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Sulletin snd Qoufied’ 122 YEARS QLD ’fla. 12 a !'nll Boe o e Postoffice ‘at Norwieh -class matter. Feiephone Callss Bulletin Business Office 480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms 35-3. Bulletin Job Otfice 35-2 wmlmnnglu Ommce. 625 Ma'n Street Telephot 0-3. Subeeription raowth: 34.00 8 year, Entered at Coun., as ne- Norwich, Wednesday, Sept. 18, 1913. CIRCULATION 1901, AVerage ......eeciene... 4412 1905, average ..... 5,9’5 September 14, 1618.. 10,161 MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Assoclated Press is exclusive- ly entitled to the use for repubilc tion of all news despatchies credi ed to it or not otherwise credit- ed In this paper and ~iso the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special despatches herein are also sesprved. Right Is More Precious than Peace” K __ _ . i —————— = R help have been given as the reasons over and over again and yet there ap- pears to be a dispute between those in authority regardirg the lack of il cars. Such being the case there is apparently a lack of co-operation somewhere which fieeds to be réme- died. There should be a closer up- de) ling between the fuel and rail- road administrations or at least there should be-a better understanding of each other's position for nothing is gained by laying the trouble onto the other. They should work carefully together for the benéfit of the nation, and at least avoid the mistake of making conflicting claims. Each may Le right and each may be wrong ac- cording to the view which they take of it but when the United States geo- logical survey maintains that car shortage is responsible for a 50 per cent. loss in bituminous coal .produc- tion the statement of the fuel admin- istrator appears to receive substantial support. AGAINST THEMSELVES AND NA- TION. ©One of the hardest things to im- press upon the minds of certain bod- ies of organized labor these days is the fact that their demands for in- creased pay or different weorking con- ditions can be adjusted, if there is 2 willingness to have it dome in ac- cordance with the facts, without in- terruption of production and without resorting to a strike. The need of such action ought tof be perfectly apparent if consideration was given to anything but a seifish ttitude. They must know that it is important to keep the industries of this country going if the soldiers and sailors are to be properly supported right here at home. And vet in spite of such a well known situation it i: too often the case that strikes are in- dulged in without the least justifi- cation. The latest instance is the case of the hard coal miners wito in conform- ity with action at a mass mceting la’d down their too's and stopped work. They want higher wages but an agency has been provided by the gov- ernment in the war labor board for dealing with just such cases. It can- not heln being 1 therefore that Fuel Administrater Garfield o takes the only possible stand when he declares that they must return to their work before their demands get any consideration. A proper read- justment can be made while they work and whatever is right in the the p vas beginning to announce “Allies hlhrtb Vkl‘t;jnllla' at a StandstflL” and ex] once more how difiéult the Geriaans had made the task of pursuit by utterly de< troying the evacuated territory. The iluns were consoling home pop- ulation with the fiction of another strategic retreat, congratulating them- selves meanwhile on having made a fairly successful getaway, and the Allies were getfing resigned to ano- ther long period of preparation, when suddenly Foch struck again in a new spot with & new weapon. The new spot was St. Mihiel, way down be- yond Verdun, the new weapon was the First American Army. The St Mihiel salient was a sharp angle jut- ting out full twelve miles from the main battle line in a soutwesterly direction until its tip rested on he Meuse river twenty miles above_ that is south of, Verdun. In the tip of the salient lay the village of St. Mihiel, from which the Germans had forced their way across the Meuse and estab- lished a bridgehead on the west bank. The position had been seized in Sépt- ember, 1914, and had been retained ever since with a view to encircle Verdun from the south should the op- portune moment arrive. As long as the Germans held Mihiel -the rail- way connecting the fortresses of Ver- dun, Toul and Nancy was lost to the French and the entire eastern fron- tier was just that much more difficult to defend. 