Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 15, 1919, Page 4

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sy . NORWIC THURSODAT, MAT 19, over 60,000,000 bushgls in a month is i ——-—————m worth talking about, but it is real- 3 THE CLUB DANCE! ized of course that the weather still w o % ~ b . S PE K, 3 4 . Has an important part to play. It can| ‘“T's just perfectly. - awful,” an- [yourself, and like as mot hell be v 5 2 L . % destroy wheat as quickly as it can im- | nounced the very pretty girl to her|danciag a two-step when they are ’rwui' u”gkn prove the outlook, if mot quicker, al- | bachelor uncle. “I dow't know. what|PLimg @ onesstep. He' feo con ) though for the sake of ail concerned|pm, going. to do. s B and the demands that are. still being i ‘Dear. dear!” apologized her uncle. | and q.nfngr' oy ‘Confide in me, ‘begged the bache- |1 must obgerve him more closely | made upon -this eountry ‘it s .to bejlor uncle with enthusiasm. My best|after this. Evidently 1 am slipp\ng‘ TODAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY hoped - that there Will 'be né advetse | speclalty is helping helpless young |up as a Judge of character. Lets| e A Screen Version of the Stage Success LD ladies who need. help. ee—um—John Baker” 123 YEARS o Senteiene, | . {1397 ‘P'ogh!” said the very pretty girl 7 "SI:mmchoesnshonz than I am!” sm “e nmmd Tn Subwription price (26 & werk; 5% @ meath; s.00 | Tne harvesting. of this wheat has|gloomily. ‘“Much assistance vou'd be|exploded the -very pretty girl: 3 5 ‘ 9 | i s | not begun.as-yet of course, but with|in this crisis. Anyhow, vou'd laugh.” |* “Ie only noticed him sitting down” Take "Fm'.a_fi"s” Sutere at the Postoffies ai Norwich Comn. ® |such a bumper-crop it is quite evident! “I'm a regular tomb,” he told her|explained her uncle hasti Is ar wcod-cless matter. that there is goihg to Be a demand for J;rx;oa%.h’fully. Crape and everything: ,:mng“wrong with Fred Williams? He( 73 Lees Ave., Orrawa, bl S labor in the' wheat traising ' sections. oed.” s tall—" “Three years i o - g = - ey ee years ago, I began fo feel - S R R e That, there il be good pay and plen | e ieco I five. desrees worth f | prety gir) Rolowy, “warid in dane: ; NIGHTS IN LONDON — 200 N IN NEW 8.3, . Nt i 2 - H Faltoria ot 3 omes 382 |ty of work for ‘the unemployed.seems|lis niece in five degrees’ worth of|prety girl hollowly smrtc{d in danc- | run-down and tired, and suffered 800 200 NIGHTS g still gloomier tones, “for me to asi|ing school ten years ago, when I % . - Willimastic Offies 23 Church S Tekphone 105 | probable. To.those Who aré familiar| (o the club. party. . And T've got to P s et e By T veu| Yery much from Liver and Kidney e e == | with it it should be eagerly sought,{ask some onc or I can't g how to put one foot before the other; Trouble. Havitg heard of “Fruit-a- Noewich, Thursday, May 15, 1919 |but it is a question whether those sec-| “I get you precisely,” paid .- YORK, AND STILL RUNNING - ; the | without Talling. over it He knocks| fives?, T thought I would try them, | All Seats Sold for 16 Weeks Ahead at Cort Theatre, tions of the country ‘that are reporting j bachelor uncle. Th is a truly {down, everything in a room just The result u HE CIATED PRESS, the most unemployéd could get those dreadful state of affairs, and I wond- | walking through it. Besides, T'm| esult was surprising, & New York Cigy MEMBER OF T ul: gl men to go to the iheat fields, It is m«m_vau hare not. i [e;ifrnlxg ot\xlt b‘?;" made at. him—on purpoic—so he 111. 7 have not had an hour’s sickness The Assclated Press SO A golden air in landfuls. Mabelle. | sta; away and not bother me. i . 2 e 1y 10 e for repuiicalion of et aews gessicn || the matter of the distafbutlin. 