Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 27, 1920, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

‘where payments would be| acknowledged and whers they would not be told months afterward that no, PO ARG Ry etuartption prics 120 & week; Svo & menth; $3.80 . .. Sulessd st the Pestofies st Norwich, fema., & @emd-clasm mater. Naturally the consumer is bound to| realize. be intevested ”m‘_t-he,.:?ing‘ s 0 ot the operators :dm ¥ for the purpose. ing the wi increase, which bids fair to be in -nom:mNo—. - no more dull blades! And besi the Twinplex enables you to get 100 shaves from ONE blade. me that definite heed|rate information regarding their bus i iness conditions and will be able | some things, as to know: others. Sun- shine has: its place in our lives, so has | the fog. In the experience of ancient’ Israel, the pillar of cloud by day was |as protective as the pillar of fire by night, : of other concessions. The consumer ls' wondering. where he is going to get off, and well he might for he fully recoguizes the fact that. there is no one standing up him now as Fuel Admias:cztsr Gar- fleld @id when he'insis‘el that the 14 per cent. increase allowad the miners at the time of )endinz the strike should come out .f the pockeis of the eperators. ‘With. the ending of coal control by the government the first of April the situation changes again. Providing} ‘there is an agreement on the award the to eliminate the complications of the|more successfully. present law, to avoid as far as poS-|therefore, that heavy war taxatidn sible- the shackling of business and' to | has not been without its benefits, b | work out a permanent and simplified| Gradually our manufacturers are system of taxation. And to this end | getting over their uncertainty as to every taxpayer should Hecome' & stu-|the cost of labor and raw materials dent. of the theory and practice ‘:: ::d &nce“l:linty It-ly ?‘ t::ukm m‘: This was for the purpose of i taxation and should' strive to assi 0 the uncertain! regard first” aid in activmr. Mo.(‘;o:l‘e those- whose duty it is to frame and|taxes remains, I think we w\xlfl‘ look ¥ probably would rather go to. the robin | administer the laws with suggestions|forward with assurance to conditions i for any kind of -instruction thah to|sgrowing out of his own experience | permitting a reduction of the revenues the ant, for we welcome the coming |and observation. ito be secured from taxation ,if we of the robin more than we do: the ant.| Revision: of the tax laws does not|had merely to consider raising enough The things we love are better teach- | necessarily involve a reduction in the[money to meet governmental expendi- ers than those we detest. The robin|amount of revenue: to be secured Dy | tures. CIRCULATION certain man reputed for great [WEEK ENDING MARCH 20th, 1920 “wisdom, living in the olden time, once said, “Go to the ant, thou sluggard!" TIME TO SPEAK OUT. When a democrat, and a southern democrat at that, takes 40 minutes of 3 out charge to prove how ¥ that Sang the other morning in my | the ent. from: taxation. It| But there are other things to be| i the time of the lewer hotise of con- | of the conl commlssion’the eonsumer| LG 08 (1 Do story fmat T was| might involve. Jowering. some and in- | considered—and most important ; gress as Congressman Humphteys did|is anxious to know whether he is go-| Trt f5XC 00 M0 & S0V et L VARl O 0 o ther tax rates, better, to ad- | among them is our war debt amount- Gillette 3 to call attention to the fact that ::l!rd :'; ';: t‘::fem“ mfor‘:‘;mfi:;"ii song of winter vanishing and, spring|just our system to post war condi- it:fs t:;estmve“ r%gw;’mflflh ?n part of 10-Year Service Guaranteed Pres 7 i- crease, or-w hing. i tions. lun-:em:::l :Ztuftn x:zos?(‘;n‘:wl:nm;;:‘: :;E:Xll will be just the added increase that ny itxl‘:(:e v{kfl:le &'{Sn’:a’m::;agi When_then can all' taxes be brouglit | sources, but the larger proportion can :’&m 'mot be a candidate for a third time,| the coal commission haa'made that|back to his source of information, yet|down. Beforo that question can be an- | be cleared only by taxation. Shall it 1t you are not deli ghed gj e be little question but what | Will be loaded onto him. we ' may rest%assured that the little|swered we must consider and give|be cleared away by this generation? dnys’ use you can Temurw Rt e e sentiment of Miany more| Passing it on to the consumer is| creature speaks with scientific accu-|answer to several others even more | or ave we justified in passing it on to 0z money will be Tefuoded. han himself, or many more than|the Dopular method that has Dbeen |racy. He somehow gets at the. real|fundametal importance: It