5 It was in this vicinity that the Americans first clashed with the Ger- mans, for just apout a year ago it was announced in Germany that American prisoners had been taken along the Rhine-Marne canal. A few months later came the raid on the American trenches at Seichprey, ten miles east of St. Mihiel, when the Germans first experienced the fighting spirit of their newest opponents in a hand-to- hand combat. Then followed the quiet months and though deeds of valor were bing done in Flanders and Champagne, the American force re- mained apparently inactive, but did not cease to grow. Finally when it had become a real army -with its own artillery, cavalry and air forces, and after the temper of its material had been tried and not found wanting at Chateau-Thierry and the Vesle, Foch gave the new army its first real chance. The blow was struck simul- taneously from both sides of the Mihiel salient. Little more than the gap, bag 15900 Huns and advance the battle line close to the German border and within striking distance of Metz. A short but furious barrage, doughboys filtering through forests and ravines, tanks everywhere to clear St.? twenty-four hours was needed to close | tall youn; ‘was 5uut re&dy when ie%.ms lware th‘t e girl with the curly hair and di: !w;‘ dimple wi trying to ;uy omet ou_know. dom't you,” she asked, “that I'm perfectly willing for you to ;o into’ the army and I'm terrib] ro‘l}d of yol;-—-.nfl all that, don’t you?” tlnumnd the tall young mu !n some surprise. “You've beén a regular brick about it. I'm just as proud of you.” “Well” she proceeded, “I got to thinking today and I wondered whether you just had to go into that southern training camp? Can't you be trans- ferred 16 Oone east or west or some- "3}‘”" he young man sat down again 1;: the shade of the porch ‘; 5 the lovamike, vhy" he tlemanded “Albert,” seriously said the girl wnt{x the distracting dimple, “I just don't want you to go soufih at all., I—" “Thera isn't any yellow fever “Yellow fever!” she echoed scorn- fully. “Albert, I can't reconcile my- self to letting you go down there among. all those southern girls. Why, you might tell them every five minutes that you were e ed and do you suppose it would make any difference? hy, southern girls consider it per- fectly honorable to flirt with any man under %0 who isn't roped, handcuffed and tied by the bonds of mhtrimony. It's an understood thing snd I suppose it's all right down there, where every | girl knows it’s catch as catch can, but how about me way back up here? Why, Albert, I—" “Now, Angeline!” broke in the young man. “Don’t talkk to me!” she cried indig-, nantly. “I know perfectly well what you are going to say and I expect it's all true—that you love only me for- ever, but I guess I know girls. Why, the southern people are the most hos- piltable upon earth and I can just see you being asked to dinner in some great, big house coversd with masg- nolias and fifty-leven giris that never g8et their faces tanned cooing over you and poor-soldiering you and everything like that and, I Len you, it goes to your head. ~“You can't help it. Why, there was a southern girl who came to our sum- mer resort one year ago and she wore veils when she went sailing and wouldn’t play tennis for fear of sun- burn and took a nap every living afternoon. with cucumber cream all over her to whiten it. “Then you should have seen the days of Grant, U. S. stands for “Un- conditional Surrender.” ons E"' Eder at fl:?rdc g the lmle pal act aid being companions on the lake or playing tennis—and es might just as well have crawled und the hotel porch and gone to sleep with thte spiders dropping o'sr us as to have atténded the dances. They nearly dislocated their necks ~and shoulders trying to dance with her or just look at her. She would be a sea foam dream of lily whiteness and she gobbled them up. And, Albert, I could- bbled. e “Oh, I know all about it. Butwhen sundae with whipped cr-cr-cream a girl who' looks 1-1-like a pineapple ! gazes at you and sympathizes with you ’ 1 gugss you'll remember how sunburn- | ed I got my neck playing golf and you won't even remember I played be- 1 you wanfed me to. And if you pex"il in going down there I've de. cided not to stand in your w-w-way, and if you fell in love with some girl down there—and, of course, you will, because I don't think you are going to be any more heroic than any other man | when it comes to a pretty girl be- witehing you—you can just let me know jt’s all off and I'll send bac your ring. So far as that goes, might as well give it t0 you now, be- cause the mails are so uncertain and it might get lost or something, and it'll | save you buying a new one—you can | have this reset, you know. And % T PRICES: %’,‘.