I had one “CABEAGES AND KINGS” pl:g:xcl;‘:\tlit:r ?hnti VOL. BY 0. KENRY other bt ¢ me nogood. Tread Nfack Sennatt Comedy bout Lydia E ance”’ it Vexe HHer Nature Dance table Compoundand gaveita trialand in a short time I felt benefited and am now feeling fine, and without weak. nessorpain. Many | of my friends have also taken Lydia E. Pig]lihén'l ega\i table Compoun 1:30, 3:16, 6, g andumher 3‘£‘5 and 8 P. M, LINA CAVALIERI In the 5-Part Artcraft Featur “LOVE’S CONQUEST” J. BARNEY SHERRY In the 5-Part Mystery Play “Who Killed Walton” Last Chapter of the SON OF DEMGCRACY With Benjain Chapin, Entitled “UNDER THE STARS” re——— e & CURRENT EVENTS ; inflammation, ideache, head- It or at your service. MC Teday and Tomorrow ng g to deatroy Ger- | rmanent union of It was a w which sa ¥ prove: of olden “Femove not the or words to that ther days they the old signs 2nd practical times | another p nyhow, in store ou But in th marks. because he is {by any idea comes to mind as the law of | 1iartford Post rogress operates to remove oid build- . s in the ¢ center. We are to have a better Bridgeport | ; ways after the shiftings of are over—Bridgeport Tele dise THEATRE Today and Saturday TWO BIG FEATURES LILLIAN WALKER In David Greham Phillips’ Greatest Story THE GRAIN OF DUST NROE SALISBURY IN 1 “HUNGRY EYES”- A Thrilling and Gripping Photo Play of Love Out West Hearst-Pathe News the common jails or in the state Hartford has a number of cases that farm There are a number of women who meake a constant round between the police court and jail, who are seldom liberty mora ‘than three of four treatment. before being sent back again for iod of confinement. are cases' of disease rather than. of offense against the law and any other treatment is as cruel and ineffective as punishinz an epleptic as a criminal subject to fits. Such cases can be handled on a state farm 1 anywhere else and with better chance of effecting a cure than other form of These treatment.— Fortune seldom knocks at the door ;of the chronic kicker. is part sot rid of at we m He has | 00f of ot | be a shortage. Ed of ations to} bl ceds )t Poems, essays and romances, | ¥ g8 ofshations! to] the public needs is much more | ¥ ensure >. Peace in this world can | gps 3 ol g which Pierrot, The Pools of |cyist on A xorl definite in 1 as to conditions e e R O n based on power. |in the near future than the coal hoard = , The Chil-| We eaking races, will | qucoseds o e of the Sea and The Beef of stars | the world peace and of the brand | 1y f there should certatnly | IHVALUABLE FOR COLDS have been dely eircula: Eiis | guarantea shail be | learer and more definit Un-| yp taken in time this Calcium compeand books have e into | of what may be expected | lessens the risk of chronic n}muré&l' ¥rench, Italian, erman and vet been made public. 1f| troubie AN ineremedial snd tssic qutl Swedish.) 1 of the ""&"":‘ézg! pound: °Xe harmiul drugs. Try them to- - e 2 Say. - s Let us throw down Shibboleths and THE WAR PRIMER » be given. 17| BO cents a box, including war tax think cles We, the sh-speak- 8y National Geographic Socisty. there is to be coal enough for all For sale by -n% ing peo e faced not by Germany | mode wants it that there Eckman Laboratory, but by that vast nat.¥al energy calied - that the force that pand and destroy a| V v same force that built ch is maKing Germ 1Y [ the rs-Cotterets, one of the historic French towns which lies in the present should be some tolerab! definite in- B formatio It ar situa itingench made it nl: the people kave a plan for provi- arise meetin sion for the hoof Germ n offensive al WELDING WILL FIX IT expand to d tr id is that pdple Eay Cylinders, Castings of all kinds, Agri- xpand to desiroy the worl iha S it has been formed, 5 i i ch created the British Empire and on-Montdidier fr Tl SR TRt on cultural Implements, Transmisslons nited States of America. today's wa and Crankcases, Housings, BSteel recos, that the growth of d from the W: gton | R R any is evil, but for Heaven's sake of the National Geo-} tate Farm for | of ALL K e the | W NDS can be