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\Blorwich Bulletin and Qoufied " 122 YEARS OLD Bobeeristion sried (20 & weeki 506 & Butered 1t the Posioffies at Norwich, Coma., s proposed consi goods. Thus theallies betdin a hold on, the situation, but with Hblland T e merous or fewer year us: In the darkest hours of 1918 it looked as if our generosity would be dwarfed by the claims of necessity upon but since we have reached the dawn of peace and the joy of safer and better times has taken possession of our souls, our gifts may be as numer- ous as ever. We have many more billions to raise, and the turden of the world war will press upon man for @ century or more, War is the most ex- reats to its shipping and at the|Dpensive thing on earth, and yields in mcend-ciaes matier. same time ouf it off from its coal sup-|Teality no ‘profits. It is well to re- ply from Germany, it is evident u.i: member that “it is the will and not it must look upon any arrangement|iD® gift that makes the iver” He which will permit it to get.what it|Syee best who makes his beart supply ot oy elonable. Ther 18 o rea. | What his hand lacks. Those who count Bulleds Business Office 480, Bl e e 5 Ot 381 Wilimantie Office, 35 Speing St Telephone 304-2 and compare and estimate the value son to belleve, however, that with afof their gifts lack the spirit which strict observancé of the requirements|should bless them. it will not be able to get all that it It has been said: “No man is happy needs in the way of supplies whether | without a Qelusion of some kind,” and it is. raw material, foodstuffs or coal, |that “delusions are as necessary to our MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Amociated Press 15 exclusively entitied = e o Fepabicaticn of Al news dempatch- 5 eredited o It or ot otberwie crodiied in i puper and alo e local news SHEEP RAISING. happiness as realities” This is not the way we are prone to think, and still any live man will cee that delu- There will be general acknowledg-|sions in life takes the raw edgze off o heetn are ato ment that the Hartford Times is en- in answer to right when, Guestion as to how long the attac many stern facts. Barnum was no a|more right when he said the people ng | liked to he humbugsed than he would and killing of sheep by dogs is gohg have been had he said they enjoy self- to be permitted by the state; it de- CIRCULATION illusion. Our dream of democracy has never been half realized, and the idea clares “It will be permitted just 2s|of a millenium has been & charming long as the general assembly is indif- | hope for two thousand years, and is ferent to the importance of raisinx | likely to be for two thousand yvears to sheep in Connecticut instead of dogs.’ Nov. 30, 1918, 10,457 come. Self-illusion is a buffer state ' A comparison of the for the readjustment of the - foundations of the ness expansion in this count ing the Civil war the pectation that the development of va. rious frontier preparations parallel in its effeois upon world in-{for the try thegstimulus of | west in the earlier period, saye the.De- cember Guaranty 2 The effects of war upon a nation ars conditioned largely by the stages in the industrial cycle through which the nation happens to be passing. Th Civil war folldwed several years of upward moving prices and volume of erages wers terms of greenbacks from i862 to 1878, not. to imaginary prices compuied il { upon the basis of the gold premium! in sreenm:.ia d in_ fthe premium. on. go! were nu'f‘paun‘al. the high p2ai in th latter muda‘um;fl by six- months th high point prices. %fl\e’comn of mch'; mml et!h'e, Wa, very much behind pricea in M“ l:gbn: ward and the downward Tuovements after 1860: they increaced more -than prices and sustained cains for a longer time. agcording to Professor Mitchell's rab- ulations, the high peais ia prices cama ir January, 1885, and tnire was an almost uninterrupted d: index number for 1550 stand= above tha lavel ‘Wages, on the' other hand, Tose much more siowly Auring the war od, but continued 1o rise generally until July, 1872, seven B prices had begun the long argin of gain for the workers, the net ingrease in real wages, main- tained at the clogs of the 20-y riod, is roughly measurcd by the in- They show a gr per eent. in w2 1860 level, against 2 not Der cent, in whoiesale pr: The reiation between developing | 1rices His Latest Million 1 “SHOULDER ARMS” A HOWLING TRAGEDY| ON TRENCH LIFE Cooties, Camourflage, Batile Rookie Training, Hunnish Traps GFASONRC e e S N ool The most significant index of the business expansion in this country in the decade préceding tho war is the dented development of trans- tion. The orgy of canal buildin; so much of which was unwisely dl rected, had received a decided check from the panic of 1837. passed through a perlod of experi- mentation during which they were projected primarily. as ‘water routes. By 1850 it ingly evident that they were to occupy the dominant pesition in iniand trans- Previous to that year only 8,000 miles of railway had been constructed | in this country. but in the following decade 21,000 miles were added. While most of the new mileage was in the east and( south, § TRIANGLE FEATURE PICTURE THE SECRET CODE WAR GARDENS ing at only 4 per cent. Railroads had Charlie did not spénd two years in the trenches getting the “dope” so it is ‘3" wrong” ‘“ail wrong” “all was increas- s eain of 33 ENGRAVING MATINEE 130, 8.15- 643 AND 8.15 Have you Jewelry or p older sections, At the same time it points out that | Which affords more pleasure than the there are in the state at the present (Fo8l facts. Man = really objects ta time 70,000 dogs and only about 1%,- 00 zheep, or about f This does no) ir dogs to every the mavement lines were pushing we of prices and -the yolume of business facing the facts of life as barely and cruelly as they confront him. . mean that ail| What is the use of discussing who these dogs are a menace to the sheep | WOR th ewar? Nothing less than the ralsing industry but the frequent kill- ing of sheep operates as nothing else (0 the diseourngement of a greater ex- ransion of this industry. united action of the whole country capld have won the war, so we all hélped. - We are not going to deny ta | the men who took the mest valorous and perilous part any of the glory due Connecticut farmers can raise sheep | their couragé or sacrifice, and cer- The products | tainly we can never less than praise at a handsome profit. such an industry are in great de- riand, but the effort to get more peo- young America for saving ~millions from self-denial and putting it in thrift ple interested therein constantly comes | 513MPs and war savings stamps, whils face to face with the old excuse that; it is useless to attemp: th2 job in view of the depredations which are cavsed sheep [illing dogs. It is therefore h that the should give greater consideration to this problem than i ever has in the past. _— BRITAIN DAY. ‘We have no the men and women who provided more money than war ever demanded leviathan lift. We all did it! But our services were widely diffarent, Do you, know the people had better make a study of bacteria so that they may discover how much these scien- tsts know about this orgarism's life for the mongrel dogs whizh go roam-| d you ever see a grasy ion of the great and im- 3 ! i ghrtant part whichGreat D ing about the country causing more Well, bacteria when they are| damage than they are worth, but we | Multiplied by the meops Etx thot have need for more sheep and evers thing should be done to see that sheep raising is encouraged. gayed in helping to bring about the ctorious conclusion of the awar it is has Leen taken is- &in day in this country said times are about as large as grass seed. He who steps upon ¢ inch of common mud annihi even millions of them. He who Jature take hold of this matter and|breathes a gallon of pure air sucks in understand that | fifty-eight of them in every gallon. F give the ‘farmery to fiy-elsht v evers galon. 1 they will bo properly protacted and :t |\Who drinks a quart of fresh milk swal % Oy believad. that there wiy [1ows anywhers from two to six thous and of them. Everybody since thei children of Tsrael came out of been takinz In bacteria every day, t service rendered by that nation, ich, through enteri ting for its own protection as we'l the defense of Beigium, stood as a againat more cxtensive ag- gressions on the part of the common long before this is confidently believed that there will be a return to the good old days when #very farm was proud of its flock of the war and reached Chicago in 1853, St. Louis i} 11855, and the Missouri river in the northwest three years later. The gold discoveries in California in 1848, almost coincident with the Aws- finds of the precicus metal, further stimulated through the operation of an increasing gold money supply in rais- ing the general level of p is significent. the after-war pericd under roview the indices of prices and in opposite directions. prices was due, noi merely to an ation of-the redemption of the o bocks, but chiefly ‘to the velume of business. The comparative steadiness of the upward swing in bus. inesg from early in the war to 1372 in | | the facp of wide and leng continued | iovements of prices in both airect would show, §f proof w ally | the prosperity of the per of territory, | more eubstantial foundaitions than the stimulus of rising pri. There is no eause for wonder in the or inertia of s he length of the pe) which contracts are mad the wheic of Silver Ware to engrave? AUDITORIUM FOUR SHOWS TODAY 1.30, 3.15, 6.15, 8.48 Lzst Pay of the Fun Show Bates’ Musical Comedy Company WILLIAM DUNCAN __The Fight For Millions HARRY MOREY ~ IN buainess move Bring it to us and we will do it for you. The Pi;;(i;;!en Co. Established 1872 4 SHOWS TODAY 130, 3, 6.15, 815 Theda Bara IN THE /EMOTIONAL Photo Dramatic Masterpiecs 'UNDER THE YOKE A Theda Bara Supor Production e i MADGE KENNED And Her Eyes and Hor Smile OUR LITTLE WIFE HEARST-PATHE NEWS movement of popu'ation and industry. Tn short, the industrial background of the pre-war period was essenti —a great expans: natural resources axd respond- jing in development to the rapid ex- in this world before, furnished the{tension of railroads; a popul than deubling In & generation; farm products, manufactures and ex- | doubling practica decade—with a resulting which the reaction of 1857 did not ma- | s long, disturb. Apparently the situation at the close war might have foreshadowe period of serious i Hundreds of t had to be reabsorbed by the economin power of custor respond more tardily of commodities to changes In curren- v or in indust SKATING RINK LYMPIC HALL AFTERNCCNS 220 TO § EVENINGS 8 TC 10.30 P. M. Dprices cannct be ¢ PATRIOTIC DOLLS Free to Ladies and Kiddies Matinee Today nd social syetem sern half of the republic| was disrupted, with most of its peopl into the pay envelop: what is more workers were paid In - dolla creasing pursheein s i e Coming—Monday and Tuesdey and it was was on a streicher that money was for the most part a mass| he went away. and the pasteuvization of milk will 1ot take them from the air from which | SECRETARY OF THE TREASURY.|they get into our lungs and into. th The nomination by President Wil- son of Congreseman Carler Glass of Viirginia 1o be the successor of Wil- Wam G. McAdoo as secretary of thae treasury must be regarded as a logi- cal one and in keeping wilh expecta- ve had for enlarging i Both before and after he war our shipping would even greater perience in the lower I £ress and he has been especially iden- ‘ified with banking holding the chairmanship of the house committee on banking at a time when ‘put Tp to that time through meant 1o our coasts that t floet was bottled up in the Kie! Likewise has it been to our great ad- There is no proof bacteria ever | anyone and no one can real 1 out their life history the tiny. I am glad peace is zoing to be de- red within \the next three monti¢ var is a hig \oroblem to settle and settle right, Too many sentimental- ists are in favor of soitening the pen- alties upon the people upon the ground that th misled, not realizing that leniency a sure way {o per- petuate the gpirit which bred tie save agery the world is just freeing itsel! from. The people knew better than tc commit indecencie hwayman or his congressional activities had not|buccancer would have been az{t;u;ned‘ attracted the attention of the country |Of because they were commanded to as well as to the 2ll the alties' that Grea able to lend us so many transport service. was done with its fleet Lut he showed a thorough understand- | 3¢ €9; There i ing of that matter and won widesprend recognition for the manner in whi no excuse for the slaughter of thousands of infants and still more thousands of intellectual noncombatants, It seems strange to he handled that plece of fegislation. |hear ‘our enemies pleading for bread likewise done with They did their part in checking the agvance of the annot fail to recognize a this activity which has ac- is therefore work is thoroughly, interested cabinet position to which<ie has been selected he will be in close touch wi reserve board ational financing i has shown himself to be so well post- which+ he in the and mat- which he and that we should further cement a friendship which grows out of stand- for right and justice. But it is no easy task which he will assume, and for that reason it is all more important that he should possess the qualifications which ap- have received consideration He is.not to be bur- dened with the work of directing the under government well that he should not.b That is certainly a job in itself out- side of the treasuryship even though Congressman Glass has had no ex- perience in that direction, pears to be no reason, however, why he should not prove to be an effigient financial director unless his adminis- v failé to measure up to his legislative ability. ing and fightin POSTMASTER GENERAL'S REPORT line with what has been known to be his attitude fe the rec- Postmaster (ieneral Burleson in his 4nnual report that the telephone and country should be brouzht under gov- That has been indicated by the course which he has pursued in connection with them and he apparently overiooks the fact that present exists is in his selection. control, ommendation of lines of the the railroads, €nly recently the president has indi- cated should go back to the under a different EDI!TORIAL NOTES. It is to be hoped that America’s scc- ond peace ship will be more success- sl than its first, The weatherman ssems to be anx- t the right sort of a stage cetting for Christmas. And yet Henry Ford can claim that the boys have been gotten out of the trenches before Christmas. lines of the count; to enter upon a scheme of govern- ment ownerst ¢ wers taken over which would more quickly meet the when they have denied it to millions and would have starved Belgivm ex- cept for the timely aid of generous Americanst. Those who sow to, the | winds reap the whirlwind. Let them get their dues, We are told the best books are the | ones that make us think most: but