Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 2, 1919, Page 4

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in the child mind the germs’ of exclusiveness and T Scmeriptios pries 13s & week; S%s 2 wowtn: 3a.00 | €lass dstinction *‘ ‘:‘:Inn the & goar. democratic -wyu Sntered ot the Pestofies ac Norwieh, Comn. m | gohools. S@ch ef the private wand-class mater. @s are above reproach meed have mo fear but.theose that mr ‘the same op- Bditortal Soges. mm 3.2, | POrtunity as ‘the Salina school e-nho: o . Tmtam 105 {De too sharply curbed. . ' - ool The vouthful mind =0 prepared :at Norwich, Saturday, Aug. 2, 1919 Tatrsneme Gals. Office 488. Sulletis Bustness an ‘mpressionable - age - is - fertile ‘ground for the printed page which the Lusk committee shows was freely &ir-. culated in New York, urging plunder and violence if capital should inter- fere with the plans of those who would overturn this government. TREATIES WITHIN THE LEAGUE.|rrom The more we- hear of special trea- ties to be negotiated between powers already signatories te the League of Nations, the more the impression forced upén' us that fhese signator- ies can have no abiding faith_ in thel league as a working possibility for the peace of- the world. Before the -senate now for consid- eration is the special treaty with France by which the United States engages to go at once to that coun- try’s aid. in the event of umprovoked | MEMBER OF THE m m The Assoclated Press L oy e ufi"- paper and .also the local mews published S, D rights of republication of special despateh. 1 s hersin are also ressread. - CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING JULY 26TH ' 10,108 TAKE THE BULLETIN ALONG Subscribers and readers of The Bulletin leaving the city for the || 288ression against her by Germany. 9 the city Tor the ! at the same time it i considered nee- geason, or a vacation, can have J| . v tnat there should be a-special The Bulletin sent to their address {|in treaty between England and France in which England “consents” to assist France under similar circumstances. Now i appears also that Italy feels the need of a closer - alliance with France for which Premier Nitti of Italy is making a special appeal to the French people. The intent of all is the same. the adequate protection of the French republic, against whom it recog- by mail for any specified period at the regular rate by notifying the business department, telephone 480 . HURLEY SEES ENOUGH. After his experience as chairman of the shipping beard, Mr. Hurley may reasonably be expected to qualify as is an expert when he speaks of convic-| % - tions grounded upon that experience.|Dized the full weight and hate of Ger- In view of his coming retirementjnany would De flung in case that country: were ever in a again to challenge the world in their purpose to furnish France trpm the board, Mr. Hurley was as e ed what had impressed him the most. His seen answer was that he had = e enough of government ownership and|With the assurance thai she 11 not operation and that it wes me¥itable| D€ 1eft alone to face German aggres- that it could not have the efficiency of | 3198 all nations seem agreed and sure- private management. True It was|l¥ the United States shouid be the that there were responses thespecial|laSt 1o deny her that comforting al, but the relapse carried pre- | Suarantee 4 on again below the standard of] But With the league of nations her- instrument is it not alded as the long sought to bring peace to the world, an evidence of doubt that such will private ownership. With the respon- loaded onto the gov- and emplo | e ;giaé;t’f;a):;fi really be accomplighed throush the there was o constant demand for more | lea8Ue, when treaties within . the and more. treaty are demanded? Dees this not Mr lead to the ccnclusion that France Hurley For new shipyards we furnished the sums it up as fellows: + “ihe|and Italy, at léast, recogmize it as a Utopian dream, and put more faith in a practical working plan through spe- cial treaties. capital, provided we guaranteed the wages, we the profits. What natural incentive was there to keep costs down? As we view the opposite con.