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stranger tells them as long as the promises are sufficiently attractive even though they have previously been caught napping. The woman with the decidedly Though they ought to know better it crimped hair who had rud ‘im. from is mecessary fo stand between them jacross the street s&!’hed “jgyously. as and the swindlers. Hence the “blifé]|she settled herself and took out her sky” laws. But tHero &re states which | crochet work. have not taken the needed action to| “I can't begin to tell you, provide this protection. Out in In- }l’egpfémfll'rlfi’tfii?eisffgdmher diana where the state legislature has| What a relie just failed to enact such a law it is |3l = e rer}:ec‘l’ “tm:y tmdx“ kers' association that all banks should y TODAY : AUDITORIUM Iaraw ANOTHER GREAT SUCCESS—SEE IT - MABEL NORMAND IN “PECK'S BAD GIRL” (SIX PARTS) ONLY TREATMENT THAT GAVE RELIEF Suffered Three Years Before same time as that pretty girl across the stréet goes to work, and shée might 28 welf I'e out on the western plains ;E here for all the notice he takes cf er. “If I don't decide pretty séon whether or not Mrs. Simpson dyes her hair I'll lose my mind. It doesn’t seem possible any woman could nat- urally have hair that color, and yet you can’t detect dye in the brightest sunlight. It cerainly looks natural, - Yorwich ulletin and Goufier 123 YEARS OLD 2 ek bseription price 126 & waeki 5us & month: $6.00 o year. Mrs. hostess, ind having Exifered st the Postoffice s Norwich, Cosn., as wewnd-class matter. Toleghene Galls. Sulleits Business Office 488, P udietts aorta) Hooms 88.3. Bulletin J5b Office 35-2. Willimantle Oftiee 23 Church St. Telepions 105 WEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Associsted Press ls exciusively entitlc to the use for republication of sll news dbmsteh- es credited to It of not otherwiw credied in this paper and also tbe local news published agreln. “All nghts of fepublication of special despatch herein are also CIRCULATION WTEK ENDINK APRIL 26th | GERMAN TALK OF NOT SIGNING. There talk being in- ilged in that Germany not treaty. That| pected at th has been keeping ard o what has been conference. It knows to extent what it is going to upon to sign and Germany had reason want the report | £pread broadca jat it is not pleaced with the prospe Through such it is! posefble for it to bring a certain in-| fluence to bLear upon the representa- tives of the alfied nations. It may not amouynt to an) thing but it is worth trying and certainly if it is ever go- ing to have any effect it must be | worked for all it is worth now. On the other hand Germany well| knows what the result will be if 'it| does not sign the peace treaty. It ap- preciates the fact that the allied n: tions are not going to throw up their any such threat even actually refuse. get- Dest it can through suchi methods it: cannot to understand | that if Germany does refuse to sign the treaty, that preparations have teen made for sending forces into Germany to take control of the coun try, collect jts customs and put into operation just what the treaty calls for if not more. Germany has had a sufficient taste of terrorism. It know that it wants nothing to do with hol- | ghevism and furthermore it that if it is going hack place it seeks among nations it must not po nit the con 1 of its aff: pass into cither short or a lo Germany will ting the requ effect peace is plenty to the sign the course to be Germany 0- for g hands at ghould it ting the or After realizes to get into the et s o for a period oft cheaper by | ents that are ex- we are greatly lizes it and the tre ed unless unexpected occur in the get n O now. mistaken wil ve Unless de- meantime. opment BREWING AFTER MAY 1. Uneert: ard inty continues prohibition to prevail in the means taken that it is| Preparation. have been 1 tests, and brewers un- and are to be to se n of their counsel are now the manufacture of beer two. and three-quarters per the counsel declaring made in view of the | that such beer is | < un- of 1 of the bry intoxicating even to prove hat that brewers kind the it 1ctur the irted partment has nue stamps for s ardly to b con ~deq- statement e hureau that stop on ccord with the fc whith was f s been § revenue g sct but it that this W the fi 3 vation passed in November 1 it has be tion act | retofn o as to whether 1 beer made would depend upon the! trength of the i it intoxjcating or tion is called to the fact t of November 1918 provide ns, als, fruit or other be used in the pro- fermented malt liquors af- holic whether at that no cer food.products n du tion of May 1 Just how it is going to be possible