‘.’:’ésc,"‘so‘c,""vsi‘,"sl S “Angeline,” cried the young man in- sistently, “you simply must-—" “No,” said the pretty girl firmly, moypmg het eyes, “I will not, simply listen to reason. I'm perfectly wilung to have you brave bullefs for your country that I have to hur! you into the jaws—no. I don't mean jaws, of coursé—that I have to sée you succumb to the wiles of one .of those terribly attractive southern girls. I just can't stand it!” “Well you won't have to,” the young man told her. “The camp they finally picked out for me is not within gun-i shot of a town and they don’t have magnolias in Texas—I mean girls. Nothing but cactus and sagebrush and tarantulas and greasers and dust.. So I'm safe” she gasped happily. “Honestly? Why. Same. ALLIED NATIONS OFFICIAL WAR REVIEW D. W. Gnfid:, the Master Proflu:et, Presents - “THE GREAT LOVE?” AN 8-PART ARTCRAFT PICTURE With the 8ame Cast as the Birth of a Nation and World,” Showing the Part American Women are Playing to Win. War. They Don’t Handle Machine Guns but They're Fighting Just the “Hearts of the the “Oh. Albert! you poor thing— why, how perfectly lovely!”—Chicago News . AUDITORIUM Today—2.20, 6.45, 8.45 DONT FORGET TO DANCE ORIGINAL |“l}anz Jazz Band” 1 THEATRE i} Today and Thursday Edith Wharton's Wonderful Play SHe e o - AT o way of a new wage scale can be made}out machine-gun posts. and thei STORIES OF THE WAR Vaudewille and Hictures The House of M“th THE ONLY ANSWER. to operate from the time the demand |threatening St. Miriel salient was a He Edund His Mether. PULASKI HALL ; i is made. They certainly are not|thing of the past. The whoie battle = R 3 ar With An All Star Cast of Although it was not known just by holding|was planned by Americans, led by | A letter received Aug. 16 from Lieut. what sort of an appeal would be| helping thelr cause any by holding| ¥AS PAtAcl ps, Americans eG W) Afgur W. Pope, Jr, of the Ninth iar an 1H1ar Broadway Players Headed made in behaif of peace by the cen- | Up coal production and it is most un- | | United States infantry teils of his ex- i ! on e MOSt T | The world has thrilled at the news of | Next Saturday, September 21 | tral powers, there was advance infor-| fortunate that greater recognition is mation enough to make it evident that som¢ move was being contemplated and the allied nations were therefore not given to this very fact. are acting not only against their own interests but the welfar: of the na- They | the exploit and the German amswer is the last peace proposal. Some enthusiasts have talked if the taking of Metz was in sight, but as | Wounded, and no further mformation periences in the attack of July 18 near Soissons. He was reported severely could be obiained by his family until Those Two Slick Hicks ELSA FORD PRIZE DANCE. By Katherine Harris Barrymore e e ettt e PEARL WHITE S N— adequately prepared when Austria- | tion. these are reckoning without a real the resRvuiol A letep T Jhones The httle R“ndmut firedey ‘Evening, Sept, 19 THE HOUSE OF HATE Hungary asked for a gathering of . conception of the task vet before us. P e LR rsda; ! belligerent representatives to dlgcuss THE DOG MENACE. li:;'fe?"dq]‘oi?u"h Lhe ‘“nfir(:n;";,‘] other day near Soissons and went | Frank and Cl!l‘l LaTour AT PULASKI HALI misunderstandings and discuss them g s Aot | secretly. . As if with one voice the allied na- tions have declined Austria's proposi- tisn and the whole explanation of the declination is deftly summed up in the statement of President Wilson when he said that this country “has re- reatedly and with entire candor stated the terms upon which the TUnited States would consider peace, and can and will entertain no proposal for a conference upen a matter roncerning which it hag made its position and purpose so plain.” That is the very reply that was ex- pected. There can be no beating about the bush. The allied nations have announced their aims