Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 3, 1920, Page 4

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SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1 T RAL RENEDY OF SUGAR SHORTAGE o good “that| tons, very few of which ‘ever sugar shortage has been said e ) LA good 1o e e holopioal, Tnstead f beink psychological, as .’g:\:g by an eminent poragy and more or less ficticious? writes Malcolm H. Stuart in the Bos- ton Transcript. ¥ ‘| labor frouble of the smoll plaster would soon become the labor tréuble of the big company, and the faet that the price paid to the small planter on a percentage basis must eat into the margin of profit of the big company, is not mentioned. It would be much more profitable for the hig company | ‘te_grow on its lands all the cane its | tent of the cane through .its various transformations, it is interesting - to congider its increase in value, or bet- ‘ter expressed, in selling price, from one cemt a pound to two dollars & | The first-named price is ap- proximately. what the small planters receive. ‘Brice is that received by some of the Fifth avenue stores in New York for in ornate boxes.t ourseives out of are the orable and the worst kind good gift for friends, or others, and govd werds for the rest of the vear fur everybedy, is good resolution enough. | wonder if we moderns live ri This matter 'of living right is far heing stable in the world of ideas. Ol Pythageras thought that to one must thrice review the transac. tions of each day, that he might be sure as to the valug of what he had done, and of the injury which mght accrue from things he had not. done; BERGER AND THE LEGION. Vietor Berger a speaking tour but he is not finding the country as sympathetic with him and his ideas| s |as Milwaukee is Bnd the privilege of tle OMce 23 Churen Nt Telotgme: 5. | speaking in at leait two New England ~— cities has been denied him. Berger is enconntering the oppesi- tion of the American Legion but in no greater degree than he must ex- pect in view of the stand that he has calleg candy. At a time when the word “sugar” Is. on each lip, and ‘in the taken and the statements he has) mills grind. Another c¢ompany converts its bonds into common stock, giving thirteen or fourleen shares of stock for each one thousand-doltar bond The .bond holders, instead of reeeiv- ing fifty or sixty dellars a year divi-| dend, are to rcceivé sixty-five or sev- enty dollars a year through the ex- change. Very pleasant for the bond holders, but net so satisfactory to the treasury of the company. The literature whose purpose is to sell sugar stocks tells how a company which expects an outptt from ifs each and eve a few intelligi man, it ‘appears that e comments on sugar might dispel the bewilderment of the unfortunate public. comuveiled to read propaganda and to depend wpon it for sueh information There | 8s it -affords. Hag' the world forgotten the Island of Java, one of the Duteh East Indies? In the early spring of the year 1918 the -infermation was -published aore than 1.000,000 tons of cane sugar were “in_ store in the iglands of the Dutch East Indies, for the long voyvage fo.and from. I rope prevented ' its export. but in this fast age what a man does daily or leaves undone is not allowed people realize that the one first to be suspected . should be ourse the suspicions of ourselves are the 1t was only this week. at De- troit that ‘he deciared that the Le- gion’s “purpeose is to ‘fight bolshevism and any person- who wants a half dol- lar increase in salary is“a bolshevik. The American Legion is nothing but the tool of trusts.” /When the members of the:American Legion: went inte the.: servieewf their cotmtry, which is ‘the enly thifig-that entitles them to membership therein, they were, the.same patriptic Ameri- cans that #hey are today, Berger to the contrary notwithstanding, and #t is not an -organization that has been convicted of violating the lasws of the which Berger s Norwich, Saturday, Jan. '8, 1920 the present-day . e CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING DEC. 27th, 1919 10,373 THE CHOICE OF ROOT. One of the provisions of the league of nations covenant was one wise man who used to pray “Deliver me, O Lord, from that evil man, myself!” 