Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 19, 1920, Page 11

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Mexico City, Feb. 18.—Hieroglyphics overed on the foundation e pyramidg of San Juan ot 27 “milés northeast of exico h(.::ty may zwix t‘he‘ prohlsg‘x W] lexe storians ant rohtd ’;g -centuries as to the frue- ‘of the 'Mexican nation. | These - strange, e thorities to be Chinese, thus tending to_bear out the old tradition that in the dim past wandering from China crossed to a new continent, settled within the present as- | boundaries of Mexico and bacamo the 0 itorum ;t' thB‘“r:ce which now ”gsflifiaesung are the recent dis- that the Bureau of Anthro- been lnstmc;.e(xln u:hc_onduct vigorous research an _this_con- Ty Afdgg Kuang, charge ‘of Lhe;h Chinese laga.tign mln exieo, visited the pyramids and stat- that the, hieroglyphics' were sin:l- lar in_many regpects to certain sym- now. in use by the Chinese. the words “Sun,” “City” and “Eve” were clearly depicted. Mexican clogists w! have interested - [themselves in the overy have de- ————————————————————————=| clined to pass final judgment until p L & Mngz;; a;_e made and ‘more evidence obtained. “The pyramids of San Juan Ttotihu- acan as well as those in Cholula in the state of Puebla are among the oldest marks of primitive habitation to Ye found in the republic. |-as ' colossal monuments to peoples awhose history was as obscure tol the conquering Spaniards in the sixteenth gentuty as to presfent day historians. Because of their general construction, & used very ur R S + £hAampoos contain too § I g E B iy 4T i WOMEN VOTERS OPPOSED ..TO MILITARY TRAINING Chicago, Feb. 18.—The National League of Women Voters, after adopt- '@ | ing a 'resclution opposing universal residential hotef. Dianer in full'swing. cv:nl\gulnryl 5 m}umrl! n;a_i; ng, refused Khives . al e closing session today to recon- i R wa ol A e | e aeilia | The motion fo . - = m"m sider vggts-de(ented following spirited erach 4t oge e room, & | argument. - sound -of falling” dishes. ~ An abrupt ; ‘(i)ther ac:inx; :;:kep today : ;?cltgded > indorsement o e League of ations, e~ t::' m"'h"'"'fi"“‘ :fi‘“‘;‘ with . the understanding that neces. ncenttptod, oil. the .scene. sary reservations were sanctioned. @alsmity. Then, suddenly, s6aring | The resolution' was passed only after sbove & rising murmur of ipguiry, efie | much debate, Clear voice ‘with the desired informa« Hon, “Squash, my dear, of all things1® - The- next -national meeting of the ! league will be called by the board of directors. The league succeeds the National American man Suffrage Association, which dissolved after fighting for weman's right to suffrage since 1369. At today's session right of free speech, free press-and free representa- tion were emphatically supported. The women declared their opposition to g&y attempts to use violence against | e. gavernment but warned that “ill- | considered attenipts to meet this dif- ficulty,” imperilled the real liberty of American citizens. Hatching Trout. A trout egg takes from 35 to 60 days to hatch, according to the tempera- tare of the water. Destroys The Hair < Qirls—if you want plenty of thick, beautiful, glossy, silky hafr, do by all means get rid of dandruff, for it will starve your hair and ruin it if you deén't. It doesn’t do much good to try te brush or wash it out. The only sure wiy to get rid of Gandruff is to dis~ solve it, then you destroy it entirely. To. do this, get about four ounces of ordinary liguid arvon: apply it at night when retiring; use enough to Giving in Service. “Every woman, and every man, for justify her or his existence. 2 woman gives s much as she takes | in service she is'a Mability, and not an asset to the community.”—Dr, | Esther Lovejoy. Happiness and Duty. | s are said by | that matter, ‘should do something to| Unless | | Burope. some authorities believe they are the handiwork of the Egyptians who in some mysterious manner crossed the seas and denoted their places of per- manent habitation with these stone and cement structures whieh are even larger than the more famous pyra- mids of Egypt. i The little village San Juan Teotihuacan which in - the .. Aztec language meant “City of the Gods” “was in the early days of Asztec his- “tory ‘the scene of extraordinary re- ligious ceremonies. The two pyramids, one dedicated to the Sun, and the other to the Moon, are known to have been the tombs in which hundreds of tribal dignitaries were buried and ex- cavators have exhumed wrought stone containing human. bones, obsidian knives, terra cotta heads with broad fases and flat noses, fragments of rare pottery and great numbers of arrow- ‘heads. One of the most recent and most _valuable discoveries : was' a jadeite mask of some past monarch with the brow covered with the dia- dem known to early Mexican history. TW pyramid to the Sun es 761x721 feet at the base and. is 271 feet high. They both contain numer- ous chambers and their geveral stories are complete temples in themselves but conneted by winding stairs. The inscriptions having Chinese characteristics ~ were discovered through excavating in the ruins of what has generally been known as La Ciudadela (The Citadel) but ' which, according to recent reports of investi- gatons, are what is left of a pyramid Vax-ger, dand perhaps, older than the| wo_pyramids to the Sun and ' the Moon. CONVENTION OF NATIONAL DRY. GOODS ASSOCIATION| New York, Feb. 18.—Profiteering is the last and least of six reasons for the high cost of living given today by Howard E. Figg, an assistant United States attorney general, at the ninth annual convention of the National Dry Goods association. Mr. Figg asserted, however, that some of the dry goods dealers were guilty of profiteering and should he punished without. trial, while he believed that all were guilty of having profiteered, perhaps unwitting- 1y, at some time or other. . “The first reason, for present condi- tions,” said the speaker, “is the in- creased volume of money and credits; second, the: wide increase in wages, due partly t6 car necessities and gov- ernment wage scales; - third, lessened world production; fourth, increased cost of distribution: fifth, reckless: ex- | travagance and a spirit of speculation, | and, sixth, profiteering.” Mr. Figg wredicted that there would be no appreciable reduction in prices until labor “considers itself a part of the whole of industry and consents to co-operate.” “T do not mean,” he explained, “that labar must g up its shert werk days and its high wages, but I do mean that labor must hepd its back and work a full sixty minutes in each hour.” Large Increase in Imports from Europe One’ of the surprises of the after- the-war trade of the United States is the large inereases in quantities of merchandise being sent us from It has been asserted that Europe would have little which. she could send. to the United States in exchange for our merchandise, but official figures of imports from that moisten the sealp and rub it in gently with the finger tipa, By morning, most if not all, of. your dandruff will be gone, and three or feur mere applications will co) dissolve™ and eHitirély déstroy every i sign and trace of it, will find, tos, that all itching and digging of the sealp will stop, and your hair will look and feel s hundred times better. You can ‘geét 'liquid arven at drug store. It is imex< pensive and four ounces is all you will need, no matter how much daRdruft you have.” THis simple remedy never fails. Cured His Piles Now 88 Years Old But Works at Trade of Blacksmith and Feels Younger Since Piles Are Gone. Happiness is the ratural flower of duty.—Phillips Brooks. The oldest active blacksmith ‘In Michigan is still pounding his anvil in the. town of Homer— thanks treating *Cascarets’ act on Liver an to my ime ternal method of piles, So Convenient! You wake up wit 4 Bowels without Griping or Sickening you— Breath and Stomach Sweet—No Rilicusness, continenet in the calendar year ' will show a total considerably more than ad Clear, Complexion Rosy, h your He Headache or Upset Stomach. 9 ont Mr. B R B p Dear Sir want xl to your'treatment has done fo with piles for know w r mé. I est activ 2 St m!t‘ln ; youn, lnpw'wflhfi:é{r thi; . 8 Way.. ‘use my letf any wa: m‘“ L'n‘ it nmm J;?.’a ai'e&‘ ‘?lc"&’ s * ! Youm!y‘ 1e BUReriDE WI Dot e Bt b os Pile & 7ot tried the one sensible way of freats Bon't e eut. Dow't wasts money on | g:lfih salves, ointments, dila: e ” e SR No matter whether cal HE e mH 1om, .ll:n‘llrl’( or nec.n} dav.ha:‘né e e —— occasion en! P | $ou should send for - this free trial 4 : .. treatment. z A e S A T g _In this climate with i This ", ‘;1 1 ] er occupation_| tos, Y methon Wi free treatment gl Tan o g Sirh mafl the ‘eoupon—but s o box handy. Page Bldg. Marshall, Mich, il Hoo LPAT B vome: meee Briggs’ Mentholated-Hoarhound Cough Drops o} w.;h:ylmmgoeongh at onee. s C-‘A. BRIGGS CO. CAMBRIDGE, MASS. uA_h@-.d Briggs’ Boston Wafers TR SRR its sudden changes we licy to have a ) New b 2-29S 2uoyg “ee. cery.... NARRAGANSETT v ot and(wgeg‘m e s T S8 2woyq 4eang Uy [9€ “00) A1Su0n9JU0) AESAOYM HedLRTIY 2-5Zp Suoyq 931§ 2400 § WBUM 'F I9184) bytle case at your gro- €F SUoyq ‘pPaxmg dssunmo)) “o) p{wfiso 'seyn G WIRY] 13M, 00Z <00 IOVLM [RSUI FoX MeN SYOLNERIISIA TTVSTIOHM double that' of 1918. While the tails of December are not yet avail- able, the oflicial figures for the imports from Europe at 379,000, against §2 4,000 in the same months of 1918, and partial re- ports for December indicate that the total from - Europe in the full year| 1919 will approximate 9,600, | against $318,000,000 in 1918, and fov a total larger than, that of any year| since 1914, he 1919 figures ¥ parently show an iner 125 percent over those of 181 closing year of the war. This big increase in Kurope's ship- ments to the United Sta s not due | in any great degree, state-,| ment of the National City Bank of ! York, to the resumption of trade by the Central Power: Th: figures for the 11 months ending writh | November ow that the total of 1919 | imports from Germany but about $8,- 000,000; - Austria-Hungary. $2,000,000; and Turkey $13,000,000. or the increase from the neutrals as great| as had been expected, the crease | from the Scanadanavian States being | but about $13,000,000: and from Switz erland $8,000,000; though Spain- does | show a comparatitvely large increase, ! $28,000,000, and Netherlands a gain of $59,000,000. The bulk of the increase of $360,- 000,000 in our imports from Burope in the 11 months ending with No- vember comes from the three most active participants in the w on the Allied side, Great Britains France and Italy. The merchan from Great Britain imported in the 11 months ending witnt November - stands . at $267,000,000 against = $140,000,000 in the same months of last year: from France $107,000,000 against $56,000,- 000 in the corresponding months of 1918, and from Italy $52,000,000 against $23,000,000, Thus these three most actitve of the Allies in the war show an advance from $219,000,000. in the| 11 months of 1918 to- $426,000,000 in | the same months of 1919, an increage | of nearly 100 percent. ¥ This big increase in merchandise which we are drawing from Europe | occurs largely in luxuries. Cotton laces and embroideries chiefly of Europe manufact ed in November 1919 $2,350,000 against $659,000 in November 1918, and will| total about $14,000,000 in the full year diamonds and other precious stones, practically all of which are brought from Europe, chiefly from the Neth- erlands, showed in November 1919 $8,433,000 against $1,459,000 in Novem- ber of the preceding year, and for the full callendar year 1919 will ex- Ceed $100,000,000 as against $24,000, DONT | DESPAIR If you are troubled with pains or aches; i‘eelured ; have headache, ; on, insomnia; painful pass- #ge of urine, you will find relief in - GOLD MEDAL ture, show- and ove eleven | cnding with November menths ending with November, putism,eno,ooo as against a little over $4,- $633,- | 000,600 in the same period of 1918; | in the 11 months of 1919 $16,493,000, | | Spain, the quantity from Italy how- 111 months of 1918 to $597,000 in tke| t ! corresponding period of 1 {dom, amounted to $13,000,000 imported, | = Iohli;ing you to seek relief two or three amounted in the 11 months 1919 to over olive oil, of which the imports in} 1918 armounted to only $450,000, was though it is proper to add that a very large proportoion of this came from ever, advancing from $20,000 in the; 19; fu drawn’chiefly from the United King-‘ in the} 11 months of 1919, against a little] over $3,000,000 in tha same manths | of 1918; currants, chiefly from Gree show a total qf 11,000,000 pounds in the 11 months of 1919, and 5,000,000 | ounds in the same months of the preceding year; of artificial chiefly European product, the impo: of the 11 months of 1819 are $3, 000, as against $205,000 in the cor- { responding months of pearls | from Franee in the 11 months of 1919 | are $4,594,000 against $111,000- in the and from Great Britain $5,076,000 me months of the preceding year, against $377,000 in the same months of 1918, In a few articles required for manufacturing there are also in- creases from Europe, raw silk rom same months of last year, and india rubber, which England is again be- ginning to draw fram her colonies, $23,130,000 in the 11 menths of 1919 against $3,724,000 in the same months of 1918. Census Takers Use Aeroplanes Everything from aeroplanes to snowshoes is being used by the agents of Uncle Sam in taking the 1920 cen- sus of the United States. About the only modern method of transportation either on, over, or below land or water that has not been employed in enumerating Uncle Sam’'s nieces and nephews seems to be the submarine. Aeroplanes have come in handy in enumerating the dwellers on the is- lands off the coast of Florida; yachts and rowboats have been used in the URIC ACID IN MEAT CLOGS THE KIDNEYS Take a glass of Salts if 'your Back * hurts or Bladder bothers you— Drink more water. If you must have your meat every day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with saits occasionglly, says a noted author- acid which almost paralyzes fl_\e kid- neys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They become sluggish and weaken, then you suffer with a dull misery in the kidney region, sharp pains. in the back or sick headache, dizziness, your stomach sours, tongue is coated and when the weather is bad you have rheumatic. twinges. The urine gets ¢loudy, full of sediment, the channels often get 'sore and irritated, times during the night. * To neutralize these irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush off the body’s urinous waste get four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy here; take a tablespoonful in a glass eof water before hreakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then aet. fine This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- The world's standard Hiver, biaddvr and ric s pen oY ric acid trou Nationui Remedy of Holland m‘l‘.";% Three sizes, all druggists. Guaranteed. Look for the namo Gold Modal e el = iy b bined with. lithia, and has n' used for generations.to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also te neutralize the Italy $15,310,000 against $53,622 in the - ity whe tells us that meat forms uric |, wailan mule te: snowsho aidy am has carried the . census takers out on the desert regions; and es have become the the census dwelling bodied cens ourney. of northern .states an In the central nea n enumerator. making his rounds on'| snowshoes arrived at.an isolated farm | harbors cf the country; native canoes been in demand among the are being | used everywheré; the trie. and trusty Islands; “flivvers” r Oswego, a few days only - to find: that™ an, a gatherer as contmumg Sun’s Wonderful Heat. | | Ha- | 1 trusted | in the E Bos: part of New York | go | ble- | man was needed more than a| A2 . the man of the|d0WN. is always the one who Is wait« had been sick in bed for sev- | ing for more ride instedid of the ona eral days and the farm animals were suffering ‘for lack of food and water. The census man, like any good neigh- | bor would, stopped long enough to do the chores, dig out -paths through the | deep snow and put things shape order before 1 | in ship- { enclose his | The heat produced by a given sur-|pain i1 s face of the sun is 400 times greater | than that which is given off by the same surface of molten iron. Just as Good. Bobby, just home from hfs first visit ’ to the country, was telling'tte folks P its wonders, v, mg,” he said; get milk from and it's just as good ws any."e ton Transeript. ‘ ‘And saj “out on the farm they 'S, Such 1s Human Nature. z The man who does the most com- plaini when utomobile - breaks .. who has to fix it. is Worth Money Cut out this slip, mail to Foley Ave., Chicago, 11 Co., v Foley's coughs, ney Pills faz rheumatis and croup; sluggish bowels. acids in urine, so it no longer irrifates, thus ending bladder weakness, Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot in- jure, and makes a delightful effer- vescent Mthia-water drink i _ALGO] | AVegeiablePr eparation cod. fasust i Atelpful Remedy £ ! Gonstipation and DiarT milatingthelt H&YBM s, HOL-3 PER GENT- ula- i. pud Feverishness ¢ For Infants and Children. . ; Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria - N o o1

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