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ERVICE 18’1; E will be pteased to inspect your . battery at any time dnd as often is necessary, free of charge. Our service is the expert kind, and our ex ence is talways at your disposal. ould repairs be mnecessary we wiil make them at a moderate charge. The “EX{DE’’ . Starting and Lighting Battery is the famous ‘‘giant that lives in a box.”’ 0 encourage her prosperity before t! it will be interesting n q‘? Tos- | _h Will be able to peace- g ". '* ‘aqhfltrha;!hé.m, o ; ] N A itencon ofk AR B and QGoufieé € has' been taken of|as a mf'm to the est News. says: en the pride of G vmny me s - OLD tion oy the house| He sits a mile or so high, “As the object of historical study and | of her scliolars and scientists still are 123 YEARS ; dense to cast a shadow. We/|criticism is comecerned with the past| Jeft: but many of the promising youn ’Qm.“;.fl,l :: ::;mv,:f have to two or- three thousand |it is very difficult for the historian|men havé béen slain in the war. m5 L Erertetion i 12 o wkz S o mouth: W of doing it mow | Miles morth to find the temperature 62 to gauge properly the future and out- . mahy -of the more competent need of doing it now line the development to be expécted.|German scholars and scientists may be thought comparatively | find better empiovment abroad than ing Will hardly keep us comfortable, | easy for him to turn prophet and in- |zt home, especially in the United and seven miles ‘high. as far as from | dicate the development to be expected | States. and this will deprive Germany Norwich to Montville, the cold is sel-| by mankind in the way of change.|of much of the brains she now needs. ae less than 62 degrees below zero.| But it is not so easy to know the fu- [ Thus the future of Germany affords Old Sol for seven months in the vear ture. Most of the forecasts offered by | Iittle ground for optimism, makes Jick Frost ebey his thus far | historians have proved to be largely “What' of the future of the allies? and no farther. jinsccurate To ask a historlan about | That is as difficult to predict as is the o . the course of the world is like ask- ure o rmany. All one has to chusetts is wrestling with the prob- | Have you mnoticed that our musts ;'8 COUCS Aan about the course of |0 is to speculate a LELIe on the pro- lem and others are going to watch the|nceds, and our must-nots far behind|a river; the boatman knows that the[céss of negotiations among the allies catcome of its efforts in order, to profit) them? Must holds the mastership in|river never -uns straight .and that it [to see that their future relations are Ly its deliberatioms and actions. all of our extravagancies and con-|has its humors. mow toward this side| very uncertain. It would be rash In- pic ies. Tt ., and|and now toward that, even chang-|deed to speak definitely of their fu- the peoplc 6f the state stand |spiracies. juggles our wants. a - gl R L R degrees below zero, but in the hottest harm has| weather at one mile high winter c!oth-{ ‘more 2 ATING LLBOARDS. TEé question of regulating bill- Boards is one that has given many commmunities and states nc end of trouble. At the present time Massa- —_— Norwich, Saturday, Oct. 18, 191% —— WEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRE®S. 5 . makes them seem imperative to us,|Ing its channel betimes: and it g > un:x: t::nm'”:&dt?s hn}\::nb:: es rocit ;‘”, are of small conse-|Jjust as futile for ths ~isiorian to at-|been inaugurated but there is no “Bxide’ You have heard of this battery and its pretty Slusively led w1 quence. Our mustinots menace our|tempt to indicate (Lo current of fu- |ground for believing that it is firmly unique features—it's the original Unit- rotit : t giving the O and would - prevemt our|ture history. Ever since the signing | established. It has no more assurance Seal Batiay . e powactil, ey 'i3 legislafure duthOrity to carry on thé| ..o of action and check conditiogs | of the armistice how the currents of | of its perpetuity.than had the famous i » regulation was