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| come ‘by the le: ?1 3 mtflbflfion ‘to 4 ;%n- long.as the ey | thal position to do. m Forestry association approves a - for coopératicn on the part.of the eral and sta chopper, has _béen’ busy ‘for years and he will contig 1; active. Denuded hills are telling .the story of his work'not only throughout New England but in iral states, the north- ihe; Pacific_coast and in uthland. There is still a largs acreage -of timberland but it is go- ing fast and the: regettable part of it all is that, inadequate. proyision is be- lng made for,the time when the exist- will be exhausted, The eneration may not see .the day e shortage will be greatly incre d but there is need of looking beyond our- nose. Consider, the vast amount of land that can be put to no better use than the growing of treés, the sections that are made up of waste but reclaima- ble territory and the cut-aver ‘wood- {land of which no use is being made {along with, the large consumption and waste of wood, and- it is evident that there is meed of ' greatly increasing whatever efforts{are 'being..made to replace, the dwindling forests. It takes time for trees to grow but much better -results can be secured if careful attention is given to the wood- land instead of leaving it to make headway for itself.’ Many states are interested 'in reforestation work and the value of it is being disclosed with each passing year, If better results can be obtained by cooperation . be- tween the federal and state goVern- ment in.this' line - of *endéavor it should by all means be atfempted. The future needs shonld . ation while there is time to. prevs the effects of a serious shortage Norwich, a.uruy Jan. 24, 1920 CIRCULATION WEEK sunma JANUARY 17, 1920 5 present ROAD IMPROVEMENTS. From all indications much import- ant highway work is to be carried on in this part of the state during the present year. Highway Commissioner Bennett has already set in motion the large contract in New London county that will mean the completion of an improved road between Norwich and Westerly, opening up a section that has been in need df such attention for a long period, and in another part of the county through the calling of bids| for the improvement of the Hartford- New London turnpike by.way of Col- chester it is indicated that a much larger project is to be undertaken. When completed these roads are going to be of immense vaiue not only to through travel between - the . larger center but to all of the Smaller points ang the farm owners along the way. In both instances contribution is made to the shortening of the dis- tance between Hartford and Westerly and the elimination of road which in/ the past have been shunfied more than they have been used. Hartford already has a fine road to the shore on the west bank of the Connecticut. By the concrete road to New London it will be in closer touch with south- ern Connecticut but by the Col- -h-Westerly road it will ‘A STI‘I' %H IN TimME, It was only a short time ago that it was announcz1 inwthe British pariia- ment that Great Tritain had gone its limit in contrivutions to the anti bol- | sevik ! forces, -fhat its finaneial ‘con- dition' made it impossible,to do. more than it was doing and that decreasing rather, than, increasing help -must be! expected. It was also opposed ‘to/ sending any reinforcements to the ar- my of the northwest or to contribute to the support.of .the..operatigns .in that region. Trat such an attitude had any particular part in the defeat of General ‘Yudenitch’s “forces is not claimed, but it is interesting to note ibat as the resuit of the success of the bolskevik armies in Southern Russia Great Dritaia now sees. the necessity of going to the proteetion of its own Interests. © This is r the time he- 1ng, being: fl%ty ~@espatching of vi fo tne Black sea. Trom. Paris comes word to the eftect! that. vigorous action is planned by the British ip the Caucasus. - Directly at stake are thé oil field, in the Caspian region. The iniportanice of keeping those out of the Hands of the bolshe- Viki_is.evident, . but ..ig view of the manner in-which “the .¥oviet forces have pushed baek the ophonents and are threatening Persia and India i is prain-that' Great Britain Believes. in the wisdom Jof putting 45 .prompt.a check to suchh operations. ag are pos- sible anq- certainty theré is no better line on which tp fight, it out than that afferaed by vlg _mounln.in. range in that locality. S How far the._ bolshe‘fld intend to continue toward the southeast has not ‘ho only thin'zv lfldilfls; o0 rhrmg about yeen . indicated:excépt . by their an- e greatest degree of safety in pas-|nounced detarmiration g senger service but it will prove a val-| their influence to 319 w;%ler:'loc:;dm;: uable contribution when such mechan-|ig to he inferred therefore that the ism is invested that will meet