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glass hm Mk comes to WTOng and unjust tmwents, At the same U-Ih. Germany not the allles was the mation which insisted upon the war, had been for it for years and has no license therefore to talk about copqueat in view of its pan- Germanic plans. Just what will be done with the former German ¢olénies is something which wil] have to be determined when the pease terms are written, In- asmuch as the allies stand for the sel determination of peoples it !. not im probable that some such plan wWill be resorted to in regard te these posses- sions, and in wiew of the kind of treat- ment which the péople ia those colo- nies have received at the hands of Germany there can be little question but what they weuld weleome the day when the German yoke was amm cast aside. Most any which the ailies might make would be an_ ipprovemant to them. Slorwich Bulletin and g.-'i_ci 122 YEARS OLD on price 12¢ & week} 5oc a year/ Enlnr.d At the Postoffice at Norwich, second-class matter. Telephone Calis. Bullgtin M-Ea-: Offics 480, o s. Hetn B iictin Job Othoe foe 35-2, Willimantic Ollbe. 25 Spring St Telephone h e rre— Norwich, Saturday, Oct. 19, 1943, If MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, T Asmcivet Pose 1o ety to the ues for republication o credited 1o it or Bot otherdise this paper and aiso the local new hugein. AL rights of republiestion of special despatch- o0 hemeln are also reperead. ‘DOES IT MEAN REFORMS. Whether the evacuation of the im- portant oity of Lille without the burn. ing of the buildings or the blowing up of the churches, libraries and other public institutions indicatessan impor- tant reform’ on the part of the Ger- mans can be told in time but it !s as yet too early to reaeh such a decision as the result of that instance alone. It is of course being accompanied by the stories coming from Holland that Germany has récalled all its sub+ marinés to their bases. From this it is possible to infef that Germany is to abandon its ruthiess submarine warfare but even that does mot of ' mean that such is the case. Germany has gotten to the point where nothing it does is above suspitlon and it can be apprecigted that it there is going to be a harder submarine cam- paign attempted it would be only nat- ural that the underwater Loats should be recalled for instructions. It is entirely possthbie, however, that knowing what the situation is at home and at the front, ahd having beén brought face t6 facé with the fact even at this late date that it is working to its own detriment by the wanton prac- tices to which it has been resorting Germany recognizes the necessity of instituting immediate reforms in the hope that it will be able to modify the feeling which exists agsainst it There can be no id¢a that the allied nations areé in any mood to forget what Germany has done, but if Germany is really striving to lighten the penaity CIRCULATION October 12, 1918 10,129 *Right is Mors Precio gm— than Peace” DON'T FAIL TO BUY BONDS. it (mghl without such, loan which is ssed ov alsed 8 too important a|which it must pay more than one In- e owed 1o face a faflure | Stance of nen-indulgence in destruc- he expenses of the|tion will be required. It, howsver, 4 met prompely,| Ehows by the manner in which it has we ing that | left Lille intact that the devastation o N capped in|in which it has been engaged wus of N v wants of our fight- | no military advantage. « whether r sea, and — nd et by OUR AIRPLANE ACTIVITIES. It has ‘taken us & much longer time than wag first figured upon to furnith our forees in the field with the neces- sary air fighting equipment, but frem the latest reports which are coming rrem the front it is shown that we are rot only providing more neafly in keeping th the needs but that we are furnishing a type of airplane which is meeting the requiréments and mak- ing it possible for the Americans to do as effective work in the air with their own American made machines as hose who ate fighting with them and from all accounts much more telling service than their opponents. For war gervice it is acknowledged that the De Haviland typs of fighting machine is meeting all demands and well along toward téen thousand of these machines are now in France or on the way there and in thig connec tion the Liberty motors are not only coming in for much praise but they are being sought by the allies in such numbers that the orders eannot be | filled. Thig is certainly for a thing to dc in Jjust a an. as we day t make his a gratifyinz out- ceme of the discouraging start which was made in this line of production. Apparently the expericnces of the ear ly days, or the far-reaching ery fgainst the methods which were at firet used, have brought about the necessary reforms. It is a welcomed change and regrettable that we could rot have received the benefits which are being gained now right from the purch e big and !