and thepe gre not to be sidetracked a lot of talk which would not be binding and wkich would be bound to start an un- dercurrent of pacifism in behalf of just such a peace as Germany is de- sirous of megotiating, a peace which would show Germany and its vassals to bé the victors. If Austria or Ger- many are ready to mee: the allles’ terms well and good, but until they are the war must go on and from the standpoint of the allies it will be continued with increased fury. Now iz the time to send home to those rovernments that their opponents are comstantly getting stronger -and not armies thias e 5 | weaker. harm comes. If men were engazed |when operating in France than fo|Lqayay, I ould not do more. Poor CLIPPED ;Surgeon General Blue Ad- in stealing sheep as persistently as|stand as a defence against a possible In connection with the effort which kas been made to increase the sheep industry in this state and the atten- tion which is always calied to the doz menace when such a nuiation is undertaken, it is interesting to note that during the past year there was Qisbursed by the state be- cause of dog damage the sum of §17,- 170.29. That means that in addition to the loss caused by dogs wkich run in addition to the dogs which run about the country causing tion to valuable property, and the re- sultant effect which it has had upon the raising of sheep, for there are farmers who because of the experi- ence which they and their neighbors l:ave had are determined that they will not enzage in the raising of sheep as long as dogs are Ziven the liberty which they at present enjoy. it has cost many thousands of dolla which might better have been spent in buyving sheep for the purpose of stocking farms that the wool and meat markets might be better served. There are all kinds of dogs the same as there are all kinds of peo- ple. There are those which are kept where they belong but there are oth- ers which are not and it 1s from that number which is disposed to rove about the country, chasinz and biting if not killing the sheep that the great destruc- | border, face each other 33 miles apart. | Verdun, as all the world knows. lies | on the Meuse Metz on the Mozelle, a few miles north of where it emerges| from France into Germany. Like Liege, Namur and Antwerp, both were vonsidered impregnable. It was to avoid the necessity of passing Verdun that Germany chose to violate the neutrality of Belgium in 1914 and thus drew down on herself the might of Britain and the condemnation of the entire world. Taught by the Belgian forts, the French promptiy transformed the defences of Verdun from unyielding steel-and-concrete emplacements to earthern trench and concealed battery. Thus when the test came, “they did not pass” and Verdun was saved. Now it is only reasonable to suppose that the Ger-| mans have made of Metz quite as formidable a work as The French suc- ceeded in making Verdun. The itself is the center of a fortified area 125 miles in circumference. To take it by assault would call for an appal- ling loss of life; to pass it by and mask it would permanently occupy & veritable hest. but to cut its railways south and west is perfectly possible. Metz is more than a foriress, it is a great depot of supplies for the entire German line westward to Laon and quite in keeping with the German principle that the best defense is a strong offense. Metz was planned more to supply the German | ahead, the Fr. { fleshy part the fate of|and hand and part of the forparm. 1 | Mildred, who is south to the Swiss border. This is| coming behind. Our j | regiment ‘went eizht kilometres fabout five miles) the first day. 1 do not {know how many after, because I was wounded three hours after we went over. We were just starting into a sort of ravine when I was hit in the of the left shoulder by a machine gun or rifie builet. the bullet i coming out through the back. It was lucky it did not tear or fracture the shoulder. But unluckily the bullet cut a nerve, which paralyzed my left wris. had to walk four miles to the first aid station, and then was in three exacua- jtion hospitals in a French hospital and endured painful rides in ambu- lances, finally finding myseif in a hos- pitel trair on the way to Bordeaux. “On reaching a little station at St. | Pierre des Corps, near Tours, where the soldiers arrive, a Red Cross can- teen worker brought me & cup of hot | chocolate. T