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GBHRNE ASPIRIN|= | TAKE WITHOUT FEAR AS TOLD| IN EACH “BAYER” PACKAGE “Bayer Tablets of Aspirip” marked with the safety “Bayer Cross,” is the genuine Aspirin, proved safe by mil- liens and preseribed by physicians for over eighteen years. In each “Bayer” patkage are safe and proper directions for Neuralgia, Calds, Headache, Toothache, Earache, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, and fer Pain generally. Handy tin boxes containing twelve tablets cost but a few cents. Drug- gists £1so sell larger “Bayer” packages. Aspirin is the tradesmark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid, $1—Introduction Special—$1 0.- dozen Photo Cards of the Baby. s day or night, rain or shine, e _you wait. Amateur and Developing. 24 hour service. MODERN STUDIO 18 BATH STREET MACPHERSON'S “FOR QUALITY” FINAL CLEARANCE ON : FUR COATS We have just a few Coats left and in order to clean up our stock we have marked these Coats at prices that are away below the wholesale costs to- day. It is to your advantage ‘o investigate, MACPHERSON QUALITY CORNER Opp. Chelséa Savings Bank SALE OF ENAMEL WARE Old English and Hampshire Gray Enamel Ware. First quality, fine even finish ware. 8-quart Kettle ........, 85c|2nd is soon to be operated. 12-gt. Roll Rim Dish wqt. Roll Rim Dish lD-qLDeepHmdle 1z-¢. andle l1-qt.Deep andle THE HOUSEHOLD Balletin Building 74 FRANKLIN STREET Telephone 531-4 Flowers and Trees FOR ALL OCCASIONE Orders Delivered MAPLEWGOD NURSERY CO. T. H. PEABODY Phone 986 WHES 70U WANT 1o put your bu: iness befors the puoilc, there | medium Ubetfer thun through the wastising cofums oi The Bulletin | | W VARIOUS MATTERS Light vehicle lamps at 6.16 o'clock is evening. Saturday’s freeze turned a number of Norwich lawns into private skat- ing ponds. Lord’'s . Point people report ice cakes in Fishers Island sound be- twéen five and six feet in thickness. Norwich looked like a section of North Dakota during a . bliz 3 while Saturday morning’s storm last- od. . In the will of the late Miss Helen Breed, of Stonington, the sum of $300 each is %aqueathed the two churches in Canterbury. _ Although bad weather interfered with Silk Week in Norwich stores the trade was %ood and promised well for spring business. In many places the young and early variety of fruit trees have been in- jured to a ceértain extent by the se- vere cold of the winter. An Amston man, Ned Raymond, was among those who had the privi- lege of celebrating a Leap Year birthday on the 29th ult. . Firms who have been-handicapped by poor freight and express service are receivjng their goods by parcel post through the postoffice. In. Franklin, Mass., at the funeral of William J. Bourbeau Friday at St. Mary's chapel, one of the bearers was James Colgan, of Willimantic. The. American Legion is endorsing the suggestion~of the American Fore estry association to plant a tree as a memorial to each local doughboy who fell, The Mystic Woolen Co. at Old Mys- tic plans to rebuild- their burned plant, putting up a modern factory, much better equipped than the old plant. Relatives from Norwich will be in Groton this (Monday) afternoon, to attend the funeral of Frederick Bill, who died Tuésday at Winter Park, Florida. A month’s mind high mass of re- quiem for William J. Collins’ was sung in St. Patrick’s church by Rev. Peter J. Cuny, Saturday morning at 8 o'clock. . At Trinity Methodist church Sun- day, Rev. C. M. Gearhart conducted an interesting questionnaire before the men's classes, during the Sunday school hour. / A social meeting of the neyard Workers is to be held with Miss Hel- en B. Moore, 120 Laurel Hill avenue, The men friends of the members have been invited. By a new health rule in Norwich, a pupil returning to school after ill- ness of five days or more must have a certificate from the family physician or the school doctor. During Sunday afternoon Miss Sa- die J. Dawson was in charge of the Otis Library Reading reom, over one hundred persons visiting the room be- tween 2 and 6 o'clock. At the Forum at the United Con- grogational church Sunday the men considered The Iffect of Bolshevism, This was the final scussion in the interesting and profitable series. Another hundred car¢ or more of coal, oil, etc., were switched out daily, last week at Saybrook Junction, and are on their way to their destination, Providence and connecting points. w. of New Haven, state give a stereopticon lec ture, How and Why We Should Save Trees, at Slater hall, March 10 at 8§ Norwich Art Association. Ad- mission 25 cents—adv. Friday afternoon Miss Miriam Choate is to speak at Park church on Congregational Women and. Their New Responsibilities. All women of the chuyrches .in the city and county have been invited to hear her. The beautiful offertery at Park church Sunday morning was Caesar Franck's O Lamb of God, the solo op- portunities being well improved by Mrs, Arthur E. Story, Chorister Eben Learned and Eugene . Seamans, Favorable reports come from James Lewis Smith, of Broad street, Nor- wich, who has been i}l at the home of his sister-in-law, Miss Carrie E. Rogers, in Washington. He is able to sit up and is regaining his strength. . Yale alumni eligible to vote for a Mmember of the university corporation, have received blanks calling attention to the expiration of the term of Hen- ry PBradford Sargent next June and asking for nominations to fill the va- cancy. Farm bureau leaders call attention to the fact tbat apple trees should be pruned during the early part of this month. There is to be a large demand for apples and careful prun- ing, it is stated, will help to insure a good crop. At Westbrook men have heen go- ing over the trolley wires on the Shore Line electric road tightening them and that fact started the re- port that the road has béen taken over by the Connecticut Company A Central Village correspondent notes that a former Norwich resident, Mortimer Stetson, who has been off duty on account of iliness, has recov- ered. Adelard Daignais of New Lon- don has been assisting at the rail- road station during Mr. Stetson’s ill- | ness, Miss M. E. Sprague of the Connec- ticut Agricultural CTollege, at Storrs, will sp®k on The Future of Ameri- can Womanhood at a meeting of the associate members of Hartford Chap- ter, American Institute of Banking (the girlg of the banks) Tuesday eve- ning. C. N. Woodward, general superin- tendent of the lines east of New Ha- ven on the New York, New Haven & Hartford railroad, has been made as- sistant to General Manager C. L. Bar- do. R. D. Fitzmaurice, formerly of Norwich, is Mr. Woodward's succes- sor, with offices at Boston. A nation-wide Bapust campaij will he started April 25 and wm’::of:‘t2 tinue until May 2, inclusive, to raise a fund of one hundred million dollars, Of’ this amount 32,265,000 has been set as Connecticut’s quota. Judge E, K. Nicholson, of Bridgepert has been elected state campaign director, A large number of fnembers of the Young Ladies' Sodality received holy communion at the 7.30 masg in St. Patrick’s church, Sunday, from Rev. Myles P. Galvin, who was assisted by Rev, Peter J. Cuny, and will have a memorial mass at 7 o'cleck this (Monday) morning for Rev. Hugh Treaner. B When Middletown Elks were visited last week by District Deputy James P. Hayes of Norwich, the work of the degree team in initiating three can- didates was of such high order that the visiting official praised the lodge fér its fine degree team and upon the manneér in which the ritual was in- tarpreted. At Ballouvile all winter, Mrs. Hector NecConnell has fed large flocks of birds from a window box at her home. Starlings, juncoes, bluejays, chickadees, nuthatches, tree spar- rows, English sparrows ang both airy and downy woodpeckers have n daily visitors and now a tiffy chipmunk comes for food. | torms. Louis North, of Norwich has been visif at his home in Essex. Thomas N. Dickenson of Mystic is visiting at te home of his daughter, Mrs. Martin Wright in Essex. William Yare and family of Nor- wich, recently visited Mrs. Yare's father, A. H. Sayles of Bast Killingl: Mrs. Alfred of Tattville: has been in Atta n spending a few days with her daughter, Mrs. Samuel Littlefield. Mrs. Eliza Weaver, who is Keeping house for Deacon William R. Thurber at Brooklyn, Conn., spént the past week with relatives in Norwich. Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Larsen, of Fréeman avenue, Norwich, hnave re- turned from Waterbury where they attended the wedding ~of their son, Chief Yeoman Arthur C. Larsen, of the Submarine base, and - Miss Marguerité C. Schwartz, Tuesday, March 2nd. OBITUARY Gardnér Olney Bensen. Gardner Olney Benson, nedrly all his life associated with the hotel bus- iness, died at the home of his sister, Mrs. C. W. Flagg at 26 Laurel Hill avenue about 9.30 o'clock = Sunday morning, following an illness of sev- eral months. Mr. Benson was well known throughout eastern Connecti- cut having been in the hotel business in Putnam, Willimantic, Providence, Hartford and Springfield for many years. For the past 11 years he has been at the Berkshire Inn at Great Barrington, -Mass., during the summer and at Court Inn, Camden, S. C. during the winter. He was prominent in Masonic cir- cles, being a member of the chapter at Putnam, the council at Danieison, Columbian Commandery, K. of this city and Sphinx Temple, Mystic Shriners of Hartford. He was born in Milbury, Mass., on Feb. 22, 1860, the son of A. B. and Su- san Olney Benson. His father died when he was a young man and his mother married Alfred H. Potter of Putnam and Woedstock. On Nov. 15, 1917, he was united in marridge with Bertha J. Herrick of Lebanon, N. Y,, who survives him. ‘Besides his wife he leaves a step- sister, Mrs. C. W. Flagg of this city. and a step-brother, Frank H. Potter of Webster, Mass. Edward M. Cox Following an illness of two weeks with pneumonia BEdward Cox died at the home of his sister. Mrs. Francis A. Williams at 320 West Main street on Saturday morning. Mr. Cox has alwayvs made his home in this city and | has followed the trade of a cigar- maker .and has been employed by lo- cal ecigar manufacturers. He was born here, the son of the late James and Mary Moran Cox. He is survived by one sister, Mrs. F. A. Williams, four brothers. Thomas J. Cox of Hartford, Joseph J. Frank A. and Patrick H. Cox all of Norwich. Miss Sadie P. Connelly. * Following an ilness of short dura- tion, Miss Sadie P. Connelly died on 8unday afternoon at her home at 418 North Main street. Miss Connelly was the daughter of Patrick and Mar- garet Downing Connelly and was| born in this city on March 7. 1901. All} of her life has been spent here where she has a large circle of friends. She graduated from St. Patrick’s paro chial school with the class of 1915 and for some time had been employed by the Reid and Hughes company, where she was a valued employe, Besides her parents she leaves two brothers, E. T. Connelly of this city, T. J. Connelly of Springfiéld and two sisters, Mrs. E. A. Dessereau of West Haven, and Mrs. J. J. Sullivan of Jewett City. t FUNERALS. Harold Tufts Oat Funeral services for Harold Tufts Oat were held from the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph L. Oat, at 89 Asylum street at two .o'clock Saturday afternoon. There was a large attendance of relatives and friends proacnt. A wealth of beauti- ful floral tributes surrounded the cas- ket. The funeral services were con- ducted by Rev. C. A. Northrop. The!| bearers were Frederick M. and Rich- ard Oat, brothers, Albert Aberg. a brother-in-law and Clifford C. Oat, a cousin. The body was placed in the receivahg vault at Maplewood céme- tery. Cummings and Ring were in charge of the funeral arrangements. John Knowles. for John Know! v morning at 10 o clock from his late home in Montville with relatives and friends attending. There were many beautiful floral The services were conducted by Rev. C. C. Tibbits. Friends acted as-bearers. Burial was in the Knowles cemetery where Rev. Mr, Tibbits conducted a short committal service. C. -A. Gager, Jr, was in charge of the funeral arrangements. New London Was Lightless, A mishap at the plant of the Con- necticut Power Co. early Friday ev- ening caused the electric lights on the streets and in private homes and places of amusement to be put out of commission. The street lights did not remain dimmed for any great length of time, but it was nearly three-quarters of an hour before re- pairs were made and the current turned on so that houses and theatres ang dance halls could be lighted. Will Report on Banquet, Reports from the Father and Son banquet held last Wednesday evening by the Young Men's Christian Asso- ciation will be made at a committee meeting this (Monday) evening at 7.30. . Four Arrests Saturday Night. Three arrests for intoxication and one for violation of the motor vehicle law relating to lights were made by the police Saturd Saturd-y nlght. ) INCIDENTS IN SOCIETY William H. Caruthers of Detroit, Mich., spent the week-end. at his home in town. Mr _and Mrs. W. Russell Baird are guests for several weeks at the Hotel Dennis, Atlantic City Mrs. Charles L. Richards enter- tained at auction bridge Saturday afternoon, the date being her birthday. Mrs. George D. Coit and Mrs. Gar- diner Greene attended a recent Co- lonial Dames’ meeting in New Haven. Mr. and Mra. Frank A. Browning Who have been spending the winter in California and visiting their son at.| Britannia Beach, B. C., are espected to return to Norwich about March 10th. Mrs. Charles W. Gale who is in California, will return home early in April At present Mrs Gale is in Pas- dena ‘at the home of her mother, Mrs. Hakes, who will celebrate her 100th birthday March 26th. . Days to Celebrate. In other words. we have a straight tip that on March 4, 1921, the new president will find the resignatien of Postmaster General Burleson on his desk, in strict accordance with a glo- rious custom.—Houston Pest. Why Wi Him on Us? There are indications that the time has arrived for D'Annunzio to take that trip to America for which he l-:y-l he is yearning,—Indianavolis Star, ! Although Herbert E. Draper, _for the twenty years d puq uty sheriff of N London county, died suddenly at hu home at 88 pect.streét on Sat- urday evening as the result of an at- tack of acute indigestion, Mr. per was sitting at the tablé with wife after supper when he complain- ed of feeling dizzy and he expired within a few minutes. About two weeks ago-Mr. Draper sufféred a at- tack of the frouble and was uncon- scious for some time, but had recov- ered and was apparently in good health on Saturday, going out dur- ing the afternoon and making several calls. All of Mr. Draper's life has been spent in this city where he has been well and favorably known. For many yvears he was employed by the Hop- kins & Allen Manufacturing com- pany, resigning when he was ap- pointed deputy sheriff twenty years ago. A few years previeus to . his ORDERS INSTRUCTION CAMP FOR THE STATE GUARD The military emergency bdard of the state has issued general orders for a camp of instruction for the Connecticut State -Guard, at the mi¥- tary reservation, Niantie, Connecti- cut, ag follows: \: Second Infantry, and First Separate Company Infantry, C. 8. G., July 12 to 17, 1920; Third Infantry and First Separate Battalion Infantry, C. S. G. July 19 to 24, 1920; First infantry, C. 8. G., July 26 to 31, 1930; Fifth In- fantry, C. G., Aug. 2 to 7, 1920; Fourth Infantry, C. S. G.. August 9 3p 14, 1920; all dates inclusive. Company commanders will, at the carliest possible date, appoint two cooks (first and second cook) in their respective companies. It is very es- sential that none but experienced cooks should' be appointed and they should be, if possible, men who have had experience with government ra- tions. 8 stant quartermaster gen- eral mmunicate with' the sev- eral regimental commanders and ar- range for a meeting of all mess ser- geants and cooks in each regiment, for a practical talk on the issue and| preparing of the garrison ration. BRIDGEPORT JUDGE TO LEAD BAPTIST CAMPAIGN Connecticut, Massachusetts and Vermont have selected campaign di- rectors for the Baptist drive April 2 May 2, and organization for the New World Movement is being perfected. The appointment of Judge E. K. Nicholas of Bridgeport as the leader in the Connecticut campaign hgs been announced. He will devote practical- 1y his entire time between now and May 2 ‘to the work. The goal of the Baptists is $100.- 000,000. This amount is to be raised | by 35 states and New England’s share is in keeping with the wealth of the denomination in this section. All state quotas have not been announced and so far, the only quota known is that of Massachusetts Baptists, It amounts to $7,877,00¢, or about one- fifteenth the total amount to be raised. Suffield Academy at Suffield, Conn., s one of the schools scheduled to| i benefit by the big expenditure for ed- ueation. Nine other New FEngland eduycational institutions are included in the list. COMMON PLEAS COURT i HEARS MACARONI CASE The court of common pleas was in| session Saturday morning at New lLondon when the case of Josephl Tistere, of Providence, against Dep- uty Sheriff Manuel J. Martin, an ac- tion resulting from a réplevin suit in- stituted by Fistere was heard. With the conclusion of arguments, Judge Charles B. Waller reserved gecision. The action is the result of Sheriff Martin attaching Victor Fredericks, proprietor of a store at Fort Neck, to satisfy a claim. The attachment brought about the seizure of 42 cases of macaroni. Later Fistere sought and obtained a process of replevin, and he was awardeq the macaroni. it is c'aimed that Fistere sought only the recovery of thirty of the cases, it is claimed he took| possession of the entire lot. In court Fistere claimed the goods were sold to Fredericks on consign- ment. This was denied by the de- fendant. NORWICH STRING QUARTET AT CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH For the monthly musical service at the Central Baptist chureh the Nor-| wich String Quartet generously fur- nished the music Sunday evening and| a large congregation heard their twol numbers which made one of the finest! trogrammes that has been rendered | at the church. Their first selection was Lento, | quartet in F, Opus 9, Dvorak, and| this was followed by Theme and vari- | ations from a Beethoven quartet, Opus 18, No. 5 .The quartet is com- posed of Frederic W. Lester, C. D. Gallup, Miss Isabel Mitchell and Miss Elizabeth Lane. BISHOP ACHESON UNABLE TO REACH THIS CITY Owing to the inability of Rt. Rev. E. Campion Acheson to get to this city on Sunday the confirmation ser- vices at Trinity Episcopal church and St. Anderw's church and St. An- St. Andrew’s church were postponed until later. Rt. Rev. Acheson got as far as New Haven on Saturday but track conditions because of the snow storm prevented him from going fur- ther, BURGLARS MAKE VISIT AT GOODYEAR CAFETERIA (Special to The Bulletin.) Goodyear, Conn., March 7.—The Goodyear Cafeteria was broken into between the hours of 1.30 and 5 a. m., on Friday. The cash register was pried open and contents taken with the exception -of pennies. The safe also was forced open and emptied of all mon Burial With Naval Henors. Relatives have been notified by Mr. and Mrs. Henry Tetu of New Lendon, formerly of East Douglas, Mass., that the bedy of their son, Amos Tetu, who was killed when his boat was .in European waters in Au- gust, 1918, had arrived in New York on the steamship West Point. Mrs. Delphine Quintal, an aunt, Jleft East Douglass Triday evening to join the family in New London, and then proceed to Brooklyn for the funeral Saturday, which was held with na- val honors, burial being in the tional cemetery, Cypress Hills, Brooklyn. The young man was born in Fast Douglas March 14, 1899, In May 1818, he enlisted at Newpert, R.)L. in the naval reserves, and went across about a month later. Copagnia Case Continued Again. The continued case against Pasquale Copagnia of Groton was called up in the Norwich police court Saturday morning but was again continued for a weelk. Copagnia is accused of breaking into the Glen woolen will at Norwich Town appointment he had held the office of city sheriff, which position he. creditably filled as he did the office of county sheriff, official position in connection with the sur perior court he had a wide acquaint~ ance all over the county. He was born in Norwich on Jan, 10, 1858, the son of Orrin and Mary Mar- shall Draper. His early schooling was received in the Publie schools of this city. Forty-one years ago he was united in marriage with Minnie E. Johnson, who with a son George Or- rin Draper of Richmond, Virginia, survive. ‘There are three grandchi dren. He also leaves two brothers, George S. Draper of Norwich and Melvin F. Draper of Plainfield, N. J. Mr. Draper was a member of Un- cas Lodge, No.-11, I. 0. O, F. He was a man of exemplary character, -of quiet disposition and a great lover of his home. Deep sympathy is felt for his family in their bereavement. CITY STRUGGLES AGAIN IN STHE GRIP OF WINTER . Whoever hung up his snowshovel with a groan of relief Friday night and watched with satisfaction the heavy rain clearing off the snow in rapid order had to take down'the same shovel with another groan when he woke up Saturday morming. Between bedtime Friday night and rising time Saturday morning Nor- wich experienced about every variety of wintry weather that New England is heir to. The combination made the toughest experience in a winter that was already . supposed to have done its worst. Friday night it began to rain. light- ly about 10 o'clock with the thermo- meter at_40. The piies pf snow in the street began to melt away and were cut down still further by the torrents of rain that fell from about 1 to 5.30 o'clock Saturday morning. Between then and 6.30 there was a sudden drop in temperature to about 10 ahove zero, accomp: d by sleet,! snow and a howling wind as the bli zard that had been sweeping from the west arrived here, The floods of water that had been flowing were quickly turned into} congealed masses of ice in streets and on sidewalks and the two inches of snow that fell until about noon, combined with the ice on the rails, disrupted trolleyl and train schedules The biting, swirling wind that swept in from the north and west piled the snow into drifte and drove pedes- trians to shelter. Altogether it can be said to have been the most severe morning of the winter. The. trolley line kept its cars’mov- ing all day in the city on fairly regu- Jar schedules, but the !uburlu\n lines had their troubles w cars getting off the t On a late afternoon London it took three hours to reach this city because of a dar that was derailed on the Montville line. Trains on the New Haven road were heurs late Saturday. The 7.10 p. m. train from the north reached here at 11 o'clock at night anq thej “orcoeter boat train due here at 9.47| p. m. got in at about 1 o'clock Sun- | day morning with two engines draw- ing_it. No New York papers were received Saturday until 7 o’clock in the even- ing, but the napers froén Boston came through on time. v Washington square and the West Side bridges were places where, the| flerce winds of Saturday held merry carnival. The square was nothing| but a sheet of ice swept bare of snow by the wind and those who passed over the bridges had to fight asainst the force of the no"therl\ gale to keep from being blown into the mid- dle of the street. Sunday afternoon the troller com- pany had a gang of men at work on Williams avenue from the Park church corner to Washington street, working with picks and shovels to keep the tracks clear of the ice that accumulated fast from water that settled on the tracks to the depth of several inches. Cars were kept run- ning over the ci lines .all Sunday night to prevent accumulation of ice on the rails, in the snow. trin from New A section of Washington street from the Mohegan park entrance down to the city line looked like a page out of Peary's dash to the north pole Sunday afternoon. Half a doz- en ruts made in the street auto- moiles were frozen into solid ridges six to elght inches high with jagged ice points crusted all over them and the same conditions prevailed on PBroadway alongside the Chelsen pa- rade, The blizzard and freezing weather checked a e of the Shetucket and Quinebaug rivers which had threat- | ened this section with serious floods if the rain had continued for long. The danger is not yet over, it be- lieved, for the rivers are full of ice, which must break up with the first thaw. At Plainfleld, the Lawton Cotton Mills are' surrounded with ice, the flood waters of the Quinebaug having spread over a large area. Cellars and streets have been flooded in many sections of Sterling and Plainfield. Conditions are the same in parts of ‘Windham and Scotland, along the Shetucket river. WORK OUT SALVATION, PASTOR HOWE'S THEME “Work out your ewn salvation,” a text in which every word is emphatic, he said, was lhe theme for the sermen by Rev. Dr. S. H. Howe Sunday morn- ing at Park Congregational church, | The study of every word of the text is worth while. In part he said: First. Salvation is at once a finished work and an unfinished work, a past aecomplishment, a contemporary task and a one day to be accomplished fact. First. It leans back on the past. Its true hinterland is what was done by One who brought the world salvation. The context deals with this. He who ‘wasg in the likeness of God came to us from without. Poured the whole wealth of persenality upon the task of salvation, took the form of a servant, humbled Himself unto death, even the | death of the cross for us. Second. ‘It deals with the conquest of evil, the ever raging battle within and without. It deals with rescue, de- | liverance, reinstatement, reinstaliment | in old franchises, resolving chnoa into order. The word can be studied world of teday. The world needs *sal- vation. It has broken away from its old moorings. Humanity has broken its old leashes and is plunging to its ruin. It has broken from old re- straints. Its problems mock the power of solution. The wisdom of the world for its control is baffled, statesman- ship, diplomacy are outmatched, Idealism has broken dow: Force, compulsion, reason, are equally Impotent. spirit that brooded over and brousht order out of chaos can resolve these world problems, only He who walked the | stormy sea of the old Galilee can | speak peace to this greater tempest, and He is not appealed to. A great masterful world-conquering force alone can bring salvation. Third. And the individual soul e { { in human relationshin, Inventes Forerunne Soh ek’ Benjamin Holt, who invented the “caterpillar tractor” from which the war tank was later evolved. Mr. Holt for many years h2d been in- terested in the development of agricultural machinery and finally brought forward the caterpillar tractor which revolutionized farm- ing methods in America and throughout the world, life. Salvation in the Semitic lan- guages means room, the letting of the soul out into and roomy spaces. It cuts the bo d from the cords which hoid the eagle to the earth and give him the firmament in vhich to so vation breaks the cage which incarccrates and lets the soul out into a vast sniritual universe, gives it room to sire full to its powers held ne hast established m Fourth, This God that wo in lat et my feet in a larze place and oings. to be worked onut. infuses a life- in giving pe Tt is concurrently with Goc Here the word is continu; It throbs and vi { There i a dynamical power needed f the production of the concrete sal tion, or, if you prefer, for (he produc tion of character. At this’ piece of strenuous lahor we are put to work. Work out what is worked in. The human soul is permeable to God, po- rous to the infusion of a divine enerzy which must be caught up and brou nto copartnery with human No softness w em. Duty ake for th land. no silk grounds for 1 men and w agonize. have munon who Christ’s name. the eross and t voke and the weanons of a st warfare, for it is ty neht out, a new an to he produced. .. Then it is your own salvation. ds 1 new hood to he wr Ro‘ corporate 1 " Howev ries. Alone we come into live alone, sin, repent, alone. Everw man must of himself to God. Nothin salvation, or, i u choose. ard what destiny alone. Then others do, work h § e fear and Before these well to n with and wi t off onr sandal: red head er. T must forever. T must bo-s: secount and on Aceount of others. the presence of a Resener o infused heln which God mini ides with an immortak which we shall never break nen: in reverent h that Wife Of Jack Dempsey CQPYRIGHT_KEYSTONE VIEW_CO. NEW_YORK. Maxine Dempsey. the wife of Jaek Dempsey, who has been en- deavoring to prove her husband a slacker. Now that the point cemirg to an issue she is sorry has made such claims agu Pempsey and is w all charges she has Rim. is Thonsan Mother knows that chaos of disarder, needing | rescue, deliverance, reinstatement, re- i on the night of Dec. 31 and stealing $2,770 worth of woolen goods, generation. It is more. ‘Salvation is liberation into a new and expanding lets the | . Thou | Tt is a hard plece of work we | profess e pass out of taneled we are solita- we die e account but_our our char- Tt is all we carry hen we go. Friends, We must face life alone no matter out your’ own trembline. outstanding facts we do and stand awe e alone and saved on my own n our nhce we need to stand with reverent awe tremor of fear which makes all life a serious and eventful | business. When a man is financiallv embar- friends who only feel so: for him. CHAPPELL CO. Telephone 24 104 Main Street or Central Wharf ULSTER UNIONIST LEADER FAVORS POLICY CHANGE London, March 8.—Sir Edward Car-" 5: unionist leader, ad- er unionist council ommended that Ulster n to the Irish cept the bill now the Daily Mail Thn _newspaper describes this as the. nt development in the | Iri n in many years a i Eanatungriedt o2 LN INTERCHURCH BUDGET | IS OVER 336 MILLIONS New York, March —The inter- d movement announced 20 budget of thirty s co-operating on of religious ot $336, 0,000 would be - the in America.g | Not Entirely Civilized. There are no cuss words In the Jap- anese tonzue. And yet the Japs claim {to be a rn and civilized nation, And what (‘10\ hope tc s they are somebody notion i Eyesight Dim? If your eyesight is dxm, your vise ion blurred; if your eyes ache, cf iteh, burn or feel dry zet a bottle of Bon~ Opto tablets from your dissolve one in a fourth of a gl of vipter and use to bathe the eyes from two to four times a day. Opto has given stronger clearer, sharper vision and reli thousands. Note: nocnmuym strengthens eye- sight 5066 in a we e o meny instances. YOU HAVE BEEN ANXIOUSLY WAITING FOR Cosmopolitan Red Book Classic Metropolitan Physical Culture Photoplay Electrical Experimenter Shadowland Everybodys System Adventure Parisienne House Beautiful House and Garden THEY'RE ALL HERE NOW=— Also the Fashion Magazine. And don't let any man say it costs tof much to put clothes cn a woman's | back—Just look at the mow styles — they're not wearing them on their Back. Come in and look. GET YOURS TODAY to By the Year or by the Copy, at Shea’s News Bureau MAGAZINE SPECIALIST UNION SQUARE WE DELIVER THEM ANYWHERE nera! Directors and Embalmers 222 M oticet Chkamber of Commerce Building g Phone 238-2 Lady Assistant Sain