‘l‘n.l the loan beir Everyone should e top. dut BOWING TO PRESSURE. dence is furnished daily to that the central powers have he handwriting on the wall and ereof have realized the serious move| Very start. /The improvement. how- th the idea of bringing about con-|€Ver, cannet he allowed to sidetrack litions in those countrley which willy the steps ‘which ‘have been taken to prove to ha stens toward raeeting the | iX the responsibility and detérmine yns which have heen ot forth| the penalty fof the sad beginning. It| ident Wilson as preliminaries | $:Mply awakens an increased interest in the result of the investigation which ir. Hughes has been conducting. FEER PR O, ary has been staving e demands of the many nation- ities within its confines. It has heen EDITORIAL NOTES. o this by the dominating in- 2 : . which Germany has exerted Wish: Gapmiahy “Bitding the * tiing to do is to buy more honds and make brea. Con: dermg who is after them you cannot blame the Huns very much for showing their heels. Those who do net buy honds cause of the talk about peace simply throwing up their hands to Huns. :. If reports are true Austtia-Hungary is beginning t6 sét its house in order that it may take advantage of Whson's terms. The man on the corner says: If it were plums you would not require ad- vice, but being bonds get everyoné you ean, Do not step lending until you are convinced that yot are doing every- thing possible to win the bond vic- tory over here. The latest leng range gun bembard- ment of Dunkirk by the Germans is in all probability a parting shot at a much shelled town. If the ambitian of the kaiser is to die a war lord he is entirely overlook- ing the oppertunity which the front line positions afford. Your last chance to buy bonds in the fourth Liberty 1loan and you haven't done your part unlesg help to meet the.quota. If the allies keep on the way they are going it will not be léng before Secretary Daniels can begin to assign placey for that patade ints Berkin. ith Germany cngaged in a reorganization of its be- are the istria is to be divided into ez ad a concession to the Qe- ands of the people for autonomous rnment, and that proclamation was read in the Hungarian parliament ing Hungary to be an independ- Though these steps may not have been taken as yet, there are strong indications that they are on the way and will be put into force, tor it canr- not help heing recognized ‘rom the at- titude of the people that if such ac- tion is not taken as the result of present conditions it will bs brought about as the result of force, not enly from without but by strong and. des termined uprisings without. The dual monarchy I therefore bowing te tho inevitable. It is not doing So out of a desire to see the changes effécted but because its hands are being forced. Reforms are apparently pend- mg which mean great thifigs for the paople in the central powerd, and it sesms now that the breaking up of Austria-Hungary cannot be avoided. GERMAN COLONIES, Germany may be thinking of a great deal more just now than fts solonies which have been for some| The announcement that the state of time in the hands of the allies. It|Connecticut is out of debt could not hasn't forgotten nevertheless that it|have come at a more opportune time. cennot get along without them as it hifie fréquently said and there éan be tle question but what it will make determined effort to get them. It i1 make all kinds of pleas. It will daim that 1t s beihg wrongfully treated, that the dllies are resorting to conattest although they maintain that they are opposéd to it and that if Germany Is going to give up terri- tory which it has takén the allies should do the same. There is no evidence at hand, how- ever. at the present time to show that Germany i8 going to give upon any Another feather in the hat of Gov- ernor Holcomb. The order removing gasless Sun days doesn't mean that everyone $hould endeavor to burn up in one day all the gasolene that has been saved in the past several weeks. Helland is_taking courage &s the fesult of the sudeess of the allies and is to sénd out its own shipe in erder to gét the supplies that it nesds. Fear of German threats must be abating. in that Garmany is in the glassiest offarmy. You, till all hope - Irecognize that worship without works When CGermany asks for an armis-|force as a prayer said at the right tice it should remembeér it is doing |time. A lasy man's réligion is not half Just what Franee did trritory which it now occupids ex-|France was denied bedsuse Bismarck |Jevitty. - All goodness which lacks rapt that it is fofced t6 do so and it|donsidered that the surést way to pertl. %sev:um" ;‘ni“ ur;‘ic: nr: yugl iz thoroughly undérstobd by the world|peace was to deprive France of its|as closely related as faith and works, and peither can stand credibly 1870 and|as interesting ad a design S : T r eluy Henry Thoruuhlml Mark many ve won- dered why man works €0 hard to earn mng he does not need—why the man of $26,000 desires to make it or the man of $100,000 is not sal until he has doubled it: or the with a miilion desires to multipt his dollars W“bbllt limit Money has worried as many people to death as ;overu, and it has doubtless been a source of trouble tp more’ than it has been an absolute source of comfort. Money- is nejther to be worshipped nor despised. Love of money is on2 of (hcj Mmdast of loves. As a religiolis teach- er John Wesley used to say ake | all you can, save all you can, give alf you c¢an” “He who malk money - 4 good servant exeeis in wisdom. He who reeognizes it as a master becomes it slave. He who has &n income of millions more than he can spend is a menaecs to his fellowmen and usually as miserable as the devil can make a human being. A. few persons recognize God’s own architecture; hut the ma in thought never gét beyend ciassi- fying a tree as a thing, instead of a!l creature that hunts its own food, has| ability to proiong its own life, and tof reproduce its own kind. Many a pl g0es a long way for sustenancs. ¥ marjon tells of an old maple tree thut was dying upon a wall which sent new roots to new rich earth several feet away and saved its life. Trees send their roots deep into the earth for wa- ter, and it is recorded of u weeping willow growing in sanmd, that it sent a rodt 30 feet to a well to keep ifs supply of water constant. Rundge, a mastér of chemistry, points out that a tree distinguishes and separates substances more definitely and zecur- ately than man can, or in othm words i¢ a wonder in chemistry. thought the leaves of a lwex\ old are just as green ani beautiful in the spring ag when it be- gan life. We have heard a voice from down the ages notifying us “Man does not Trultt, bub min in a tree live for himself alone!” Andi we ate living in times whan the fact is 1o be seen with crystalline clearne: by all except the blind—the blindest of whom are those who can see but will not No fool ever becomes great. -vanity and canceit can damn the groatest ac. ccmplishment. “A great man ways willing to be little,” saiq son, “learns his ignorance, ard e cured of the insanity of ~oneceit--has moderatipn and real skill!” ‘There are hundreds of millions of peopie now who are making great sacrifices that life and iiberty may he sccure in the future, and bhecoming awnre that the man in the treneh may be a greater entity for goed than the man roiling in wealth, Manh: than money—always was will be. Vhen man gets right and keeps them right, will be right and ery human soul. Aren't the American public havinz a trying time witn the names of these It has taken the peo- see in Ypres, s Tem- my Atkins for calling it Wipers! The French is diificult becausn of its nasal requirements; and other people do not know how to be nose-gay. A col- lege man writing Loston friend warned him of the danger of attempt- ing to enumviate that word Rouen geen 8o often in the rllwnm‘vw, which when propert near like guage, bhut it? Taunion husetts: nothing but o penple make “Tarnt'n!” in and Cholmondelay is “Chumley” eéver in Eng- spails land. Parisian French ix the real thing among intellestuals, but in Canada or In any the prov- ifrces of Irance it is not ac perfect a means of communication as most folks ima It is great to feel tha* vou are a veal man or woman in these days when in all