a@opted by over 109,- | which are deplorable. Must and|history have changed! The worla is| Fioly Alliance. Usually when a num- care for and repair. Let us explain its 000 majority. That shows that therc| must-not . are divinely set as the|€ver marked by change: and no one {ber of nations unite in this way for features to you. is a strong seénmtiment againsi thel Scylla add Charybdis of life through' ¢an accurately indicate just what theé | mutudl interest, it is inevitable that Take advantage of our free service. <N Bic] which we must steer straight if we,change will be. As time evolves the| differences _will arisa from conflict e o R e e S 2 h f th 1d b of interest if for no other reaspn. The osstiat would avoid shipwreck. changes o e worl ecome more o er on. i WEEK ENDING OCT. 11, 1919 o L The ‘birdé of pa theijr | Dumerous and complicated. Histor- | terms of the l.eague of Nations by no The billioard ddisknde is by noj = TNe DI ermer climate. and the|ians are comstantly cafling 1 the[Means suggest impartiality of inter- - .. metns now 11 nar been wresued with | wey to S warmer el wha The| M 8 Some Tgni on T fus | 818 mant (he mORbare. Home Coun orwich Llectric Co ‘or a long time. It has bothered and identify species that nest farther ture, but as the vears go on the fu- |tries “will be greatly benefited by the . thickly as well as sparsely settied north. We do not have the opportuni- ture seems to be separating further rerms and others as much injured. . sections of cities, served to make un- |y of the students along shore fo see and further from the past. During the | Therein lies its weakness and the seed por-— 4 of its undoin some day. The whale thing feaves 1§ on the mind of the his- torian the possibility of some sudden there occurred many prophet could have imagined war in Hurope : | changes that no T krit - | foreseen. Who could = have CUTTING RED TAPE. attractive many sections that might The troubie out in Omaha wherée éthérwise preseni a fair appearance these birds in largs flocks Sunday of no tury of a race riot, that caused |and served to obstruct tiews and|Mass. was called “warbler d i v a £ L eath and destruction as well as an|blotch the landscape throughout the|Cause of the large number of these| before the war that Russia would have | change which the future has in store. i - £ Tigrating birds seen there A student|fallen io pieces as she hax done? Or|ltaly, for examrie, which nourishes empi (o irnch the mayor of the|ecountry. It has likewise been the : who could have predicated that Ger-|a srudge in regard to the peace writes: “Our trees were full - : f th means of dépréciating property vaiue | 1no®L, OVE TTIES WOTE e’ ana|many would have been as completely How to rcgulate it is the question| pine warblers. and two days in suc-| defeated as she has done? Or who that Massachusetts, is_struggling with | cession T saw a Comnecticut warbler,! could have predicated thati Germany | t armo now. Thére are tMose who contend|with his slate-coloreq cow! over his |Would have been as c mpletely de- jland. France and America in-future, & N = o < _| feated as she has been” [t was easy |opinions vary. may remain for siate viwulation -ana others bb-| Begd o WEL L ASd Dhver seen Dot o IGROURD. Iv Tifar ‘Hat -siids Geohaby| fionay Sr. comé aggers Arawn, lieve that it should be done locally.|l was quite interested to see in Reed's| 3 : i L } bird book that they were seldom seen|had agreed to {he armistice conditions | but no one can teil. What the world It it is the experience that a state regu- o tC PO 08 i "the fall migra. |she would be sure to sign the treatyis more concerned with is the prob- / lation” bill geté more consideration|ion. Sunday afternoon while the|imposed by the allies. Even when she|lem of the effect of the war on cCiv- than hose that are local the former|cun was high up I turned on the water|Olfered the natural opposition dis-jization. On this problem also most should by all means be adopted. What|in the fountdin, and thé crested fly-|blayed by her dclegates, no