asRed wrere we were and she said ‘Near Tours’ I exclaimed: ‘Why, that is where my mother and | sister are’ and asked to be left there. | So here I am,_ near where my motheri is working at the officers’ club of |.Ae‘ Y. M. C. A. anq it _was a_jovous re- union with my mother and my si en working in the caz- teen here. As I walked to the first| aid station my friends were falling | st, and I stopped to assist them all | 1 could, covering them over, unfasten- | ing their collars and tunics, and do- | ing what I could, but as I was bleeding | and ] Al. Whitman Funny Capers, Noveleties Bubbles - and Mary Anderson {§ In a Thrilling b Western Picture “THE HOME TRAIL” CURRENT EVENTS WAR NEWS MUSIC BY ETHIER'S SYNCO- PATED ORCHESTRA GEORGE G. GRANT i Undertakier and Embalmer 32 Providence St, Taftville Prompt attentiou to day or night calls Telephone €30 apri4MWFawl THERE s no advertising medium la Eastern Connecdticut equal to The Bui- letin for business resuits. A BATTLE ROYAL 2-Part Mack Sennett Comedy WITH Ben Turpin and Polly Mora.n Burton Holmes Travelogue GEER — e The Piano Tuner - 122 Prospect St. Phene 511 — ] “One Ounce of Prevention Is Worth a Pound of Cure” Help Your Board of Health Fight This Disease THIS ARTICLE SPANISH INFLUENZA DISCOVERED IN SIX \U. S. SEAPORT TOWNS WE HAVE ARRANGED A WINDOW DISPLAY SHOWING MANY PREVENTATIVE Py = 3 o = “We have only to say that we be- i 3 3 THE MACEDONIAN OFFENSIVE | the dogs kill them, it can be nppre. | Ivading srmy, Hence it is even more | ong o ne Ninth resulbr. Intantee, | mits European P;a.ndemm > The openins of the offensive gy ciated that indignsiion would run so|Yeluable for its railways than for its|Secong givision. to have anything we FROM | Has Reached Aniericn. MEDICINES Macedonia by the French and Serb. | hi€h that an immediate stop would 5 want. After our reputation in taking | | iang indicates that General Foch does not intend to give the enemy any rest, here for any son it becomes recessary to slow down operations at any particular point he makes it evi- dent that he is ready to strike else- where so that it will be impossible for the enemy to shift its troops about be put to it, but it is certainly as im- portant that as mugh attention should be giverrto the elimination of the worthless dogs. The right sort of encouragément will not be given to sheep raising until the dog men- ace is overcome. EDITORIAL NOTEAS. The next move will doubtless be not against Metz proper but past it on_the west into the Bassin de Briey. Such an advance would not only cut thé railway lines to Loan but would defi- nitely put into the hands of the Allies the deciding factor in the great war. The Bassin de Briey is the greatest iron region in all the world reaching Vaux, July 1, when more prisoners| and machine guns were captured than m operation up to that time, the Fighting Ninth is right there with the goods, and we think we have the best division over here. And we have more | of a reputation than ever, after the| Soissons affair. The French say the | American soldiers do not know the! THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE WASHINGTON, Sept. 13.—Surgeon General Blue, of the Public Health ! Service, has made a telegraphic survey | to determine the extent of Spanish in- i fluenza in the United States. General | Blue has found there was a sharp out- ANTISEPTICS > from Belgium through Luxemburg and | meaning of fear. The boys £o o ihe |break at Fort Morgan, near Mobile, | TONICS for the strengthening of weak points = along the Franco-German border for|attack smoking cigarett They are CAREFUI LY {Ala., in August, and at about the same | without seriously endangering the| The chap who failed to produce ajthirty miles. Before the war France|wonderful, and the Boches just run Ll front somewhere eise. substitute for gasolene must be kick- : : Already it appears that the gains made in northern Greece are of no ing himself harder than ever. was obtaining over two-thirds of her entire supply of iron from this region, before them. “When the bullet struck me I was YOU WILL NOTE time a tramp Steamer arrived at New- | | port News with almost the entire crew | prostrated. ATCOMIZERS The German prisoners are not the|{while Germany was mining quite|twisted directly around by the force Philadelphia posted a few cases Slight importance. Three peints of| only ones who are surprised . that|ihree-fourths of what she used from fand dropped, but did not lose con. some four weeks ago, and a few have SPUTUM CUPS fnuch strategic value have been taken | they ape being fed on white bread, |Der purtioniof it. But fir the last fonr sciousness. T do not know how scon I THAT SURGEON beeen reported from New York. The s : years Germany has had the use of the|{can get back to the regiment, which Boston outbreak was reported Sep- in the initial assault wizh thousands| The man on the corner says: Noliiiiv Tield, obtaining theretrom ninety |1 am: anxious to. do: bt fhe surorach tember 11, since when the pandemic ETC. of prisoners and the indications are|sooner is the canning of the strawhat|per cent. of her iron supply. _With the | pfomise nothing because of the injury GENERAL BLUE has appeared at New Londom, while that the Bulgarians are likely to be|started than summer begins to re-|Briey region in her possession she can|to the nerves pushed back for some distance where turn.e g0 on waging indefinitely, without it specially—and I may New Orleans bas not wholly escaped. have to be here two months or more.” “The disease is characterized by THE FIRST it was believed by them that they| The time seems ripe for the scat-|she could not cominuedlhrqe months. =i s RECOMMENDS sudden onset” said Dr. Biue today. AT 2 were so strongly fortified that they|tering of a liberal amount of propa-]|The prize is great and will not be| mhe man that marvies five times in | - “People are stricken on the street, could not be moved. ganda tracts back of the German|Surrendered without a struggle. order to convince himself that mar- S e BT S B SYMPTOM OF THE For a long time this theater of the|lines. “Words, words, words!” Hamlet riaga is a failure ought to be locked ; ASPIRIN offices, or elsewhere. AND MATERIAL SUCH AS First, there is war has been especially quiet. There| OF course the order which General|might well have been speaking of the|up for safe keeping. “?mcr:i‘}mlhi)fl lgeg\'efiexflh;efige&zme 8 4 Bave been artillery duels, airplanc at- | Pershing will give in reply to thel L nann o e of verbiaps | TEE———— | AND ! redenning and running syes, painsand| DISEASE’ CALL: ¥OUR tacks and small Infaniry operations| Austrian invitation will be “On to} o J0ce BRSBTS D SEENE PREPARE FOR CHANGEABLE |aches all over the body, and general . but ‘the impression has been gained| Berlin.” £ dent and oft-heard truths that the | WEATHER. { prostration. Persons so attacked should SIC : that the allies were satisfied to hoid| While talking about dotng your f war, desirous of| Many doctor's bl g0 to their homes at once, get to bed PHYSICIAN— their line without attemoting to’ad-| Christmas shopping early, it is an ex-{peace and destined to utter Tuin if govsd by anéfingl fl;_“l"'[ Wlfih T ;lz“hd{ { without delay, and immediately call a vante. All the time they have been|cellent thought to apply to your Lib-|this is long delaved. With this pre- | o™ remedie oley’s Honey an physician. 3 ! 3 & Y- | Tar has been successfully used in preparing and in addition to thelerty bond purchases. Tude, Austria proposes that “all belig- fortes emploved in this latest offen- sive there is a steadily growing Greek army eager to regain lost territory from the Bulgars and with the men- ace looming up bigger it is certainly to have its effect upon Bulgaria and Now that miners are demanding a hundred per cent. increase in their wages no one will ever dare to refer to their modesty again. It is a significant fact that the al- lied nationg are all of one mind about erent states send delegates to 4 con- the basic principles for the conclusion The purpose of it = all? : democratic nations are made up of all sorts of people with all sorts of minds. Some are for war to fidential and unbinding discussion of | B. thousands of hom colds, in cases of coughs, croup, hav fever and asthma. H. ler. 'R. F. D. 10, Wooster, O, tes: “By the changing of beds and l"e weather, 1 took a very bad cold and sore throat. Four doses of FG'P\ ‘! gave such splendid results HE ALSO RECOMMENDS DOVER'S POWDERS “Treaiment under direction of the physician is simple, but important, con- sisting principally of rest in bed, fresh air, abundant food, with Dover's pow- der for the relief of pain. Every case with fever should be regarded as seri- ous, and kept in bed at least until tem- PROVIDE YOURSELF WITH SUCH HOME - perature becomes normal. 