i3 of im-|our pursued. - Dr. :Garfield showed: that it was an unjust method ‘under the con- ditions that. existed while he was in office. But Dr. Garfielg, isn’t there to help the consumer today and the coal commission upon which the public was v~-vesented has nothing .to do facts better than the learned weather man at Washington. He goes not de- pend on the forecast of weather in the- New York dailies when to start| from his winter home in the south. His; coming north is fixed by law as| immutable as the vernal equinox. ‘Who told the bird? Go to -the robin portance that we answer ‘them quick- | dren to be paid off in easy install- 1y to be rid of the uncertminty I have | ments? To answer this question we spoken of above, but we have not yet | first must know—if we mean to be the: information necessary to answer | just—what we got out of the war: them with Wisdom. Whether we: shall pass on to genera- Practically. every European. govern- | tions to come benefits gained by our ‘ment is at present considering the im-) sacrifices in bloed that give us the position. of higher tax levies, Only|right to ask that they make up our those who expressed approval of his sentiments on the floor of congress, It has generally been accepted in view of the physical condition. of the president, in view of the known op- position to a third term gnd the dis- approval which has been manifested 'GILLETTE BLADES, 12 FOR 89 . & FOR 45¢ THE LEE & OSGOOD COMPANY at the acts of the administration that there was no chance that he would seek another term. It eannot be be- lieved that he isnow making any plans or has any idea of atiempting to car- ry the party banner in'another cam- paign even in his determined fight for with the fixing {of’ prices.. Its . duty was to say what the miners should be paid, so that with ceal control re- moved the outlpok for the fellow who uses the coal and pays for it is not what might be considered ‘exactly en- couraging in the way of lowered liv- thou sluggard—in faith, and think! At a convention held in this: a dozen years ago or more, ohe speak- er had a very instructive address on “Leaners. and Pushers.” ' It dealt with some very common facts in a:very uncommon way. He showed very erents has: hee nable to lower its war | tax rates: This year's revenues from taxation and the_sale of surplus war materials will be quite ample, it is estimated to meet current govern- mental expenditures. Everyone agree, 1 take t, that we should never reduce: the United States among tihe bellig- | sacrifices in money. The war was fought “to end war.” It was the cause that gave to us amd our allies the victory. achieved as a result of this genera- tion's: suffering? inspiration of this NOIY | s meter to measure his walks, a plow | grandchildren, grand nieces and gramd that won a gold medal at a French |nephews, he sold his cherished Nbrary exhibition, and a light two-wheeled (to Congress. Soon he was plumged Will this purpose be It is not the league of nations’in itself that will prevent vehijcle for Virginia's heavy roads. |deeper into debt by the failure of a ing costs, clearly that almost every enterprise|tjo peveriues to be returned by taxa- | the recurrence of war, but the confi-| He knew not only Greek and Latin, |friend whose notes he had Sdorwed. the treaty. ot has those that push fit, and Others|ijon tg an extent that would make|dence of the people that it will have|but also FtencH, Italian, Spanish and|Happily the hearts and purses of the Yet the fact remains that he has B PR T 0 L B that paralyze it. The “Leaner” is the|new bond' issues necessary to defray | this effect. If we ratify without de- |German. He wrote three books and|peopte were touched by the not definitely stated that he would STOPPING WASTE, dead weight, the one who never ini-|tpe grdinary expenses of government.|stroying this constitution, it seems to|compiled a Bible of his own, leaving not be a candidate again, There have| When Secratary.Alexander: of e s N the department of commerce calls atten- tion to the fact, that the coming,of spring means the season of the year of the author of the Declaration of In- dependence in want and in peril of losing Monticello. Only a few months of life remained to him, but these were The cost of government at present is high. Like the individual the gov- ernment can somewhat better its fin- ancial’ position by the practice of me there will be no reason why we should not reduce taxation for this generation and permit the generation to follow to contribute something for been statements which have indicited that he had made up his mind not to be but there has been no flatfooted! er fellow is going to do and tries to persuade