Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“DECEMBER” 11; 1919 NORWICH BULLETIN, THU Ie tetier. gor Eisie from her cousin, Jane, Jane said she was coming to see Elsie at grandfather's house. The two girls had a good time togeth- RSDAY, SHOWS ROOSEVELT HAD LOFTY IDEALS 1 New York, Dec. 10.—A new and in- teresting explanation of . Colonel Roosevelt's objection to the use of the phrase “In God We'Trust” on United States coins, is afforded in an article er. / At the last, Elsie had to go-home, dnd back to sbhool. She never forgof what a good time. she had at her. grandfather’s house.. MIRIAM PARKER, Age 11. Mansfield. We Have 200 Tor;j ef well to have inscribed on our na- tional monuments, in our temples of justice, in our legislative halls, .and in buildings such as those at West Hii Piles Now 88 Years Old But Works at Trade n|on November 11, 1907, to a clergyman who had differed with him about plac- ing_the motto on the coins read: I did net have much time to hoe my gu\ieln. but I hoed it about six times in_all. e Point and ‘Annapolis—in shert, where- 2 2 ‘ 1 7 > of Blacksmith and Feels Younger |in the December Scribner's by Joseph | ever it will tend o arouse and inspire The Story of My Garde < i » i( 8 e ““fi“ Eg s Since Piles Are Gone. Bucklin +Bishop, the former presi-la lofty emotion in thase.who look AR 1% 44 dent’s blographer. thereon. But it seems to me eminently | I had potatoes, tomatoes, ‘musk- e % ; active blacksmith in| A letter written by Mr. Rooséveltfunwise to cheapen such a motto . by|melan and squash in my garden. - - : : The eldest Michigan is still pounding his anvil i “he town of Homer— ternal use on coins, just as it would be to cheapen it by use on postage stamps, o thanks to my in- method of treating piles. “When the question of the new coin- age came up we looked into the law and found there was no warrant therein for putting ‘In God We Trust' on the ocins. As the custom, al- though without legal warrant, had grown up, however, I might have felt at liberty to keep the inscription-had 1 approved of its being on the coinage. But as I did not approve of it, I did not direct that it should again be put on. Of course the matter of the law is -absolutely in the hands of con- gress, and any direction of congress in the matter will be immediately obeyed. At present, as I have said, there is no warrant in law for the in- scription, “My own feeling in the matter is due to my very firm conviction that to put-such a motto on coins, or to use it in any kindred manner, not only does no goed but does positive harm, Mz, Jmcob Lyom, Homer, Mich, ! wish that you could hear him tell|and g in effect jrreverence which of his many experiences with oint-|comes dangerously close to sacrilege. ments, salves, dilators, ete, before he| “A beautifyl and solemn sentence tried my method Here is a letter just from him: such as the ome In question should be treated and uttered only with that fine Page, Marshall, Mich me to find that my supvorters are to| = Reports received from New England 1 5 S 1 owant you 6 know what |Teverence which necessarily implies a[be found among the overwhelming|and made public today by Major Gen- | | e for me certaln exaltation of &p Any_use | majority whom Abraham Lincoln call- | eral William G. Haan, in charge Of | i u v pile Or mAany years which tends to cheapen it, and above|ed the ‘plain people.’ As I suppose you |the war department’s employment a e i used suppositories and all kinds offall any use which tends to secure its|know, Lincoln is my hero. He was a | tivities, show that the soldier emplo: Bears e Signaturs of . | {reatments: but never got r'_l!u)r "v'.'f".f being treated in a spirit of levity,|man of the people whe always felt | ment situation in that territory has i ) i o ‘n','f,.f;:‘-""\ i 8 yoin oo End the s {mm ev:r:d standpoint profoundly | with and for the people, but who had |proved somewhat during the past st active blacksmith in Michigan, 1|0, be regretted. not the slightest touch of the dema-|month. ¢ T Piles have| “It is a motto which is it indeed|goge in him.” 1 In eight representative cities during mend it to November, 1.642 ex-service men were way. You or in advertisements.” Among the 150,000 letters written by Colonel