whether it contains | d_ three-quarte aleohol to cor tour, por « fermented that P sider | two i but ion | as anything malt liquor is the que but when it | t all brewing must stop the May’ it would appear that it \ded to seo that the prm-wioni law is upheld. i now arise: is de-| wred first of was inte of the PROTECTING INVESTORS. For t of their aga the sellers of frauduient stocks a number of states have passed what are known a blue y” laws, which require that stocks shall have the approval of recognized authorities be- | fore ‘they can be dealt in. Such a step Is not only a valuable protection to the people in general but it is en- | dorsed by legitimate deale means discouragement to the practice of holding.out alluring bait to those who have small amounts to in: who are inclined to belfeve all t told them without taking the proper precaution to investigate thoroughly. Too often is there a rich harvest reap- od off of those who aré the least able to part with their hard earned money. Even the experience of others is not snough to prevent them from partiei- pating in gold brick swindles and therd are seme co cager to jump into the jwealthy class over night that ¥aey fare read: 1o believe what any 1 protection people | were early reasons for feeling that the | ! the interest rate is larger, the selling|y | business to bé developed with | fight by airp | the manufactire of all fermented malt e and am perfectly free to study French be advised by bulletin concerning cer- | or develop my intellect in any fashion tain stocks on the market. Such, even|I choose—I - simply couldn't settle though it may mean a small yearly |down to anything when I had to expense for eéach bank would in fact|Worry over coal bills and‘fuss with be less than the expense which is of- the butcher, who insisted on his ten entailed in looking up different|Money, and stay awake nights trying securities, and there .can be little to snatch from the air where I was question but what it would demon- going to raise cash enough to buy Gemon- | clothes and hairpins. strate in a short time the advisability| “When I get my work done up in of enacting theé legislation called for. the morning I am free for the day, and haven't a single thing to occupy THE VICTORY NOTES. The second week of the Victory loan my mind. I think a woman owes it to herself to have time to think of now well underway. Although there something uplifting “instead of rivial. “They are the nicest people in my rooms. If I do say if, nice people al- ways are attracted to my house—I suppose there is something about if. country was going to step into the breach and make a quick clean up of this loan, the _subscriptions whieh have thus far been received through- out the country indicate that not as satisfactory progress is being made as was hoped for or desired. Here, throughout the state, and in New En- gland generally there appears to be a deep interest in meeting respon- sibilities. Victory has been secured as the result of the efforts put forth by the boys in blue and khaki and there is a determination on the part of th they represented to see that the bills d. It is of course the onl stand to take and there is good re: for believing that New England meet its quota. But it is a matter in one should participate. alone the patriotic duty in connection with providing this $4,500,000,000 to spur on the subseriptions but there is also the investment proposition. These notes carry advantages which are not possessed by the previous bond issues. The money will not be tied up as long, “A Mr. and M Simpson front room, and you never thing like the jealousy that woman suffers from. Of course. he’s good looking and all that, but from the way Fh(‘ acts you'd think every woman on earth was lying in wait to snatch him from her. If he is five minutes late oming in at dinner time she is tear- g her handkerchief to bits and paec- ing the room, and she bursts into tears all over his shoulder before he can get his overcoat off or open his mouth to explain that the street car was blocked. 