him not to do it. He is the fellow who enjoys the life-of’the en- terprise which the other fellow fur- out of' the Seriptures everything ex- cept the precepts of divine: love, mer- ¢y @nd goodness. s correspondence. would daunt a nibdliclf L cheered and freed from lnxieb"w an | % 'economy. But the cost of government|the benefits we shall have handed|man with a staff of stenographers and |outburst of public sympathy and grat- announcement to that effect, and|when people are in the habit of|nishes. He is the consumer who in u,;"-’;,.ain cannot be ms,gt:rlaflv re- ydowar to them. typists today. Generally he had to |itude. ¥ there is no question but what there|throwing away much material that|growls at the food the producer puts|quced until high prices come down,| If, on the other hand, the war we|work from sunrise until past noon| As he lay dying an hour before sHould be some statement forthcom-|cdnld otherwise be used and urges|into his handgv “without money . and| fsn the government is;} much affect- {have fought turns out to have gained|answering by hand the flood of letters ing. that the possibility of reclamation be| Without price” Such is the person 4! midnight of July 3, 1526, he whispered, “:'Is this the Fourth?” To quiet him, the friend sitting by his bed nodded, and the sick man fell aslep with a smile on his face. Though he did not open hiS weary eyes upon the fiftieth | birthday of the Nation, his heart still the sunrise guns saluted its dawning and again when the noon- time bells rang out. In a few minu utes more it stopped. His dust is mingled with the easth that was dearest to him, close by his louse at Monticello. His burial place was chosen by him in his boyhood. when he planned and dreamed in the shade of a grand old oak. There on a simple shaft the achievements of his manhood are set forth in his own words. In this sef-made tribute he does not record that he was governor, envoy. vice president and president of the United States; they were only offices he chanced to hold. That he added an empire to the United States by the Louisiana Purchase, he ignores as a mere real estate bargain which he happened upon. The three things in his life that Jefferson deemed worthy of remembrance were that he wrote { the Declaration was the author of re- | igtous freedom in Virginia and the founder of the University of Virginia. Monday: James and Dolly Madisen. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA edi by the high cost iving as' the average citizen. It is important in this connection: to consider whether heavy taxation is the cause, as has been many times alleged, or the effect of high- prices. Must we' reduce taxes to reduce prices; or reduce prices to reduce tax- es? I am of the emphatic opinion| that high prices’ are due to other causes. principally to the condition of uncertainty in every line. and that us: nothing but a temporary respite from' armed conflict and aggression, how then can we ask our children share the burden we have laid uptr: our country? The wise thing to db and the just thing. to do; if the league of nations is not brought into be- ing, will be to increase our taxes and pay off the war debt as quickly as possible,' in order that future genera- tions. may be left free to prepare: for the wars they will have to fight. B — highly intelligent people is in the|theatres thought to help them and same class as' the domestic animal|said: “Think of the curtain down at that still eats from a trough. the theatre. Does anyone remember what is printed on it?” B No one remembered at first, but Sunday Morning Talk goon Heary did, and his hand shot un e teacher's THE LIVING GOD: er's non brought fortd the God has a’heart of tenderness and love like our mother’s heart. He seeks triumphant shout, “Asbestos!” - And She Wished Him ta Know It. 2 He was in_town for several days on thelr companionship, craves thelr af- |y, 005 and knew few persons. He fection and is grieved by their sin or | BuSing o alienation from him. Jesus was the | M4S onesome ang the SIENC of & A revealer of God, and He used but one | AT, t8cC WO A B O e name in making God known—the name | 770" lgartnicfixlar g W aa e Father, putting into the holy word all' |,y "came a messenger boy with a | that is tender, sweet and compassion- | tojeoram. It might be good news: and ate, all that lgve could possibly mean. | &SI | 2t PRERT b BURC ToWE SO0 e O 1 ;:“ot"fc;’l“ffi‘;; saw it was from home. This is what it satistaction for all our cravings. We | Mg i o i o Know what a satisfylng of the heart| pe recognized the initials because even a strong friendship gives. There are friends who are to us like a great rock in a weary land. A friend in