2 — No. one .can-be-fed - with - spiritual food who does not meditate upon the truths he hears discussed. There are o spiritual dinpers served free those who are too lazy to work for them. A celebrated -writer onee de- It is easier to ride ten miles|of shipping has continued during the than to meditateperiod intervening. when I get;perennial Tiack of shipping to hear*a sermon it fifteen “minutes There is no. such thing as e truths as a sponge Sugar ‘cane is a! making seasons have pa servative to estimate that Thought has to be|sent time a minumum of 2 asjof cane sugar await export from Java Jand the other fertile parts of this islang group. | Has Peru been forgotten? In Peru there are millig to the growth of sugar cane. The an- nual crop of cane sugar is about one million: tons a quantity equal -to the combined cane and beet sugar crops of the United State. of shipping of sugar from Peru, Other localities might be mentioned, Santo Domingo and Porto Rico, where came sugar,is pro- duced in lesser quantities, but never- theless in large quantities, and where problem has Is that the su-lecapnot lay claim to. The American Legion stands for 100 per cent. Americanism through. an ed- ucational programme. for the deportation of Berger, and all aliens who took .out their first papers then renounced them to avoid military service, It believes that all | foreign language newspapers carry a translation of all matter, that care should be taken to see that relief. organizationg .are not propaganda. organizations in disguise,| ns- -should -leart: ‘the - English language, that -mo chila” born. here of foreign ‘parents” should be "eligible to. hip unlcss the parents were this baving partieniar refer- ence to the Japanese. ‘Tt also helieves: that all draft dodgers should be dealt with sternly, justly and. premptiy and it protests against-.the release . ol from . imprisoament their termis expire. 2 There fs nothing in this programme Legion to indicate that anything more then il elaime to be, an organization 'of veterans with the best interests of the-eountry at heart. absorbing div soaks up water. Fletcherized for soiritual —health food does for physical nourishment.] Hearing sermons .is easy, but assim Iating them = sticks or stones a bath, in spiritual light might be enough, but the sons of God must make it their own. It is funny how many people be- lieve in weather prophets, and laugh at the prophets who uvon what they consider divine data prediet the end of the world at a positive date about every. century. English scientist says the cv weather is 186 years. and that when the record has been carci» this period, the weather of the corre- sponding year is ever aftér the same The government weather bureaugspends large sums of money to be able to predict the weather from submit to the members of the league plans for the establishment of a per- manent court of international justice. the court to hear and determine cases nature submitted @so provided or assembly can ask for its It also stands international ns of acrés is to be expected e league of natioms is orsan- hat there will be no slight re- sponsibility devolving upon this court. i{he announcement The same lack hes retarded the export r that reason e effect that Elihu oot i d to give his advice and to aid in ormation of this court will P& ac- ization that one ) companied b; day by day. ‘een difficult. The beet suger crop of the world is also to be considered. The sugar beet comes to maturity in months, Millions of sugar beets are raised each year in Europe; especially in the plains descending from the Al-| pine Highlands, the plains of Hung- en selected to assist s a matter in which he has v interested and it is a job r he is thoroughly qualified. ad both the experience of a Johnson said his” prayers and guessed and -excelled it for accuracy. for the day and date of the world's| end is as sensible and dependable as reading signs to forecast the weather. When 1 look about me, | for one, wonder when it is that “the meck are going to inherit the earth.” do not cut any iee now-z-days; and there is no evidence that they- have in jthe past two thousand years; put as a divine decree this must be accept- ed as a truth which must surely come to pass; and when it does the proud and the arrogant will. have to go way back and sit down. of meekness stem of grace;” but the botanists have not found and classified it vet, neith- er have the bees gathered its homey. Let me say that the meek are angry here is combined France, and the deita of the Rhine. | Muchi of this land was unravished by TNe women and child- ren work in the fields in these regions 4nd notwithstanding the diminution of man power as the result of the war, it appears that tke output of beet su- gar from nearly | will be on an inereasing secale, through | the gradual return to mormal condi- | v to such a court ent that a wise choice the great war. THE DLD "AND THE NEW. The old year has gone and the rew Much was- expected of 1919 in the way of straightening| out the tangles into which' the world| had Dbecome- involved as the result of | the war, but only a start was madé. The couritry " JawEed forward to shaking off the war shackle§ ized it only to a certain extent. Pe- refore it is of the|Year has