Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 20, 1910, Page 10

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Ex-President Welcomsd by Half A Million on Land and ROOSEVELT RETURNS Eay—Brilliant Weather for Great Popular Demonsira- tion—Land Parade Five Miles Long—Mayor Gay- nor’s Welcome and Mr. Foosevelt’s Response—*“My £ uty to Help Sclve the Froklems of ths tation” New York, June 19.—Ex-President Roosevelt returned to his ewn ceuntry yesterday, after meore than a year and & Qquarter abroad and a journey of thirty thousend miles, and found a weloome that assured him ef his place in the hearts of his countrymen. Some small idea of what was await- ing him bave come to him frems the letters and despatches that reached him on the other side of the Atlantic, but not even those who were planning the recsption on this side had made an adequate guess at what really was to_happen. They expected an outpour planned for a reception that thrill the Hieart of But even in their utmest e and ovtiraism they could what the scene would really e 1k6. affairs. It even port, sky. unti serene marred But then and | stree | e who | They weuld w were of the"horizon. A 1 the lightning, s were tlooded and thousands had thought after the held up the weather. fog lifted when the Kaiserin came into and true marked the great demonstration. clouds slipped silent and ashamed back “Roosevelt businesses in the ceuntry from their The weather” The The sun smiled from a perfect day was storm rain and hail ched, un- land parade was dismissed and the crowd was well on the way home. Then Came Downpour. broke —thunde: The of sto wind up a while subway acked and all the trans- n lines of the city were taxec nd their (‘ank)l . Haif ‘a Million Persons United in| Cheers of Welcome. ) Half ,a million persons were dis-|sen’s fiancee, to see the wedding pres- tributed over land and uniting in | ents when the storm began to gather. king his first sp York lLas just made a si PRLE ooy , JUNE 20, 1910 fln Nassau county men -tamli' on m He said: “I take this opportunity to thank my friends and neighbors for this devetion. want also to thank the New for the Wi ul work ‘Retivement of WA Moody. It is to b nnl\od Cthat Justice has ?he arrange- ment contemplated by this legislation, and that he will at once retire from the bench. In view of the precarious state of his health, and of the some- what urgent necessity that the court reconvene in October with a full Hench, (there will be general approval his determination. He has, we think, been well advised, and his retirement will be evidence of his disinterested patriot- ism.—New York Times. roped-off space ‘held 3,500 ficko! hold- -ers who had ‘been gathering for haurs. ‘Then came the only two breathing spaces, the carefully guarded aisles to ndstand and speakers’ platform, one leading from the pler and the other at right angles to it from Battery place. < The Mayor’'s Welcome. Mayor Gaynor said: “Ladies and Gentlemen: We are all here to welcome Mr. Roosevelt home to New York. We have watched his progress through Eu- rope with delight. Wherever he has gone he has been honored as a mar and as an exponent of the principles of the government of this country. He was received everywhere in Europe and was honored as no man from this country ever was henored. We glory in all that, and it only remains for me to say now, Mr. Roosevelt, that we welcome you home most heartily, and we ,are glad (o see you again.” Ex-President’s Reply. Repiyving to Mayor {aynor, Colonel Roosevelt said: “I thank you Mayor Gaynor. Through you I thank yous-committee, and through them I wish to thank the American people for their greeting. I need hardly say I mest deeply moved by the reception given me. 'No man could a_ greeting Vithout being made to fecl hoth very proud and very humbl “I have been away a yvear and a juarter from America, and I have seen strange and interesting things alike in e heart of the frowning wilderness waliting crowds a chance to cheer and Mr. Roosevelt an opportunity to show himself on the back platform for the benefit of those who had waited so long to see him. Home at Last. More than five hundred persons were waiting on the station platform at Mineola to cheer him as the train started on the last leg of the run to Oyster Bay. Before the last stop was reached Mr. Roosevelt had made an expedition through the nine cars of the special train and shaken hands with all his old neighbors who had come to escort him heme. At Oyster Bay the school chil- dren, whe had taken refuge in the schoolbouse during the storm, once more were waiting on the platform and sang “Home, Sweet Home,” as the train drew in at dusk and the Roose- velt party dismounted—home at last. Mr. Roosevelt made a sbort speech to his neighbors and many visitors frem nearby places. Then he took a walk through the town before he con- sidered his day ended. But the arrival at Oyster Bay mark- ed the end. He went to his heme on Dolly Wasn't Brave. Little Grace went inte her mother’s darkened chamber in search of her doll. She ran out so very fast that her | said: “What makes my darling run so? Is she afraid?” Whereupon the little one exclaimed, “No, but my dolly is.”—Delineator. Tyrannical Science, Everything has to be scientific nowadays; cooking, beverages, educa- tion, sport, bookkeeping, law, hygiene, sociology—that is what we teach our children. No wonder the world is sq | dull. To enjoy one’s self is not scien- | tific.—Paris Journ: When Romance Flees. When a woman can meet one of her and in the capitals of the mightiest | Sazamore Hill with the announcement 4 »nd mest highly polished of civilized | that now he would take up his edi- | Busband's former sweethearts and I have enjoyed duties and through them the| treat ber courteously or kindly, it is thoroughly and now I am more glad than an say to get heme, tq be back in my ewn country, back among, people I - would learn what they desired to know of him. a sign that the former sweetheart has either grown very stout or has faded terribly.—Chicago Record-Herald. Trouble with His, Too. « Photos by American Press Association. arrival in the United Siates after h welcome, and Colonel Roosevelt is Mr. Wayback was tugging and straining at a bureau drawer that stubbernly refused to be opeamed. Aft- | Getting Along with People. ; Getting along with people Is a nl-| er five minutes’ strenmous exercise, | uable trait to cultivate. First of all, he remarked quite forcefully: “Gol| be amiable and forgiving: do not hear ram the balky thing, amyway! No | &ll that is said, never repeat anything wonder the gever'ment is lishin’ | and be willing to be pleased while do- all bureaus from the mpavy depart-| ing your part. ment!”—Iliustrated Sunday Magazine. A Fall of the Right Kind. “Don’t despise the fallures,” sald the quaint philesopher. “Even the lit- tle tumbles of life are not all bad. For instance I once knew a worthless fellow who fell into a fortune.” Reply to Varsity Critics. The varsities are not the simks of iniquity they are sometimes said to be. High spirits and Jevity are there in abundamce, but, cemsidering these few years are the best of ene’s whole life as far as opportunities for emjoy- ment and bedily health go, this is ot 8aid Uncle Silas: surprising.—Tatler. “It takes a woman Jonger to get into her duds to go down town shop- Wet Cloth in Sickness. ping than it does a man to pack up | for a six months’ vacation trip.”—ILos | When a very het cloth is wanted for use im sickmess, do not wet the whole cloth. Take hold of the ends, one in each hand, them drop the cen- ter in boiling water, twist the cloth guiekly, and the resuit will be a very bot cloth and the hands not wet. Angeles Express. | Tact and Talent. ‘Talent feels its weight, tact finds its way; talent commands, tact is obeyed; talent is henored with approbation, and tact is blessed by preferment.— Easy to Carry. London Atlas. “Why, I see you have sent little Wil lie for beer for the first time, and that you have given him two jugs to carry. Why did you de this?” “I did it se that with one in each hand he could keep his balance better.”—Meggen- dorfer Bluu»r Always Seme Girl. No matter how commionplace a man may be, there Is always some girl who imagines him unigue In the history of the universe.—New York Telegram. will B- D|1€-rent There. The explapation of Champ Clark’s present willingness to retire from pub- ic life when he is that he is not ~Louisville C aul ier-Journal. Say! Cannot some of these sclentists teach us hew to muke baldness at tack the face imetead of the scalp? Kansas City Times. 75. ong trip abroad. Mayor lying and bowing to the reg hen i ard to greet a| deluge hardly the descenged. in _descended from which he the | love. had been orm broke and a Those who woy up the; h satbered in front of the house e2 19 the turning paiat of ¢he ght shelter, remarking on ‘Daved pavede, beck to the Betiery.end | svelt luck,” but for more than up the Gfsaé agpin to Ceniral ¥ "Bttty miles of cheers seven hours Iriinck Weicannen of tweo feets o “thmes cemestips to weleome Mr. Fow 2: M reguivel 2 naval parade’s ey Tullref merchant craftisnd ex- (wirsian, vessels and pleasure yachfs. It necdedthe wheres of two slates tined | Switsh ofmering ‘erowds. It tock = 1 i “puradp five miles long with 3 #honez lining Beth sides of Fifth ave "$rom Washingion square o Foriy—s “oudl street. Naiion-Wids Event. It walleq; for ffty theusand persons n Bettery perk and some humdreds of iousANES Broadwsy irom the Antteny ioWourth street and on Pifth ' mvemas, From W oD sguare o FEy-ohth sivaet. 1i stopped woerk for bmm-s In lower NeweYork and in maost of thaimmmminder of the city. It 4 :n-nhis preseace off and the § Tain W S i i | 3 preugh: {matives oF the president/frem Wass: fzon. 1t edlied for siaie officiuls it was at the uves trom many’of theip . 1t proughticlubs ands de‘egq(mnr and,! parties fromevery! section: of the coun- | ¢iry. It‘taxed theitr: railroad running.into New gathered the RooseveltiRouszh for their first reunion in four It calied the heads of the of r's f ery the cort To the sur the s quad who formed Mr. Roose— t's guard sat their were drenched to the skin. Reosevelt luck did pot wait Jt made esterday to show itself. the Xaiserin e felt fog the men of xty saddies in when hupdreds of m demonsiration solid nerth of carried lines of the pier entrs the the out shouldered her way through 3 Quaran- get cheduled minute. WELCOMED .BY THE MAYOR. | Roosevelt’s First Spesch Ashore Heard by Many Thousands. smoothly had the plans of the re- committee been that ihe delay of the early morning | Gue to the late arrival of the Kaiserin ,lnzufte Victoria after a day of fog =3 more than made up by 11 o'clock, the Bour set for the fermal welcome by the mayor at the Batter, 10.55 o’cloc out that Colonel Hugbes i:amsqavqa stepped ashore from the An- droscogzin and went to his place on seption stand. e feyer Gaynor had arrived from City ail a few minutes before, with an es- mounted police bearing the inch of space at the Battery policemen 11d permit to be occupied was jam- { Llu-n he went to t ready and eager to as F am able in which must be greatest dem- upon which the sun are to see its desti gh level of eur hopes And I am has ever nies rise tc and its “This but it is pecul my man who hes ever been Lionored by be the United ver after rendered : people and life to remem- uch as in public life that the American have ause to feel people they placed him at regret their head. once P ARRIVAL AT OYSTER BAY. Children Sing “Home, Sweet as Train Draws In. At 4.15 o'clock School Home,” E was made 11'nad ferry. Longworth t made the t to Oyster Bay. T, despite the and " streets ndroscoggin, Has Anybody Here atien from Oyster Bay 1t as he stepped at Long Isiand ( ng sgreetings rear platferm of Seen the train and mede a (Colonel Roosevelt with Congressman Lengwosth, James B. (a=" =" prominent citizens o8 beard the U nited Siate: oo e (Colonel Roesevelt on board the Kaiserin Auguste Victoria talking with his fr | els and | he hath found it?" lrgckln-. The dazzling achievemnts of Humil< ton bave uumd people to overlook for the ‘moment some other acroplane flights that are significant The ‘Wrights are training o number of men who will soon entor the sky contests and makeé a name for themselves. One of them, Walter Brookins, at Inddanap- olis, a few days ago rose to a height of 4,384 feet, and hopes soon to make it at Jeast a mile.—Bristol Press. Mermald for Breakfast. A stranger meal than any ever pam taken by Frank Buckland or the mos¥ bardened and .cosmopeiitan traveler is described by Juan Francisco de St. Antonio, fn his ‘account of his trawe ventures in the Philippine islands, published at Manila in 1738, In this curious little work the author tells us that he omce breakfasted off a mermaid, and he further gravely de- scribes its flavor as being like fresh fat pork. Told by the Features. Men who pucceed in commerce have alert faces, but no particular features, Clergymen who go up the ladder of preferment have faces that tell of self-repression—tight lips, eyes which look straight abead, Artists, on the other hand, have eyes which are all over the place and small, well formed chins. Politicians who sueceed by their influence over memn have ak ways prominent noses. G i No Doubt. On one occasion an ignorant guack was called by mistake to attend a couneil of physicians in a critical case, After cousiderable discussion the opinion wes expressed by one that was convalescent, “Con- sald the gquack, “why, that's mothing serious, 1 have cured convalescence in 24 hours”—S8acred Heart Review, i Wise Interrogating. A faculty of wise interrogating Is half & knowledge. For as Plato saith: “Whosoever speaketh knoweth that which he seeketh for in a general no- tion; else how shall he know it when Anud therefore, the the more is larger your anticipation is, direct. and compendious search.—! Bacon, A Hint to the Wise. s il ki your ° A blacksmith picked up a paper the other day as he was going to work and read that he was one of the beirs to an estate that tion for 13 years. to hunt has been in litiga- He took time enough up the administrator and re- 2. Now i the time to sub- ton Globe Gallant Burglar. After rifling a lady’s boudoir and am nexing some jewels, the burglar left a note—brief but gallant, and gratify- ing to a degree—before taking bis de- parture. “A thousand regrets,” so the note ran, “for not having found in this chamber by far its most lovely jewel.” £, Mont Relly of Kansas City.) ws by Amedcan Poess Assoclation. Women's Whims. A woman always gets cross when | she has to get up to let her husband | in, but she doesn’t mind it at all to get The Real Man. The man within you depends not on geegaws or feathers, not en bag- gage or furniture, not on rank or sta- tion, but on large-heartedness, homes-| "P 2Rd let the cat out.—Aichison ty, sincerity, and elevation of pur-, 210D pose, breadth of sympathy and sim- plicity. Uncle Allen, | “I suppese a man never begins to feel really old,” eaid Uncle Allen Sparks, “until he bappens to catch | his boy in the act of shaving himself.” Recognized Work of Women. After the Franco-Prussian war, “The Service Cross for Women and Girls” wae established in recegnition | of their aid during the war. The dec- oration consists of an irom cross em- cased in siiver. Failure. Wherever there is a failure there is some giddiness, some superstition | about luck, seme step omitted, which | nature never pardons.—Emerson. Thinking One’s Self Old. If at 30 you expect to be an old man or woman at 35 you will be one, because the mind makes the material correspondence of whatever it sets it se:lr permanently upon.—Health Rec ord. He Knew, Tommy—*"Pep, what is meant circumstances over which we have no control 2" Tommy s Pop—“Modern children, my son by Nething to Him. Johmany—"“The camel can go eight days without water.” Freddy—'Se could I if ma would let me."—Har- per's Bazar. A Financier. Customer—Please, mister, I can't remember wkhat ma semt me for, but you can give me two cents’ worth of peppermiat candy, 'cause she said I could keep the chamge.—Century. RS A Teast. Te Eve, who, recogaizing the val- us of a.higher education, secured it for hercelf and her descendents, while Adam thought lflly of tickling his Gentility. Burleigh: Gentility is nething but ancient riches. e, Ne Cheap Grades. There are mo varying degrees sincerity v G | dent | ranging Life as a Duty. It would pay pleasure seekers to try the old plan of leeking on life as a duty, whete pleasures came by acci- or kindpess, and were heartily, gratefully enjoyed. It stands to rea- son that if you gre deliberately ar- te’get pleasure, and plenty of it, Yol cga not enjey it as much as it your lifé conmisted of duties, and your. pleasures came by the way, Camphor Cures Cold Take guta campher and digsolve In kerosene, having enough se that there is always @& Iittld campbor undis- solved in the hottom of the bottle, Rub the lame parts thoroughly and often with this and you will have re- lief. Do not bandage it on, as it will blister’ If used that way. This is also an excellent remédy for cold in throas or lungs. Rub it in well, The Duty of Forgiveness. The most plain and natural sent!- ments of equity concur with divine au- | thority to enforce the duty of forgive- ness. Let him whq has never, in his life, done wrong, be uuwed the priv- flege of remaining ipexorable. But let such as are ee: us of frallties and crimes consider fergiveness as a debt which they owe to ethers— Blair. / The fotal vilue of tha utohollc bev- B o iy} i

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