1 know she reads his letters, cause the other ¢ she had hystekic clutching one from the pocket of h other business suit, and she k moaning ‘Who is Ada” Who is Ada’ all the time I v bing her head. He explained to her that Ada was the econd wife of his favorite cous nd had a perfect right to addre: him as ‘Dearest Arthur, being least twenty vears his senior—but| Mrs. Simpson was a wréck for a day erward. That iman has the patience of Ji don’'t see how he cin stand cause he never so mucn as look, another woman. I know. watched him start out mornings thel ave th aw any 11 which eyery- There is not price will in ail probability be at par or better and the security cannot be excelled by any investment. There i thus a chance to serve country and be. and yet I am morally certain it can’t It would be just like a womah of her type to usc dye—and yet she doesn't have any rouge about her. “Now, Miss Grandhaven, in middle room, is just the oppo the she makes up her face ot the and yet is so shy it is hard to get her o talk at ail. collection of photos, and whether they are cousins, uncles or brothers or just She has such a friends goodness' knows, for all she tells! T have admired them s0 many times, and she just smiles pleasantly and never opens her mouth. “I don’t like that in a person at all. What's the use in being secretive if things are opven and above board? You'd think the natural thing for a girl to do when she's all alone and lonely would be to open her heart to an older woman who took an interest in her. There's something queer when a girl won't talk. “Mr. Patterson the back room talks enough. Hc nearly drives me wild. He follows me clear into the kitchen to talk, on it’s . all concerts, which seems the breath of life to him, and T must say for young a man it would be more nat- ural if he talked about dances and movies and girls—it would certainly be more interesting. “He is so full of con has to bubble over to though you couldn’t exactly crete bubbl beir more anything else. 1 don’ nature at all. Sometime: thing and again I think him, and T can't decide at the pictures of two dresser, but I can't make lie is in love with because with all h talk he never talks about them, and I must say it seems queer. “You can’t imagine how T am en- joying myself right now with all this ne to devote to improving my mind and doing the real things I like in- stead of having to worry over what doesn’t count.”—Exchange. in sol on his out which sell which should not be overlooked. | jut in addition to these points it is to be realized that this is the las{ of the loans that the government will seek in this manner. Everyone should therefore make up his mind to do his best, to be in at the finish and to make as great a suc- cess in the provision of the funds for meeting the war debt as those who fought did in carrying the flag to vie- tory. STORIES OF THE WAR Around Lake Baikal. (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) American railroad engineers . who will doubtless come to Siberia in large numbers in connection with the reor- ganization of the Trans-Siberian r: way, will have much to do with the re- gion of the famous Lake Baikal, which is skirted on the south and southeast L] sian railroad. It is ible in the winter months to cross the lake on sleds. thus varying the monotony of the long journey, and in summer by embarking on a steamer. But the builders of the railroad found it desirable to have a safe all-rail pas- sagd to Vladivostock, so the way was hewed through ranges of hills. The tunnels are now guarded by Japanese IN THE FOREIGN FIELD. What the removal of the trade re- strictions with neutrals, as proposed by the supreme.economic council of the allied nations,- is going to mean can be readily understood when it is ted that while Norwegian firms are anxious to buy large quantities of dry goods in this country and are placing some orders here they are not what they are commissioned to buy or what they would purchase if the restrictions did not exi It is even declared that large quantities of goods are being heid in warehouses here that were bought as far back as 1917 because it is impossible to secure permits to ex- port them. Such being the case there can no wonder that there is a desire fi the removal of the war time restric- tione. The same situation exists with other countries but how much more horoughly other councries have be- | come acquainted with American goods in comparison with the product o other countries is indicated by the| statement of a Norwegian buyer to the effect that “In dealing with the Americans since the war started we have learned that we can buy to bet-| ter advantage in the United States 1 forméfly we could in Germany, it ving been a long anding trade om for Norwegian firms to buy through Hamburg dealers, who in 1 i handled American goods whi bought for cash and resold to usj on easy credit.” This makes it evident that there not only an opportunity for American Norway is more than likely tha the same situation exists in vegard to other countriés in that and other sec- | tiens of the world. The war has help- ed to develop the d b there will ill be need of making the proper ef- fort to get and hold it. al, which is one of the largest fresh water lakes in the