8¢ fa<1 But T confess 1 am-somewhat-at sea. | sef you fhere St Athe any one_to] siice X commenced using “Fruita- | 7 ROAD COMPANIES NOW ON TOURK T e s h local Sews wubisnes || or which always bothers during the|Why is there nobody for you - to|agk” tives” or Zruit Liver Tablets, and 1 e o e s G {harv esung season, ?rsokmwly‘:eeandi:\g*crg;‘ ulx;(; wln glg;xc%m:g “It does graw(’] xl:ore dt]mcunil«nml;: know now what I haven’t known for THE BIGGEST AMERICAN STAGE SUCCESS - repul i I 0 2 v S| Y moment,” agrees er uncle. “ hou R | NO ROOM FOR THEM HERE. |or some of my old gentfeman hooks, | not think you would have club dances 2 good many years—the blessingof & SINCE “THE LION AND THE MOUSE” Down in ‘Argentina there is appar- || sceha Surging_multitude of 3“‘"‘§ often”if it is such a stra ori you: healthy body and elear thinking . g IWE 2t % iy . |men hanging upon vour every word|girls as thi Sa: almost 0 v g . Lentiy very little sympathy with those | 0 (RR0E8 SHIN SOV, SOU ere [ B8 4% e ™ ncitoment’ 05| ‘brain” WALTER J, MARRIOTT. |§ You Can See the Same Play at the Breed’s Usual Prices | l N who are, preaching .dangerous doC-)are heaps of boys around this house|then he sighed in thesatisfied way of| 50c.abox; 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢. trines and working against .the na-}all the time.” one who has just stumbled upon the i o 2 D : i 3 That You'd Pay $2.00 to See on the Stage tion’s peace and welfare, and this is| “Oh, goodness?” moaned the very{lost chest of diamonds and pearls, s ers or from FRUIT-A-TIVES | particularly“tfue of those who are in- | pretty girl. = “As thoush I'd ask any|“I have it. I'll bet vyou've never| Limited, OGDENSBURG, N. Y, clined to anarchy. Recently several|of THEM!” . . 5 5 thought of him, - becuse any girl | hundred such agitators have been de- They look good to me,” persisted|would have been tickled to pieces to 2 z ted by that country and fhere is a|the Pachelor uncle. There’s that|have him for an escort. She could{an American shoe store which had ported by i simitar | C21Y Harper—he agreed -with me|just burst with pride because he|just adversitsed for sale a carload of greater number with whom similar|perfectiy about finance in Europe— |would wear his croix de guerre and | footwear, at prices ranging from action will be taken. Argentina does|ask him.” - the Britishemedal and al Ithe others.|fifty to sixty francs. In the shop- not intent to tolerate them-there eith-| “Youw're losing your mind.” his|Capt. Loper! Ask him!'" ping district shoes were worth from jer as troublémakers or martyrs. Itluiece told him.. “Cary Harper! At a| The prety girl did not clasp her|eighty to one hundred and fifty 3 {believes in sending them back where|dance! With his . spectacles and|hands in relieved ecstasy. Instead |francs and hére these crowds were they came from and in acting in ac-|double jointed knees. - Besides, helshe swallowed twice and traced a|battling for the privilege of purchas- cord: dith its belief. doesn't dance: At least nobody ever|pattern in the upholstery with her|ing shoes the lower cost, equivalent o s : was known to'-dance with him, . and| finger. . to 10 or 12 a pair. The supply was That this is the hest method Oflanyhow I should think you should she said. “I can't—not |exhausted before sundown. AS two |dealing with such people is shown by| have my interest at heart enough |tha’ | especially want him—in fact|poorly dressed women emerged from the fact that a Yuartette of anarchists not to want to say particularly at a|I never in the world should have)the store one twas heard to say: recently .discharged from a Wisconsin |club dance that Cary Harper was thelthought of him if you hadn't—oh, | “Blessed be the Americans; 1 have prison have gone right back to their|best [ could do.” 3 .| that hateful, pushing Tsabelle Rich, |saved fifty francs.” % EREE s “I gather that Cary won't do,”|with the long nose, asked him over old practices; while one of-their in-|_, ., BPC Bl Caw wont 207} wit Bhors. Bve iriies. after the clination upoh being arraigned -in @] "ot ug not lose hope when the|olub had decided on the dance.” OTHER VIEW POINTS Chicago court on a charge of having| wiods are full of’e Now, if you| “H'm!" said the bachelor uncle.