the re- sending of warships by the British to quirements the Black' gea is to be regarded ds a 1t is interesting to note in this con- : & stitch in time that-will nection that the committec named by|on, e Aty the United Statés railroad administra- tion for the purpose of investigating the automatic train control reports af- ter a year's work that on lines of lieavy traffic such a device is desira- ble and that it has inspected 37 de- vices in one form or another and plans and specifications for 300, but further actual tests will be necessary before the relative merits of the devices can oe determined. Wtkatever the type, lhf' most direct Jine to ‘Watch Hill and beyond for with the comple- tion of the road to Colchester New on the London road there will then re- a stretch of a few miles zrahville which is not im- fortunately it is not a concrete that Is indicated between Col-| nd Norwich but even though rmanent highway is not pos- s ifying to learn that - P lity that the unim- wed section of that road will get rly atte ,Unn It is needed by the i and it is neces- > of , the im- road in the most direct line "u tween Hartford and Wsterly. TRAIN CONTROL. e of the large number of lives ve been ‘lost ihrough the fail- of the human element in the op- ion of trains need has existed for ong time for some. automatic train| would work even if the , faileq to see warn- or from any cause did not train in control in accord te signals, v minds have been at work on} train stops. Large induce- e been_held ouit by certain| acceptablé device and on! vstems has it been seen where o, an arrangement would have pre- ted wrecks and death. It iS not| EDITORIAL NOTES, One cold wave makes a thoroughly acceptable winter if it only _sticks long enough, 5 Japan's determination to withdraw its troops looks as if everyone twas getting dold feet in Siberla. = The.man on the cerrer says: There howew;er. it _has been agreeq that it|must _be'an extrad big drain upon the chould supplment the establishment|reservoirs du ring these dry days. of the block system, The' committee calls attention to the fact that the.autematic control would have a bearipg on less than six per cent. of tha fatalities, but certainly ihat number is worth considering, and if they can be prevented it will mean that some of the worst railroad wrecks will be avoided. Every step in alf of greater safety is to be de- sired. Every protection that will put It will be one, grand merry go round If all_the candidates for the presiden- ©y undertake to stump the country: Another. struggle between the lion and the mouse is the effort of ‘Rhode fsland to overlhrow the Constitution. The wonder loday is if anyone high up in the navy department ever said, “, love in. it the way »gwu!d themselves walk ’lg E ‘he home ex-mp]e cannot. bgnya- s taught week in - the Su nothing of the wfion; of the It wtshmuywe ‘who p;)i shou der wfiy the a.\-e bitter, ‘wgen they them- selves have® pomoneé the fountain. -1 guess he who said a song will out- live all sermors, the heart, knew ‘he was g about. A gpod couplet or q\i:khaln with” truth and - keep the heart singing ity whole life through; but wl e a-heart, with a sermon in it, when the ayerage heart is a stranger to the Golden :Rule, and would. feel crowdeq if required to retain the 23d ‘Psalm, a song of comfort which has blessed- millions of souls, and, will|;, comfort humanity through all future ages. It is just as natural for man to_sing as for ‘the bird,” and the hu- man singer finds in his careeer what Carlyle specifies as “the dewdrops of celestial melody.” The little song in the heart gives more joy than money in the bank. It doesn’t mgk any difference what happens don't get a grouch on. The first groucher was a fool, as has been every one since his day. No ra- tional ideas can live with a uch. Because he is crooked everything the grouch sees is crooked. It does not take long for a grouch to make the moral law look as crooked as a ram's horn, or a googd friend look like a foe. A grouch is worse than any germ of disease, since it is a germ of madness innoculation cannot cure. It has no status in science. It is in the end capable of depriving the soul of one glimpse® of reason, or of heaven. A half century.ago Wendel Phillips was telling the American publi¢ that “the age of bullets was passed, and that the age, of ideas had dawned, and that they were to govern the world.” Looking back we notice that the world is still lumbering in the belief that ideas are best promoted by bul- lets. Man does not seem to know. how to bid his primitive meth good-bye and act up to the clear vision of the times. - Wendel Phillips had a .true vision of what should be, but who can say how many hundred years he was ahead of his, time. He dared.cham- spite of the prejudice and violence of the times in which he lived. Sorrow is # sl er or an educator as man elects to Some . one has said “one can see further through 4 tear than a telescope,” but I doubt it, ;There is no doubt sorrow has giv- en. expression. to some of he finest hope-sustaining sentiments the world holds -dea and yet, Tennyson's dec- ‘laration: “Never morning wore to ev- jeninz, but some heart did break,“ ol@s true. Hlan was never made la dwell in solitude with sorrow; but was designed to master it. When there is socialibility sorrow loses half its pail Many sorrows are hot, half as serious as they look; and where hope is strong sorrow is weak. Happy is he who comes. to recognize “sorrow as one of the lowar notes in the ora- torios of blessednéss. The more a nation appears like a mob the less it must be of a Zovern- ment. The only thing which makes a Bovernment secure is. loyalty and | obedience; .and the government which applies, to its subjects least law, is the best government. Love of authority and selfish - interesds put upon the statutes many laws: which are never enforced; and probably if one-half the laws of men were obliterated, the laws of God would have a better chance of observance. If the laws of a nation represent its wisdom, they also represent its lack of .judsment, as well as the erudities of government There s much villainy in. law so | splendidly clothed that it gets by the lawmaker. Very few people realize that being 2 gentleman is synonymous with being a Christian. Bishop Hare says: The real gentleman. should be gentle in everything, at least in everything that depends on himself. in carriage, tem- per, constrictions, aims, desires.. He should therefore be mild, calm, quiet, even, temperate—hot hasty in judg- ment, not exorbitant in ambition, not over-bearing, not proud, not rapacious, not oppréssive, for these things are contrary. to gentleness.” You see un- der this definition there are many more near gentlemen than real ones. There are many varieties of good and useful men who are not gentlemen. Few cognomens are oftener misap- plied by men than this. We all have our guardians, and they do not seem to be guardian angels, either; and they manage us by law they are so fearful lest we shall do wrong, or get sick. Because of thé few drug fiends, the entiré population of the republic is denied the privilege of buying drugs without a perScrip- tion; because of the drunks and the crimes of a small per cent. of the users and abusers of alcoholic stimu- lants, the temperate, the aged and the invalid are totally denied them; when contagious disease menaces the, few, compulsory innoculation must he ‘sub- mitted to by all the people. We, are wonderfully taken care of by those who cherish the conceit that they are our protectors by Divine decree, and those who make such good work profitable. Don’t you think_the world is giv: too much atteniiin to where men :'g “We are. as willing to fight the Mexi- rans as the Germans.” Boysand many. of skating. movifg Mr. Hoover has kept well in the batkground during all the talk about candidates, but distance, it is remem- bered, lends enzhantment. a check on careless operation is to be encouraged. SALUTING GERMAN FLAG. Ever those who must. respect the order of the British admiralty to the effect that irasmuch 4s peace has Leen restored the German national flag must be saluted are of course go- ing to obey for a time with a lot of mental reservation. But it is only what must comeé in the natural course of events and the reestablishment of that relationship batween Great Brit- ain and Germany is only what must| take place between the allied nations and the central powers generally. When peace has actually been ar- ranged and the ‘treaty ratified the same thing will be required of Amer- rlq used to bé putting in ¥ spare hours. sliding and Those jof today are doing the picture “theaters. spmr to be about as much-divided 3ver Heover as thelr senators do regarding the minority leader in the upper house. i e o) - In-connection with the excess prof- lts tax it should be remembered that It thers was a reduction in prices icans in keeping with the regulations,|\Xc> WOuldm't amount to o much. With the reestablishmient of peace| Gommunt the war will be over. Germany and its allies have been defeated and made ::‘,,‘fm:;u to take their medicine. A mew order|yics. Sell of things has replaced the old and Bvere on i1s relationship with the new must govern the future even though it will not e poss past. epidemic arrives, allies to salute a fallen foe; regardless|g of the acts and conduct of theé old|it. government, than it will: be for the y defeated central powers to do like-| Secretary Daniels says that wise since our salute is that of vic-|people. q&: be. m.t(isfl'd with the i'e. nvuuyb}mu into the tory and gfir salute_ is that of de- gult. of feat, but first few years will be 's. OF. a- naval® fl)u;l wil to onal boi‘ yIn) thy on_those vrhe are fighting the hardest. :{Ler that it will be- §. come a matter That “wasn't lu; Inasmuch as there will be establish- naval t'ss where influenza pre- give it everla it‘»”:en to observe the pre- na:rg:nx ever advised by health authorl-| month war's vi £ protection iy wise even be-| Creased by. “’fi" R"’“l-”“‘ ‘;ga gl T finexphlned 28 it is there aré those. ible to forget the who > aré aiways ehouting for Ameri- :ml ev ism. and. vet they never feel satis-|another. Possibly it vfll be easier for the M unless thé; are wasting a lot of | Bill is a De inguiry. cv in E::nt mexygg\. going and not enough to what they are doing? It is always talking about the future, which:is wholly shaped by the present, instead of making Now the watchword, and putting the spir- itual ecglor into life which will be rec- ognized as being heaveply.. He who lives right today, and day by day, is living right for all time. Horace Greeley used to say to those who ven- | tured to labor with him,along spiritual lines: “One world at a time, gentlt.L men, one world at a time;” and’ it doubtful if they ever tan the hin that he who is living right for this world is llvhlg ,flght for the other. Our : percepuon is ot always as depend- able as we thi t 1. .A There™a w things Bill Shuk says he lmtlcee -as the outcome of war, and tha is that “the entente tions are all ized lflm the ring. nations af the ceptral Burope, -and ;that. the bxg spirit which to c ng .is getting Y. Withm the past |’ have ‘been. in- a d"e‘gt nine ;i{flnn?:l’ma .vu a year ago. ;o't i tt;i 3 ng to Jo '.heir damndest!” ssimist. “Call upon me-in.the day of tro ble I will deliver thee, and thou shflt *Out o e e D and pre can | t] plon. the rights of the oppressed in|. Chrll!thn unbyrden all . war and | Eympathy and e, using two| qg:md close togeth- with an outside cir- g ‘ platinum _el er in the flam cuit copw phone_recel tt.ry and, a tele- that successful ‘flames de olved . the evamna.A W’ tmnln; first two, e at least of £ Considering of the audion, it look .back at the first grid-electrode of the audion, wit! der .at .tha enormous cha it has wrought. It has made commercial transoceani radio tel phy. It has, realized transcontinental telaphcny. lt hu e re(;gfitkm of less signal -vmy around the) glo as an eury a.y -occurrence,: “The uncanny accurracy of millions of shells from the Allles’ guns, clocklike precision of advancing bar- rages, would hawe, been impossible a lane , rad: rvige, in. which tl?g g{g audion w&fg3 _the essential heart. . Today. this lit 3 grid, controls and modulates an ever-: _increasing , ki- lowattage of radio telephope, energy, .as 1%15 conveyed thé gton to Hono- spoken voig P i1 {lulu and m ,x;ecenuy Brunswick to the. transport George Washington, in the hu);or of Brest, It has already placed ten simultaneous telephone messages upon a single pair of wires. ew ounces of grid wires makes possible the saving of hundreds of tons of copper in lqng-qisumce telephone conductors. It has given to the phy- sicist a tool for. the eXplaration of un- probed fields of research and to the electrical engineer a generator without moving parts. of alternating currents of any desired frequency, from.1,000,- 000 to 10,000,000 periods. per ,second a machine absoliitely constant and re- liable in_its -silent- work. “It was in the summer of 1912, when at work on tlie problem of audion am- plifiers, in cascade arrangements for telephone repeaters, that I first covered that.if the input or-grid cir- cuit was inductance, the audian be- came a generator of.-continuous al- ternating currents, = originally made evident. by a. shrill tone in the' tele- hone receiver.. ‘A few months after the audién was first._ used for the production of. al- ternating current of frequency 1 first demonstrated the | fact that . weak high-fre- quency. qurrents . could be equally well be generated, simply by . sub- stituting radio-frequency coils for the original iron-cored coils and small’ va- riable air condensers for. the large telephone condensers of my original experiment of 1912, “The uniform generation of electric- al -oscillations in‘a circuit by means of: an audion s one of the most strik- ing and fascinating of its applications. There seems ‘to be, in fact, no limit to the number of applications to which be. applied a§ a tool in the hands of the experimental physicist, “Probably the most promising field of all of audi- is the arrangement ons in cascade as amplifiers, of pul- we live in' unbroken happiness, with sunlight everywhere around us, we are in. danger of forgetting God by forgetting our need of prayer. It is jnot “Jeshurun” alone who, when he “waxed fat,” “forsook God.who made him, and lightly . esteemed. the rock of his salvation,” for we have all fall- en into the same sin again and again. Just as too great, brightness of the sun causes the distant mountains to fade away, wrapped in a haze of light, so in