they stood Zor the names: of the only girl. But the “aning of the message was a mystery. He tried to pry out h, | whom we cam: confide without fear .of | the hidden meaning but- without suc- disappointment, who. we are sure will { gegs, \never fail us. will never stint his love | Finally in his desperation he appeal- in serving us; who always has healing | ed to the hotel clerk, After glana- téndgrness. for the hurt of our heart; |ing at the message the clerk repeated comfort for our surrows and cheer for our discouragement—such a friend is riot only a rock of shelter for us in the words aloud. The stranger’s face times of danger but is as rivers of lightened perceptably. The clerk laughed and wondered how he could water in a thirsty land when. our hearts cry out for life and love: have missed it. Yet this, at its best, iz only a hint LETTERS TO THE EDITOR of what God is to those who bring i Crossless Buns. their thirst to Him. The cross of| Mr. Editor: It was with much ap- Christ meets the soul's most intense |preciation that I read the article of ery for pardon. The divine love meets [ “Hot Cross Buns.” Well do I re- the deepest yearnings of the hungriest | member our pastor, some thirty years hearp for love, God's wisdom answers | 880 When I was a mere child, asking all Questions. of human eagerness | the boys'to. remove from their coats to know. Things alone will never sat- | the eross of palm leaf they wore as isfy an immortal life; even the best [they would any flower on button. They of God's blessings and gifts will not |did_not realize the significance of the do it: nothing less than God Himself | Cross any more than the drunkards will suffice: Yet this'is what Christian | Who Wore them on Palm Sunday as faith finds—not. the mere tokens of |they reeled from one side of the street divine. favor, the comforts of divine|!0 the otker. ~The lowest lover of i care; ‘but God Himself. “I am thy | erime wore the cross to be in popu- friend” is the assurance that comes |lar fashion on Palm Sunday, and Oh, to each trusting' oen. Thus it is that [[What It cost tha Chaist to suffer fdr God meets all human cravings—by |US on the cross! The cross is. the sa- giving us Himseif. cred emblem of the salvation of hu- Breaking precedents has' been’ pop- ular with President Wilson, so it Is not to be supposed that he would hes- itate at being a third term candidate justbebause others have, ang for the spme reason he may not consider it|ing this very peint. .It.is another ap- necessary to let it be known that he|Deal to check the great” amount of will not be a candidate for a thirdWaste which goes on every year, an term just ‘ because McKinley and|effort to make the people realize the Roosevelt did when in office. chance that prevails to reduce the When, however, he has persistengly living expenses. in this very way. appealed for support. and recelvea®it| It can be fully apprecated that the from the democrats, some of whom/|amount thus saved in each household have done what they did out of par-;t0 be applied toward the 'offsetting. ty allegiance it is only just that.theOf living costs is'not likely to be president shoulgy play fair, with the|large but, wheny it is realized that party even without waiting for tain ones thereifiito demand it.' A who will never take any office; never serve on a committee; never volun- teer to help a benevolent cause; _never does any work savé that which is necessary to keep body and soul}; together, ang just as little of that as he can and get away with it. As by evolution the tadpole | becomes the frog, so the “leamer” ' becomes the ‘knocker.” To him his’ church, his order, his guild has the “biggest lot of boneheads. in the state.” His greatest delight is' in rapping his city. You see him leaning against a lamppost saying to the passershy, “This is the most God-forsaken hole on earth! After months of filibuster in the senate would it not be appropriate to | eall the documient under cross exami- -nation, “The League of Procrastina-} tion; No other deliberative as- sembly in the world has generated so many new maladies. Up to the pre: ent we have the reservationists, the mild reservationists, the irreconcila- .bles; and the irreducibles. Not only have these diseases broken oyt and spread but expert internatiomal doc- tors tell us that more are likely to follow unless the senators are willing to take a well known specific called ratification. To make ‘“confusion worse confounded” a warning voice comes from the “white. house” with the regularity of a fog horn saying ot acceptable! Not acceptable!