made WHOLE nat the fact of its being evil detracts i with ant event for|and SOUND with our WELDING. foot-pound from the energy estabd- | Forest of V t g | Co ted, in af Skilied, expert work that is guarane ing i it to the h t purpose,{ . . it. o L R ST el R b Dot | teed—try it. Auto Radiators also re we talk as though our ideals were th , is 17 @ its_most difficuit problem ~"r‘m€d- chief gtre: Ideals cannot fight rail and 23 miles sou do with women offerders | . and unless we, iihc of Compeigne. law. Its activities will be Cave weldmg and Mfg_ CO- % oples, find a coun- | “The town is nated in the hist ginning. gradually ex- ter for the natural force against us|French literature as the birthp scope until all women 21 Chestnut Street we will so down babbling about_the|the elder Alexandre Dumas. Another pt those convieted of Good, the Beautiful, and the True|great 'y light, Racine, the ed for there instead of | Phone 214 under the w of an energy that|dramatist, was born a few miles from kens nothing and cares nothing about |here at La Ferte-Milon on the other Goodness, Beauty or Trut side of the forest of otterets | A high and common ideal has|(eight and a half mile linked us together. German brutality |rail). A statue of the has brought the BEnglish-speaking | was erccted here in 18 races under the one common fiag of| “A philosopher mi ing, if, wa' do spirit of ritory strengt We whilst founder: pire was founded by suing spirit th: down G force it selves, unc of the race that must be in t] goes en That the someth thing which can not be e idexls, erty—that is much, but Britain is to exist, is not after being brought together, not find kindlinz in us the t Growth. Not growth of ter- but growth in dominion and ume ave the they may s of power. ideals: be but Jeaders The Bril men not pur- deals but urged on by the makes nations grow. If the on of the United States and to crush ol ermany. and remain as 2 world must be inspired _by this Individuals must sav to them- sciously, “we bre members | iles,” and their pride t race and where pride eruy follows. is _the something unbuyabl ideals, the | ntangible, he some- ied by or precepts, the Red Cr or words, iers. Poyet, a who rose to power throus of Louise of Savoy Under the ausy s a party of p perts are at Ottawa studying Canad- inn methods of training disabled so'd- OF NORWICH of the 16th ! Today it i French (masisirate |} pAvis, ELLAVERN, Plainfield ’ oy o peaor i} FARRELL, JOHN, Norwi Shorten- || GOULD, THOMAS, Norwich , ordered § HAKES, MARGARET A, ALEERT H. HAKES, Jr, River Forest, lil. KEHOE, JOHN A, Taftville......... KNICKERBOCKER, KATHERINE, Stamford. LATHAM, IRA T, MARY L. LATHAM, Tr.,, Ledyard. MAXSCN, HERBERT E., Providence, R. PHILLIPS, MARY ANN, Preston PRATT, MINOT T, Kansas City, Mo. REYNOLDS, MICHAEL, Norwich. 8MiTH, DELCENY J,, Norwich.. ne exclusive! anguage in all legai | ices of the American | fessional ex- | Resino CASTORIA 1f your doctor said to use Resinol for that skin-trouble you'd try it without a second thought! Well, many doctors throughout the ccuntry @re prescribing it to heal sick skins, and have been deing %0 for years, g Sc why not take the combined advice of all these wise medical men and let Kesinol Ointment meke your skin well ? STANTON, FREDERICK L., New York City. WHIPPLE, CEORGE A. YOUNG, BENJAMIN JOHN E. YOUNG, Tr, Norwich SARAH WHIPPLE, Tr, Norwich.,..ooovieiiinanenn The Dime Savings Bank LIST OF ACCOUNTS OF MORE THAN $10.00 ON WHICH NOTHING HAS BEEN DEPGSITED OR VITHDRAWN FOR TWENTY YEARS. $118.80 15.16 1263 1022 12.85 38,95 1157 2586 18,12 169.60 31.89 sty R 1t usually stops iching and o makes tlecp | poss ickly clears 1 away all trage of the tly H eruptien. Kesinol Seap also i conaias the Kesinol medica- | tion, raaking it excellent for i tender, easily-yritated skins. A I For saic by all drugeiats. Samples free. Write Dept. 138, Resis L, Baltimore, Md. ‘42 FRANKLIN STREET | FARM LIGHTING OUTFITS AND WATER SYSTEM,S/ ENJOY THE COMFORT AND SAFETY OF ELECTRIC LIGHTS AND POWER ON THE FARM “Ask Us Questions” The Norwich Electric Co.