nations the rezl man and the woman can do worl: creditable to themse beneficial to their fellowmen. have reached a world crisig in rk is reengnized as our salv ere 14 no menial labor | nee or BEngland and titled women in both countries ¢ and scrubbing floots, in hospit whils millionaires are knocking elbows th commonere in the trenches, and arc mood com- rades. What iz a mnn of ieisure com- pared to a man of work in these times, or a Idy of refinement. when the preservation and Lealth of free na- tions is ealling for all the intelligencé and museular efiost of which any of s a o: and for 8 hours of work a weel instead of 4f. The men ana women of this day and hour must be {he real thing to win the approba- tion of their fellowmen. Money was never being so lavishly spent in the world as is heing spent today, and never spent for a better purpose—it is beinz put out for humapity ana security i freedom at the Tate of more than a hundred thousand dollars an hour—and the free gift of the people to the Red Cross and other auxiliary societies is full two hundred dollars a minute. Th the past four years 400 billion dollars have been spent in war, and fifth year will call for more than a hiundred bil- lions more. This is more money than a thousand men could ccunt in a3 life-time— it is incomprehensihle. We have been told that three billion dol- lars represent the total expenses of our government f{rom its establish- ment until the present vyear. The fourth drive calls for {iwice that. There have only been one hillion, eight hundred and twenty-five thous: and days since man began to record time. Two hundred tnousand dollars a day for all recorded time doesn™ ex- ceed the cost of the war for (hé past four years. We all have a hand in making our own davs.’ If we get to thinking life isn't worth living we have a poor foundation for every day at the start. Mind moulds our day, and has power to protéct it. If you logk at the day to befin with from gray eyes, yours is likely to be a gray or gloomy day. It takes resolution for right to make a day right. An unknown poet put into song this way for making what geems to be a crooked day straight: “If the day looks kinder gloomy, an’ vér chances kinder slim: if the situa- tion's puzzlin’, an' the prospects awful grim; an' perplexities keep pressin’, is nearly gone—just bristle up an’ erit your teeth, an' keep o1t keeping on!” Don't mind the mood but get a move on! Some people do not seem to know they can always command sufficient energy to knoek out gloom—if not alene, with God's help! There are tos many people who pro- fess religion wio never discover that amiability and service form the larger part of it. Aren't we all guilty of magnifying worship, or failing to is as void as faith without them? De-/ votion is better expressed by serviee than, by religious habits. Neither Faith nor Devotion weresever intend- ed to grace a pedestal. There are tod many of us beihg goed who are not @doing good. Being g0dd is of very much léss merit than being good for someéthing! The right word spokén at the right moment is as beneficent a ing man's FOUR SHOWS TODAY 130, 3, 6.5, 815 T0 HELL WITH THE KAISER The Screen Classic Production with Beautiful OLIVE TELL From the $tnry by Jume Matic Al LGO FRANKLYN FARNUM IN THE GREAT NEWSPAPER YSTERY DRAMA “THE EMPTY CAB” Hearst-Pathe News PRICES MATINEE 17c—EVENING 22¢ FOUR SHOWS TODAY 1.30, 3, 645, 8.30 DRAKE & WALKER BIG COLORED REVUE SINGERS DANCERS COMEDIANS Real Creole Chorus B BESSIE BARRISCALE —IN— WITHIN THE CUP Her Latest and Best Picture HIS TERRIBLE THIRST MACK SENNETT COMEDY ‘THEDA BARA, Siren Suprofnc of flw 301 THE BIGGEST PRODUCTION BY irn THAT HAS EVER BEEN SHOWN IN NORWICH 5 ,000 PERFORMERS ‘.500 flGRSES $50,000 Spent on 500 Feet of Hi Reproduced Scenes Aloné—And There are 10,000 Fflt GUESS WHAT IT COST _~ PRIC THE QUAIL AS A SONG-BIRD In January, after weeks Of Dbitter thira ‘oz birds”? To ‘8 i song L.fd winter, the quail came to the farm- [mi.st 10 B Litle, and foliey | yards, and the farmers put out grain |ruies? Measured by ih2ir music theie for them. No one can fathom the im- pulse or jnstinct that led these wild | and timid birds to seek, in their ditest | extremity, the aid of men; hut they did seek, and many sought not in vain. Despite {he food that was placed conveniently fer them tne cov- eve diminished in numbers from day to day. ™~ The struggle againgt cold and bunger was a losing one. When Feb- ruary brought warmth and thaw many of the qna!l had perished. In some parts of the state it is said that no quail were left alive. Last summer it was generally ap- | fall parent that the enactment of a per- |that is quite incomparable. It is ever| manent quall protection law had in- ‘a song from an invisible sing. if creased the number of hirds in Ohio. |anyone ever saw a quail in the act of ‘They were fairly abundan: jn regions | where they had not heen eeen or heard | for years. Thig year they aré fewer, Fut endbugh have survived the cruelty | of the wintér to make certain thei per- wit! three are song birds thrasgher, bobolink, thtusa or tluebird ~—and tht best of them is Lob White. Like Sheliey’s s is a disembodied vol sclously row. singing he is a searcher | pati meaning, for Mr. 'nore things than any other natura: as truly v, s toward evening, miking musi We wren. always from som2 hidde ience of Job—-which s h his the pert{ rut there comes a song withi the 5 Tob White The afternoon and we see the hobolinks and the meadowiarks con- note tie portly romn and the fitfing song egpar- We rejoice in tae gleam of the undulating geldsincfi and in familiarity of the frieady from somewhere, near at hand or far |} aws grassy, fairy dalte, m, petuation of the spegies. Kor the pro- | living or past, teation of the io game law really Bob White is liut a poor rendition protects. It hag the backing of rural{of the liquid sp.erdos of the quatl public sentiment. The Ohio farmer |2ong. It carrles no idea of the honey h learned that the qua:l ig one of |sWweetness or th: protounl depth of Lis most useful friends. The men who | the call, fed the quail last January gave prool PR of their sincere desire to help an aily “More wet,’ tha rural philosophers | in_aistress. interpret the quail's sons, No more Now comes the time when the|wei,” when the prefatory note is au- vear's bird songs begin to wane fewer |dible. Weather predictions are thus and weaker. The ochorus of earlymade, with almost goosebone as:ur- morning is stiil sufficiently jubilant, [ance. Tt is probably true that tre (he vespers aré as yer not hushed to|duaii is moved to vocalism by the midsummar silence, if théré is com- [cooiness that preesdes rain, but ing to many of the singers a weari- | Whether the two notes of “More wet” ness of rollicking and exultation. The {0r the three notes of “No more wei” robin in the denuded cherry tree is{are heard depends largely cn the prox- 4 persistently hilarious break of |imity of the hearer. As many oc The setting sun &tirs bobolink to | notes of the wood thrush are auafl nn elstatic wildnéss. Cheéwink in the{only to the listener who ereens to a cuter beeches talks and grumbles mora | front seat in the forest s=o tae Hr than he sings: while the catbird of jnote of the quail's three may he un- the brambiy borderland hag become ) heard acrosg the pasture h<, an niore catty and less birdlike. The|hand interpreier and wood thrush as vet is in full voice [may he proclaimed as a Aro} but his paeans may be briefer and of rain at hand. iess Cardinal, pewee, vi-| Thers indeed, no adéquate ren reo, , wren and a few |dition of the quail's others show no diminution of energetic jdepth of the cyousness, and some of them willlmeadow!: Leep right on sinaing through all the devilment of Ang 1t i& not’ June, though, and July’s best show bears the stamp of imperfection bie When July comes the quail proves lis right to be classed ag a Songhird. Our Ohio legigiators thus claggified cardina h ment of the mourning dov part of its c is & song from There is, too, You seek the s No sma invisibi performer. own throat a certain ventrilequ: quail's sops. Wonl may find fity in the him to give him permanent protection song coming from more than one- from the hunters, and gathered ridi- [ quarter of 1he comy s a plea cula from certaln quar: Truly | ant rch to there are few finer songhl you zet ton “wa 1 The quail and two others stand to-|cease, and that must be sether in n little class aparl, The[lt is a poor reward and vou will re- othertwo are the moirnin® dove and | tire in the Hope the v Ull\innl thé sobeech qwl. Of the soothing, ré- [magnanimity wili condone 3 intru- poseful lové murmur of the mournine | sion dove thers can be nn tivs judements. | Down a weed-bordered iane, with one of nature’s sweetest calls, an | pasture on one hand and a stuhbie iresigtible hest to peace and content- | field on the other, with decrepit 1 !r“u’ The ululation of the iittle!fences sheltering cornels and vibu w!, which is anything but a|nums and little trees all tansled " i in its way dortul | clematis and bindweed, you may cong of the fa thejof a July afternoon and be reasonahly 1 softest wavelst a|sure of hearing White making cver a mossy melody. Last vear vou would have storiond melody, a been su Next year vou will be e moon hangs jist above the[surer. This vear vou will probably av opy hear one where there should be three ove and owi; wha woull ca.llor four.-Cleveland Plain Dealer, STORIES OF THE WAR form of a <oldier lying d under blankets drawn over the head. This Feeding the War Dogs the sad s o sedate content- n i It} il d n of one who needs no 3 » Associated | more help. They motionad the bearers (Correspondence of 'Th fo set it aside in a corner and, when Press.) } b : 834 bomb, | (he last wourded man had been looked A war dog's ddlnn;'r-hfl-‘l el men | O¥er the surseons reverently lifted the When all is ready for the meal blanik o ace. “dead' standing neac dugout craters close to m?‘:. i r::(u‘i“hvr‘::‘:n ufx“\‘v'm:rhon dplgx(}n the keénnels throw is fused hard gren- Then the “case” laughed, lay adss, and right and left all over tfhel i, ARkEL sves place there are terrified explosions Thev let Lim his joke on w-'\rh x‘lféad: of smnk: ?:‘4‘:!3:;‘9'1 S for a whilé, then sent him to a 'he G are no Y WL < vy 8¢ Line - they hs\es:efln taught that explosions ;e'lflp‘l\v;\;:l”fl”i‘n"‘ R are merely the e % meal. A%l “Do vou suffer very much, laddie,” the grenades go o 18 ol asked the nurse of fer who layv run down the line, pushing each @o's| iy j)is eot with white faecs and tight piate of steaming food within reach | jips in un American field hospital, so that all are served .at the same| wNo, Miss, Oh, no,”* was the shaky time. Thie training teaches the dogs, car- rring messages at the front to pass through the Leaviest barrage. without | fear, believing thdt the only purposc of all the racket is to announce his dinner. Arriving with the message at headquarters, the dog at once finds his waiting master, who detaches the message from the collar receptable and immediately rewards the animal with food. In this way communications can be maintained with acvanced ele- ments of troops without the sacrifice of human life. Thé advaniages of 4 dog messenker are many. The dog of courlé runs much more quickly than & man mes- genpger, and jredents a far morée dif- fieukt target for énemy shipers. In the case of 4 small garrisor in outlying posts, the sending of suldier finners seriously weakens the fighting power of the unit, Lesides exposing the mes-| sengers to all {he perils of a fire-swept zome. Experisnce Fas proved that a combination of a.dog and carrier| pigeon sérvice is, if not miore reliable ! than that of the Ruman runners, very mueh more ¢fficient. It is of the utmost importance that the dog of war be safeguarded from all blandishmeénts and temptations to linger amonz new-found friends, for everything depends, when he is re- leased, upon his holting straight hack | with his precious message to his master. As food is the reward for faithful services, no one Lut the mas- ter may give the dcg even a scrap of meat. Must Have Their Jokes. The laugh and the icke and the prank are not absent {rom the Amer- ican military hospitals. There is suf-| fering, of course, in thes> great, splen- idly equippad institutions, but even loaded American citizen fun. One surgeon tells this story: . When the iines of stretcher cases wero eing hrought ifits his hospital the surgéens stood in the rece ward making quick exammations. Itched, age I began to heads, and my face ered. The pimples were red and came o ahead making melook awful. They itched 8o that when I scratchedthey got :: hnrd and red I tould not sleep with e pai PIVIPLES COVERED FACE AND NECK it ey Got So Hard and Red Could Not Sleep With Pain. Troubled Two Years, HEALED BYCUTICURA SOAP AND OINTMENT — “‘When I was about fotirteen years of ?n pimples and black- and neck were cov~ “I h-d the trouble for mést two years before I used Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment, and after using three cakes of Cuticura Soap and one fifiy-cent box of Cuticura Ointment I was healed.” (Signed) Miss Agnes Haleks, Pleasant View Ave., Bristol, Conn:, Oct. 5, 17, Some think that because Cuticura does such wonderful werk in soothing and healing Severe eczemas it is nat adapted to toilet tises, But that is just ‘Where it is most effective in preventin, little skin, troubles becoming serious. 