one doubt-!of the prophets and historians for- iS needéd in every state is the regu-|catcher came down to bathe with the ed that Germany would sign the (rea-|bear to express any definile opinions. iati i £ ittle birds! T also identifie fricr Germany well knew that her only | The future makes cCowards of us all ation, thett Wil be maost citective: thellittls R~ T 48, Wiérdifled o it | hope of salvation was to set her seal|All seem agreed that the future will treaty, will probably foment difficulty in the future. < “As to the mutual harmony Eng- was allowed to run for hours bes could be checked, while two ps were within trolley ser- the city has apparently had Central Baptist Church Union Square EVENING SERVICE AT 7:30 EVENING TOPIC: “The Turning of the Way” A Good Place To Go Sunday Evenings the effect that was needed to cut some the red roush in « federal were pe that had to be gone rder to get the services of troops when and where they needed. Omaha is not the only where similar delays have been experienced but it was one of the t and it was apparentiv as the resull of the situation there that ac- |regulation that reguiates amd mless|red-breasted nuthatch. a downy wood- All s tion was taken to correct th. ndi- : £ = ecker and a Kingbird. Except for the: to the treaty of peace. The calmness|be different from the past, that con- tion Trect the condi-jthat cdn be obtaméd the undertaiing | PECRET A0S 2 Fingbind. mxcept for The | [0 M Gignity maintained by the Ger- |ditions after the war will be quite dif- might as well be abandoned. But with rules once established regarding bill- boards public sentimtent ougzh of utter 10 be u sreat race like and the Latins. defeat | ferent from those prevailing before the war. This, however, is a safe forécast and means very little in itself. bird lovers in the alert summers here.” The Eastern Connecticut are on | mans in the face | showed them axons aw and order are more im- | n most he government the Anglo- - - ©o peffor the small groups to be seen for a n This has apparentiy beén|sufficicntly strong (o see that any|few weeks in most unexpected places. | Yes. it was casv 1o IRGL SEtmnany Th’,,"fw,'d“ et oy B | : 5 ed for every governor in the|violations thereof are quickly srought 3 aht| WOUld e the treaty: but{is té be founded not on skilful nego-| : o s e o oy Seeres | La" e of e auehomuicn P | Ths, Bemery whe, thinke b _ie cight] SR o e W W e ol | atlons s Torce bt wpon Fisoss. | SEpioration, 414 net ke piace, wntt] - OTHER VIEW POINTS of War Baker that wheréver the right and wrong of things in life| NOUEh to foretell the future of Ger-ness and Justice is supposed to Make | cars later, -while ‘eoionization was [ Reports to.the governor In respect national touch a are the hardest nuts we mortals have | MY delayed until {wenty vears before our |to the matter of forming a suard in Connecticut just now LOOKING TO THE FUTURE. ““This problem “ivil disorder which cannot be for some time willl tion; Others hold that in the fu- by him because of the de- | gt i crack. Of course. every man must! 3 _gor e 0 _ - Civii War. t n of the national guard the |1s CCEIARIN 1o Bo rominen e e live up to his own ldeals of right o be|Drove ome of the enighas of history. | iure a e P e & on atrane| “When colonization did take place|delicate subject in a discreet way. We i x 7 redlized the im-|s¢ peace with himself. It is right for;One thing. of course, b g < > it resembled the settlement of the Am- | see evidences of an indispositior : that e Al othiers 4guin Befleve (bat| ican coloples, in that settlements were made in half a dozen places, in- stead of being promoted from a central base, according to the usual British ederal aid by with the com- e department in ed mind, namely. | men ible to re-| and power It will take the most unthinking { that Germany will not be | cover her former efficienc | for at least thirty vea on the part.of old soidiers to put them selves into' the power of the federal government again wuntil they know what it has in mind. ‘They