Roosevelt during his public career, Mr. Bishop said he found a number from Rudyard Kipling, writ- ten in that famous author's character- istic way, that is. in the tinjest chiro- graphy. In a letter written in 1908 the Colonel said: “Great Heart is my fa- vorite charaecter in allegory, just as the M but M written; and I think that Abraham|the Lincoln is the ideal ‘Great-Heart' of [ the public life” He returned to this.idea| T about Lincoln from time to time, a o ¥ other. Soon T caught a fine, big{- fact which explains the origin of Kip- | trout. ling’s memorial poex entitled “Great-1 “In all I caught a dozen fishes. . I Heart," written when the colonel died. Colonel Roosevelt’s admiration for the Great Emancipator was also shown in a letter which he wrete on Mareh 9, 1905, a few days after his inaug- uration, to Sir George Trevelyan, the English historian and nephew of Macaulay in which ‘the colonel said: “Tt has been peculiarly pleasant to for The; 1se my let y way hope it will lead others to try anderful remedy urs trul WIDE-AWAKE CIRCLE (Continued from Page Ten) once an English colony, has more En- glish-speaking people than England herself. Australia, New Zealand and South Africa are English-speaking colonies, Every American boy and girl should know the leading events connected with the origin and growth of their language, J. L. LYON. fflicted peo- » have never ay of treat- nsible v t waste money on ts, dllators, etc., ee Trial of my the healing of ir case is of s handicapped with a large foreigh pop- | = e 'l "The original inhabitants of Engla . : . R er ot oyttt Fwho wereflulkdnl'l'?rltnns,lsx:;ukgn:lx;:‘d: Little Flsie was visiting ber grand.|ulation, the American Legion in co- 3 wol'th 33 00 fOl' 52;00 : hid ' free triall guage somewhat like ~ the modern|Mother. Her grandmother was busy|operation With other ageficies has been = B RFRIVSRs Slereieitoe minis % s Tuy Welsh. They were conquered by the|making pies, puddings, and baking the |able to place 200 of the 322 men reg- 3 B B B aei et TREY Ere Danndere R Ly hEl Bl istering. On e other hand Water- |England, the country us's whale still| back in'y few nouss, New there must fon__if you | Romans at at ¢ beglnpiag Grandfather nad found the rosy ap- roports conditions 2 aces a_genuifie: problem. “In 124 ‘citickh e a long, expondive. trip by traln, witn GRE SOLVENT - method will | Christi 2 i o With the American Legion on | only 20,375 former ghting men havéla stop-over-night'al a hotel - ) ee treatment|ons. were Ariven Tty ‘the "arve Brit {Deen ‘to_the store and got oranges|the job. Severe weather e el Novahar ; . Sonato : too. imp to nelect a|north of the island, held by the Ro- |Brapes. banznas, and potatoes. e s o = SR IOV © DS, Praie et l-pound can 15c nele day , mow. 'Send . molmdne ‘v the three German tribes,| Little Eisie had got flowers with|the employment office at Springfield. | figures. . Bela: Kun is 'said fo have escaped to R R R R RO & mones. Simply mall the caupon—but| e’ gazons and Angles, They sers|Which to decorate the tables. ~She{This city Copops S e sy, - = Italy and.to:be stirring up . trouble ge iratical peoples who had lived on the|Save o poor sauirrel some nuts: The |Tegistrations and men placed in jobs To Jail By Airplane. there: . Thats umprotessional, . of|| 3 ]-pound cans 40¢c P peoples, ived on the | &% LR than_in any other period since Ausust: ; B R R R Ll shores of the North Sea near the mouth| Xt day her mother would come and| 2 tting work out of 219 The practicé of ‘cofveying" prisoners] Gaurse, he knows D'Annungjo is work FREE PILE REMEDY ||t *the Rhino, the Weser. andthe | at dinner with them, _then she would |37 men getting work out of 212 e oeying prisoners] ine that. side-of.the strest.—Macon Tel- R. Page Elbe. These tribes swarmed into. 80 back home. Elsle would spend an-JPAadil. olor providence. R T: the o ntly " when™ Lyan Gates;}€8raph. 4B Page Rl Marshall, M Britain, bringing their own language|Other week with her grandmother. dicate that th tlook in that city i ¢ of -the - San. Francisco N B TRTR : age Rldg.. Marshall, Mich. ith th 1 hey all called | To Binle it seemed a’ long time to}LICUE HAS theontiegin dn that iy ice Ry s sil s: Lot y Please send free trial of your || W em. Tn time they all called to PIGt & seemel & (ong MM e |very satisfactory. Although the clos- [department, flew across the bay to ilence Says a Lot. \ . s themselves Angles, and thelr speechj Wit While she was wailing she | o'of the Maine summer hotel season | Alameda and retusned with James M.| Gompers: says “big husiness is de- came to be known as English. e g c,;mfl e b‘“’,v as thrown much additional labor un Kelley, who, had ‘been sentenced t0f¢ormised to give labar & blow between This early period of the English lan-| i 13 tausat & ?3‘“{)’” “l {‘ ‘“‘i the market, Portland. Bath, Dangor and | six months in jail. Kelley, who Was [i}o eves™ but is: silent about labor's & fuage, extemting from about 430 to TRt vl 1t Fotons bt Augusta report seiisfaciory progress | brought across with no bhandeufts oni L5 desire to- lyneh capital and : , is often called Ol English. il 2 jight. n Concord and Manc X. H.|says he enjoyed the (rib across the|3PPErE L = o ot g : In 1086 occurred the battle of Has e il mof, Sleep Much, She was| conditions are good. and in Burlington though 1t was rather short—less |assault the publie.Wall Strest Journal. |} Bylietin Building 74 Franklin Street ings, in which William of Normandy|S° i 3 . day shel,nq Montnelier, Vt.. there is little un- | than five minutes. The airplane : =| overthrew Harold, Saxon king. Wil-|Went with her grandfather in his bE| employment. up 5.000 feei, Clief of Poiice White| Engraving on wood was long known Telephone 531-4 A s Siis. liam's followers were calleq North-|far (o Pt 1€t Mother, Tvhen hev] In making this renort public General s’ “Think what a saving it will be in- China, but. began in Europe witi A men. e tabie SEH AS ONy Haan points out that notwithstanding |if we can send . plane to Reno or|wmanufacture .of playig cards about ng to stand the public on its| What is called modern English be-| Mg WM 0 o the fairly satisfactory situation in New | Los Angeles for a'man’ and have him-l 100. s a more serous game than|gins about the time of Shakespeare.|, . 5o had the wishbone of the tu o i a vaukee Journ; group.—Mil- | English had then | which we of today are able to under- | {stand without special study. This pe- riod extends from about 1500 to the present time. ‘| " Our language is growing. It began with the German tribes who crossed the English channel, In the fifth cen- tury. New words, names sumed form | What Every Married Man Knows. | S of new inven-| se with plenty of fresh A ciean h tions ang discoveries, are being add- | s e ong step in theied to our language. For example, tel- ion o . the United | egraph, telephone, dynamo, phono- | Pubiic h Service. graph, et | words W m. 5 HARRY SCHATZ, Age 13. | but lately Yantic. Head Of The World League Against Alcoholism | A Merry Thanksgiving. A young woman and an old lady were sitting window. They were both waiting for their husbands who went to fight for liberty. ~ The young woman was thinking about her wedding day when they were all so happy. They had 50 people at their wedding and had wonderful gifts. The husband’s friends were rich people, | and he had given her the most beauti- | ful bedroom set. He wWrote her letters every day. Now as the armistice was signed he had written her that he was coming home. Her father was also coming | home. 1t was Thanksgiving and it would be a happy Thanksgiving for them. All lin a “Bayer package, of a sudden’ she heard the bell ring. She ran as fast as she could and her mother, also, ran to the door. But who should she see, her husband and his relatives: and also her ‘father. That was a happy reunion and _ft would always be remembered in that house since Thanksgiving, 1919. _MARY LIPPS, Age 13. New London. and 4 ban; 228 appl are key. They had a very vleas: d then’ grandfather fook see her mother start home on a trai) of cars, The next day in the mail there was ASPIRIN FOR HEADACHE | @ Name ‘‘Bayer” is on Genuine n—sav Bayer Insist on “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” ontaining pro- Headache, Colds, per directions for- Pain, Neuralgia, Lumhago, and Rhey- matism. Name “Bayer” ineans- gen- uine Aspirin prescribed by physicians for nineteen years. Handy tin boxes of 12 tablets cost few cents. Aspirin is trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. Ernest Hurst Cherrington, head of the “World League Against Al- + eoholiam.” organized to establish world-wide prohibition. “Pussy- foot” Johpsou. one of his assistants, was recsutly mobbed in London. Says His Prescription Has Powerful Influence Over Rheumatism Discoverer Tells Net te Take & Cent of Amyome's Momey Usless Allenrhu Completely | Banishes All Rhcumstic Paing and Twinges. Mr. James H. Allen suffered for years with rheumatigm. Many times this terrible disease left him’ heipless and unable to work. He finally decided, after ceaseless study, fres from sm cumulated impurities, commonly called uric acld deposits, were dissolved in the joints and muscles and expelled from the body. With this idea in mind, he consulted physicians, made experiménts and final- ly compounded a prescription that quickly and completely banished every sign and symptom of rheumatism from m'n:’:“:'u his @ T gave s iscovery to others who took It, with what might success. be ealled marvelous years of that no ome ecan.be until the are all lisble to catch o A ‘: know about his dis- covery threugh the newspapers. Cempany has bmelp)a l\l!’ rhu in this vicinity with ng that they '”'l{!lll’ ‘mone; 0" Beneds. *! ¥ agents for tBe understand! return the In this climate with its sudden ¢l Briggs’ Mentholated-Hoarhound Cough Drops are a safeguard — It is good policy to have a box handy. They relieve the cough at once. C. A. BRIGGS CO. CAMBRIDGE, MASS, Makers of Briggs' Boston Wafers cold. My potatoes took second prize at | orite @ ) | One day T went fishing at the pond Pilgrim’s Progress is to my mind one |7 baited my hook with a grasshopper,|. of the greatest books that was everiand soon 1 saw the cork bobbing on took-them home and mother fried them ‘Mansfield. placed in jobs out of 2708 seeking em- ployment, as against 1,630 finding jobs ious month. Boston alone still shows more than ' half with 1, ever, despite the fact that this city € To Offer S 2 AT A VERY LOW PRICE PHONE 1257 Mansfield fair, y father helped me harvest them, my potatoes are rotting very bad- MIRIAM PARKER, Age 11, ansfield. My Fishing ‘Trip. Shetuckét Coal & Wood Co. water. ‘T pulled the Mne.n, but fish fell back into the water. . caught three perch. one- after. an- »S,'a—haruéess supstiture: than thirty years dinner, vation. me, and we ate them for Y. were fine. STANLEY PARKER, Age 8. | . ew Englq:d slikun on on Soldier-] ¢ ,Sthlgaren’s?Mélg‘gfi - s Sriend. . ; - cenuine CASTORIA awwars PURE ALUMINUM SAUCE PANS lquartsize .:...0........... . .cu0le Wo-quart size ............... .5 . 75¢ 2-quart size .....................51:00 One Set of All Three 7] 4 In Use For Over 30 Years ; Tne King ¥ou Have Always Beosgnt s 3,027 registering during the pre this unemployment men looking for ‘work and placed. ew Haven, has proven (o be the ner city during November. with men getting jobs against 205 new licants, Conditions in Bridgeport not altogether satisfactory. How - TWO SPECIAL CHRISTMAS CLUB OFFERS | VICTROLA 1 PER ONLY WEEK CLUB ; No. 1 One heautiful Cabimet Victrola, in mahogany, with automatic -step, powerful twa spring-motor, seven shelves for album, and .(5:Double Face Records), either Victor or Columbia, 100 “loud ‘tone, 100 soft tone, and one package of fibre subdued tone needles, delivered to your hgme without any extras or interest of any kind, with our absolute guar- antee of service-and satisfaction, complete at $ l l4| 25 “To Club Members Only On the Special Terms of $1.00 a Week LApaY l PER , CLUR » oNLY $ WEEK No.-2 . A beautiful, large, upright Grafonola, with powerful spring miotor, splendidColimbia construction, ‘with all improve- ments, with (5 Double Face Records),:100.loud tone, 100 soft tone, and one package: of-subdued needles, all complete ~without any extras-.or .interest of any.kind, with our abSolute guarantee of sérvice and' satisfac- fHonpat di.. .o adoE oo $l29n25 To Club Meinbers Only On the Special Terms of $1.00.a Week All s_tyles of Victrolas md Grafonolas, From $25.00 to $300.00 = SELECT NOW-FOR CHRISTMAS GRAFONOLA VICTOR V%ROLAS my,viCTOR RECORDS COMPLETE LIST OF | VICTOR RECORDS COMPLETE LIST OF COLUMBIA RECORDS: The Store of Victor Service Supreme St. ' Norwich,Conn. Main: