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e S 3 7& t l have have'“duflhr@d 1 “Not after our forests are gone, buf| . “ es—teu me"’ besought m/J engwg- now,” declares Gifford. Pinchot, -chair- ed young man worry wrlnk]es creas- man of the American Foresters so-|ing his brow.” clefy commitiee, in urging the im- b ihe proseedgd iy ity portance of early steps for the re, gabtory ‘hndn't: :‘pé'o Se—suppose JOUR. i, placing ‘of our depleted forests, - Chicago and hadn’t ne it is advice which should bs heeded:|ang hadm't sent you This organizatien s urging the adop- | place—why, we'd n tion of a.national -forestry policy: 0¥} yéu—you'd have the, purpose. of iasuring.the, cnmm-y s-some other e “Nonsense!” 1 didn't fall in love with " girl and the minute I laid °1 knew whom I . intent 8, said the pretty flamee\_ s ‘'vou_don't get my point. I guess if "“’ ou h; beon sent to Minneapolis o ou wouldn’t hat < 1 achelor and it _gasped Lhe 12 errible- lmnmnc that when we looking .a triffe re-; reauy elong to each other you'd have “What, an|gone and spoiled ‘ttl?at kae tl;fu. It ‘ dgésn’t seem to me can forgive : you for it, Dnégey’ Vfltly, !.the tthh;tg‘f :q : ] sections of the Country. There would: --‘{rffi’wo.‘ii‘é"‘hfi,’i.fifif“"“ of ‘ doinz .to tha = g:ly Bole “ T WEEK “ENDING -JAN, -31st, 1920 | likewise ‘be efforts {0 utlize-What | Ji2q some ome.clse, and been. perfoct ). “Bui there isn't — wasnt — there - Pmflmu e oonuhh'ated o X would otherwise be waste land and to Iy happy with her, and it.is making me| couldn’t be any other girl.” he persist-- o of Jorway pine: extract, famous | s bring about cooperation with the va:|vwretched and I just. can’t stand it! ed “I pever cared about any one till It r .i on the membr: .ne.‘| R Y‘:l';, ;f.;fl? e Rstaid hf{ She.as thexmegrhu e o L i Tn nvold dk;minhn-t osk_your| i of n rid, and, at is| 1" s. exactly wl you e a 3 ' interest in new timbefland. - worse she would hova been. . ere I|Ing to hier~ she insisted. “T never can «‘}nm{mb‘fcr‘:l%dg:w w::wlt)m::fl:llnt: SHOULD HASTEN TREATY 'AC-|. When it is realized. that. this coun-{ould be in Chicago, and you nog.car-j beue;:e o, ag:ain V;’h;m‘a‘v%r ¥ou siy ireg) m:urautied % give absolute satis try is the largest timber ing a single thing about me.” - janything nice to me I shall be remem- 7 The Pinex el S uz world, When nfil und:gtfle:h;: “But, Adelaide,” said the young-man|bering that we dre engaged just be- é’:WE "‘rv:w:"n':_ It there has. beeir & disposition to} cuts two and’ h;u ek .with . a- burst .-of diplgmacy, - “yau- cause a freak of chance, for your firm ., Ft. Wayne, consider previous expressions as inde- = AnG 8 “times ‘as auc) wouldn’t have worried in the’ .least;might just as easily had its hrznch in} = finite such cannot be said regarding | tmber as it grows, that over a man you. Had never heard of|San Francisco as here.” the letter of Lord Grey regarding the| Standing half as many. trees as, { and, besides that, you'd have been in| “All my lifey” *said - the cheaden ratification of the treaty by this coun- | be required to. produce timber'at the|love with somebody else yoursélf.” young man. “I've -been conscious of a: try. Lord Grey in his communication ! rate it has: been - used, ' that- foreign “I would not!” cried-the pretty fi-|keen desire to live In Chicago. Since to the London Times is not found|forests cannot-be relied upon 1o meet}ancee in indignant horror. I suess I was a little boy my: friends have saying that the heart of Europe will| OUF necds and that four-fifths of the it T've seen all the men in Chicago I|jeered at me for it. “Why, they’ de- s T e ot - e : forests are privuely owned and ‘fhat| Know. all these vears and cared moth- ! manded when I was a native of'a per-{ yard was be broken if the United States does th to commander in 902, became - 3 3 =t mg about any of them I wouldn’t be|féctly good eastern city, why yearn not ratify the treaty in the form in|on those Hmbiefland devastation gndi % $7%; 110k hadn't (for the west and Chicago? I never| assistant (o the ehlef of the Bureau of which it was brought from Paris. He|not forestry is being practiced it can z‘g)&xeohe:e 5 B:.sidese et do;t‘could tell them, but I knew I simply| dvigation, was made upbaln and m does not say that Burope 18 gfeatly | Well be appréciated that there is rea- | j3c'% "FPC, U EREA (I b GOR VTR S et here some ‘way, and you|1908 “was Fiboeio g e o5 ‘g disappointed because we did not-has-| SOn for giving.thought-to.a matter of vnns, ten to accept the document without 3 taff to Rear Admiral Robley D. Sr ¥ erfectly callous, speaking of my falli|see finally did—and now I know the}S! providingg . for . the timber- supply: of{ing in love with ancthger man . as|reason. You were living here waiting! With the Norfth Atantic fleet, In carefully scrutinizing it ~and he| the country in the.years to come: 11908 he was made Read Admis a.nd doesn’t undertake to tell’ this country |'though you wouldn’t have ‘cared it. I)for me all the time. Yoy see Adelaide,| If the growing of timber was'a Mat-{had done it. I gont think you'could|it was planned by fate clear from the flVS:‘rnbg’:D be chief of the Burl that it is asking anything unusual in viga o seeking to protect itself by reserva- g .by disfigurlng blemlshes. 1f you are unablé to really enj The; e society of others because of the g L2 fear that that wretched skin eru; on your shoulder will begin to.itch, ~ or that your scarf will slip aau.. pose. the disfiguring rash: you Mmhardmmnceal [t k) O 'YW Nnm&. Tuod.l.v Feb. 8, 1820 ly -relieves iching - ufluzkr\ eskinclearand again, en aided Rahd Soap it is & znmoteel:'mvc, 3 RESINOL SHAVING STICK Aends m'mu. AHubmau,lm:( for the purpose of:directing sueh” or- |l ganizations as might- be. interested ‘in such work throu; ut the various “Yes, you would, pretty fiancee. sadly, hydrographic office, and after a year| there, began his.ten years of notablel service with coast survey. After tthd Spanish-Ameriain war Admiral Pillsbury was at the Baston | fiancee ter’ of but a féw Yedrs ght | talk like lhat if you 'were deéply. in]start and:wasn't chanee at all.” 5 —_ “Dudley,” said the prett; Not only was Admiral Pillsbury in- a- | be” less conern hanifest the | love with 4 terested in ocsan -eurrents, but in tions as it plans to depart from its g long established policy of keeping out of European affairs and to join with| the other nations under the league of| nations with the idea of working for permanent world peace. There is good ground for Dbelieving | ¢ the Lord Gsv statement repre- present situation for .we. -can still point to hundreds ‘of acres of weod-: land and millions and millions-of feet of lumiber, but. unless * prowision " is made for:the timber of the future be- fore the supply gives Out the country is going’ to feel ‘the effects ~of . the shortage muych more serlously than tious man. case,” . persisted , the engaget “Why, there might be a dozen had come here to lne, _you would hav “But I was just making suppositi:: Tapturously,” “you have made it per- d! fectly clear to me and set my mind at rest. Hew foolish T have been! fen living .in' other cities who if they| Why, -1 think you are simply wender- e ful!”—Chicago News. scope was the dry land. with. the.gréatest of discoveries whose Daniei preside; 1619, many other phases of geography. became a member of the board of managers of the Nationa] Geographic Society' in 1909, succeeding the late u.me president of The Sociéty April He Coit Gilman; was elected vice- nt of the board in 1915, and be- Stories That Recall Others, A resume of his findings concern- ing the -Gulf Stream, swhich fixed its| axis in the Straits of Florida and off Cape Hatteras, was published in the official organ of the National Geo- graphic Society, the National To the landsman’s mind a river or a-lake are.stable, predetermined, fixed phenomena. Ocean -currents are _con- sidered, fickle, wacillating, changeable. Admiral - Pillsbury's deductions. from it does today. Inferest. in.guarding the future is. what the feresters are\ trying to arpuse, . 4 PRJCE A®VANCES, sents the Pritish attitude in regard . to the peace treaty situation in this It indicates plainly enough eat Britain wants the help uence of the United States The Sunday. school -teacher-advised -his_class- of . hoys * that--the -morning study would be about,Ruth, referring, 2 - = > A 2 s " 3 the enormous data he collected proved 0~ u «ch conditions as we approve,| High prices are still “belng “de:| °f.Q0WSe to € sleanel. o U Hihat"the reverse of this popular con-| sraphie Magazine, and he also con-! 1 t is willing to accept the Lodge, nounced. throughout ...the.. .eountry.l tiucing the subject, -“who can tell|Ception is true. Rivers change their “tributed other important articles to! ations ang that it _has consid- ered time to let it.be knuwn. It has been previcusly stated that both Great Britain and France would a ¢ such reservations as were pro« d here. The letter of Lerd Grey in black and white and it can- to have the effect of hasten- ing the day when the seénate will act favorably “upon the treaty ,with the Lodge reservations - It has’complete- ly ‘pushed away the opposition that has come from the advocates, jnclud- dent, that the treaty ed without any change whatever,. while it strengthens. the position thdt has been mafitained by the reservationists. With this coun- try's interests protected ang the lead- er of the other nations willing to ae- cept such reservations the way ought to be cleared for quick and favorable action in accord with the Lodge plan. Complaint_is made about the cost of| me anything about Ruth all kinds, of , hecessities and while[* Up went a hand in the rear of the some of the loudest protests ’ havel class. been made about the ‘incréases which| , “Well. Williey’ .asked -the ‘%;’“’h“ have proved to be the smallest jn the| "What do you know about Ruth? list there is far less heard a,bam the ‘He made 29 home. runs last seasan, jump that has taken placs,in bther| "> the prom e things even though the advance is His*Reply much greater and appsrently no mere A teacher was explaining thé meth- s aa n | Tast “‘2"5 ?;“y' ‘s ‘&‘2 %e.i‘;i‘l’?sfi?nde ot It s n i ywi AEBLS i bureau of labor statistics wherdhy ¢ there is -a‘comparison betwéen prices in 1913 and those.in 1919. .The.report| shows that during the six years there ‘Was aa”incfelise in the retail price of meats of from-50 -to- 80 per gent. and it is remembered that meat was one of the things about which thére has | been long - discussfon in . connection with high prices. ¥et the increase in that line was mild ‘When " if " is noted’ that clothing took a jump of 235 per| cent., or practically three! times * as courses, grow and dwindle, appear and disappear. But the bouns dess ocean is affected ‘only by cataclysmic -upheav-i als; and its endless reaches ‘offer a stable course for the complicated riv- ulets, streams and n;_ighty currents which flow through itfand fixed laws govern the ‘ progress @f all * objects these streams carry, from sea weed to icebergs., It took years to collect’ the data which led to this simple conclusion; and the econnotationg that irow frof it are technical and complicated. They have been formulated, in part, by Ad- miral Pmsbury “himself, " in a’' text book swhich is in,usé "jn the United States navy, and also in naval reports which still ‘are standard references. Like many other achieyements so- credited to Americdns, Admiral Pills- bury’s ‘Gulf Stream studies former a by product of his work in line of duty for the United States government; and. his career was typically American in that he won a foremost-place after a humble beginning. Born. in Lowell, The Geographic. Little Britain Changes In the center of the great city of London lies a small neighborhood consisting of a cluster narrow streets and courts of Vi vonzrahle and debilitated houses which goes the name of Little Britain. Chfist Church- $chool and St,) Barthelomew’s hospital