remembe portance of giving more attention 10| ail of us to mind our own business and the production of wood lands, In the!to set a good examp! but thes three states of Ohi6, Indiana and Ii-| offices have their limitations. and it is linois the estimate is made that there|quite difficulf to fix the boundary lines. ceased, and between nations While this sort of most of the great war has forever henceforth ail confl will' )e economic were at the, : industri - | Tt right for us to worship and to|Germany longer to recover from this|speculation goes ol 2 ethod. The colonizers are said to| 1916. The state will do its part n e AL :lgghl;;:l:n(gu;('mz\:ls:::d‘;:Od‘l“l;:ll;leulx‘:7 Sk G e B Bl ey and|war than it took France to wecover|powers are touching uli{e:'i‘\)ei:’r arma- {:\:‘:‘mgmfi::‘ Sofonizers are said to| 136 NS state will do toh pert v hem to respond | yer supply for their raw material capacities. if in doing so we do mot|Irom l"h("" ef‘,f,;é,m";“‘,':fb:“‘:hzl,y | A e ashes “Some see a!takes of England which brought about th"“ S sencioning pret of £ % 2 -onfli. ¢ rs i suit | Ever "R Germs ¢ r bloods < £ Tl Rev, i 5 well.—Waterbury American. i of the federal| Nawurally in that section there is|fmem cienie ore fom e hursult of|cqual ts other powers in armaments.|future war in the confiict between the | the American Revolution, and so well ol Watbc by S from a gevernor ikl g eir rigl ry few people are al-| L RovEl I e r in the conflict between thelaid they apply the lessons that the & * $irobfbition enforcemént b i § concerh over the supply of timber and| ways right in_theught and action; and|Economically sh. will he : e 4 50| far away island today is onc of the|as finally passed by the Pie, Wih the |t the same time there has been more |along these lines rise all of our issues. ! Yo mow: auEost eFbEusted anfl e s loyal portions of the British cm- | tains the objectionable & and & ¢ 26 5 eabalin Sk SUPPFeSS o jess time and attentlon given to thel A person set in his ideas Is not so cannot hope to "’f‘*’fi“‘ “f‘f’(‘:‘v i(‘,‘:‘r:’;, 'h" STl 2 "M sEeE - 6 (o This f: Wi tésted by thel sreé features which sét so da o locai laws. | meoting of the requirements for these|much different from a concrete dog as being under very heav 2 the wh s Ne Zealanders far ecxceeded precedent for the confi: n ending with the destruction of All and in€emnify The econ-!spenk war debt omic rehabilit is time that such action with mob violence growing in the and private oonless T ed quota of troops Mortals vate property dvantages of i bhe thinks he is. ed. as one of our old factories in the shape of raw material were design-| P : et s are tizens used t3) ceems all its form. a in on of Germany utocracy ° and it is interesting to note in this - 2 {iike an i e tasik And if a Rhine|thus like blind men feeling an ele- ! fon that it has in the|sonnection that there is to be u for- e ik g meen e R ‘x—‘:;:‘u]:;‘i(-‘msr;ul;ul.l ® be." eetublished : the | phan: ahd trving 1o describe their im-| “A chief figure of the colonization |2 Decoming more and more appare cunras nnd ity ihs | estry conference for these three states | %G 20 (8¢ "oac- ;- case would be worse than eve No | presTions. one raving the animal is alwas Edward’ Gibbon ~Wakefield = as)as i SRRTITHR FhRs s aaharh o et 1ards and with the | his month called by the Indiana con- """‘:’d Comturies 280 the dNestion|Goubt Germany wili nl once set tolbig leg. another contends ke is a litte | bizarre a racter as hix assoc _n;on!hbu g $hns Lt rigbeto asargh o man's el en €XPeri-|gervation commission for the DUT-| And sae Of (he gretoct o oinola T work to repair her war losses indust- | tal a tusk and a fourth alwith such diptinctive dominion | house for such stores of lauor as ederal help in the|poce of finding out what Béat i S Jme Of L0 Sheate chelars of and Ghaneially: while she will We are too near the | would imply. After serving a prison may h o8 1 | for hi condition appears to|Rope in K SEeE Tt M. | e [replied: hhings. which WiIl| send abroad immi- to main a proper perspective | sentence in England for abducting an|sumption. The main Intent of proh been given the necded rerhod done in the opinlon 6f experts in for-|be of use to them when they are men! specially tc America resulis; and the historlan Is|heiress by means of forged letiers, he|bition 1s (o remove tempiation in f e s s B *d¥. lestry and conservation to *his swer, after enduri & S| Aoyerits i : = Byl 7 Hament!form of the countless saloons th try Al vation to insure the|This answer, after RO WG A siaic, . Ghmary who maintains a careful re-fwas debarred from th e e e i e which he later exerted an H thousand vears, needs no amendment; | supply for the future ! of education today That ought te be an excelient op- prohibitionists influence to aid in [£TY he trect THE SHANTUNG AMENDMENT. was skilful in utilizing the mailed fist but potent f the points of the treaty re-|portunity for the master minds who el iproved to; = e e n e S carrying out the colpnization plan | The radical prohibitionists may much opposition is that deal-|are working alone simitar lines to ex- | faly °fbrace the possibilitics of \his| . . i.inc in this life. The man shores of ice ‘-30"111’t’“llllx:‘dum:r;:(al;";‘:(-lnrvw::;‘ e L e o - i the Shartung peninsula, and | change views relativé to the needs of | anq empioyment Is necessars 1o 4| in the pew is there to hear the truth, hissing wllars of steam and |funcamental part of s Botey Wi%ias privately stored liquor they opposition o of the|that particulat section, There seems|man's full development and usefulness,|and he knows he meeds it in its most|columned vapors puncture the surface.| lo avold ereatl landed = estates —hef PG ItR S Enec, AAaT (UG OT0 B in Which Clina is treated. In-|little question bul wha: while thére|as well as the mental culture which| penetrating form. The truth. like the phenomena comparable unly to the:DIAIGCUORS, EIVIRE @¥ay OF B (5 tne ena of which can only be anarch Fing back ts China the ter-|is need of making every possible use{may be applied o solve problems or|roscbush, always has prickers upon it jsteaming, vaporous valley L {hough his early disgrace still| Prohibitionists have long been loud in Germiany Aad in (hat re.|of all the raw material available there | increase happiness. There is certainly|and they are never too much for thé |["Thcucand Smokes, near Mt. Katmai ifnaly. though W8 sarly Qissvace SUML| (o defense ‘of sthe law R in Ziten o Japan. andlis also need of giving plenty of|NO equality of ability or capacity|amiables, bui they are always too long e in Alaska, It is a case]predudonvims and Atents, he ranked as|now see to1t that law s not subvert Japap has =:i¢ ihat i:|thought Ig the matter of reforestation |STONE Men! What some can acquire for the hypacrites. sssbidal e cherches 1o volcan, and the vol-|lhe foremost coloniil authority of hisied Ithe interest of temporary aridi- P":;":] Y _Izarge in the past the requirements offics. It was Maeterlinck, with his in-|littic heed. They not only do not pray|ier of White Lsland. d]"or_ ‘(m- tl‘:l:rl:;:l P per TR R R Hard to Tell. t Wilson bas declared thaila growing coumtty must b ot Tor | springs district extends into the s R o SR R s e be gziven i did not favor the arrangement but|proper consideration and from theg‘wzy Te aporoved it because i: was the|in which our lumber supply is dimin- ©st that could be done under the cir- | ishing the.quicker steps are taken to cumstances and telieves prepare for the future the better it| ! be faithful in carrying out its|will be. { T { One section of the country it is thus | Fa” pray if sincere, believing, but they ternational literary repute, who was | obliged to confess that he did not their enemies—an act which, { know so much about cube root as a|brings to them a spiritual .sense which 3 horse. {in effect amounts to a direzt blessing. | 10WF veils of We not infraquently venture an There is still too much of the viper in| i ‘[hra»“:‘::w opinion as to how good or how bag a!us: and the old poison glands have 8= tHe HOWEs but it is an undeniable fact!noi become atrophied. What makes Mments—compu g being masters of soul | praver effactive is sincerily. not self- Pensions. tax exemptions § eak | of substance gained a foothold in New A e T o hoaded in bil.