{ The 168 owns in Connecticut all incited to riot begged that he be $hot|want a dapper. up-and-coming, keen|Did T tell you I met Tsabelle Rich's |excocted tholr quotas in the Victors rather than be seht back to Russia. It | young chap T wouid suggest Tink|paternal patent last nignt. and he | pro o), thelr quotas in the Victory {may Dbe that he was state senate rejected the prohibition uch a plea, but it is quite evident that not sincere in}Armstrong.” 3 mentioned that Isabelle had to leave _"~\r(’ _yol;\w trying to dr me to|tomorrow for the south with her!amendment, and the bill granting he has no desire to return to that]distraction?” m presidential suffrage to women, “the 2 ’ aned his nieces, re- | mother, who fs 111" FAIRFIELD’S LAW ENFORCEMENT |wonderful country of freedom which %‘Tfi? v 1‘112201::”’; "f‘bi‘éiYSSi oj‘tfk‘i vo;(;-h'p}‘-euz“;\ Dzs—‘iCtptre‘g;};{‘a‘icé‘Mh;?e 1{3’3(1 2 sm%y s seemm?gdl‘em 5 3 3 o 7 s i guld 24 g B = 3 5 0} ive.—] - Attention is being called {o the fact |l being governed by Trotsky and Le-|among the girls. He always thinks|self onto his neck an instant as she|town brese L P cooive that those who drive automobiles in or|"ine. Iis preference is o stay here c he is the center of the universe and|rushed to the phone. “Now I can 3 + gignt v and earrying on 1is DIOWKeAbAR WHen: | Catkn: W¥ery minute and’ noyer N e WEEK ENDING MAY 10th. Auditorium Theatre THURS,, FRI. AND SAT. Vaudeville and Pictures Mardo and Lorenz Bits of Variety Toots and His Pal America’s Great Dog Act Sheldon & Sheldon Singing, Talking, Musical Act Tom Mix TODAY AND TOMORRO‘ ENTIRE NEW SHOW MIKE SACKS AND THE MARCUS MUSICAL COMEDY CO. In the Smart Revue De Luxe “PRETTY BUTTERFLY” |i A Score and a Half Betwitching Maids, Chic, Stunning, Tantaliz- nig Lassies Gowned and Costumed With Lavish Disregard for Money. Fashion’s Wonder Show. NEW SHOW TOMORROW MATINEE 2:15—25¢ : i Days Dick Loper after all.’—Ex b anti - |4 NIGHTS 8 p. m.—15¢, 25c, 35¢c, 50c . through the town of Fairfield are be-|oyer it is-possibe rather than be sent{any attention to what you wantlchange. I R e Al B BESlI, ing given to understand that they | nel | N FRRL DO UT e he ! PALS IN BLUE' must observe the law. The only sur- a_home-building proposition to the | = 3 f half a million doilars. In| ds will be of 1 4 Byrrows who had b ed by extent o, records will be of special interest. to IN THE DAY’S NEWS i ey na f\f\““\“‘?p‘!“‘”&s"he present instance the bank is of-|{hose who expect to arill geep wells | g with the peerage and the title ‘T nrd Tesinis i fip i ’“’C“;;eeh"mt‘ g‘““d; in this part of the s H : > = 2 s its services as an expert advise ety ) ination of Habi-| Roberts of Kandahar. iy S A e inclined to feel that they are he.|create lawlessness. and disorder the|Mminder that not even that Temote and ! India_ sufronnd this in e ey At e ] Dakota. ! ity renta mat they are Do~ |\ise cgurse to pursue is that which is | Obscure land of middie Asia escaped With an estimated ar 0| the prospects of making a loan. Now | Natwral gas is now produced in| ing unjustly lromgd when they strike followed’ by Argenting, Departation” of the effects of ‘thé world wa Vs af‘@"flr“ miles and ponuht.on u!eo,'he bank is calling to him to “hutry 3 % Fairfield and get into court. o hf» chould | be more | Pulletin of the National Geographic|€stimated, of 5.000,000. ~ Afghan his-{ up aniTEeE busy ¥ | North Tt is quite natural under such con- |SUch undesirables shou : ciety torians date their people’s beginnings| Homes arc the foundation of any |Dbeen found there in commercial quan- v ditions that the claim should be put|generally followed whether they come ~“Not that there ¢ evidence asito King Saul and refer to them as| TOMeS are’ le in Bridgeport | tities. Whether the failure to find oil . 2 forth that Tairfiéld is trying to fatten |Irom Russia or other countries. fet that the mona mirder wag) Childten of Tsrael 4 theory that may) e S hele bunlomie, ibeutetia is dae to) the. b i ot % ?1‘ 1rs nua ance i o v — — ired by growing antipathy to auto-|have zained popular acceptance he-i : 2 is du arrenness of the beds ! its court receipts at the expense of the Asied Es : gl - for Bridgeport. We hope that the of- |, 2 : " ate collaps s ause of the Afgha appear- | tested by the dr 5 el i Desogelaelondeg ey it illeeed SHIPBUILDING ACTIVITY. cratc, but the collapse of Russia. left e hans’ Eemitic appe ested by the drill or to the unfavor gy intl ance, but it is not gen crociitea 1oL o Pie idesbir Saviage Dok, ituation of the few wells tha fact it is the automobilists who in-| American shipyards have had little e e e olonate i Ao ! will be quickly snapped up.—Bridge- S altyation, of B0 Tow wehs Ul GIVEN BY THE prising thing about that is that it is in|i§ thorougily acquainted andof which contrast with the respect for the law |[he Wants no part, as insisted upon in ’:)Lher towns, so| Just.as long, however, as such peo-|* AFGHANISTAN. that after deing pretty much as they |Ple Dersist in violating the laws of| “The reportéd assa please in other localities automobilists | this country and do their utmost -to | pullal GREAT WESTERN PICTURE THE ADVENTURE SHOP WITH CORINNE GRIFFITH A BLUE RIBBON FEATURE Dakota, but oil has not yet have beqn drilled is not known. sist_upon violating the law and then Or 1o reason fo worr# over the pros- | “wppapibulah is credited with observ-|rich in poetry, mostly war epics and|Port Post. Domes and arches in the beds age fav JAZZ SOCIAL CLUB growl because they are s for |Pects of plenty of business even un- rupulosly the. policy laid down;love lyrics. All but the mountain; The General Assembly of 1919 has|orable locations for oil and gas wells it and mede to pay. Fairi s sim- [der the readjustments accompanying father, a noteworthy ruler, that|Kafirs are Mohammed: n, and they|established the jitney in the status of |and contain most of thé oil pools in f in which are{a common carrier. Its owners must|the United States. However, in North AT PULASKI HALL io of old} h\e bon}ds 1 y agree to sub-|Dakota the heds lie 8o nearly flat that | their husiness 2 to regulation.{guch domes and ches (or - “anti- 19 clirtige, hae bar. wiEorously: ov- Clinesy ‘can ordinarlly be. - detectea | Saturday Eve., May 17, 1919 ply doing what every town | the cancellation of government orders.|of consulting Eugland about mauers.lfllin:-;l t;) a{ pafan bel should do. It ig endeavoring to make|The demand for ships that has pre-|of foreizn nolicy Lut brooking no in-|blended aint sugges g s the highways as safe a; ;hs-y‘ w:;: belvailed for a long time was bound to | terference from the outside in the do-|mythologies and ancient rcligions. it the laws are properly observed and |prevent idleness for the yards where|Mmestic affairs of his absolute mon-; Josed by some of the men in the bus- i 0 meoloie SNt ;- @nfobobd It has Hadl Wome: baq decl- | wOMEPUR. FooUsH LAHIDh™ was witoppbdti| T gen o on W STORIES OF "THE WAR | 2o o e o e heter Have | iy pos, et e pirolic surves: | MUSIC BY THE TANGO JAZZ BAND dents which warrant it in taking the {because such vessels were not meet-{made travel comparatively safe among| Uniting German Marine Units |passed. probably, had there not come!of a small flow. of gas from an ar . | DANCING 8:30 TO 12 stand which it has. It is the attitude |ing expectations, had even’considered!the erogeneous tribes of Afghani-| (Correspondence of the Associated|into this field iwithin the past few |of a small flow of gas from an ar- % that every town should take and it is|the possibility of being obliged to burn n—tri ‘C\ \;flum\' Jn‘; :‘r‘l}mpmm'r)d Pre in the opinion of A"‘“"‘“‘“‘I“;::Z;;:-:Fv?ffl. ;ce:r;‘t;ré i‘*l"( f"ltfis-“ [1); tesian fwleln drmtl‘d about 3 !x 2 miles FOX TROT NIGHT erfectly cvident that If there wa#t the partly built vessels in ofder to|upon each other a 2] r0-larmy officers who follow day by da. 8 4 . of the crest of an anticline near : Thore such enforcement there woull 1ai| kake Foown for e haAdINE ‘of other|VOCation. Irequently. they/ submisted| Sti0) SLCED RS TRV, Cday 1Y .m)-l”“’" advantage to have a standing|Nesson, in the northwes teorner of | SEN TS 30 CENTS, Including War Tax a better observance of the statutes |business. thels Sispcifs tormbitRinaiang e ) { pears likely that General von Lettow-|@"d perhaps some thinning out of | North DaDkota, about 30 miles east of |" 5 custom of the loser.awarding several|\ys and traffic regulations throughout the| In this connection, however, added|qos vy marringeable women to the rival entire state and it is belleved less fa- (evidence of shipbuilding business for|tribe was one factor in eliminating any talities and injuries in which motor|a ng time to come is given by the|clear out distinctions between vehicles are involved, whether they |decision that has been cabled to this|tribal units of the land. are always at fault or not country by President Wilson whereby orbeck, the German commander who | (Reir competitors. The public in gen- | Wwilliston, is of interest and ibly ireturned to Germany in March - from | €T to anticipate that|ef gignifica to well drilfers ‘as” weil | known to be oil bearing in any .of : 1 have better trans- bty s sty s NI bFir IRe ; is rapidly uniting under - hi I as to the residents of¢ that region.{the productive fields of the Rocky ommand all the loyal marine unit portation service becausé of the new |This anticline is a very hroad, flat{Mountain states. Writing in the summary of intelli- | 1V —Bristol Press. larch in which the dip of the strata| The driller of this artesian well re- “To the stranger the Afghan displavs|gence of the Third United | Now that Hridsqvortftluakalzl1y‘on either side is less than 1 degree.|ports that he struck, at a depth of Those who break other laws expect |shipyards will be bermitted (o accept |a sort of specious and deceptive orien-iarmy of recent @ate one of the having stopped calling itseli “the|All the rock beds exposed below the|750 feet, a small flow of gas which that they will be called to account for | foreign orders for ship construction.|tal courtesy. 1In.fact a national pro-tican experts who s Z Issen of America”—is laying claim}glacial drift and alluvium belong to|could be burned as it came to the it amd there is no reason why it|Ior some time eftorts have been made | YerD is that ‘The man who shuts his| the movements of a fmar for the recognition as the largest city | Tertiary format: that are not|surface. door to a stranger is no Afghan. But! forc the stranger alsa would do well to! jne: E ving current among the F{m—lmc most ‘God shield you from vengeance| the he elephant, the conra - and should be any different with automo-|by other countries to place contracts bile drivers. Some drivers never in-|in this country. There has bedn a de-1 tend to pay any attention to the mo-|sire to replace their depleted tonnage|de tor vehicle laws unléss they are forced |and take advantage of the facilities {of the state, we should think it xpected to be one of |might profitably turn aside chiefly e e of {from brass and gunpowder and cor-y present government—and might and sewing machines and things theleven be a reactionary power. to spend its seaon in improving its READY * TTERI to by just such action as Fairfield is|offered in this country to get such n’ “For many strangers have! Owing to the populur apprecidtion |culture. { EVE FRESH BA ES taking. ships. quick. Heretofore such work | found that, upon prevocation, to which! of the ices of the marin g| It is almost destr : . —_— has not been permitted that