3 prevent it from sending any assist-| declining the Austro-Hungarian in- |the bitter end. others for peace at any {to get ‘the genuine Foley's. Comalns Yo R H s c AN Conyalescence requires careful man- REMED ance to its allies to the north, while| vitation to a peace talk. price. The strength of a democratic The Lee & Osgood Co. U P Y l I agement tc avoid serious complications, : ]ES As the demonstration of allied strength} It begins to look very much as if government consists in its ability to such as bronchial pneumonia, which % % 7 f st . " |keep its people unanimous. Once let w"-l_ No DOUBT not infrequently may have fatal ter- R i ey et Eyrp Rurjen e arted something it be published, however informally. { mination. During the present outbreak WILL FACMTATE wherever displayed. which he will not be able to finish ac-|that Germany would- consider giving cording to his own wishes. NEED BETTER COOPERATION. It is not surprising in the least that pitention is being called to the dis- trepancy which is to be found be- tween the statement which is put for- ward by Fuel Administrator Garfieid to the effect that there is nothing the What a kind and considerate nation Germany is to offer peace to Belgium tc prevent it from being overrun by the wicked allied nations! Those coal miners who are ready to strike apparently haven’'t hecard what the president said tup and restoring Belgium, Northern France and Serbia, and the many who can see no further than their own | countries and feel no more than their {own sufferings would cry out for ac- cepting these terms, forgetiing the power for evil that would remain in the hands of the Hohenzollern. There OFFICIAL U. S. WAR EXHIBIT | AT STATE FAIR DETERMINE ITS NEED in foregn countries salts of quinine {and aspirin have been most generally used during the acute attack, the as- pirin apparently with much success in SPEEDY APPLICATION & 5 28 to the striking| At he hihe Hohensoliom. Thers BERLIN, CONN. Norwich may not be attacked by this SPANISH matter with the production of coal|Bridgeport munition workers. only a few. In either case there would |§ Sept, 24-28, Day and Night X but it is.impossible to supply the| The destroyed towns of Belgium|be a positive loss of that hearty un. . y Ry A Hiti h f hel countrs as rapidly as desired because | and Rofthern France show that the|animity on ihe part of the Allich that || oply Fair in New Englend Where INFLUENZA. it is you, each cne of you can help of the lack of cars with which to|Kkaiser has left no stone unturned tolis at present inspiring them to do and [} [ ", B p g W0 CE AT 3 2 transport it, and that of Director |shorten the war even as he said. lpeulter tofhe ierid. e BilicA have ¢ General McAdoo of the railroads who Germany is showing anger at Aus- absolutely nothing to gain by enter- ing a peace conference at this or any Pershing Will Give it at Berlin, fight this vital sapping disease and thus restore our . i 4 @ Germany, Next Year. s8ys that there are enough coal cars| tria for its peace move. Had. the al-{gihor time with such a nation as Ger- e : L 3 2ar for all purposes and that they are|lies given it a favoraple consideration|many. To suggest that the conferedce |§ Official State Exhibit of Junior full forces qmekly to aid in war actities, not being filled as rapidiy as they| Germany would have been claiming * are being provided. This has been one of the features connected with the coal problem whigh the people of the country have never been able to understand. In connection with the shortage labor trouble, car shortage and insufficient a— A & A e e e s o l the credit for the move. The opening of the peace offensive Ly Austria will probably be the sig- nal for the pacifists to Wegin anotler assaulf in this country. Anvthing of the "kind, ‘however, is dangerous bus- iness. . —— e e~ bk = be unbinding is, to say the least, su- perfluous. that stands’in the way of her deter- mination to rule. It was twenty-five minutes after the receipt of the Aus- trian communijcation that Secretary Lansing gave to the press the réply lul America, Once _more as in the the world knows that Ger- | many holds nothing binding upon her | A A A PTG | Food Army. 1§ All the Attractions of a l LIVE COUNTRY FAIR DAYS 500—NIGHTS 25¢. THE LEE OSbOOD CO © NORWICH. CONN, e —RITT o ~'-"*-—-A( e (&:flr;}fet of symptoms.—(New York lN CASE OF TROUM TS WL