bound it on the west, Smith- field and Long lane on the north, Al- dersgate street, like an arm of the sea, divides it from the eastern part of the city,” says Washington Irving in his “Sketch Book.” “Little Britain may be truly called the hearts core of the city.” Long ago the district began to change. The Misses Lamb, $whose early objections to the lack of fashion in Little Brit2in are described by Irving, used to invite “genetel com- pany” from Theobold's *road , Lion square, Gray's Inn lane and Haton Garden. Christ church school has gone, and so have the “debilitated Majestic Electric Heater ‘Warmth and Comfort Absolutely Safe’ ' The Norwich Electric Co. 42 FRANKLIN STREET on!y eight years. of on- politics so he answered thus L don't %o bull moose or belong lodge” - - IN THE DAY’S NEWS Admiral 'Pillsbury, ‘The death of Reéar Admirai, John E retiracy . prevident of - w, but “he is éither a to Oriental His Last Reason the Real One. There is an editor' down on Park Row who is a professional “anti”—a part of the-eternal no—among his friends. In any gathéring he always takes the view'that others oppose. As a result he is not exn-emely popular, Best Medicine Is Oxygen. The best medicine?. Two miles of oxygen three ‘times a day. This is not only the best, but cheap and pleas- ant-to-take. It suits all ages-and con- stitutions. ¥t is patented by Trfinite Wisdom, sealed with a signet divime. SENSIBLE ACTION. Mass,, in 1846, he That he American ‘military avia- much_as lth‘emgre:test ad@vance . in 11:;1{?::;‘ vkt v ma:ks.bwumc 2 jacs 10 B, heTseieh sents h;l.lses. d'rk}i) hat:' lngenhmmhm Bomebody asked him the other day!p; cures cold feet, hot heads, :pale tors who were forced to jand in Mex- | meat, " wiile~ the ;burega shows that 1 fior and| sentatives, at Washington. fou offices and showrooms,” such as that| wuot was the reason for his .obst: " i S bk el o were relbased by the Mexican ay- | bread was advaneed 179 per cent.|the Passing of a gallant sailor an e e - T18eR i which are now for sile, “producing - o = ces; ungs, and pers— Nt R e liched tnit| house furnishings 203 per cent..build+|Cminent sclentist, whose life story isiyears later. ~But appointment of| £570 gross per annum, Iwld for 35| B2cY. “Well” he said, “anybody can be | by Tawrason Bfown, in "Rules for on Mexican soil could|ing Inaterials-133 per éeht., Bigar 164 :’a'file‘;znf;xcfPF‘m"‘l g o s AN s T ;};v‘:lmmd‘;m“gd“:n Teatd & £210, A},s‘,ngm bu}:ldlmg now | gopular just by being agreeable. I like | Recovery from Pulmopary Tuberew- . torily - explained is only)| Der cent. potataes 133 -per.cent.,.four| ““Pacatyy the high light of Admiral|1862. Graduating there in 1567 he it v SB;“;”; Seing unpopular, ind besides I've g0t | josic™ o what to be expected. No other| 133 per ‘tent. flisbury’s evertful serNge af sea |Spent the next two years on the fri-fpommoad. in i)y The, SelrcRlAT: ok dyspepsia.”~New York Times, outeo! would have been thought of| These gains were noted up-to”the] his exploit in manoeuvering the|gate Minnesota,- and he ~was com- postoffice, . enjoys 'fl_., reim.atiin o A were the relations between this coun-|end of the past year. Since that time,|dynamite ship Vesw which < he|Missioned an ensign in 1868. being a very valuable area for com- Vital St Srowth by Labor. try and the republic to the south|however, ‘therp has heefizno,checking|commanded before Santiago during] He was made a'lieutenant in 1872| mercial purposes. Irving's descrip- pe Aebralinast ” You have communed with grest what they ought to be, but Mexico 'the Spanish-American war. At nights!and detailed to the study of terpedees|tion of Little Britain clearly includes I have crossed the rubicund,” mupr of the hdvances. mfir bréad, sugar, Rave s he ‘would work “his vessel toward tire g ! harbor mouth, and, in the . pitchy’ at Newport. has so often shown a disposition to marricd’ Niks be troublesome and to be exceedingly The following .year he Florence. Greenwood | men to little purpose if you have not references to Cloth Fair. Little Brit+ learned that, however eise they may mured the woman whe had just gitap ain, accoding te Stow, was so called reled with her red-faced cook. e {darkness, train’three: fixed. dynamite! Atchison, of Portland, Maine.. TwWo becauée the earls of Britainy formerly have differéd, in one respect they were = s i s whic] € * 7 2 TR e f‘"flf_“ n 'm:;‘;‘:can:‘t:mc‘l’i‘::;":ef prifteetine is gome :l:’tubes to let fly the charges which ac-|years later he was trapsferred-to the|lived there. It was at ome time the ve all alike. Their sinews grew. by laber. limmeo is today placed In it to do the| resardlass. “,flh““ F’fi % {complished damaging results ‘tp the fat dhief city market for sedond-hand | Woman shbuldn't ery; Is more pic- | ' ) S rt ot liance is tol a) placed in it to do the stop it 1o ot ielng tHa: & fortifications of Morro Castle.’ books.—London Times. turesque “to - sob. A < square thi D Iiod surprising tHérefore | which ~Admiral 5 . But the work ; by Pillsbury’s name, will live in-the an- nals .of original research is.that in connection with - his study of oceanj currents. As commander of the Coast Survey steamer; the Blake, “he em- ployed. a device &f hig own. invention, to. anchor that vessel in¢depths of| and: siudied| that dealers who are able t6"sell five pounds -of sugar to a custorher now are flmimg that _ .customer isn't eager to' lay 'in biz stocks at such prices, but,‘having” been * forced -* to economize when prices were _much lower they gre perfectly willing™ to The av! 1:uors of course hall no bus- iness to be on Mexican soil. For some veason, according to the report, they had lost their way and iristead of fol- lowing the boundary, the Rio Grande river, as they supposed they followed branch which turned south into TO RELIEVE CATAR- RHAL DEAFNESS AND HEAD NOISES If you have catarrhal déafness.or are | Mexico. This left them on neighbor. | keep ‘it “uprunder 'present - da.ide- | more than {wo miles, ied hard of hearing or have head noises, 5 5 = .| mands. The currents there by means of “contriv-|80 to your druggist'and get one aunce ing territors. They were where they| Wands ‘he mflr Ig. wondering, | 0 LT 0 of his own maling. Th“,}] of Parming (double strength) and_add didn’t belong by mistake. ~ According good 'TE ‘when the ndmce 1to it 3% pint of hot water and a Mttle he established the position 0f the axis of the stream and determinéd’ many of the laws by w ch -its flow’ is' gov= This will often bring ~quick relief S from the distressing head noises. * ‘Hi#¥ patience an ingenuity ‘during §1°‘=gefl nostrils should open, breathing this study, which fook seven years,|BeCOmE easy and the mucus etop drep- = : L ot Mt s MinE fn e throat. It is easy to pre- stamped “him as a sor D ipare, costs little and is pleasant to Darwin; and the results have a prac-|take. Anyone who has catarrhal deaf- tical importance only to be compared(fl€ or head noises should give this 3 prestription a trial. is going to gtop. | EDITORIAL NOTES. ~ The Tavks maintain: that' they' will never ‘adopt bolshevism. Probahly. it isn't bad enoughA jgranulated- sugar. Take to practices under such conditions spoonful four times a day. il the Mexicans had the right to detain them until they .could ascertain the facts regarding the aviators' presence in their country. That is no more than this country has the right to’do and probably would do in ¢ase Mexi- can military aviators landed north of the boundary. Because they wore the garb of the United States army and the countries are at peace Mexico was not obliged to accept their ex- planation. It had a right to verify the aviators' statements. They were out of their jurisdiction and Mexico| had 2 right to know why . The early release, however, indi- cates the acceptance of the explana- tion and the handting of the matter in a sensible manner, and by like de- cisions in similar Matters Mexico can do much to reestablish itself in the good graces of this country, table« It by any dunce it, yvss Ymus shat was signatling- she vo(nd hve been understood ‘before. this. - 1t iswi poasible 'to waz very 'e'n-_ thusiastic' aver our grewth by point- | ing to the grang list. : T S5 T 1f ths groundhog’s- eonafl—m to anything we.still have considera- ble winter to look forward to, 5 ' It will only.be a few days now he- fore we can depend upon the sun and warm weather to clean__lm our-streets. It you cannot keep the eoughing, PRflSPERITY Brands ™ ROYAL WORCESTER Animal - Fertilizers “You Never See Aged The physiclan is telling thess two Fat People” ! e sig oy seven —_— i sneezing ‘crowd away from yol other- of whom feels ‘““more or less m-t of the thu, ing ‘m that if they reduce thei . become | Hasy and No thyraig, no DELAYING TOO LONG. | wise there are those who advige nfi: and your crops will grow. healtn er, %r: Contentsd—and jonger L8 eat ail you meed, ne tem:mmmm The hoz'e!n Too often is it the case that|Z3rle. system is & whe Bave Overstoutness impe: !hd: sise. the am! MORE GREATER crops many thought is given to locking the stable ' mm e rlln o ’&'m.’“ tnd The man on te corner sa says: With E b b i cause our ENRICH 7 ‘The mumtuézuons ol " ' au m ecause of but not until after the! SOIL PERMANENTLY. Their ‘very ingredi . P - iy ; demands for an old fashioned winter very ‘ngredients are such as experts ‘one of ‘he “‘°“ horse has been stolen. This is em- | pianed who' has wiything to may -Fecognize as fhost essentialito MORE crops—MEAT. BLOOD and BONE. Biilty to EART FA FM Ryou phasized at the present time by the| losses that have been sustained in l‘hti el destruction of mills, art galleries and ‘When a South Carolina cemets Awellings with the loss. of life, me@namefl a cemetery Humane :fi threwing of people out of work and! Fyiendly there fust.be aome uhusual the destruction of valuable paintings: that cannot be replaced. ebout spring? Wehave A FERTILIZER FOR E7ER NEED Our 24 page FREE memo' booklet tells the WY‘ to your particular needs. Write fm“:l today. . Ppe et ouited NORWICH TALLOW ‘©0., Norwich, C = WE BUY RAW FURS —Write . u-mu are your heart, undergo so) stmnx sk arimety deatte dfi et flnt means! REDUCE WEIGHT HAPPILY! (219) il Regardless of whatever efferts had| g mmmem‘hfllflmfiw Waigh MNK--‘ the y been made to protect -the ~@ifferent: Bergdoll, a:fimm - i | Bation from Srosk 16 week. Liston 16, the classes of property it becomes evident One thing is cemin he malwetshu && e become | pl remarks of yous When they . through the destruction that such! was nover, w’q te Sght. - MOTOR FREI S e ahoet n r risk of | observe how much mare 2 You gre 3 steps were not adequate. 1t raay hale‘ el B R death is greater. h you want to livel o “mj:um/-‘;" i "“:: ® heen because it was considersq Fuffi-| Where insurance. rates - are in- (Al Geods Covered by Insurance Durlng Tram.t) ¢ ‘Mlpodty dulls bnrnhluvdln&o k: & cient protection was afforded, bauuse creased becatse of the nmnbet of au- ¥ NORWICH—PROVIDENCE—NEW LONDON—PUTNAM 1 3 FALL RIVER—NEW BEDFORD { and Connecting Points i EQUIPMENT—NINTEEN PIERCE-ARROW TRUC is./ E. P. WINWARD & SON ! Phone 1250 135 WAm S 2 NORWICH 492 SOUTH MAIN STREET PROVI 1t was not beMeved under ord'.nlrv‘ tos stelen it doesu't leave the right conditions that fire could be staried | reflection on peice autharities. that would work such havoc or be- | cause it was not considered advisabla) to make greater outlays for the make | of protection. l 810 ‘Whatever the rm were for the| werk. failure to take greater measures to] prevent fire and to safeguard lives and property against destruetion, it! pathies_on beeomes evident following the losses| solicitous" for that the needed expenditures would| who alweys get lun m have bee an exeslent investment mmmuwunu— wers the geed alive and the property | perves. " ::i"u eh?a'e-:fidm sym- 1 Do it bflllfl t o BT LA e, If. Holland is geing to insist on keeping-fhe kuiser, it ought to. put and: - admis- AT DlUGGlB‘l’&' OR BY MalL, 138-142 DURFEE STROST ‘ALE RIVER