| Grand and glorious as:the concen- ditions under which our industries{tion of the leaghe is. ddes not this demand for special treaties indicate that some of its members have come to realize with Premier ' Clemenceau that the existing combination of al- lied ana - associated was have grown to their present vast ex- tent, how could we look for efficiency under such a system? And if we had government ownership over the coun- oo | T +f tellect. of man.” try, nationally, taking in all the pub- powers fic .utilities, the same results would|®noush for all purposes? From this follow. More, you wouldn't have out- [ might at length be évolved the ul- tide of the ®overnment-owned plants|timate realization of what all the that efficient comvetition which re-|world wants, freedom from devastat- mains the life of trade. ing wars. - After thus emphasizing that which e ST T impressed him mo Mr. Hurley HOPE . FOR SUFFRAGISTS. warns private enterprise that not only| There is encouragement for the must it preserve its efficiency, but be | woman suffrage advocates in. the re- s efforts to improve upon|sults obtained through a telegraphic sxisting methods. He protested that inguiry sent out by Governor Bartlett the workman who does not do a fair|of New Hampshire in an effort to Aay's work is fair neither to himself |find what the trend of opinion on the mor to his employer. Conceding that!subject is. the war has given a great setback to| The New Hampshire governors public ownership, he calls upon all|telogram asked whether, if he called a eoncerned for the highest possible en- |spécial - session of the legislature, deavor. less will suffice. do New be would that not enough’ other governors likewise to make him feel [ Hampshire’s = effort would wasted. ¥ Seventeen governors have answered that they will call special sessions, provided enough others will do the same, while five states will have reg- ular sessions in time. Out of six others still to be heard from Idaho and Nevada are said t6 beé fa- vorable. while there are possibilities in_others, the governor concludes. With twelve states already having taken affirmative action, the governor finds that there is a total of thirty- four which are either “favorable or hopeful; or at least possible.” Having this in mind, it is his conclusion that the situation is one where it would seem to him that New Hampshire ought to join the movement. In order to enact the federal woman sufirage amendment, the affirmative action of thirty-six states is neces- sary. The twelve which already have taken such action are Massachusetts, New York, Pennsylvania, Arkansas Texas, Ohio; Illinois, Michigan. Wis- consin, Iowa,-Missouri and Kansas; while three which rejected the amend- ment .aré Georgia, Florida and New Mexico. Nothing HUMAN ENDURANCE WINS. For super-endurance and ability * itve in spite of battle injuries that were enough f a whole platoon of soidiers, the record of an American arm: man which has just come to light serves to indicate the tremen- dous power of resistance and recuper- ation in the normal heaithy human body. Sergeant John G. White, Com- pany G, 28th Infantry, has come back from the five major battles in which he participated, bearing sixty-three separate and distinct scars as souve- o So far as army officers are able to! tell now Sergeant White is the_onily man in the American army entitled to wear five wound chevrons, a chevron indicating a wound condition and not| the separate wounds. The surgical records show that he still carries five bullets in his body, that he was shot tweive times in the left leg, which is now partly disabled, and that he car- s various numerous knife, bayenet ard shrapnel wounds. He is accredit- ed with three individual citations and wears the Distinguished Service med- al and the Croix de Guerre. He is a regular army man with fourteen years service to his credit, and in spite of his experiences is able to get around and ride a motorcycle. The human frame cannot be such a weak and feeble creature after all when it can emerge triumphant from such an experience as Sergeant White had. EDITORIAL NOTES. Hints that Burleson will resign are coming from evérvboGy but him. “Blind tiger” hunts Will now break the monotony of a policeman’s life SOWING THE SEED EARLY Like a ship in a storm the airplane comes to grief if it 15 too close to Insidious and far-reaching is the land. work of those who would undermine and bring down to destruction the government of the United States un- der whose liberal provisions as to freedom of sreech and freedom of ac- tion of the individual they drive their nefarious plots with an immunity that they covld experience rowhere else. Investigations made by the Lusk committee in New York of the nctivities of anarchists, Bolshev- Long ago. Ceorgia refused to trust her men with liquoF: now she refuses to trust herl woiien With the vote. The volce of tHe pesple hn.i at length drawn the president’s attemtion from the beckoning fingers of visions on the herizon. To the stockingless fad of this sum- mer will be added a baréfooted neces- sity next season if the cheerful pre- dictions aoout the price of shoes are realizéd. - ists, Industrial Workers of the World and other radicals show that they neglect no age in which to spread the poison of their doctrines. Among the papers taken from I W. W. headquarters was a letter from a woman in Salina, Kansas, that sai I teach in a private school where I have no restrictions. It is my de- sire to lst the boys get direct infor- mation about the radical moVements throughout the country before their prejudices become too strong. Please do not select things that are so ve- nomous as to antagonize at the outset. It goes beyond saying that in a pri- vate school the boys come mostly from capitalistic homes. Give them a chance to know why they are o much hated by your group before you strike them for it. ‘While fathers and mothérs paid tha bills, thinking that their children were receiving a better education under private scheol management, the seeds the railroad payrell in - eightéen months without - i the service. - . ; PR R The .man- on the cornér says: At 30,000 feet up Rolilfs:findé 25 below zero in the middle of summer. Half' that. height would give most of us cold feet, summer or winter. when he asked ‘how any tén were friendly to their landlords. in ‘the limits of the Hbsny ends where it vuln or denies personal flntr others. Our laws are necessary obtain orderliness in government, and t-ufngmty o;;fl‘l}la and to protect n s . place where petrsonal is an- ed than jin the_ statutes, this is one-hal “law soon el o dead letter. freest g one which is ‘with least lmw authority. Personal rights do not rest Upon a do-as-you- ple-‘e foundation, “for ene anot] g " There .narmflu be made to the ha e portraits of the m this republic upon the walls of our schoolrooms, but the es- timate of them by others is of more yalue. Charles James Fox said in thé British parliament . of Washington: “Ilustrious man! deserving honor less from the splendor gf hia situstlon thad of his mi before wtmm 1 borrowed greatness sinks into inlilmne-na. x:;.nba‘u told the] mnhu-.ku the ional as- sembly Ben F\‘lnkl(n was '13:8 9&‘3‘ whom two worlds claim * * * one- & the greatest men who ever served ‘cause of liberty and of philesophy. | Daniel Webster it has been said: “He taught the principles of political unfon to his generation. ' He produced those convictions which ‘sustained the north in its subsequent contest to maintain the integrity: of the mnation” Good reading for young Americans Strange, is it not, that no man's re- ligion can survive his morals. although in some circles morals are of so little account? Great minds have never put a low estimate upon good behavior. Locke sa: “To give 4 man a full knowledge of morality, I would send him to no other hook than the New Testament.” Charles Sumner de- clared: “The trué gardén of humanity is_in the moral elevation, sustained, enlightened and "decorated by the in- ‘And Bishon Wilson averred: “Morality does mnot make a Christian. yet no man can be a Chris- tian without it.". One’s estimate of morality is a true measure of himself. ‘This is where man should constantly watch his step. | have been among the green hills of the east for a few days with an ef- ficient guide, and learned some of the wonderful performances of Nature. In the midst of a range of hills rose one higher than all the rest. the composi- tion of which was unlike that of any hill about it._and because of this it was declared to have been the first among the hills, a giant that withstéod all the pressare of = the glacial age through which _the fertile vallevs about it were belng plowed up and the sreen hills being placed In har- monious relation to. it: and upon whose summit the sun and the moon | and the.stars have looked down for ten million vears: which was older than Babylon when men and mice took possession of it. There like a cuckoo’s egg in some other birds' nest it must remain until the end of Time. We are now making a spurt in thig country to Americanize aliens to which there can be no objection; and do you not think it is about time to Americanize our schools. so that they may teach our. people so much of manners and . self-control and gov- ernment ‘and - freedom = and - manual art that the: sovereign citizen . of which we boast with pride ‘may be- come a reality instead an ideal." Our boys and girls ‘should be taught to know the principles of free govern- ment and the rights of free citizens. The science of government was what Washington declared should be taught i0 those who are to be the future guardians of the liberties of coun- tr¥. Our schools are not produeing sovereign citizens because they fol- low foreign systems, instead of becoming leaders. Since the Lord makes the days they must be perfect whether we get 153 days of sunshine at once. or a year's rainfall in @ da¥. The wisest of us know what our needs are pretty well, but do we know what the needs of the earth are? Science has discovered for us that too much wet wegther makes the earth sour, and unfit for farming; and.tbat drouths sweet- en it up and restore its power for £00d. Why the earth isn’t run by the Lord like a well conducted Sun- day school we canmot conceive. neith- er can we explain why His lightnings should be free to knock down church steeples. From man's viewpoint there is bungling, but from His all things are zood. If you are inclined to be frank in your speech it is well to first confine your remarks to voursell. Frankness is not a special sign of refinement, and in the family it may easily drift to impoliteness and brutality. There is so much sarcasm in frankness that it really does not need special culti- vation. No doubt that old_ maxim: “Least said. soonest mended.” is a blossom from -this alicient, pestiferous family shrub. Frankness in most di- rections is the way for a fool to win a leather medal. Frankness is not en- tirely without respectability, but in all family matters. and most worldly re- Iations a little frankness goes a_very great wa; Somehow we séem to envy those per- sons who can witness the sunrise and the sunset every day. Tew people re- alize that “the morning has goid in its mouth,” or that the evening holds in its brilliant close the assuring hope of a new Jerusalem. We do not 1gok up enough to glimvse the glory of the day or of the night. - Few see might draw her sable mantle round her and pin it with a star. Constantly in His heavens God follows gloom with sunshine, just. as_he has foreordain- ed sunshine shall follow gloom in our hearts. The morming fresh and sweet and invigorating stirs man to suceessful .endeavor, and the evening holds the promise of rest and re- cuperation without which life would lose its charm. If you desire good -company, .just make the acquaintance of good and useful books. Among the best loves of this world is a love of knowledge. and in it may not only be found comfort- ing thoughts. byt the Comforter him- self. It is quite an mplishment in, 1ife to have a dependable source of en- tertainment; and of this a love of books presents.a never-failing supply. oose your books to suit your tastes, for there has never heen a book print- ed which did not have semething good in it, if only repellant ideas. No book can poison your mind unless you let it. Reading is a stimulus for thought: and thoughts free from . prejudice can neyer be less than beneficial. There are few poo e who are not superstitious: and the majority of those who are will mt admit it. Goethe tells us “Superstition is the poetry of life. It is inherent in a man’s nature. and when we think it is wholly eradi- cated it takes refuge in the strangest holes and corners, whence it peeps out all_at-oncé, as soon as it can do it with safety.” Man lives in a world of mys- téries, and although he has strugsled for ages to overcome natural. imag- inary fears he cannot do it. The mys- teries of life are past flnrun; mfl. .na man is often confused by the ous manifestation of life in h religion without mystery, said lo¢k, #is a religion without The unmmbh always has and ways will haunt mankind. i‘” who toots his own m;‘nhlblfid:.u v- .m*m fim:‘i‘.# !and again he would unslin; ng s ‘Russi rof. N. 3s the a New York publication, ovpoud to the Bolsheviki: Practically in every despateh from Russia, nowadays, one comes acro the name Cossack—Cossacks from the Kuban and from the Don, and at an eariier period, the Cossacks from Or- enm&aurdndsb«hwgrejun as frequently mentioned . It is therefore well timed at this ‘moment to impart general intor- mation wlwt the m— and to state some facts - their par- ticipation .in the m‘ with the during vears of 1318 and 1919, The Cossacks ueA finzbody ot ‘men, E‘?fil farmers, 2 utue rsl an, who settled along num of the Russiam state and the banks 6f the big rivers. - As a reward for their service in guarding the frontiérs of ;the empire and in récognition of the Aou.: their conquest of the lands where they set- Sacks’ permanemt BRALS of OWRErSHIR sacks perm: of TS| of the soil a-l um right to un- _its wealth and appen- m givén the right to co-»wamn their inner life. in-accord-’ Ace with their own choice “and -will, »bm ‘were required to furnish, in ex- change, a certain number of armed men equipped at their own expense. The free Cossack communities were ruled by elected elders (starshinis), with an elected ataman at the head. The ataman was the chief military commander ahd was elected by the “circle” (assembly). The _economic life and the administration of the indi- vidual settlements was based on the same principles of democracy, with elected men at the head of each small’ self-governing unit. The Cossacks never knew the institution of serfdom, and the land was distributed in most of the Cossack communities among the members of the settlements. in quite a proportional and just manner. Strangers were admitted into the Cos- sack communities only by unanimous consent. In wartime each Cossitx force: had to furnish certain quéta of armed regiments, the number depending on ;" !“i f urgent :fn{:‘n‘e‘m orce. In case o - sity - the entire male population, from the age of 18 to 60, was called to arms and te fight. total Cossack pop- alation, numbering about five million, could summon under fits colers an army of 180,000 men. ‘When the dissolution of the Russian army set in, under the influence of propaganda and war weariness, the disease - affected some Cossack ~regi- ments, too, partiéularly those from the Don, and a part of them, garrisoned in Petr wenit over to the Bol- sheviki, and only later deserted them. It can be stated that even those Cossacks who became afflicted with Bolshevism were soon cursd, thanks to the fact that the great majority of them stobd firmly for order, statehood and against the Bolsheviki. The Cos- sacks resisted the very first attempts of the Bolsheviki to form “"soviets” among them, early in 1918, and drove out the Bolsheyiki. C}?u‘ack territecies avz ‘:g.ve;"a: therin, -m P fimnry‘twee st the Bolsheviki, and as a hearth where Russian state- hood has been rebofll and from where it has gradually lfl out, from the | Kuban.- out® of terinodar, into the depth of Russia, from Siberia (Omsk) throughout Siberia and thé Ural prov- inces; and that leaning upon the Cossack forces, Russian genérals— patriots were able to organize armies (the Siberian and Denikine's), and with the aid of thesé armiés to create governments united at présent under the common leadership of Admiral Kolchat. The historic role of the Cossacks until the revolution amounted to the conquest of the bordér territories and their safeguarding from the invasion of the nomad tribes, and serving the state “in faith and truth” particular- Iy In the trying vears of severe wars. There is now added to this sérvice the heroic. self-sacrificing struggle with the Bolsheviki and the endeavor to re- build the Russian government and.to save it from perdition on the very brink of a precipice. Sunday Morning Talk THE SABBATH REST. ' One very simple and effectivé way of finding out what you are doing with vour Sdbbaths is to find out what your Sabbaths are doing for you. It is not so much a question of whether this occupation is right and that one wrong, whether you may go here or may not go there, but of what the day brings to you, body and soul. Circum-’ stances vary, tempeéraments differ, and nG one can be a law to another, but the law of Sabbath rest is for all men. It is older than the tables of stone—as ©old_as human need. If you find that your Sabbath has made vour faith clearer, vour heart more tender; if it has quickened good impulses and awakened higher aspira- tions; if it has made family ties clser, and God and heaven seem nearer; if vou both look forward to Monday's task with fresh courage and a desire to be more helpful to all ‘around you, then the Sabbath has fulfilled ° its blessed mission for you. But if it brings none of these things, then, whether you have spent it in so-called recreation or in church zoing - and Bible reading. be sure vou have pro- faned your Sabbath. IN THE DAY’S NEWS Citation From General Petain. Wounded by shrapnel, knocked un- conscious and taken prisoner by the Huns after notable sérvice, Carl Dow- ing Lytle of North Brookfield, Mass. who served in Paris as a Y. M. C. A. secretary with the Fremch army, has been awarded @ regimental citation by General Petain. It reads: “Directot of the Fover du Soldat at Misay-sur-Aisne, worked with the troops until the Germans were seen advancing over the heights, and dur- ing the time our troops were retreat- ing he went back to the village to bring out a few French children who had remained there. Wounded by shrapnel, he became unconscious and was taken prisoner.” At Laury. north of Soissons, Lytle was buried in the debris of a shelle building in which he had been ope ating his canteen. After his captur he became a member of a German I bor gang., and worked until he . impressed into service by a Germ Surgeon as interpreter and by t commandant of the prison camp as field clerk to make out movemen lists for prisoners on commandoes. His luck left him upon his remova to another camp. For a time a dun- geon was his sleeping quarter: whilr he worked at cleaining bricks. With the signing of the armistice. Lyt'c was _taken to Berlin and turned ove: to Conrad Hoffman, an International Y. M. C. A. secretary. who sent him to Stettin to aid in reatriation wo He saw the last American prisoner out of Stettin before returning to Berlin and getting his release. At Scapa Flow. The historic drama _enacted in Scapa Flow, when, by the. hands of their own crews, the once —mighty German high sea fleet went to the bottom, will remain an imperishable memory to those who saw it, says the London Daily Mail. The boats which pushed from ‘th sinking ships were loaded to the wa- ter's edge with men and baggage. Most of the Germsn sailors had their best suits on and were spruce and span as if dressed up for a fete. A most commanding figure was an officer with the Iron Cross prominent on his left breast and his field glasses slung over his shoulder. Bvery now s gla; es, level them at his own sinking ship, close them with a decisive snap, and resume his ceremonial parade. This officer was a fluent Bnglish speaker, and acted as interpreter o convey the orders of the British naval authori- ties to his compatriots. Judging by the amount of bagsage they brought along, the Germans must have mistaken th. British for furnituré removers on a large scale. Bottles of brandy gnd various other spirits were plentiful, and these were ! at once thrown overboard by the searcheérs. Thgre seemed to be suffi- cient cigars and cigarettes to keep the FREE AUTO DELIVERY l 150 Main Street, in Postal-Telegraph Office Telephone Call 743-2. Give Us a Trial whole German population in smokes for & o Then number of pockef- knives was astonishing. Each Ger- man seambn had haif & dozen atleast, all brand new. Field zlasses were al- S0 numerous and of spléndid work- manship. SUNDAY EVENING TWO SHOWS AT 7 AND 8:20 Ha‘,zel Daly N “THE LITTLE ROWDY” A Five Part Triangle Photoplay Which is FOUR SHOWS—1:80, 3, 6:15, 8:15 A SCREER PRESENTATION : ghs? 1 CHARLES DICKENS' GREATEST NOVEL “Dombey and Son” in Every Sense an Ar- tistic Production FORD EDUCATIONAL ' WEEKLY ’ ‘GAUMONT SPECIAL MUSICAL PROGRAM GLADYS LESLIE . —IN— “A STITCH IN TIME” Adapted From the Famous Broad- way Success of the Same Name PATHE NEWS NEWS AUDITORIUM SPECIAL SUNDAY SHOW 7 P. M. BESSIE LOVE | 6 Reel Feature Pathe Weekly || Pathe Comedy Monday and Tuesday THE GREYHOUN® TOM MIX in THE LAW AND THE OUTLAW e el o4 KINOGRAM WEEKLY. Coming Wednésday and Thursday FIVE ACTS OF VAUDEVILLE LILA LEE IN THE COMEDY OF YOUTH “PUPPY LOVE” ve Paramount . Picture Ih the 5 Part Dramatic Story “Thunderbolts of Fate” THEY KEEP YOU SMILING A . MaJeStlc Roof “ An Amateur Liar” FEATURE PICTURES SUNDAY At 8:45 PICTURES AND DANCING MONDAY AND TUESDAY PICNIC OTHER VIEW POINTS We have in Danbury the classic ex- ample of an extreme closed shop town where no worker daré not beiong to the union. We have in certain New England mill towns the classic ex- ample of the othér exiremé, where no worker would dare join a union. God forbid that Bridgeport should become ds either of them! For in Bridgeport as present we have the fair and mod- eraté program in which the right of workers to join together and bargain collectively is reasonably recognized and provided for, side by &ide swith the recogmition of the inborn right of every free American to work where he chooses, how he chooses, and to join or abstain from joining the un-|v jon as he sees fit—Bridgeport Post. President Wilson has c.rried us but a short distance in his mature con- sideration of the treaty of peace and the covenant of the proposed league of nations. He hasl not only furnish- ed little information of a practical character to aid his coutfymen in catching his point of view, but he ap- | pears to be indisposed to add to it. Papers that have been called for by the senate have, not been forthebming and the text of the proposed alliance between this country and France is still officially withheld. The covenant, which he, took with him to Paris as|1 the formulation of the American idea of a league of nations, has not vet reached the senate though Mr. Wil- ! son assured Senator Brandegee nearly ed bodily into a huge lumber pile. For the néw vessel cargo forms the vessel. down the keel and fore-and-aft cross timbers, complete a skeleton bottom, mount donkey engines on the struc- turs, and thén launch that portion of the vessel. the heavy timber aboard for the com- pletion of the Mechanics. Monitor, died in and the the return of his land, and distinguished honors Baltimore, received at with like honors final placed by another. and DANCE AT RICHARDS’ SUNDAY, AUGUST 3 DANCING is all cargo, and the The method of construction is to lay The donkey engines hoist ship.—From Popular Honors to Ericsson. 4 8hows Today—1.30, £.15, 6.15, 845 Huse Peter and Anna Lehr Mr. and Mrs.ASit-iney Draw IN GROVE ]Mulic by Rowland’s Jazz Band John Ericsson, the inventor of the Yew York city, March within a day of the anni- of -the battle of the Monitor After his death, asked for to hWis native with 8. 8. 1889, ersary the Merrimac. Swedish government body transferred in the U, August 25, 1890, It Stockholm, September and -conveyed to in a it was T.A.B.Hall resting place chapel i his mative town 9 {he "legisiature of New. York appro: SATURDAY, ptiated $10.000 for the erection of a monument to his memory. . and the August 2nd. ceremony of unveiling took place if Battery Park, New York, August 28 ” 883, In 1801 this monument was re- ROWLAND'S JAZZ BAND In the Same Boat. six months ago that it was a proper Hungary s left her wheat 'and Gocument for that body o have fn its|mineral water only under ireats Back at the Old Stand possession. — New Haven Journal- |save Count Karolyl. Count = permit Courder. us to address you as —“br - A Whosver 15 the 166h6y ome fow, it | KAoxville Journal Dancing Every Saturday isn't John Armstrong Chaloner, for he £ iz now legally sane in the state of| Investigations in South Lapland ~w York, as well as in the states of | seem to show that valuable copper ginia and Nofth Carolia in which | v 1ies he established residences after had been confiied to and had ade his escape from an asylum in eins have been found, especially in ew York state. Mr. Chaloner, as he alls himself, although his brethers rite the name Chanler, as his father id before him, has won a fight which © hds conducted for about twenty ears, and he thus comes into the unanagement of his ,ample share of he great Astor fortune, which has vn in the hands of trustees. It was his Mr. Chaloner or Chanler who, vhen his brother. “‘Sheriff Bob,” mar- ed the beautiful singer - Caveliera, zot off the famous question. “Who is coney new?” Legally speaking. none of the Chaloner or Chanier family is now looney.-—Hartford Courant. l “We shall presently see ‘Made in Germany’ marked upon goods. but we are not likely to see another war made in Germany.” — Philaddiphia Record, If the German manufactur- ers have semse enough to come in out of the rain we shall not see “made in Germany” on goods sold at retail| from that country for a long time to come.—Wateérbury Democrat. ‘The_man on the street is well aware that the topics in which people are interested have nothing whafever to do with the league or the treaty. Fi- ume or Shantung, the Bolsheviki or 2.75 beer. The one big topic of conversation, and the one biz theme in the minds of the people, is the high and rising cost of living.—Bridgeport Post. Hae 5,000,000 Feet of Lumber A most remarkable 9,000-ton destined to make but one voyage of 9.000 miles, is being built in a British Columbia shipyard. Its purpose is to carfy 5,000.000 feét of lumber to Eng- jand: but when it arrives at its des- tination. instead eof being unloaded, it will simply be taken apart and turn- Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA ship We pay postage on parcel |i post one way Central Baptist Church Union Square EVENING SERVICE AT 7:30 DR. DANIEL DOWNEY OF INDIA WILL SPEAK A Good Place to go Sunday Evenings YOUNG PEOPLE You Are Urged to Be Present at Your Meeting. SUBJECT WOMAN’S PART IN THE WORLD’S WORK. PAGEANT WILL ALSO BE GIVEN A The Steamer Nelseco I ‘Will Meke Sunday Excursion to Ocean Beach every Sun- day during the season, leaving the Railrcad dock at foot of Market Street, at 10:30 A. M. and arriving at the Beach at 12 o’clock. Returning leave Beach at 5 o’clock and reach Norwich at 6:30. This is a brand new boat with Deisel Engine and ample accommodations for 600 passengers. FARE 40c EACH WAY. BIG DANCE WHEN Y0U WANT 10 put your, bus. the upper. part of the Viihelmina dis- | \NE5), Defore the, DuE s, @R ere e age trict (Dikanar gnd Iarmomakke). Vertising colummn Bulletin. e e

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