our summer day of gladness things unseen and eternal are hidd.en from us, and this present and passing world absorbs and occupies all our thoughts. Then God sends us trouble, The clouds gather; the sun_is hidden; the storm, falls upon us, and we walk in darkness and in fear; and then for the first time ,it may be for years, we begin to pray. The yoice that through long years of uninterrupted peace and prosperity never blessed God for His mercy, “now. in the day of trouble” is heard calling upon Him for deliver- ance. This is not, it is true, the highest form of prayer; it is better to pray frem fear than not to pray at ail The burden of a great sorrow’ has brought us to our knees at last. So trouble, like, prayer, begin to explain itself. We make a sudden discovery of ourselves, of . .our coldness and worldliness and unbelief, and a thous- and promises of God that the glare of day had hiden, begin to shine upon us as the stars do when the night is come. Ang slowly our prayer itself changes. We begin to be more con- cerned to be delivered from the trou- ble we have found in our own evil hearts and in our own evil wills, then from the sorrow that has shown us all this unsuspected and terrible sin in ourselves, until at length the prayer, which began with a passionate cry for deliverance for the .trouble, ends in a far holier desire, “Thy will be done.” And when that will is done in us, trouble has done _ its blessed work, God hears our prayer, and the same hand of love that laid the weary bur- den on us now removes_it, and the thick clouds .pass away and the sun- shine returns, and we walk singing iglong the way.' But it.s_a. ‘“new !song” we are singing now. Before our trouble came, -our song was of happi- nesg in ourselves; now it is of happi nesg in our God. We “glorify, Him, and that net.gnly for our deliverance from the burden of sorrow, but for what He {s in Himself to us; for the jnew life we haye foung ire Him, and for the new peace that.the surrender of our will to His has brought to us. What - we. need, then, is a Father, and a Father to whom we may go as W- freely as our children come to us, and into whose tatherly,.heart we may r. grief, sure that,His ove will not send us unheard away. So long .as mah “born_unto. trouble. as the sparks fly upward,” so long will this verse and verses like it touch a deep chord in v | his heart. Let us never forget the - ‘individuaiity ser than ) “Z d | of God’s love and care for us in our ‘1 hflm trouble. In this verse God speaks to over one |the world as if there were but one chua in it. aad that child was our ;worg but., one 15 wWas our out a sense of won- thefc ss_of their trench|uh from ' New a andible | this, three-electrode vacuum tube canj "con| ‘| eastern l:o\mtfg‘ ;rom whence it ar,pruxzma tslli miles,_in | has been tmmd that as msny ers; can PSS & 0 _amp! dem g.mi produce e: jpeech. at the receiving end of the Mne‘ ~L well-known telephone engineer. is. aufhority. for. the state- nt. t computation quy{. the 3 s- tenuation of a cable. circuit length to be so enormous that, ii_;n the power received on the earth from the sun could be. applied in the of telephone waves to one end of line without destruction of the apw- ratus, the energy receiyed at the oth- er énd. would be insufficient to. pro- duce audible speech without the -use of amplifiers, whereas with am- plifiers used in tandem, -the reiative- ly minute energy - of ordinary tele- phone speech currents at .the trans- pmduced speech. in -the arrange !flbht of t!!bes being of the order of n to the fiftieth bower. “General (then captain) George O. Squiér in 1910 carried:out certain gx e imax;ts which #ire destined to: as_the new art of wired wlreless attains the important co: mercial prcppruons to which it is tionably destined., He, for, the e, qped a constant reliable ndamped electric. currents of high fre ggency’ tor the transmitter, and dn audion detector between each mrned rece{viug circuit and its tel. ephone receiver. - By this combination -telephony became at once ealized fact. “But so long as 1ugh-irequeney al: ternator was required. at each trans:. mitter station the wired-wireless idea could not become commercialized. Its! first cost, the size and weight of it| with ' its moftor, its delicacy of speed| regulation, its. limitation. to releative- 1y low . frequencies, all made this im possible. - So. again an importadt de- velopment was compelled. to await the advent of the oscillating audion. “Supplied from a common filament- lighting battery, a common ‘B’ bat- tery or direct current generator, any desired number of tiny a.