the mer- ‘l"" Afghan is extremely sensitive, his| ipe r g to the initiation of (he the state register that this city r d position® is vengeful, cruel, ' and!, fty. His desire for piilage, WHERE THE SHOE PI . |chant marine of this country might 5 g NCHES. | 't be affected, but -apparently the time has passed when such a safe- evolution last November by marines|which claims the largest number of theft! numerous volunteer marine units|People provides them through its deception also 1y apt to get thelp,ve appeared in Germany during the | public library with fewer books than of him. past few months seeking to capital- |any other Connecticut community ot guard needs to be employed. our Afghan is aswarthy, swag-|1;C tne poularity, So mang of them,|size thinks desirable for its citizens, 4 |” Thus it is shown that the shipbuild- | gering, proud, but withal owever, developed into rosbec bands| The New Haven public Tibrary has dreadful and murderous peace terms ;. gctivities are not going to suffer|ing sort of man, ever omposed of men in marine uniforms|131.357 volumes on its shelves: the 7 have peen presantad 1o thefh bY | tiivogh! any: poskible Tetting np-<n || Hior itle e e s I r who never served in the marin ser- | Hartford public library has 128.000. the allled nations. It is charactetlstic | smerican orders. We must take care | SIVIng & faint suggest hat of late the average German |Behind this is the Watkinson library of the Germans to refer to the treaty|of our own needs-but when it 16 Dos. ivilian has begun to look wupon any|of reference with 93890. Tbe Silas| o 3 s disclose sh wn, 3 library in Waterbury has as reducing them to slavery and wip- moves it to d man in a marine uniform as a prob- | Bron, rary in a E Hs Gt ha matlor bt iad do“‘nfi‘ sible to do that and reach umlpoz,} (u;fllficad to t:y‘ownh\\il(dh eruly | atie thiof. 2 {IO,GQ, But Bridgeport has only stop to consider what misery has been |#00 S¢t foreizn businegs ‘at the|ringlets falling about his shoulder xuml PAFE e paat 1oWE" wrabe e caused the world by same time there i mno reason. why |the unshaved: portions. DAYLOS It is interesting to hear those rep- resenting the German government and others in that country tell Aabout the their n or of the marine un: And Bndgop‘Pn S G lo;h i i ; is @ decision! Occasionaly the men a ng up and from information to take steps for improvement. In what the plans of Germany in [ it should not be done. It is a decision most_of ihe women, who .| tho Third Army offiaets 1t 1o now poe. | 1817 New Haven's library bought case it had heen victorious which will be welcomed by the ship- with colored ta at to give a general idea of thejll, new books; Hartford bought But it cannot be overlooked that!builders of the country. | the g bly isHt call 10 |marine units. In an article in th 36; Waterbury, 7,911. Bridgeport Bernstorffl in 1914 declared, in re- | mind an 3 dy B e Ty mmary of intelligence issued daily {2dded only 6,005 sponse to a question as to what G EDITORIAL NOTES. chorus prepared to g ‘Scl ays'|py the Third Army one of the an there be truth in the report i many would exact from France in ¢ The real struggle these days is to|Were it mot for their flowing oriental| ymerican officers | . ?::e .':\'e{ag@ {Sntdlzepor{erh re?’dll i, t W at cou 4 P e col- | find hce e the big ite | I | The marine wiits of Spartacist only the stock market report the Po- it won, that it would take all the col- |find the nlace where the big trout bite | ™% | | Tomen. tike Turkish wo- ot e nam Pt o e i onies, Morocco entire, Algeria and Tu- |the best. men, are kept secluded but they are| 55 d D : first. Most important of these \ nis, it would insist upon all of France jeha ity ol considerably more afventurous than:ine" vVolkesmarine division which | from St Valery in a straight line to| 1 is &ll FiEAt now o appear in 3 HAND AND KNAPSACK "‘hdr Turkish sisters, hence scandallyont over to the Spartacists in the | Procpecting For Oil In Southwestern Lyons (or more than a quarter of straw headgear, this vear’s, last Year's|is not infrequent even in a land where| r.o.. and March troi in "Rei Arkansas. France with over 15,000,000 inhabi-|OF the Yedr before last. man may have S 3 Sl lm but has now been suppressed in reral halt deposits in Pike and H . : Lo support. ‘Amir Habibullah, ifi ; r , yoralgepiali Cencs s tants), it would call for an indemnity| . ’ Bl = n. ' However, it has a branch in|Sevier counties, in southwestern Ar- & of ten billlons, it would require a The man on the corner says: One of re-h‘(-: of hi§ death be true, left four;l““ hweig of clearly Spartacist i e Bkl i e commercial treaty permitting German | (¢ difficult things to find these days|widows. =~ 0o Lo purposes. Many who were prominent | iy nti -4 > 27 1s the self operating lawnmower. y_Hahibbilalys father, ahang Bdb 'y i the Walseclved| unit (i Beclin” are{afton in ol Soiic lof ‘whoriaiive At a goods to enter France duty free for| g fran also were enacted measures of | o in this unit, which appears to|gaimerent times loased land in {hes 2 85 vehes W i ati a sé singularly e 3 2 2 : x SR U . <o -4 Bonny thahout reciproeity, it would} mnose peotie” whe-are ajways! teel- | Rationsl defiied smppiarly W tent !...u the foundation of the present|and adjoining counties and sunk wells 3 oneh forrecmolttion of all thefing g 1t the§ wonld fiy dre=nft the | 5 WUR O tE SR et he| §partacist control of Eraunschweig. in the hope of finding ofl. In none of French fortress it would require a ones who make ‘the best aviatbrs. f\”“ e Ao shn Ten At least the two Home Guard units|these wells, however, has oil been . gift of three billion rifles, three thou- | oM : : e Ve touahdione or"‘f marines are known, one at Munich | found in commereial quant ~ sand cannon and 40.000 horses, it| Tne Germans. are losing no chs his provinces, and said his entire do-|2nd one at Franifurt on Main. Asphalt was mined several years . a ; 90-ier of thesc has been fairl ; t deposit near P! a would insist upon patent rights for |, jmpress upon ‘the minds of the al-|main could raise a million fighting|®" {GHABIR bt sleong | S0 MO 8 CRU0R Bnsat, 5 2 : 0 g both are unquestionably of strong German patents without reciprocity |jios that they are persistent note writ- |men to defénd her sorl. Nor did hel goth are undues coute] fodittleRos 4 for 25 years, it would make Francears 5 Geee | stop at the prediction. He worked out| ™% AL e R e where it in paving streets. 3 3 ers. = cery| . ‘Supporting Minister of War Nos- | This and the other osphalt deposits in abandon its alliance with England and a system by which each'man in every|, SuBPQIURE FUnster of War = . ; £ L R — 4 5 i taki i a ; tog the two counties named and the possi- 5 - Russia and it would force 25 vear| When the German envoys. admitted gf‘.lh:‘;éré‘lu ) ""(?,l,n :’:]Hdrdh)‘nfi(‘ Tllr\ several marine units of bmtv nf‘(flndlnk oil in these a“g ad- ’, s treaty of alliance with Ger: [ their defeat, they might ust as well | Vorn 2 o ‘vary decrepit, fo eacape the|orale, which appear ail or v & cotinties are discussed iy H. 3 ¢ ; i As the war progressed and mhermhu\ © kept right on and affixed their|ami draft, for the service ages were|all to De in the process of uniting at DA Miser and H. Purdue in a re- B entered the German demands grew o |signatures, from 15 to 70. the present time, under control of|pori entitled “Asphalt Deposits and " :rm if ;t ;ou]fl have had its own way | 3 | “So far as barring yvn\l'n}lr na:n)mons] N :‘;‘;T;l] ng'r[xm;fiel:“'\‘\mh"le.m‘& n;x Cnnd‘ilt‘lxz\s ,f,',‘g ?:::::‘ves‘!)em A‘:-I it woul ave dominated the world. Lik ) 0 too | makers ‘is concerned, Abdur Rahman,; ¥ & e | 3 y been pub- oy o : Othee " conitias ‘wollld Have | HatCto 1Kt S I Wiy Aisint: g | ione matorel Mg qearsoimisien mtenl e i o i s dna g Sebulietin §91.7 of the United |} Buylletin Building 74 Franklin Street | bow to the German will in most all|have nothing to dp-n the future with | have Subscribed to (he E’fl’:‘\‘fff‘:;’g]‘:fl fton Marine: Brigaie-on Marite| o s aogsicalDUEYeY, Deneuént & Teleph 5314 matters of world importance, and yet|a German alllance, fes 'at his capital; Kabul. There are|Brigade Rohden, under Colonel van|records of several deep wells which ephone now that Germany has lost it whines it wilt ‘““T* “'fi* 3 | saig to have beeri produced a dozen or! Lohde: T«\‘ vas f;)mfim[ *d in Kiel, | have heén drilled In recent years -for over the terms that it must meet in will nbt be many.days now he-iy5re rifies ‘and: thousands of cart-|Officers exclus v officers’ of atioil and for artesian water, and these order to insure the future peace of |fore the daings at Washington will be| rigges a day, and several guus 4 week.|least fifteen yea or It sup- | the world. Tt makes a difference |Betting quite as much attention in this But neighhoring states never had|bressed fhh‘f‘n'd_ir early e ‘ini 5 whose ox is gored country as those across ithe water. much fear of any pan-Afghan aspira-| Bremen uxhpven, ilhcjmhaven | = > G H . T i — o tions on the part of the Kabul war|and Lhden, and had a larg, in g 2 LABOR AND WHEAT. prostrate themselves bofore style in|picturesque @nd” the ‘c riridges are| becially ui Litchenbers in March” | y B said to have been exscellent save that! = H According o government reports |ordering the sireet .car steps lowered thers are still many without cmploy- [to accommodate the témporary tight Though he may know not efficinecy | When American shoes were placed ment in the country. The number of |skirts. ALMOST AS FRESH AS THOUGH YOU CAUGHT THEM YOURSELF the Afghan is a ‘first fightingjon sale in Brussels® great crowds oldiers returning f Europe s e e * as the British learned two | siruggied t h an objective Fl | Fres) eak :ncrazslng steadily 7:‘:';"!hnyu::‘)§:coy:i. It is hinted that certdin members of Tia;.-nna? “]aers " It Wwas at the clese ‘of'lhe“gngofther(:'l r:x?ir of the ‘R"m] Neu‘\)‘e‘ FreSh ounders Steak POHOCk Fr h St i tiokd iorss by ,|the German goyernment will resign|the second, in 1873 ‘that Gen. Roberts,|became neisy and -unruly and caused ronsans dully. | eoC (haores by ANy | o ther than sigr, but they cannot over. | (later Earl‘ Foberts), made I;ls famous!a, call to be sent to the police station H ¢ i ‘Ranhahar to reinforce Gi » objective was of labor is bound to be increased ,,l.llqok the L_l{ctltl\ht othe allied troops march to -Kanhaha ce Gen.|for the reserves. The objective was that amount. Such additions will-con- | Will move if the treaey is not signed. tinge until the end of summer and it o is going to be necessary to do every Inasmuch as Count Brockdorff-Rant- thing possible to see that unemploy- |%2%, 819 ot stand ot he Versailies M“Fmsmmmns ment is kept at the minimum. The : e P d trol of his legs, it i¥ perhans fortu- ;;:“‘":"::;":‘:; thus cannot be brought |, ,eq that the same thing isn 't the mat- Just at this time we have receivea (7 Wil his tongue. - | information from the department of| Those who are enfering protests re- agriculture to the effect that while the | garding the-threatened use of ‘2 ma- prospective winter wheat yield a|chine gun in Lawrence don't stop to month ago was §37,000,000 bushels the | think that but for the display of law- weather conditions have been such|lestness by, .those against whom it that the estimate today is that there |might be used it ‘would not have been they seldom ‘fitted many of the rifles.| Fighting for American Shoes Live Lobsters Fresh Buttei- R fish,Ib ........ 19c! For lnfnnts,lnufidsm«@rvnw CHldnn. hMlk. Malted Grain Estract in Powdee will be 399,000,000 bushels. A zain of |acauired. T The Original Food-Drink For All Ages. OTHERS are IMITATIONS

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