world, is call- d The Holy Sea by the Russians who live in its vicinity. It is only in size by the American Lakés Ti Mic eeded Supe- igan and Huron and by Lake nza in Africa. In contour it re- embles the human heart. It attains at certain points the great depth of 3,185 feet. A number of islands may be scen as one crosses the water in the navigable eason. The Buriats, descendants of the Mongolians, who are found numer- sly in the Baikal région, have a su- tious reverence for the island of Olkhon as being the residehce of the| infernal divinity, Begdozy, who is sup. posed to have re the soul of the damned. The scientist Gheorghi who visited the island in 17 5 no place in t world were so many sa on this island. According to another| Mongolian tradition, Olkhon was the| domain and home of the ancient hero,} Genghis-Khan. Americans who have seen the rocky | human profile in the White moun of New Hampshire wonld be int in the spectacle on the eastern of the lake, to the north of ( where the column_ of be ven known ! s made as| at ains | d ] | with repr a long| ented by | cavities. In the makes the mouth build their nest Burial priests and | d the submarine int where but it idolatrous priests r lered. They | The Invincible Wh TR e !many sacrifices. E { The water is EDITCRIAL NOTES. | The climate is rigorous. The left in|is short and the nights f of the oys. | part are cold nier ‘the long vaca. | ture -falle to to be the ref God, an a offer up | summer the most | In winter the tempera- 40 degrees below zero, | | Fanrenheit. Violeni winds driving | |from the Arctic region produce short,. perpendicular ve h, duri 1 There are not many days which to get that last ter before the R's tion. Between the Rumanians the Czecho-Slovaks the outlool is mnot promising for the bolsheviki in Buda- pest. The man on the corner says: Some people prefer to more light by holding a match near a leaky gas pipe There’s no place for bolshevism out- side of Russia and the area where it is acceptable there is steadily grow-| ing less. and ven 5 fee 1d a welcome Fish are abunda to the. people. Conditions in Archangel. H of The Associated| Press.) nd no work avings of the nts ceoraing to advic reaching the | can nad other allied food com ; |mittees in Archangel, the world w jetti re: Y, of y = 134 e Yo {95 ,(.id{(“x _,’:;“;_‘" have to feed and clothe the half million | part In the observance of Arhor davpeople who live behind the-allied lines| this week, or are you going to leave it|in north Russia for at least eighteen | to the school children? | months. | If the almanac days for May mean| Six months ago almost the continuance of the kind we have|ant family in this district ] n having in April it is going to be|cret heard of bank notes. While in the Sl S ipetedaiigmil cities the people were, in many in-| : 2 : stances, starving, the peasants had| It is a fortunate thing that we are| 3 = i money hidden under mattres: not dependent upon a transatlantig Y Sha 1 3 ane to keep in commu- int socks and Europe and the res | (Correspondence all every pea had se- ra ried in the ground and! {hidden away from possible ®ed Guard | of {raiders were supplies of grain and| other foodstuff <. | | yn August frost killed most of the meagre acreage of grain that | sown last year in this territory, which | is mostly forest. The ecret hoards were eaten months ago. ber milis and other concerns usually gave employment have shut down, and the peasant, with source of revenue, = been d every day into money sav buy the food that came in from abroad when the ailies landed. There is no! prospect of north Russia feeding her self until the next harvest—and eves this is made extremely difficult by the shortage of seed grain. The allied food committees in Arch angel are seeking a way to help this| population. The conditi that pre-| vail in this territory among a popula- | tion of half a miilion are believed to| prevail to an equal or worse extent| throughout central Russia, under Bol- shevik control. 3 | The American Red Cross has c ed | civilian relief on a large scale in the| Archangel district, since this work is| to be taken over by thesHoover fed organization, whose representa this date, have not arrived. The Archangel Viestnik, comment- | ing on the situation says: “If the Northern Region desires to be able to nication with the world. What the prohibitionists cannot un- | derstand is how any beer can be made after May first when the Lum which | been | no | ging | to| liquors must stop. Inasmuch as more of the gh Turkish officials are to be tricd for the atroci committed among the Ar- menians, there must be a feeling in that country that times have changed. Too early in the season are coming the reports of drownings from over- turned canoes and fatal burns from bonfires. It is to - be hoped this doesn’t mean p record breaking year | in this respect. From the attitude which lower house of the general assembly has taken in regard to the sanztorium for the treatment of bone tuberculosis, the impresson might be gained that the state had more money than it} knew what to do with. Word to the effect that es are to be increased hs anticiputed. "Along with the in- sed cost of living thére will be the extra expense for talking. But wvhat will happen if it works like the eased fares on trolley. lines? telephone rate come as wai s 120 mil was | t |infant Ivan VI should come of age. essary seed grains must be received not later than in four months. If they are not received in that time, the pop ulation is either condemned o s tion or they will depend entirely on the allies, Relief work among the peasants in the hunger stricken territory along the Murmansk peninsula and on the Arctic Pechora, this time of the year, is greatly hampered by the ice. ~ An ice breaker with about 700 tons of flour, sent to Pechora district had to return| to Archangel. unablé to penetrate the ice fiel What a Russian Volunteer (Correspondence of The Press.)—A Ru n_ voluntee who took part in the battle of Perm gives the following narrative of what he saw in the village of Kouvchine, not far from Perm, where he was stationed during the fighting which resulted in the complete defeat of the Bolsheviki. ordered to cléan out three s which were filled with the corpses of people who apparently he- longed to the intellectual or cultivated class of the community. Many of the bodies bore wounds made with swords. removed thirty corpses from the pit, the ages of the victims rang- ing from 16 to 60 years. There were several women among the vic bodies were naked. There wwa: reason to believe, in the soldier's opinion, that many of the people were thrown into the pits still alive ana they died by siow tion - and from the effects of their wounds. The inhabitants of the villag ified that they acted 1 ns. When the Sibers victors and the town rang out, the people jumped for joy, clasp- ing hands and skipping around in ¢ cles. In the neighboring village nozavadsk. situated on a railroz people were found to be g without nourishment, .and the tion of the children was witness. came about ! S0 { 1 IN THE DAY’S NEWS MITAU. objective Courlana, in the following ton head ational Geographic rds sire to Mitau. an perations in of R s de »ulletin from juarters of the society evidence he N that hren ted with called irteenth centur; nity in Sword, Teutonic car) upon, to im- Courland, me the capital south of the Gulf of Knights of the Sword built in 1265, and three cer town grew up there whic! seat of the dukes of Courland. Under the dukes of the Ke and flou 1 and even i nd a West whic! “On an tler : Indian colony: But Duke James, last of the Kettlers, died, ime an turer whose 1 show y Rasputins ssian Srnst Jo! groom, was expelled fi ity of Koenigsberg. ol back to Mitau one of his s temporary favorite of Pote minister of the Duch nova, his m Upon of liaisons Biren limbed attention and favor, | had Peter banished became Empress of Russia ir and handsome soldier of up his abod wrtments of the royal palace adj “Nominally chamberlain Biren became a stop gap for roy and th umulated enormc money cwels. He induc imperial mistres; Courland. He rebuilt the historic le at Mitau “ount Ra. al Winter palace which figured so overthrow of the ¢ “But_Biren ov when he persua deathbed, to make him re ne W Anne Iva to her lover. > debon cas- architect f the orig: Petersbu in tl ne, upon her ent until the In deposed. His property v confiscated, including umonds estimated to be worth sev- eral million dollars, and he was con- igned to political oblivi than twenty “atherine I tored him as Duke and, and when he died, nin the duchy which had nity in his youth and resented h ing forced upon them by Anne, ha come 1o regard him as a kind and ble ruler. “This same palace of Mitau housed Louis XVIII while he was yet Count of Provence and for a period during his exile fr wice Mitau was captured by Swedish Solomon and Richard Cou de Lion, Gustavus Ad five languages w he ferred with minister. : addressed the diet officially at 15, three weeks he was con vet ot|0f the house A the | had ce|the vote 1 ve h became the ¥ i ed | your lot and adven- | a: how | your right, not to h themselves to| cit 1 i grandson of a|thoroubhly the Univer- | 3 he drifted | pea s a | dic uchey, | Germans sk Anne | pexted | made that| ko and | antly, 1z subsist on its own supplies, the nec- recovered from his precocity to become| I, New Yark N. Y. Finding “Fruif-a-tives” CexTrAL WHARF, BostoN, Mass, #For three years, I was troubled with Constipation, accompanied by Dizziness and Violent Headaches. I took medicines and laxatives, but without permanent relief. Last October, I heard of “Truit-a tives” or Fruit Liver Tablels. 1 used one box and the results were so pronounced that I bought two dozen boxes. 1 continued using *‘Fruit-a-tives” until the twenty four boxes were finished, when my physical condition was perfeet”. JAS. J.ROYAELL. 50c. abox, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25c. At dealers or from FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, N. Y, ““DANDERINE" FOR | FALLING HAR Stop dandruff and double beauty of your hair for few cents. ADORABLE LITTLE TOM BOY YOU WILL NEVER FORGET WILLIAM DUNCAN BIG V COMEDY In “THE MAN OF MIGHT” COME AND LAUGH fi AT w! S Today and Tomorrow KEITH VAUDEVILLE HARRY AND ANN SCRANTON In 1919 Capers—A Real Noveitv GEORGIA EMMET The lrish Lassie LAZAR & DALE Musical Comedian e e—rr it o e et ARTCRAFT SPECIAL FEATURE WM. S. HART —IN— THE BREED OF MEN Six Part Western Thriller Burton Holmes Travelogue Lyons & Moran Comedy HIS BODY FOR RENT i HER LATEST SELECT PICTURE THE PROBATION WIFE PEARL WHITE IN THE -12th CHAPTER OF THE LIGHTNING RAIDER HIS MUSICAL SNEEZE 2 Part Sunshine Condedy Novelty Dance Dandruff causes a feverish tion of the scalp, the hair shrink, loosen and then the comes out fast. at once and rid the scalp of every particle of dandruff, get a small bot- tle of “Danderine” at any drug store for a few cents, pour a little in your | hand and rub it into the scalp. After sevaral applications the hair coming out and you can't find any dandruff. Your hair appears soft, and twice as thick and abund- a great general and saved Protestantism fre tinction. His death w as his care his statesman. m probable ex as dramatic troops at Sutzen, after a mist had descended and thrown both the Swed- ish and German armies into a pani When his devoted men leadér had fallen they rallied to ad- minister 2 memorable defeat upon the superior forces of Wallenstein, Ger- s Aaron Burr, who has been im- ed by Schiller. Mitau is more important historical- Iy than industrially. It manufactured flour, ink, soap, cotton and oilcloth. and limited trade in grain and lumber before the world war. It lies 29 miles by rail southwest of Riga, in a fertile plain so low that it often i bmerged occasionally the ci 1f is inundated. Of its 40,000 popu- lation, nearly fourth were Germans, remainder Jews, Letts, Rus- and Poles OTHER VIEW POINTS It does seem as though might be done to chec these con- ant strikes. The chief trouble is the reasonableness on both sid In the end, after much los, the thing is done which might w be cor at the start. Compromise is reached and strike ends. But bitter fee! generated and the public is red. It does not help for the resu idgeport Standard- The action the senate tt: 4 referendum clau to the pro- prohibition amendment shov ard for the rights of the electo the house should have heeded be too now for the lat er hody to rectify it ous error though that is At doubt, it depends al upon the temper fact remains the right yester showed that thi regard for the opinion the state whose v ould be r¢ this ~ impor ford Courant. When something est h may te was in members some of your ne wantonly garage or your antly zo into court for the destruction. Tha ay vour duty German ~ people 1 delil 1 troyed . France e court for dam al judgment rendere 1l pay her district. The two alike. Ti away to over sma; en on up your you s en. he over to F coal m efore and the tha ith the The anz propositions Saar valley CGerman in- are fortune| jured ps port i bury n day 't load: and unt} real of night of public. war France. The have come in the ager world. to clothes. In > men who are wor public into handing them magazines that I bec simply for offering an public’s mor near who never for more| S0t out of this country into real war Y- | mm—. FAT PEOPLE GET THIN Best safe home method. Get a smaii of oil of ko at Follow nlain directiens Zuarantee. book teils all about quickly, ple: 1 wraper, fre i under write to Korein Co., irrita- | roots | hair | To stop failing hair | | stops | He} He fell while heading| realized their} Who’s Who In Norwich? PATHE NEWS Up-to-the-Minute News Topics NOTE—The special gov- ernment film “The Price of Peace” will be shown at this theatre from 5 to 6 p. m. and our regular program will be shown as usual, 6:45-8:30. Tooker’s Hall, Montville Music by Moose Jazz Band Good Time for Everybody TONIGHT, APRIL 29TH Big Gymnastic Exhibition Tonight at 8 AtY.M. C A Drills, Apparatus and Mat Work, Tumbling, Club Swinging, Wrest, ling and Basket Ball. ADMISSION ONLY 25¢ service. Some clever men who never even got into any sort of war ser- vice say the chance for money mak- ing that there was in arousing pub- lic sympathy through the soldiers. They have been making profits of; Get-Rich-Quick-Wallingford charac- ter through their work, pushed by means of soldiers who get only a share of the profits—Waterbury Re- publican. ?Gleaned from Foreign Ex.