\ternaun;- current - generators (oscillating audi- onms), each driving its own _easily turned circuit, can now be assembled in a small central station. The grid of each oscillator is voice-controlled from its local t.elephone cireuit and.as many high- freqnency ‘carrier’ wave- trains superimposed upon, a. single trunk line pair it may he feasible. to use without lznerferences betwaen the modulated frequencies of the sev- eral_conversations, “Taken together, the impro'vemen_t at both ends of the span, the use of undamped wave transmitters and the audion detector and amplifier have made possible the use of smaller an- tennae at transmitting stations, and have almost removed the necessity for any atenna at_all at receiving, sta- tions, Tor example, under reasonable weather conditions, it is gquite easy to listen to the messages coming from stations on the other side of the At- lantic by using a receiving circuit of which the receptive element is a small coil of wire, three or four feet i Thus, sa far as receiving it is possible to intercept virtu- ally all the great stations on one-half of the globe by means of apparatus contained wholly ‘in one room, or evenh in a cupboard. “This does not mean that the use of antenna for reception: is abolished; on the contrary, when these highly magnifying methods are put into op- eration. with Jarge antenna for .the purpose of reception, the range over which signals can be received is -ex- tended .very far: beyond what it. was in 1913, and, in consequence, it is possible, undgr repsonably good weather conditicns, to receive at the Antipodes the signals from a modern high-power station. In accomplishing this the magnifications in use amount to several hundred thousand fold. All this is the work of a thing which looks like an ordinary electric light bulb with a few extra pieces of metal in it—the three electrode tube. “But more than this. Signaling by conduction currents of relatively low frequency. will soon . be practiced through| the earth as well as water; and we will find the antennae of the future thrust upside down, deep into abandoned. oil-well borings, and mak- ing contact with deep semi-conducting strata, at points separated by a few| miles; the two inverted intenna of such a transmitter connected by an 4 taining the alternating current gen- erator and signaling device, and to similar ~ srrangement for receiving. Then . our. wireless messages will g0 through the earth's crust, or possibly by a more direct path, : and rnot around the earth's surface, to be tangled up as at present with . be- wildering snarl of static ravelings. “The future of radio signaling at sea lies with the telephone rather than the telegraph. The s.mplicily, the reliability with which the medium’ of an undamped wave carrier, ideally guited for the voice transmission, can now be had will rapidly limit the crudities and laboriousness of the Morse code signailing - between ships. Yet today scarcely the dawn of this new epoch has been seen. Vessel owners are today almost as skeptical regarding the practicability and uti ity of the radlophone as we pionee: found them toward the wireless tele- | graph. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR, Christ’s Second Coming Mr. Bditor;:—What of the future?: Are we on the threshold of a new! ea, or will the world continue on as in the years of the past? Many be-| lieve we are living in the close of the: Gentile or Christian age and that' Ohrist will soon come as a visible world ruler. Any betiefs of this nature | must have exceeding good ground on| which to rest for, like the boy guard-; ing sheep, who repeatedly called men to his aid against imaginary.wolyes, ‘was at last left without help, when | the wolves really attacked his sheep, ' becaiise - of. his deception, . so maxy people haye become indifferent to the subject and inclined to ridicule any reference made to 'Christ's second coming, referring to the many dates set for that event which failed to materialize. What then . are the clearest and most forecful arguments, supported by existing conditions. which favor the view of Christ's near -ad- vent. First.we, might take the sj Ergad and advance of the . human family since the Bible record of Adam's cre- ation 5920 years ago. Starting in een~ tral Asia t%e birthplace and. cradle-of man, “Westward the course of em- pire’ has taken fts way until | now the vanguard of western pro- gress. tjon, has come into ghmmmts of dflm ed. . Dhe M(tfln; of the . question = of eastern or western supremacy, OV overhead power-transmission line con-|$ ASTRY ;a o ST Wforfixeletw@dlfi-;—Sfl!lCflpCt&ué&udom Large Cup Cakes, $1.00 a dozen. Catering for W‘e&dili'gi,mnéon'l"eu,&c.lspé&hy S8 K PE N, INC. Use Your Electrical Apphances IT 1S VERY EASY TO INSTALL A FEW FLUSH RECEPTACLES wm:nr EVER YOU WANT THEM ST NO DIRT COSTS LITTLE THE NORWICH ELECTRIC CQ. 42 FRANKLIN STREET y. s hOFR after so many_years, of gt;fort on the enemies. In the year 1907 the gift of part of I:n-e!s. é, rther dis- | tongues appeared among some earnest caveries or expiorations of magnitude | Christians, while in prayer, in the city must be directed to other planets, The |of Los Angeles, Cal. The meSsages navigation of the air, with the under llven . through ' this manifestation, sea craft fulfills the dreams of ages. were that Jesus was coming soon and With the question of supremacy. set- |to get ready, also, that the world was tled nothing remains to be accomp- |entering the border of the geat trib- lished -on shis sphere, but the develop- | ulation that was to come. just prior to ment of its resgources and the beauti- | Christ's advent. Simultaneously . the fying .of its . surface rendering com-|same gift, of tongues s,ppeared in all fort and happiness to all. The con-(parts. of the world, giving out prac- summating®of this _task is reserved |tically #he same messages, continuing for -the millennial age under the per-|until, the outbreak:.of the worldwar. onal and visible reign of Jesus Christ, Wfihatever the near future has jn store represented -by the great agricult-|they that are alive to the situation ural and structural pojects undertak- |are awaiting with intense interest. en and during, the peaceful and glori- ™ L ous rejen of Solamon. which followed the years of strife and warfare of sub- jugation - conaucted , by King - David his father as a type of the present disturbed dge of the world. All the prophets have testified to this order. Tsajah, probably with the greatest at- tention to detail for he says “Out of Zion shall go forth the law, and the word of the Lord from’ Jerusalem, and He shall judge among the nations, and shall rebuke many people and théy shall beat their. swords into plowshares and their spears into prun- ing hooks; nation shall not life up sword zxainst nation, neither shall they leam war any more Is 2.3, 4. - The wolf :and. the lamb shall feed . zether and the Hon shall eat straw like the bullock. They shall not hut nor destroy_in all my. holy mountdin, for the earth shall be fill of the knowledge of the Yord as the waters cover the sea. Is. 11:9 The angel Gabriel, when annquncing to Mary, that she. was chosen by God to be the mother of Christ, said, He shall be great and Shall be called the Son of the Highest and the Lord God shall give until him the throne of his father David. This age.of Christ’s rule is a thou- sand year- period of time according to John in_ Reyelations, which is liken- ed to thd Sabbath day of rest and peace follwing the 6,000 years of strife, and tumult which has been the world's history_ since man’s creation. As we are living within eighty years of the beginning f the millennium so Christ must necessarily come some time within this period. As Scripture es there will be a time between Christ’s coming for .his church and the beginning of his reign on earth, it seems to be a matter of conjecture to get any cloger to the date of his com- ing. This seems fairly certain that sometime during this present century, inside. of eighty years, Jesus Christ will come in the clouds of heaven with all his angels to gather his people to himself and execute judgment on his ON TRACK ONE CAR PENNANT STOCK FEED— 600 BAGS ONE CAR POSTAGE STOCK FEED—600 B:it;é ONE CAR HOMINY CHOPS—600 BAGS ONE CAR BEET PULP—600 BAGS TWO,CARS BUFFALO GLUTEN—1200 BAGS Nrwich, Jan. 22, 1920. l Stories That Recall Others. | Results in Others. A certain youngster on the east side was on a visit, to the "doctor, who coaxed him along with the usual line of “jollying.”’ “Now, Bobby,” he said, “you .must sleep all you can—get plénty-of rekt and sleep and you will gtow well and stmrkg. and have bright_rosy cheeks.” As Bobby, went out he spied the highly roug&d attendant in the next room. He stepped to the door and looked, at her admiringly as he ex- claimed, “Gee, you must have had a good nap.” p . Parked the Children At first thought, perhaps , there seems to. be but little connection be- tween flivver and readin, ’ritin’ * and ’rithmetic, but at least one little six year old ml had no difficulty in as- sociating the ideas. When she went home. from her first day at_.school, naturally, mother asked her what she had done in school. “Oh, nothing much,” the fot re- plied. “We sat around a while and then the teacher parked .us all in a row, and, then she made us march out one behind the other.” The most popular men of letters are the postmen. HE FEELS LIKE A NEW MAN. Rheumatlc pains, buz'uchq pains in sides, ;sore ut\mc)i° stiff joints or an “always tired” fdeling are usually symp‘oms of disordered, kidneys. W. W Toauin, Mich. wrifes: . 1 T nmy faer mbst of the.time and get tired. But: after- taking -Foley h!dney Plll; 1 feel like a new man. I recommend them-to my ounnmeu and have never heard.’ se_where they did not give nfistmtlon Promnt in action. to_ reliewe kidney. troubles and bladder allments. Lee & Osgood ONE CAR CHOICE BRAN—600 BAGS TWO CARS CORN—5,000 BUSHELS ONE CAR 36% COTTONSEED MEAL, HIS FEED WILL BE SOLD CHEAP & Son FROMTHECARS Charles Slosber