'l;.‘c“. card: **Cut evmbe:e.glp g ] 25 and S0c. U WANT t6 put your bus. on 1634 betare. the Publie, ne ! med stretcher was brousht silently in the vertisin there. = columns of The Bulletin. is fio better than through the ad- | fLIBBY-BROWN- CONLON . THE BIG TIME TRIO IN DANSE “A LA PETITE” - A Study in Color A Little Bit of Variety DOROTHY GISH IN “BATTLING JANE" A DELIGHTFUL 5-PART PARAMOUNT COMEDY DRAMA HIS WIFE'S FRIENDS—Mack Semmott Comedy - - THE CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH Are guests with the United Congregational Church on Sunday 12,00 M—Sunday School 7.30—Evening Service Topic of Sermon: “A WINSOME WORLDLING” ALL ARE WELCOME “We Marines don't suffer, From the Cemmeres Reports Exports from So@k!mlm o the “nited o {of 1318 azgregated in vaiue ogly 3593 Master of Psychology. A master of psyeholo; Hoo- | s ver. Much more cffective (han “You'l ‘fig‘m’l‘:rxnh-man-;:.; e = starve If vou dom't eave™ is “There | {TuST T 0 > dificyittes will be plenty for all if you are just| i a bit careful”—New York KEvemn ‘,\| Imports of Dost. frem Jan. 1 — 185 338 bales of wrich 331 Even the strenuous poet has his idyl | were trom the United States asa 4&- moments. | 0438 from India. DISCOVERY OF PHOSPHATE THAT INGREASES STRENGTH AND VIGOR Nothing Like Bitro-Phosphate to In-|lack of enérgy, nervons debility, ete. Strength, Vizer and Nerve An example of how this remarka 1 Says Ldifor of Phy- substance increases strength and en- “Who's Whe.” riches the blodd 15 furnished by a New York hospital physician's- npor! 9f a New Yo patient whese red celis after-a 3 ganic course Gf -treatment were ine: inta the human system | 00. Physicians and hésp verted into healthy nerve tissue i everywhere are now recognizing merits by its uSe in eVer increasing quantities. Frederick Kolle, B . editor of New York Ph vaicians’ “Who's *Vho, says: “Bitro-Phosphate snould be prescribed by every doctor and used in every hospital te inérease-strength and nerve force and to ehtich the blood.” Joseph D. Harrigan Termer visiting specianlist to North Eastern Dl!nen- satory, saysT L8t those Who Are weak thin, nervous, anaemic or run-dowm take a natural unadulterated strength and tissue-building substance such as bitro-phosohate and von will soon see some astenishing results in the in- crease of nerve energy, Strength of body and mind asd power of endur- anoe ng a8 nerve focd that is readily simhiatea | by most delicate aRH A hat s anserais drug or timulant, Bitro-Phosphate ‘commends teelf to all sifferers from nervew: thinness, wWeakfiess,. .été. and eover il can now be cbtained from The Lee & Osgéod Drug Co..and all zood druggists in - dofivenient 51 in tablets at a cost S0 1ow as to be witRin the reach of everyone. One of these Ablets sheuld be taken Frederick S. Kole, .. Ploneer in|With each meal, and the results in T rcation ab X agy i jomeer In| B any ‘instances 'are . iltéle . &bort of Author of Medical Texthools: Member | Marvelous: Dull eves become BFIgHt Author's Committee of Ameriea, Healih |sleep is restorad to the sieepless, the League, Physicians' Legisintive League, [ Derves regain their stren: thin pa N. Y., und Editor-in-Ch of Phy-|ple put on flesh and the Whole systeih nicinns’ “\Who's Who" in N. Y. o charged with that strength, and ener which kes life medical specialists as of worth: w ehhea o} people. e Shmror | OAS there aré & ru\x Nltl‘“o{ se- Iments direc: or indirectly | called nhasnhn.es. be ‘sure get pleted nervous vitality, h| Bitro-Puosphate, the genuine, dnaduls terated organie substance descriBed. by the a\_nharin";s above ‘Mmentioned. enia, nervous weakness thinness, premature old age, insomnia, —— e, CAUTION! As we are the only representative house in this vicinity, members of the National Association of PIANO Mer. chants of America, we respectively call to your nmatmn as follows: When you have decided to invest in a piano, the fint thing to be considered is quality. NO PIANO of the best quality is placed on the market without the manufactur- er’s name on the fallbondmdcutintheiibnpli‘e{thm‘ fore we would advise caution in your pun:h-u. The Talking Machine Shop, = 46 Franklin Street