I should say that depends upon our phy- gical condition. What we derive from ! tooks really depends upon the condi- tion of cur minds. It was Pliny who said “no book is so bad but someth: valuable may be derived from it find I like to read books most people He is now in hospital,- wounded, and every man out how ‘he fought CHARLIE CHAPLIN COMING MONDAY and TUESDAY creasing guantitv prices were atnormaily high but rap- {063 1Abor Fessive: wif idly falling: and there was a public| debt of more than two and a haif bil- here who know tween 50 anu { destroyed four aud of gocds pre irereasing © Tecause in the conditions pre on the eve of the war, rsnecially ln the provision «f essential transvorts- . JACK KIE’Z‘RRIGAN “The Turn of a Card” SHOULDER ARMS * COWME-2-ME BALL T. A. B. Hall Tonight PRIZE FOX TROT Rowland’s Jazz Band drove down . e, that this air owed a remarkably ation of apparently nor- explanation is| found in the pre-war foundations; for pansion- which came as a sequel to_the war was along the lines previ- ously projected—espansion w the natural outgrowth of the spread of | transportation agencles. The gross volume of the country's business multiplied twenty-year asured by an index number which combines the following cotton, wool ,and wheat produc-| vay mileage in operation; |2 orts and imports of ew York bank clear- ings; and the reciprocal of commercial Vagis for éoatinued ero the war did nnt nrevent ar in gres measure retard And in the crucial test of the recon- struction period, neither currenay flation, the shifting from war o peace i ot husin s now a few on this side are talking of feeding the vipers. OTHER VIEW POINTS we-all” did fall for a bunch Shore Line Times, One thing that the war has done guage, hut it fits the cas kaiser ordered carine Deutschland prices nor the rising en<t of labor—in- ven the combination of all four’ factors—proved ah! remarkable industrial exnansion. Readily observed diliorences tween certain aspects of the present d the garlier post-war peritds tend te obscure come suzzestive analowics. After the Civil war the esploitation of eloped weet off: i ment to former soldiers and {o numer- ous immizrants as well, was not mewly discoyerad. new was the gion made possible m ¥ tensive rajlroad buflding just befors and after’ the war. No =mall part of the worl resources lie tody untonc nt_industrial frontiers, they will not long remain so, The bullding of railroads from the east, west ‘and south into the heart of the construction o into the contest made it certain that German so.diers would ’ OCCUDY an American city as American troons now occupying Treve es.—Meriden Journal. WHEN YOU WANT to put your bus. iness before the public, there ls ne medium_better than through the. ad- vertising columns of The Bulletin. in New London hsrbor. among them some immigration merchandise; CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH Union Square PEOPLE’S SUNDAY EVENING SERVICE Mr. Carl Webster, noted ’cllist from Bos- ton, now with Boston Symphony orchestrs will play. Sermon Topic, “Freedom Through Slavery” A Good Place to go Sunday Evenings through the which_eventuall the officers of that death and not vossals of a derer's kingdom, 5 proved ot. Ha orrected to eliminate the Influ- Provd migct gl ence of price changes. 1, therefore, Is a measurement of quan- coomiliity of that ve;, The occupied territory and the pop- were increasing so rapidly, however, that a more trustworthy in- obtained by reducing the gross volume of business to a per carita | Americans at the knowing they were laving the murder of shows a virtual doub! try's per capita business. pansion was hot a disproportionate growth in the vield of farm products, or-in the production of raw mater:: “The figures for the output | of manufactures, corrected for popu- lation and price changes—but not.in- cluded in the barometer because data w know, g of the coun- side now kn hook and swaliowed tho b: big boobs we were at that opened In Siberia in ac the Ruseian pros amme of 1913 for the construction of 50,600 miles of railway | in a decade, and the comnletion do not care for. The new books do not call me into the rush, and I fear in choosing ‘old books I do not choose them as I would chose a friend: but 1 generally try to determine what the | purpose of the author was mn writing | the book. To tell the truth, I wonder how many books ever came to get printed. Of course, the society novel usually gets by because ‘t {8 “a liitle tart” Some other novzis get by be- cause they lack the quality. A’ good hook is the cne which teaches you something you did not know befare, or that increases the sunshine in your heart. The poor book is the ome yo have to hide because you do not wish to be cauglt reading it. We do not half of us realize what & blessi ht is to us as well as to| Sunshine ig cheaps er than medicine and much more ef- fective. s > a proverh that “The doctor is sure {o visit the place where the sun The sun is both a purifier and a Te- ivifier—a corrector of _irregularities The man on the corner says: Tur|Of many sorts. What if it does fade the idea that coat dreams are more numeérous than cver fit this season of the year. now being made ths want peace, but very acts of the party cry out against to note in the post- report that he does not refer to the profits of the depart- Me deals With it as master genera ] ment this veaf an excess of receipts ov tures, but he can hardly this excess was obtained after giv- ing the country the postal service that As long as December contributes to the aid-of the fellow with an unfilled coal bin it will be bound to satisfy the malority. the carpets. if preserves health? The pale face is no ication of health; but it is the mark of the city man, not the country man. Many an invalid has found héalth in the open air doing what he cbuld upon the soil. Many a cl backyard is just as healthy as the seashore or the moun- ‘tains, Living in the open as much as possible is a real prolonger of life. It seems so good to he on the wx We don't wish the central part of | {0 Peace that most folks think we! it ‘wants or ought to have, does it exist hecause the couniry has falled to get the service which # hy Last year Mr. Bur. in knocking out the Maine any hard luck but we are glad that that ten inch snow fall is there rather than here, William Hohenzollern is reported as been paying for. leson succeeded have it. . We are still at war w the Central ¥mpire, and shail be un- til peace fs declared in 1519, although the president hopes to bring it about before March, which at present is the wearing a dejected look. That is the|dats fixed as likely to witness the style among the former crowned heads | declaration of peace. There seems to fneumatic tube seryice in the big eit- les and now he comes forth with the of the cent cas0 plea for an appropriation for the con- P MBta) DIPE this, sedatn. bp no doubt there ‘is desizn in this We are just beginning tc find out | dissolution of governments which ap- what angels the former kaiser and his | P°37s to have been so informally done, sang really are. Of course they didn't | Sice _the coilection of damages: re- Want any war bratality or fagntta. | GUIres a dependable government for struction of a tube for such service between railroad stations in New York It Is a curious move inasmuch as he maintained that motor were so much more satisfactory, re- gardless of the fact that they added Russia refuses to let its men which | the -river Danuhs as sacurity, to the congestion of crowded streets Germany has been holding as prison- its realization. But the Entente will hold a large part of Germany and there ‘seems no likeithood of the sue. ¢ers return. Probably it is ashamed to| Cess, even of such a trick as this and by their speed added to the dan- let them see what a mess it has been making of things. It is conscigus rufit which tas brought about such a state of affairs. : One meal o day s enourl for a lion, e pelq abent cyhere | but man requires from hree to five. SUPPLIES FOR HOLLAND. Now that the war is over and at- tention is being given to taking care of the needs of those in Europe who are suffering from Bill Hohenzollern is planni his Christmas dinner, but he's prob- interested in_such things now than he was once, The' reason doubtless is that the lion eats to live, and man lives fo eat. The lion dogsn't know anvthing about eauces and salads anMl glaces and isn’t any question but what | frostings, or course dinners, or high foodstuffs, it is quite evident that the the' president will have his way with neutrals are going to improve the con- balls. Tt takes rational mun to figure the delegates from this country, bu:|these things out and dic a vielim 1t remains to be seen how he will|of his own cupidity. ~The great ditions under which they have been living for many months. This is indicated by the announce- ment that a trade agreement has been handle those from the other nations. As long as enough sugar to meet Shakespeare said: “T am a greaf eater of beef, and I believe tha: does harm t wit” Wi habit requirements can' be obtained there | the o By b Bapie bt concluded between the allied coun- tries and Holland whereby that coun- try will be allowed to Import supplies the allled couptries along the ‘which have been agreed upon by should be no worry, there’ should be no attempts to hoard Just because the restrictions are litted. The New London milk producers and certainly the swine rather than the abstinence of the King of beasts. Ncbody but the doctors know how prevalent glut- tony is among men. It underlies more than half of man’s infirmities, and he are throwing eold water onto the pas- is such a fool he doesn’t know it. Men Holland has a large teurization plant idea if not into the it of shipping which can .be bank upon their wisdon: but doctors milk, and the stand which they take | bans UPOR thelr lack of it We do not available for such work and it provided that Dutch ships alone be used, and as was the case with neighbors it is particularly stipu- is no different than that which is It4s too late now to serve 3 . % o by g« ey W e The Canadian government is to|Kill him. Wwhere many discharges improve as the ages roll on. butld ten Targe steel steamers in Brit- are Dbeing|ish Columbla vards, the contracts ap- o e e ¢ cond and third transcent! iines—there are some of many recent achlevements in the fiel mainly within the They and the recen sanitary engineetine which guarantees the habita ‘Crucasians of nearly every t to another of the world's | rrent periods of unusual industrial | for other than census years are lack- ing—show an even greater increasze than does the index, The. sharp decline in business which came with the first ehock of war was matched by a pro previous level, production, ete, of transportatin war period itself. t recovery to the Taking the figures for 1860 as the hase, or 100, the index figure for 1881 is 84, and for the next year 102. afier, with the exception of a slizht recession in 18(9, there was an unin- terrupted gafn until under the strain the credit machin crisis of 1873, preci The United States, emersing f partietna- | ich has entailed the ne by anv of the nrineipal Wel- | v _collapsed in the tating a pericd of After three years the re- covery began and was 60 rapid that by 1330 the volume of business per capita was smaller by only 14 per d haye been had the trend from 1865 to 1872 been main- tained without interruption, The decline in the highly inflated began early in 1865, pment and a sizable merchont my rine. s in a peeuliar) position for sharing in the e erowth of businese. g - i an intenalve growt), in the development of nraduation I a corresnor advantageore | cent. than it W 3 Increase nt | opencd areas | war prices wh of the world, If You Have Not Already Taken Advantage of This Sale STORIES OF THE WAR British Airman Fights 60 Machines. Headquarters, Wednesday, Nov. 6.— Our flying men, who are harrying the enemy’s retreat, have beaten all their records in air cpmbats, and their most famous day, when something like seventy hostile aero- has already been But one exploit is now the talk of Army, and it seems to be as wonder- ful as anvthing that has been done by these knights-errant of the air. It happened over the Fcrest of Mor- mal, now in our hande sinco yest day ,and there over those den with a queer kind of Eiffel Tower in the centre of them, flew a major of one of our flylng squadrons, searching for the whereabouts of our troops and | for any German fighting plane which | he might challenge 10 a duel. He saw | a two-seater flving at 21,000 feet, to escape bur Archies and trouble, and our major climbed up to it in a wide spiral and then from be- low fired at it and { obsorver fell. theis ‘i sky-space, taking up the hurt for him. He flew at one and sew that his | burst of fire set it alight. so/ that it!| became a falling flam: time bullets were wigsps, and one of them smashed his 16t elbow, and his arm dropped and hung loose and useless. He was a one-handed man now, to steer and shoot against a new swarm of enemies. that came like midges. He | dived steeply to escape ght mote scouts chased him dow! d them, so foug) At the same DO SO NOW they destroved As This Sale ENDS SATURDAY, 10 p. m. He could not ave He fought’ them by manoeucring for position with every airmen with a little morning wildness But this was cold, deadly skill. It was watched by ground | who held their breath at| ht 'of that one British aeroplane | banking, nose-diving,” looping, With a | flock of Germans about h ten or twelve minutes he jug- ! gled with his aeroplane to get his ta vultures He hit and put them out of action, and then they had cnough and he landed suc- 'stunt” known to Garments Offered at Such Low Prices Are Tos Numerous tc Mention their hearts. The German machine breaking | in the air, and one man Qropping in a But when his machire came to res he did not jump crumpled up with his head drooping, | ‘Look out for Span- ish Influenza. At 'the first sign of a cold take Immediately a Fokker biplane came Wiew, and the major heard the whistling of bullets through his plane, and then felt a hammer Mtroke on his | feft thigh. He was hit, and for the | moment stunned. His aeroplane began to spin out of control, but the major became conscious of his danger, and. instinctively touching his devees, got his grip again on the engine. Then he saw that he was surrounded by fifteen Fokkers, him for a death shot. His defence was by attack, and by a marvellous man- ocuvre. he got his shots in first and three enemies fell. guns were chattering about him, and bullets were singing past his wires. Another hammer-blow struck this time shattering, his bone. He fainted clean away. and his machine dived helplessly. again the spirit of the man awakened to the instinet of self-preservation and anger against those who were out to ‘him. Je handled i again, mastered it, and looked out for | q R e back ifit fails, Twelve to 15 scouts were in his crowding about But the machine- CASCARA‘ 'QUININE Standard &ld remedy for 20 yeare—in tabl Lo h.l in 3 days. A By e ACRD A