™ Meanwhile disorder reigns, Europe is bewildered, the Turks still murder, and Armenians are still slain, * Lord, how long?” The warmer days that have: come |at last are now causing the buds on some plants to swell. Life in all forms is persistent. Little sprigs of green are often seen in the cracks of rocks, the crotches of trees, and. oth- er places almost impossible of growth. Give the sap the ‘least chance and it pushes its way up the pores to express itself in new bud life. We can take this lesson into the ‘whole realm of responsible life. Give the muscles the activity they are yearning for and the athlete is easily made. The persisténcy of the brain to function is amazing. During one’s waking hours it is impossible to stop thinking. Where there is the least opportunity for self-expression whether through the pores: of the plant, or the muscles, the mind and the soul of man, life greedily seizes that opportunity. What might we not reasonably expect if only a ' larger liberty, was given to this tendency. 'One also’ notices that the swelling bud does fiot sacrifice previous life. It does not gislodge an occupant; it . merely takes possessioh of the tene- given careful attention, it cannot fail to be’realized that g makes an ap- peal that ‘should bg ‘giyen; carefully attention throughout the country. Much time has been -spent in urg- that never ceased to flow in upon him. In the finer arts, he was a musician, an architect nad a landscape garden- er. Although he sprained his wrist in Paris so badly that he could not again play his favorite instrument, the vio- 1in, he could still sing well, and wi forever humming tunes as he rode horsehack, which was his only sport. H' not”only designed his house and laid out ‘the-grounds of Monticella, He was also the architect of the Uni- versity of Virginia, and twentieth cenfury, architects agree that he pro- duced a most beactiful college group. Domestic sorrows. nad poverty form the shadows in the picture of his old age. Jefferson’s wife and all but one ' of his filve children wei® taken from him and after nearly forty years spent In. the service of the public, at sixty- s{x he retired from _the presidency | twenty thousand dollars in debt. For fear that some partisan foe might event jail him as he left the White House borrowed the -money to pay what he owed the Washington store- keepers. Since he was thirty, he had nelther practised law nor been free to look after his farm, and in his long ab- sences the slaves had eaten up the neglected estate: Athough a most sys- tematic person. an efficiency expert by nature he could not make his slender official salaries and his personmal ex- penses’ meet at the end of the year. come as president fell eight thou- His twenty-five thousand dollar in- sand dollars short of the outgo in one year at the White House. To keep the roof over his head and #& home for his always large family of there is' reclaimable~material thro: away each year in‘this countryito the value of about' §500,000,000, it must certainly be appreciated that the small amount of effort “required to dispose of it 1s <worth expending in order to get the benefit. It is of course easier to throw away stuff than it is to be bothered with having it Kicking around until a. pur- chaser appears;. but:so 15 :it easier to kick about high' ‘prices afd ufisatis- factory conditfons than it is to better them. Many have ‘seen the necessity NAVAL APPROPRIATIONS. In spite of the fact that the aim| has been toward the prevention of all| future wars, it is made clear that we are not likely to notice this for some time in the appropriations that are made for military and naval purposes. We are expandifig oar’drmy 1o eral times what it was before - the world war and we are not showing any inclination to let up in the con- struction of naval vessels, fo say[of Saving @ little here snd z. 1itd nothing of the increase that is being e in order fo make ends meet and Sile S iy HAVAT Lk es; others may have gone to much great- In the naval bill, whieh has been|€F €xpenditure of time and. effort to agproved by the lower house and is|$ffect mo greater saving than could now in the hands of the senate eom. |be Accomplished through the saving mittee, appropriations to the amount|2nd disposing of ‘what it has been of $425,000,000 arc provided for. There|the custom to burn.ar throw. away. 18 no provision for new construction,| 1t IS not to.he expected. that all meaning vessels which had not previ-| Faste can be prevented bug it is. per- ously been considered necessary, but]£°tly apparent, in spite;of the: lessons this is because the building program|©of the war period, that there is a of the navy has not been completed.|Chance to turn much of® what iz now THere are enough vessels approved|Waste back iito useful” trades. under the plan of 1916 so that con- struction work will extend over sev- eral years, and to carry this on about a quarter of the naval appro- priation bill, or $104,000,000, will be needed for this work. . We are not thegonly nation that is looking to its navy, and ceftainly there is no other that has better rea- sons for 160king to its first line of de- fense. Our extensive sea coast de- mands it and in the unertainty of to- day we will have no more vessels than we will require after the build- ing programme has been completeq if a new era has not dawned. Such outlays as are being made con- not be regarded as laging the foun- w EDITORIAL NOTES. Connecticut is a small state but it shows up big in.the income tax pay- ments, y 2 Will Georges Carpentier get more attention as a pugilist or as a Hun chaser? As long as D'Annunzio continues to make threats -the Fiume question is still alive, 5 4 Conditions in Germany today are not exactly what might be considered attractive to tourists. The incrense in the length of the 3 - manity by the only perfect man, ment the old occupant has left, New/| The truth of the living God gives us dation. for future trouble or future|day only makes the demand for day-|life simply swells the old bud, It doeg|confidence in prayer. Is there anyone |Tesus Christ—Cod being sinless died >4 s on the cross for our sins. wars. They are to be regarded only| ight saving’ more .insistent. mot. takte its cue from Jeshua who| ‘dispossessed the Jebusites before h moved in, it waits until the Jebusites. have dispossessed themselves. There are. stiil “sermons in running brooks.” Viewed from the _standpoint of economics feeding is the most tmpor- tant and serious question, of civiliza- tion. Strange as it may. seem in- this age in which machinery for producing| food, and facilities for its distribution ‘are well nigh perfect, probably more| People are hungry today than at any one time within the memory of man. Have we not depended too much on| | thiese things, the result of which has | created the habit of living from hand to mouth? If cut off from contact | with the larger place today, the eoun- try town will suffer within a week, 'while years ago it could be iselated for a month without annoyance, be- cause then large stocks of provisions| to Hear us when we cry out of a sense of need, danger or desire? Is there anyone who cares to help us or bless us? If God is only a great central ‘Force at the heart of things, it is in vain we bow down, morning and night, and tell out our heart’s yearnings. Can | 2 Force hear the cry of the children, the pleading of the distressed or the | sighing” of the prisoner? Would a 'man pray to the wind or to the sum or to gravitatfon? If there is no living God, there'can be no prayer; for then there Is no heart to care, no ear to hear, no hand to help. Suppose we were to learn that all this cherished belief of ours concern~ ing prayer is a mistake; that there im no one who cares for us or can give us any help, how dark the world would become to us! Men who have been reared in the simple teachings of Christianity = believing in a God of in the light of preparation against trouble siimlar to what we ‘have been previousiy forced into and therefore one of the best means of insuring our safety. It is to be hoped that the time will come when such expenditures will not be made ‘nedessary But until it does there is no other course than to give due weight to self protection. SOLDIERS' INSURANCE BUREAU. The country will welcome the an- nouncement that is made by Director Cholmeley-Jones of the bureau of wat risk insurance that the insurance division of the bureau is virtually at the end of its' period of congestion and consequent dissatisfaction and vexatious delays, for there has been great dissatisfaction and deplorable delays in connection with the busi- | Let us enjoy buns any time without |the cross on it, and not make light of what should be dearer to us than any other form because of what it cost Him Who died for us. B. Yantic, March 25, 1920. e L A The man on the cornér says: Even the coming of spring deesn’t brin; any change in human nature. The least of' the fears of the weéts is that the taste for drinks will be swept away by tke prohibition wave. ‘What's the Use of HOT CROSS BUNS Only One Friday in the Year ? Good Friday was the occasion that first inspired us to make Hot Cross Buns— And such pride did we take in them that they developed Five Minutes a Day With OQur Presidents With the move to sell firearms to Copyright 1920—By James Morgan Those who' are keeping the family woodpile replenished have a lot of feeling for the ex-kaiser and his af- ter the war job. 3 A