come. it should be best pessible foun- these localities We are told “the work more ef- d upon to act in ncern‘rg the world's peace But after all, it is a fact that one's eves turn toward the Pearl of the An- cs—to Cubs, when the word sugar L. is frem Cuba that our country recelves more than early supply of sugar. ditions surreunding its cultivation and | growth are many of our people, First of all, a state of political tran- quility in Cubd. such as now exists | is most necessary, and is conductive to the production of a large t'it bas real- untry has confidence in Elihu adjustinent has made some progrese,f©nlY When they ought to be. but it has encountered: numerous and Perhaps you are wholly unaware of the parts bhirds ‘play upon the earth: similar to the work and occupation of men. The study tribes as a whole show good home-makers. and cliff Awellers, cave - and ground nesters, ‘and road builders and road They act as athletes, street cleaners and scanvengers. iators ,musicians and actors; and in the constructing of their nests hnters of ro- serjous obstacies prevented the com to contentment and prosperity. Tt has E ich the eall to. help suffering - humanity has been sounded respond to the duties in such work in a man- ich will co credit not only to country. He 1is the man for the job. - of which have onz which tend been a year in wi them to be many times bt the task is not fin- 1ghed, . There will be much of such work to be carried en throughout the The poor and the suffering are to be found on all sides, Trade development has been an outstanding feature of the past year with - the- demand for goods - greater than could . be conditions have been such as to fur- nish a regrettablc handicap which has PROHIBITION VIOLATORS. ndications the authorities done good work in ar- resting those who have been found te be ~onnected with of the chief factors making of a cron in Cuba is the con- dition of the knmown ag the of sugar cane, per centage basi: sugar mills, The | s and other small fshermen they from a mingow to have the villainous habit of hunting one another, full of wonders though not which they sell on to the “Ingenios { Colonos. a wort. continal econom o many deaths y, but it seems quite cer- n § ar with the mill | owners over the question of percent- ages. The Colonos bear the heat and burden of the day. not been completely eliminated and many problemis in connection with remain to be met. We hiave been going through s peried of.-high prices which has: coniributed mot slightiy to the spirit of unrest, but what has exhibitions of dis. the precious | the mille at a pricc which means abont one cent a poung for the | jsugar content of the cane. This is the beginnii om the grower to during which many fatten the es on this essential commodi the transformation elling price from a cent a pound to two dollars a pound takes place. The cutting and grinding season is| now beginning in Cuba for the crop But the warehouses he illegal! traf- much-real whisk ve been sold might ask, What.would home be with There is no ewidence fich a home would be heavenly, but there is something admirable and diz- out a tempes? been worse has been the ‘organized ac- | tivity of the radicals, In the new year we look forward to the settlement of the peace question, the enactment of much important leg- ation bearing upon the future wel- fare of ‘the couniry and getting away from the fag énds of war conditions. Tt is likewise @ vear in which cholcé will be made of a pew president in all t will be a year filled with large poggibilities and whether they .are reali s will depend large extent-on the mattet in which they aré faced. “Talk will Tiof et us anywhere; action® is what ‘is needed. of knowing nified in 2 home in which tem held in abeyance. things to deal with is righteous nation, becausg it is a bonehead duet. Righteousness. displaces per and installs harmony. never heard that Satan had any use | for ‘temper except to buvn those who aré tempery! but a little goes a good ways. It is not wise to be talking of what one suspects; and it is far from being | so to tall top freely 3 s well to remember “that | diseretion in speech is.more than elo- | guence.”™ Nothing can result in great- er’ loss, or deeper regrets, than care- lessness in this direction. said in wrath has to be repented at | and sometimes the done eannet be repaired in a This is why classed as golden. to .be sorry for what has never been To be garrulous and to whisper scandal is to leave a To be modest One of the rde simnly add emplas during which relied upen tc enforee the pro- o those who are willi 1ances connected with be obtained, ng to take the the sale of it znd there are o provide or, is necessary, At the seaports, h wharves and freight B countless bags of sugar The shortage of much delay. Sinee the problem of securing necessary ships is of much relation to an island v understood that the | problem as it pertains to Peru Java has been almost insurmountable. | In the passage of the cane through ! the sugar mill the first unwarranted elevatjon in price occurs. cane is cut by machete in the hands s a Dblemish, | Of the Cuban peon, who labors under | the tropical sun during the cutting ! season, November to June. I have yet iting export. ordered, whether 2en shown that no great dif- ends the transportition of ons for with motor vehi- EDITORIAL NOTES. It is said that hotels are’ to be- al- lowed@ to use rum-in their pies. Now watch the pie-eating ‘confests, or shutting it off that prevaileg ang pleasure cars{ e avaifable, and this of eourse ap. ns as well as N lence has been You do not have ~| The man on the corner says:- 'The llaw of gravity most everything except prices. to other sec Just what determination there is to if rd the law has been manifest- mephitical odor. Y e speech and merciful in action are evi- | to hear that he is overpaid The sugar famine is. said to be re- lieved, but not so the pocketbook with | the sweet stuff 25 cents a pound dences of supermanhood. Self-government is the best govern- 1t is the sfraight way and to ever is loaded sinfo two-wheel oxcarts and hauled through the muddy roads to the mill or to the railway pyv eight or more bullocks. 2 and ‘handling | small, Jsince wages compared with | wages paid in the United States are 1 thev never did before just what they f probibition is going to be Those who are willing, for ke of the money obtained, to sell on to drinkers should be made to pay the full pemalty of the law, but the running down of those dealing in|pretty even matched "as to -football the real stuff will call for much closer | teams with the east a shade the bet- ment there is. to good government, good condition ‘In the family and It underlies firmness with- it accomplishes re- sults in a quiet’and orderly way. God has to manifest wrath in nothing. He “Let there be light.” and there was light, speaks peace to man, It is only one step from the boss to the tyrant, and two steps to the devil pious men are meaner to their fam- ilies than hyenas to their young. Con- sciousness of a little authority has created more,_ hells any other one thing. It is a fool man who thinks he can be untrue to himself- and disloyal to A 59 per cent. jump in divorce suits looks as if there was a determined ef- fort to keep up with the cest -of living. The cost’ of out temper and The east and the west seem to be At the mill the cand passes into | L. ithe erushing and grinding machinery i'where the Juice i juice flows into the vats where it and nevef bosses. The process is simple, boileq down. and the work is done hinery under the eve: and sugar experts, ang Its machinery, that is the plant, are expensive and-require ldarge capital, but the personnel employed tin the mill s comparatively small. At 1the end of the vrocess the brown su- comes down ‘the chute Perhaps congress will see the wis- in|Gom of being guided hy néw reselu- Washington on a mission f Great | tions when it reassembles next Mon- Britain ‘as a special ambassador, the nature of which is to be judged from the fact that he was the ene selected, Viscount Grey has announced that he will wait no longer but will return to THE GREY MISSION, three months Some professedly Having spent of mechan- | ‘What is bothering a good many peo- ple is that they'eansot have the real whi -4 - at kinds of the mills of 700,000 bags, expects to make a profit of moré than two and a half million dollars. This is more than one cent @ pound, of expressed in an- qQther manner, more than three and a quarter dollars a bag. Such profits are unconscionabie in a commodity of universal necessity. Competition will grow more keen as the werld works up to normal. The Iprofits advertised so freely camnot | fail .to_stimulate production in every tropical country, of the world. Many mill owners in Cuba have stated that they look- forward to only one good year after the war. Cuba has raised two record crops, and will, no doubt weather permitting, raise a third ree- ord crop during the grinding season now beginning. 1f the consumer is avise he will tabou candy at the pre- sent fabulous prices. He will also partially tabou sugar at the presenty unjustifiable prices. As stated at the £ of this article, “Bring up the Reserves.” The steady improvemient in the world shipping situation brought about by increased ship con- struction is to be dependéd upon to accomplish this. In the not distani future an era of abundance and of declining markets for sugar is read- ily forseen, whatever course the man- ipulation of priees may take during the next few months. oy “FGR QUALITY” FURS OF INDIVIDUALITY standard of wo:l::mhw, -fim For twenty-five nized for their showing of Furs for the season 1919-1920 reflects upon us and their designers—characterizing of the highest type. COATS, SCARFS AND MUFFS J. C. MACPHERSON may seem romantic to gners their passionate prntes:atigts of love may seem too frank to us of Puritan descent; but not only in financial af- fairs, but even in their pleasures, they | minutely calcelate all items. “Probably there is ndt in the woj the equal of the French housewife in | economy. and efficiency. war ‘'wages were astonishingly lew im there mist have squeezing of each vrelers not | ofosie with 2 m any courtship, it is where she can ki difficullies in the P T French giv] provably desires more ar- fessedly desires it. superviston of the that her only release secms to e in “Tlence 4 remarkeble doeflity in the matter of tie cliokce Some one has suid that ¥rance, continual but, thanks to French wife, who could tefl from out- jside evidence that there was unusual] stinting in the average home? “To see a French woman bargain at} the market is to learn mueli in econ- omics, mathematics—and oratory. She refuses to pay @erica Thers h‘l‘: mach French in Ber bome the first price e } simpi, Sunday Morning Talk | Guotes: A fair whitée page on which moth-|YOU ing has been written has about it the her genius for “getting what is admirable. “With sueh women, is it any mar- ry accompanying the wife will prac. tically be demanded. What does she bring with her? is the not uscommon question 6f the young man’s parents. charm of the yet unWritten future. All | vel that the French home is so admir- things are possible to this clean page. |ably united? X It may be filled with beautiful words, rp?rle r&:flzefflct in France, and the sxpressi ally beautiful thoughts.|Pa P hans ity Carty o fetter trobi an | without which the organism (the {am- i ~boy and mo ily) could mever have ¢ome into being. Soanilos e mother 1) 1 e there is a reverence for parents|0f the expected children. If the wife The white page, mefely as a page | equaled probably on “Extremely prudentizl 1t afl mey seeni; bt one should remember th: this dowry is not 10 be employed by the for his petsonal use, but as a trust fund for the maintengnce The family is the pri-: fundamental dies cbildless the gowry will, Im all probability, revert to her family; the theory of the affair is that such prép- erly belongs not to the individual— Tndeed, it Is! ied Vi é ¢! it | tral worship of China. chiefly valuable bécause of what it whethes e Tt R | vy hold after human hands have | Very vrougt it wh ¢ may | tween husband and wife cquals that| Vrought upon It whafever fhey may| i iing between parent and child. Gud_has given us the gift of the cither husbang or wife—but to the family as an institation. and relatives New Year. Fe means it to be a happy | With parents ome. 9ik when we 3 our Heavenly Father |2nd daughters of advanced years—a seeking and consuitation scarcely s stays for plead v that He likes to send us | form of adversity and _affiliation . _calamity | heard of in an American family. and disaster. He doth not afflict wil- “If a Frenchmian of thirty or thirty- | 7 lingly or grieve the children of men. |five proposes changing his From what ver quarter the chill jhe may consult not only winds of ‘adversity come, they come}and his mother. but the entire family not because our Tather wishes us to|groun' the proposed marriage of 2! bé erushed, that.may eceme by His|daughter or a son is often an occas will for our ultimate good, and then |sion for a council of the entire efan, He will bind up the wounds and soothe | includi them with healing balm. God means | America would hardly be Mcluded in us to be happy, and almost invariably. | our {amily tree. if happiness is not eurs it is our own B e ——— You know that beneath that mjuddy, relatives that blotchy eomplexion yot over-red or have a skig that's u eonld omiy have more beautiful skin exposed to view “Theé world has been fond of poini- Ll 8 e Instead of the horrid old skin you mow fault, our own reluctance to do and|ing out that the French language has to be right; and® eur ewn wilful wan-|no word for home.’ derings from the way of His appoint- | possibly even meore tender. ment. meaning is in the sound of ‘foyer. Tt|{ On the fair white page of the New | includes the concept Year let us write resolutions of 1ove, 6f | and much more. forbearance, of charity, of hope. Let us make others happy, and more and| s more asy behold n your mirror! by a very simple, whith you can use yourself. ounce of common mercolized wax at your druggist's and this evening spread thin ‘coating of it over your f mofrow mornitg wash | warm water. Tt has a word Xou cap—sand of hearthstope mind ang heart all the ideals, , and dreams of a close, in- to Dbe like Him who fn ner circle where obedience Repeat this daily His short ecarthly life went about do- | respect ing good. In what way can we fill {love an ever-p our unw daily i tten vagees. well as in the on of Christ. a willing obseryance, nt radiance. not for the outside ontil all the worn-out scarf Then you'll have n heaithier looking complexion now think possible. { world: i does it OTHER VIEW POINTS e pimples. spots. freckles or c‘her sur Tace difigurements are of coutse re- moved with fhe skin itself. ally live and flourish. b world of business. but here in the foy- Rhode Tsland state prison now ha<:or the mother generallv rules supreme the largest number of inmates in its|and her influence is evervwhere seen s i mallest recorded num- LEGAL NOTICE XOTICE, 70 _CREDITONS, tF OF FROBATE - while the Providence county | iy it. There are eother reports 6f a |parent oy is immediately X ind. While prohibition cufs | faken into down the number of petty “drunk {and disorder] major crimes laugh in the face of its| promises.—Waterbury Democrat. person to obtain exhiliaration eno by drinking hard cider but he will have to consume many times more say this by way of discourazement but merely to straighten out a popu- |lar misconception on an_ important the home of the married ! son or daughter, there to rule as enlightened do.‘—l * cases, apparently the | core pot “Perhaps some youthful American It is possible of course for a Lhirsl rFs;l\dgr In‘r these pages ] asked, OW the creditors of said deceased to bring agalnst said within six months I posting a notice to that =ffuet, torether i { this order. on the sign- to- the place where sald it. and In the same ing Lhe sate orce a eirculation ir this -an there by any court- ship in so privatea pome, where ev- ‘body within the charmed cirele is than the amount of whiskey necessary | consulted about irs t0 obtain the same resuli. We do not [nected with that eircle? “As a preparatory step toward such a beawtiful home life one would think sh st be a most ro- f deceased last dw Town, and by puabli in @ newspaper having that there smid Distriet. and make return fe subjcct—\Waterbury Republican. mantic tlement of the problem growing eut of the friar lands of the Philippine and whispered words of ador- Mr. s diplomacy has been dis- | Walk Ay e ta R . | ation and all the other played before this, notably in the set. End 1% the SR mERHT HOS #Unfortunataly If imviteq to act as peace- | you may nd foregoing - of record “P%ilest: WELEN M. DRESCHER, Clerk fortunately—as mateh-making are | NORICK--AL i ma between the majority and mi- | ments of Ame nor; of the senate, and he accepts | frequently total wo shall expect to see a compromiise | courtship. effected which will gratify the coun- |higher clas: notified 10 present ;ped are hereby el t saisi estite to the nt from French | in the middle and of French soclety there sibility of love- t he time limited im nd foregoing ord and force thie acceptance of Mr.|is often very little p Wilson. We shall watch the confer- i making before marriag ence, if it is held, with imterest and | confldence.—New Haven Journal- | and the fact LDWARD H. e are few coed- WHEN YOU WAST ic put your BuN- in the countyy. the Courder. | ueational sch public. there is zirl seldom makeg with boss . Of daylight saving it can be sald!“'“‘fle('hr without contradiction that it stands | th the test of “the greatest good to the | greatest number.” By far the¢ major | portion of the resident habitants of New Englanig live in the cities, and: desire the change. But the time to] plan for ways and means to bring Connecent into accord on _time | with tbe city of New York on the | one hand, or- side, and the state of, tts on the other is before ' hen the nlan is to go Into effect. That time is new.—New Hav- en Regist | Litle Willie punctured the head of, hig mew Christmas drum in three places before it had been in his pos- | dession five mrinutes, and now, five days later, minety-five per cent. of | i his new possessions are hopeiésfly] damaged. And thus tbe Christmas ! tokens of c'nfldl;hoofl{ %uip:}y eheco_:l:‘ he battered relics of fond memori nd the early lesson is fmpressed that | | i dangerous stuff. Every youngster will be overjoyed learn that over 6,000,080 pounds of castor ofl were preduced in the three|, That investigator of Ireland's econ- omic conditfons who declared the Pers | meonerald Isle to be a paradise isn’t OWever, | contributing’ anythaing to the miove- man and at the same time be loyal to | There is_an -unwritten law that honesty maust ‘begin at-home, as well as charity. Fe who misinterprets his relation to.his Heavenly Father, and g in fear instead of in love of God, is to be pitied. To kmow that | the divine promises will come true is that will endure. et and revenge and there will soon be no England. During his stay he has not been given an opportunity to present his credentials to the president and|,, because of this and the failure to rat- Ify the peace treaty in any form it has been impoesible for him to take up the important matters which he was sent to present to this country. In: the failure to present his pa position is no different, h carefully weighed weighing 325 pounds. Tt may. confid- ently be s2id that even under the pre- sent conditions of laber wages having advanced since the be- ginning of the war, the mill owner would make a fair profit at a price of four cents a pound for his output, Strange to say, very Hitle sugar i= I have heard of not more than four small refinerics in the Harbor prejudice refined It Cabe. the - greatest- joys are tramsient. But! youth spends no time in vain regrets. Little Willie is already looking for- ward with high hove to next Christ- mags—Providence Bulletin. IN THE DAY’S NEWS Home Life In France. { Washington, D, C.—“France ne' doubt has jts weakness. The imumor- room in your ming for hope. The brown sugar ality of women, however, in that great persons through meanness and nar- n several other diplomats who are ment for an Irish republic. ilarly restrained from undertaking ] = shipped to the United States to be r i te granulated commer row mindedness have crowded the selves out of the Kingdom of Heave: the full responsibility -of their ap-| With President Wilson overtaxing| country has been shamefully exagger- ated.” | A number of the |mills of Cuba are situated at or near | peintments, i Correct thought is salvation, “Apparently It is not felt that the{on his strength at the 'family gathering Such is the preface to a bulletin of | the National Geographic Society deal-| his birthdav it doesn’t.augur well the seaports. Shipping hanling and Indorsed By G. 0. P, refining charges should not raise the chance to carry out the purpose of the|for an ing with the home life of Irance, a! subject of particular imterest because Colenel Bryan comes along with the | mission looks any brighter in spite of family at the other end of Pennsylva-| price more than two cents on the av- of the varying impressions of that assurance that he has a way for the Jie efforts to get together in the sen-!nia avenme. land brought back by returning sol- Democratic perty to win next year. If it is anything like the several ways Colomel Bryan has so often tried we hope it will be adopted.—Philadelphia | dte or at any rate it is not felt that more time should be spent here now| A miW ¥ the viscount, who is too important|day of the month was a bit gisconr- #ifigure in British affairs to be idling|aging to the ice men but a3 few more| Pr ay his time which can be put to|days of eontinued cold weather and a Even | sufficient ice supply for next sum- assdred. ATowing for the lezitimate profit to the middleman, the wholesaler, and the retafler, about one cent 4 pound | more may be added to be divided among the that séven cents a pound, ————— r January thaw on: the first ch better use at home. h he is suffering from impaired|mer will be ogesicht, which does not appear to ve worse during his here, the choice of such a man Great Britain indicated the import-|{New York next week at ance of the mission upon was gent and this was apparently 118 purpese of bettering And Wartime Prohibition. ., would be & fair price this, a price of T cen mills. ook for ends are things—ei ts or higher is W. G. McAdoo Has deelimed the in- the end » K by | vitation zomeJawnmermmmH:'*hfldlhok tclked of at the stocks ve. One to be fortumate in that it only raises dfers, * “Because, befors the war, the for- eigners seeking sin found it on cer- tain Paris boulevards they concluded that thie frank sexual advertising was characteristic of France, whereds the average French girl is as zealously personal friendships Buying Good Furniture| IS LIKE PUTTING MONEY IN THE BANK Thrift is a splendid virtue. But the young couple start housekeeping with good Furniture have as important as a savings bank account. The right kind of furniture will pay you big dividends all your Fifetime contentment, ‘comfort, rest and pride in your home—the kind of dividends that are vital to your health, success and happiness. i Lifetime Furniture—the kind that is built to survive the years in style and endurance is the only kind we and our prices are no higher than the commeonplace ki of those who desire conventent terms of payment club fees, interest charges or red tape of any kind. SHEA & BURKE |

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