| changes i intage of the various schemes f"r‘Slalel’ Ha“ Concert series s Most of the ex-soldiers who take ad- i securing a small holding will have a| certain amount of gardening experience to guide them, for many acres in tre and ere cultivated by troops during their periods of rest, and excel- coop, | to_collect | the | get ¥ drug- | Academy Musical Course Tuesday Evening, April 29th, at 8 o'clock JOINT RECITAL Mary Jordan, Prima Donna, Contraite and lent results were obtained. | At Benson's Barn. in the Salient, | vegetables of all descriptions were grown, while the extensive allotments near Reninghelst were the pride of the Canadians. Soldier-gardeners were en- g but they had a grievance. nual moving of di- | visions from sector to sector the plant- ! | ers rarely reaved the benefits of their; Mayrice Dambois. the Great Belgian | labours, * which, however, werej Cellist | thoroug! enjoyed by the battalions} | coming into the vacated acreas. Thel| cators of a magnificent bed of asparagus discovered. gathered, and consumed near Baiseux last summer deserve special thanks. “Probably the only passive resister to Summer-time,” savs a writer in a| contemporary, “will be the sundial; it ag an hour behind.” That would ase if the sundial showed 4 matter of fact, on four days in the if its position is Greenwich meridian. time is based on an im- which 1s supposed to iformly, a thing the real ch the sundial depen Even on the Greenwich eenwich time and sundia more than a quarter of ar The Net Proceeds of Concets will be given for the Benefit of the Red Croas. Single admission $1.50 Tickets on sale at Cranston’s, Broadway Mail or phone your order now does that 1 3 or to Lord Strath- war_broke out, and nted to carry on until It it understod { permanent succe cona. Then tk Sir George cor peace was restored. hat he will now shortly retire, and ir. Lloyd Harris, charrman of the nadian Mission in London, is men- ioned as his probable successor. variance, the dial being at| Sir George is a milionaire, and is j times t amo fast and at others|known as Canada’s “Handyman,” ow=- s much slow. {ing to the number of f_)[rcamo‘ns 1on " o which he has temporarily acted for o creatures) fhit go 10 male up| icmbers cbithe Borden administration pay attention for the amusement i FEUIL L s fr zer. It is a crea-| The official guides to the museums, ght and late evening.| me their rouhds next week in great numbers to: will be welcomed, for there is nothing rgms for the purpose]more dreary for the unlearned than a { fantastic dance, |round of a museum in which one feels v things havs mteresting his- only the information wers 1 a form less trssome than d by repeated references to e official guide books. The mu uide, we know from s | experi v different from the lackadai to country houses, m | We recall i out to visits full-rigged ship with the information tantastic costume, | that this v th actual vessel in sitn these varie- | which the first Nevills came over with ity and bewilder- ! the Conqueror. | There is a now apple heing ratse in as | contral Essex from a pip, and its name “Mr. Prothero. of the Board of to be a large h: nt qual Greenwich aginary sun, mbve qu un, on w never does. meridian G | time can & { hour at a height- | motions, | av al in Observed from | th nte the 1 istingui her evolutior s dancing {m readily 1 | habit ‘of shoe male protruding coat. to deck| ing spectacie How comically crude, as well £ the ignor- | e peas: 2 . dent vouc isome fruit of which keeps longer and ny pie now 1 not readily , even if bruised, and is in season to June. . ‘vival of the fittest” in fruit-growing too often means vietory - inferior quality, because leners will plant, not the hest kinds but the heav ich are usually the most pro- jou t, who h for his revoli some cas took pianos fron them to them D able to! number grim i 1t cold” in. Th d been | a no 1 eft ouy in the r whom ave purchased of the latest for an over | for | thirty he post the Can June 1914, he ended | for two months oniy, until | «ir service in the Governme country. AUTOMOBILE BULBS THE NORWICH ELECTRIC CO. 42 FRANKLIN STREET