| Zealand, that Indusiry rather than veils of white vapor. j exploitation became the motife of the The publicist because it|colony, and that the fundamental alm governmental experi- | Of the government still is that of ‘no rv arbitration, old age| millionaires and no paupers.’ e on small| “The island population, exclusive of Maoris, now exceeds a million. The idle 8o much it isn't hard to tell which they'd choose—working or loafing oston Transeript. that Japan! not effort in the : e ; or| Pt o 4. S he treaty lienate has beenindicated seems to be alive to the!capabie of discovering motives we ave|lhness. To love the Lerd thy God |farms, for example—New Zealand in-{NACTIS MOW, cXceeds s m{lon The the treaty amended so that|conditions. It is time that more of|always in the dark concerning the| thy heart and thy neighbor terests the geologist for an opposite| | ™%, 3 pogition of eminence, baing Shactung would be siven (o China;them were instead of waiting until it|goodness or badness of any one: and < is the price of true spiritual | reasen, hecause i is among (he oldest| L recanted in the legislative assembly, St. James Hall, Wauregan nstead of Japan. and this is too late then bemoan their negli-|in this direction are always at sea! which reacts upon the hi- g e P in the cabinet, and having physieians, - JETE > g country o t ol o i | face M ;‘;‘;‘,‘,‘,,;‘;:“}',,g“;‘,;:;";hifn,{‘,"r‘mfi“’“}j,f’fi:'!‘ “Seldom is a clearer illustration to! cause of the action of love. of which ! K;N’]\af D:;D)'i‘he I:‘\fl';;c(_!'flt:: d.’i:?g;flqu! the reaction s knowledge of spiritual |\ on" was dupiicated in New Zealand, Ly gy 2. e ! once withgihe Maoris, and then with| | the Engi colonists. . The Maoris, NEW ZEALAND AND | amons the most remarkable of all ITS CURIOSITIES | cavage tribes. are Polynesians. Gew Zoalanders, so far out: came, some 500 yvears ago, H trask of worid cvents|from Tahiti, and found the aborigines that their institutions and customs | ‘unappet but, as the event proved, bav developed along uniqus lines, and | not indigestible.’ <o gelf sustaining that the Worll War, “The climate of New Zealand, with | scurcely affected Lheir food supply. are | jt« ‘elasti¢ air and perpetual motion.’ i nct isolated enouzh to escape the uii-|is more stimulating than the enervat-| 2} versal pinch of hizgh iivin {ing air of most Polynesian islands not become party n of this terfitory frim China even | Japan later on returns it. or that t wouid not sanction the giving it to| Japan and take the chances of its ever zetting back where it belongs. In oth- er words the effort was made to have s country wash its hands of sign- ng away in black and white to one! country what belonged to another, but! this ias failed acco<ing to the action of the senate. The It {o etr wrong didn'. succeca ltis overcomes the possibiiity 8f an amendment upon this particular fea- attorneys and other professional of note among their numbers. men| SATURDAY EVENING, OCT. 18TH PICKETT'S ORCHESTRA is with ourselves. We think some people| are bad because they will not do as we think they should, when they are duty bound to do as they think they ought. We are capable of identifying a trend. but totally incapable of com- passing to the full quality or lack of it in ourselves or others. In life the wolves are aiways mixed with the sheep, because of our inability to identify them. Man as a creature stands nearest to God. and one charge against him is that he steals the livery EDITORIAL NOTES. ¥ fellow who is sticking to his job these days knows what it is to let a Zood thing aionme. T T at the. couniry wants to hear now is that the coal strike has been declared off before it starts. BREED THEATRE Four Shows Today 1:30—3—6 and 8 P. M. Anita Stewart Ever the of the beaten Sunday Evening TWO SHOWS AT 7 and 8:30 If they keep it up much longer the HP b et i n : of Heaven to serve the devil in. gal wil e as popular a i sloban ap (he full Ginnee Sl ! While we can tell what makes the {leaves take on their autumn color: ture and probably any other though it eniirely probable that it will be A vaudeville actor battling a burgiar in a Providerice hotel ought to be the taken up in gonnection with the reser- | entertainer that such a stunt might vations that are certain to be made|make a hit on the stage. and therein the United States can state its unwillingmess to be bound| The best evidence as to Whether the treaty terms in this respect. |the Thanksgiving night celebration Bven as the Amecrican Jdelegation|has died out heré is the unmolested rrotested when the Shantung provis- | ashbarrel. r was under consideration in the peace conference it cunnot fail to be| The worst, of the unautherized strikes is that. like a lot of home made drinkables with a kick in them, they are dangerous. rstood that even rhough the sen- ate has refused to make any textual change n this respect ii shows strong sentiment in favor thereof and against the way ian which this matter was handled the peace conference KEEP UP THE BARS. Right in keepin: with what is need- ed at the present time is thée attion of the lower house of congress in pass- inz the bill that will extend for a year after peace s dectared the emergency war time control of passports. Noth- ing more than the conditions in the d1v could be required to in. th: passage +f ouch legisia- With the statement made that thers are 10,000 radicals aclively at work in the coumtry who ougght to be Aeported it can be appreciated that we io mot want to increase that number *y imperting them from Eurepe., For Europe has them in greater number and they would be only too glad to get the chance to get into the United ‘When Attorney General Palmer sets out to reduce the cost of living he certainly has a great and popular zoal before him. b: The man on the corner says: Some peopie conduct themselves as if they thought that bomb efficiericy was what the country was demandimg. If Germany insists upon Foch get- ting von der Goltz out of the Baltic provinces, il ought to kAow that he is just the man who can do the job. With Generai Woed and Colonel Mapes on the scent any reds hiding in Gary might just as well come to the ligth and get ready to start for heme. The girls who used to bé horrified at the tales or siEht of ola women smoking pipes are probably watching SQtates for such good as they might do | themselves in the mirror as thy ihemselves and such barm as they | SMoke cigarettes. might do the comrtry. - = = With trouble cnough of tais kind|g LDt ’f"“:"".’ll:k'!::g m:e!cedr::z cn our hands, with plans being mede :""’e“e:“"" Bosto he pétien rid of his ac- cumulations dfig tha war when ‘prices were higher. to deport maay that are here the safest way is to bar the umdesirables. Hav- ng set up difficult obstacles to the se- curing of passports under war condi- | It doean’t look now as if we éver tions that furnishes an admirable| would know what afls the president méans of accomplishing just what is|unless he is withhelding it for a spe- cesired. cial ‘message te COngress just as soon When our diplomatic aad consular is not so easy to tell why the birds re turn to their autumn notes.. Of course, the season for mating is past, and the luilaby stage of voung bird.dom has| gone by, and no longer the. cuckoo sings to his mate: but why should the bluejay be screeching iike a cart- wheel crying for grease? There is nothing musical in his cry, although| his plumage is gorgeous, and he does not carry himself with grace. He and the handsome merganser duck are at the head of our true Yankee birds for Dbeauty: and, as to his habits, they are like our own. open to criticism. Au-| tumn has its peculiar noises and skies | as well as colors. , The old Goiden Rule is out of sight. and the new one—Do him quick. or he’ll do you!"—was never home in evi- dence as a force. Mankind has been following the wrong trail, and it is go- ing to go over the precipice of Distrust into the zorge of Damnation if it does not retrace its steps to the plain of Honesty. The Golden Rule declares a divine truth which would make mor- tal life heavenly, and for it there is no substitute. The price of departure from it is all the confusion and con- flict we witness in life—all the crime and tragedies. It is a fearful price to pay. When man has learned how to live right in this world, he knows how t6 live right in the world to come. There is no cutting across lots to the millenniom. 1 do net knew how it is with vou, but when I sit in a pew I always ad- mire the man in the pulpit who hits me. It is impossible for him to take the people to task for their sins of commission and sins of omission with- out hitting all of us—and our sins. of omission are usually our worst, since they often lead right to sins of com- mission. 1 shouldn’t want to be prais- ed because my sermon was so intellect- ual, for evidences of its effectiveness are more creditable. There i5 teo much ehez, 1 ciety has consern- cording to recent disps The National Geogr.phic -cued the followin-; hulletin ing our antipodal neighbor. “Imagine boot-like Ttaly with the tip of her peninsular toe | pointed toward the eastern coast of | Australia, some 1,000 miles distant, | and you gain a picture both in size | and contour. of New Zealand. i “Long accounted a social scienoe‘x aboratory and political experiment | station. some phyhical features of New Zealand are equally unusual. Zoo- | logists found there a tailless bird, ! evolutionary souvenir, they belleve, of | the now extinct wingless moa. ranging | in size from that of a turkey to a | super-ostrich height of twelve feet | from head to ground. Then there is a_caterpillar which dies but to live again in the form of a pfant. which blossoms and goes to seed. “In_the instep 6f the isiand boot is an_area equal to that of Connecticut and Delaware together, where boiling inverted | these savage cannibals were developed | weave. food was not waiting to be plucked | from trees, and shelter had to be pro- vided. Hence the latent instincts of here as nowhere else and, even before the English came, the Maoris had gable roofed hou: with elaborately | carved posts and lintels, and interiors decorated with designs of crude beauty. “Women ' were needed in the strug- gle. against harsher natural 'forces, so they won positions of esteem, and were represented in tribal counci They were ingenious enough to bake mea on heated stones: but not too civilized to roast especially tough cuts of human flesh on this aboriginal fire- less cooker. They alone among the Pacific islanders, discovered how to Yet they knew not the usel of minerals, and their léviathan can-! ves. lashed together, were constructed with tools of stone, shell. bones, and even of humanh teeth. ““Huropean discovery of the ands “A MIDNIGHT A Screen Treat Superb C cludes Jack Holt, Edward Tilton, Mrs. sock, MAE MARSH —IN— PATHE NEWS is attributed to Tasman, In 1642, but IN LOIS WEBER'S PRODUCTION ROMANCE” SPOTLIGHT SADIE A Delightful Comedy Drama GERALDINE FARRAR —IN— “SHADOWS” A POWERFUL SIX PART DRAMA SHOWING THE WAY OF A In- Juanita Hansen, Elinor Man- Helen Yoder and 200 Others. WOMAN IN THE DARK HOUR OF LIFE. WILLIAM PARSONS —IN— BILL’S OPPORTUNITY . LATEST NEWS TOPICS "TODAY AT—1:30, 3:15, 6:15, 8:15 WM. S. HART —IN— ) “SQUARE DEAL 7 SAUNDERSON” A RED BLOODED W STERN. STORY_IN SIX ACTS LILA LEE —IN— “A DAUGHTER OF A FIVE PART SMASHING STORY OF THE GREAT NORTHWEST. A ufi IN THE HOUSE 2000 FEET OF COMEDY- ONE NIGHT ONLY, THURSDAY; OCTOBER 23rd “IT 1S TOO GOOD TO . M Messrs. Lee and J. J. Shubert Present RACHEL CROTHERS’ GREATEST COMEDY 39 EAST As Played All Last Season In New York 1SS”"—New York World. . SUNDAY 'NIGHT AT 7 and 8:30 -EXTRA SPECIAL ! SAMUEL GOLDWYN PRESENTS MABEL '/ "NORMAND N~ “UPSTAIRS” A Six Part Ragtime Romance, Made t6 Make Everyone Happy and Noth- ing Efse. 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