XI—THE SAGE OF MONTICELLO Jefferson is the only president who remained the leader of his, party after leaving the White House. Indeed, the democrats never have ceased to swear B Until the claim is proved the sclen- tist who svs ' '~ impossible to shoot p his spirit. T a & laid i the I love, in the cross of Christ and in [2liegiance to A “ " ness of that division. @ rocket to the moen {5 bound 10| son Wouldn't it be well jo brink besk| PFEJR and fhen Teve lost thesa| Although clected tor the frst term |} into one of the most delicious of our specialties Whether the steps that have. been have the public with him: % that old custom of independence and have confessed that in the American politics, he was reelected virtually without opposition, and for a quarter of a century the destinies of the country were intrusted to his guidance. President for eight years, he ‘was the mentor of presidents through sixteen years more of the Jeffersonian fading out of childhood lessons from their hearts they have lost their sweetest joy and thelr dearest happi- ness, and that the brightness has dled out of the world for them. No_ other loss, no bereavement, no misfortune could equal for a taken to put this great nationgl in- surance company on a businesslike basis have been undertaken it time to arouse a sufficient interest ' among those who allowed their insurance to lapse, or whether the changes which foresight? For this purpose it ‘might be well to heed Solomon's advice: “Go to the ant, thou sluggard!”™ Vitally connected with the food. problem is the feeding habit., It was a very shrewd observation—whoever made it—that “more graves aredug in With their fairy light, flaky “sweet dough,” and sugar cross stamped on them in delicate icing. Now the question is being raised by our customers: It Carrie Chapman Catt ‘demands a logislative’ gession in' Conneeticut even if the goyernor will net call| Qt, fhy wait for: ratification at ail? With, the new king of Syria order- possible Why not give us these Buns every week ? hawe covered many m con-| ing beth: the French .and Anieics s moment the loss. of falth in God as our | er2. Both Madison and Mornroe lived |} - g y " o6 who' radikigtn, tHeE s L ) 4and British, oyt ATievica with knives and forks than|pmather as the hearer of our prayers, | Within a day's ride of his home. He ‘vimced those who remained that they| it indicates that this new boil .in th with any other implements.” —_— They make Sunday breakfast a treat, Easter week or any-week. ‘What- | ever may be true of India and China ‘where famines are ' periodic, _it. 18 b TR E oanps s that (él::btless‘ true that here in the Uhited shaped their studies in their youth and they were to him like younger broth- ers on adopted sona should not give up their insurance, remains to be’seen. near east is: coming to a head quickly. There is no question but what the More influential than any other of war inst by * tes more people die antiually | ~—e————————— | the cx-presidents, this _many-sided PLEASE PLACE YOUR ORDER EARLY. insurance plan has suffered se- eat Britain has enough to tend 'to|from overeating than undereatins. Tob 2 Is k7 man was more. fortunate than most of verely from the way ‘in which = the| without taking part ‘in” governing Con-|eat beyond bodily. ~ uifements—| - The pupils had b business was handled. Soldiers, as g | them in-the variety of the interests stantinople ‘most ‘ people * ‘will and diversions that crowded his seven more than bodily organs,can easily with him. 2o assimilate—brings in__ a big, black agree - - 18 Cents Per Dozen at !well as their relatives became dis- were asked’ to give quotations|teen years of retirement from 3 with the confusions and con- PRpeACt BT . fworld of imps all the way from.mild|from various plays. ~“The Merchant|office. He Wwas surgeon eno to jctions, threats and denials and|< The oné surprise in’connection with |indigestion to Bright's dis and | of Venice,” “Julius Caesar,” and sev-|sew up a wound tie an artery or set just as soom as the war hazard was|the M apoplexy. The doctors rave against|eral others had been passed and YThe ! s H it, but we answer by eating more | Tempest” was being discussed, but|of a mathematician to calculdte an over u.;re were 1arg’;! ;umbers wl‘I‘.o and richer food. | It wouldn’t be pop-{no one mb‘gd.g a quotation from |eclipse. He invented 2 letter-copying lm kéép up paymen !"" *fular for any writer fo attempt to es-|it. The teachar, press, a revolving chair and a fold- They wante§ to get away from the| will iuve to uphold.. ¢ timate how large a_ proportion -of our)one was on the ing chair, a hemp E i, ey Co S il St P e, o : e - T e %

Other pages from this issue: