Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 30, 1920, Page 4

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124 YEARS OLD “Setrigtion rise (15 & weeh; S & meamh; §A® | CODStantly growing ;a.n‘---&‘q bound to increase. ' . STILL ANYEODY'S BACE. ;;32 it 3‘; i H Efg b ¢ g ks Is ] to be H H 31 }l £ i 5%% ¢ to mands on the forests in every : i E with practices which have out at this season of the are coming from Burope to §&§§ SEE §§§s T5z i b 1 fiin i} ggiief“g i i first as American day. It s quite natural that candidstes| Goverer Allen fully appreciates the fact % ishould claim advantages from the results| ot there are those who are working to of the primaries as they are held even| egtahlish here the policy long followed \UAbough such cannot be observed by the in Europe, that it comes from the radical galoskers. There are unquestionably 10| oy glement and that it is time to start eal conditions, fights among state fae- tions which have much to do with the & real backfire to check its progress. Tu announcing his plan which gees in- tcame even though such expressions to effect in Kansas tomorrow for the not @ fair test of the sentiment Yok | yoiging of large parades in behalf of ative to the candidates themselves. Cane didates are often times judged by thelr | stion whet! Wanagers and win or lose accordingly ey Americanism, Governor Allen well says the American spirit and our historical institutions shall and there are probably but few Stated|..gcminate is as vital today as was the “~where this does not play a part to greater or less degree. Thus What candlidate sees In the result may be dif- ferent from the surface indieation as gained from the cold figures of the re- sults, In Ohio the victory of Senator Hard- g is not all that he could have asked for. He was amongst his own people where it was to be expected he would got strong support if anywhere and yet the result where it shows in his faver is by & smaller margin than one might ve expected or desired. He doesn't got ® united delezation even as a faverite That General Wood made such 2 abowing under the conditions cannot heln Wheting to his credit even though that getling the sinte's doesn’t amount to delegation. Wood sentim in the Massack: Massachusetts look upon b ¥ s for Johnson nt out of Chio, dment from Idah and trom the as favorite sons. 8| gubject of preparedness four years ago, 2| when the preparedness parades revealed X I AN X ) /. why you can’t have as foxy a.watch as any of 'em. Choose one you like. I guess it won't break your old man." “Oh, daddy, what an eld darling you are! I exeiaimed. As T hurrled downtown T recalled the eireumstances under which I parted with the wrist watch that father gave me when I sailed for France. It was when I was at Erize le Grand. It was when tillery. T was billeted in the same house wita Miss Appsiey, who was by fellow ‘worker there. “Will you be mo angelic as to lend me your wateh?” I asked her eme evemine. She looked rather surprised and I has- tened to explain that mine had stepped running. “T simply must have a watch so that I can see the time in the morn- ing. I wish to get up early. “Why this sudden ardor for early ris- ing, Lucile? I always get up at reveills myself. Can’t T wake you then?" “Thank you, Doris, but that wen't be ‘with | den gasp of dismay I had a mental pic- ture of it lying on the top of the coal in I jumped out of bed and empty and there was no watch there! I had thrown it into the fire with the coal while I wag abgorbed in that exciting book. The thought of it almost spolled my Lieyt. Gales, but I tried to put it out of my mind for his sake, TWhen I went into the hut later in the morning 1 went bravely to Miss Appsley and ‘tearfully teld her what had happen- ed. £he did not say ene word or show any feellhg of sympathy at my discom- fiture. I do think sileng people are im- possible., At last when I insisted that ghe take my wrist watch she did speak. “As 1 need.a wateh, I'll accept it, Lu- cile, for I cannot get ome here. But, come to thi~k of it, you said yours wouldn't go.” “Perhaps it can be made to run” I suggested hopefully, and just then one of the handy men of the outfit came by and I asked him to examine it. He took it and shook it and then wound it “All it needed was a little windi"ng," he remarked laughingly. Doris gave me a withering glance and 1 murmured something about having to think about my work so much that I couldn't always remember to wind my watch, She sald nothing and I laid the watch down beside her and moved \ X 75 s J ‘wholesome time.” public American day 1s advocated to bring|He has found a perfect little duck of a at tne American spirit and net keep it |TUaYe, for me. slumbering while that which is fighting it 12 netive. That he believes his confis denes In the result will be sustained is evidenced when he says: preme faith in this country Deople. The heart of our people beats passionately for the Integrity of Ameri- can ideals and for our constitution and the fnstitutions bequeathed by it to us. sentiment “I have su- at and that | early enough. You see I have an en- is apparently strong tts delegation, though Governor Coolidgs will get its first vets. these men is bound This day approvriately observed. will give conerete exnressions of the emotions jea will fulfill her proper -destiny in the final’ realization of the ideals of equality, of justiec and opportunity for .’ Ameriea day is so In keeping with zen- tunent throughout the land ciat it may well be otWerved In all rather than in {ust one stats, sots little encour- some diseourage in the split delegation, “ Oght In New Jersey [ made to the Providence Journal, inspired | charge of his duties with a longer of- SETTING WIMSELF RIGHT. Accerding to a statement which he has ;'-‘ about the same encouragement as|by the comment of that paper, Herbert 0od docs out of Ohio, for though he | C. Hoover has seen the necessity of hav- gefs some of the delegates the preference was against him in what is thus far the #eal primary battle. edptiviy up better after the Indiana the nomination in Chicago. Thus far #eems 1o be anybody's race. MORE TREATY TALK. -y Pongress will taks trifle carlier. n the 't other president are week been Wiee the resotution o Senator | the resolution bas ow iy Pt Senator : as the Gator - n tie $rniced A tesubmission of 4. what fhis view is a presiden the po~ition to obscure fieation Taering - the majority sentiment. Benator Hitchoock stood of course for the president’s ideas regarding the treat- ment of the treaty win eut it was even disclosed that he president’s supporters were divided . this matter. ator Underwood can mid reservationists among the republi- sans to get back of the Wilson de- _mancs That seems highly improbable, "Wt otherwise it seems unlikely that any Beiter chances exist today for retifica- THE: unless the president is willing to do *Wifho backing up himself and by such ac. Hen direct his party followers to do like- wise. In the other hand If the treaty g §Og to be thrown into the presiden. Ual campaign no action ean be antigl.| ™Il pated now. SHOULD RESTORE FORESTS. SWhile urging that action be not de- WP and that the staw establish ten | Saestry districts in which to carry on the work of reforestation, Genservation Cgmmissioner Pratt of New York state The contest is thus warming up per- Harding’s outlook can be sized primary while the actions. of the next week will "*§eebably help to clear up the race for a recess at leagt at the end of the first week in June and If it doesn't do 1 the matter of the or 'he peace resolutian be- *i1l be a delay of course and that » hold it up until after bably until another con- in ve, however. within the past plan by the action of ating a revision of upon that passed by changes which he *ho was unsuccessful there are hopes ex- that there will < % {and which he apparently mow sees the treaty by the pres- the grounds are for | Peed of correcting. Better late than never,” may apply | Buchanan's inauguration, when the su- red 1o step down from |\ POlitics as well as anything else but |preme court held that all be has previously held and | S Clear cut statement would have been|Were unlawful, that all political agita- with reservations fn | ™¢h mere helpful months age. unless the _‘gl may be that thers is an ides that influence the ing it clearly understood that he is not the pawn of President Wilson, that his eandidacy is not promoted by him that it is not understood that he is to be the heir of the Wilson policies and that he tional policies of ‘the president. that a democratic congress should be elected for the best Interests of the coun- that what seemed like the political as- istance given the president was enly loyaity to his chief during an emergency. administration. its assumptions were not | tude taken by Mr. Hoover in apparently e —— EDITORIAL NOTES, tion to spend less. falling down now and then. | and eonvietions of our people. that Amer-| XLI—THE MOST TRAGIC ADMINIS- is in fact not in sympathy with the po- | does not, cannot make a leader. litical, economic, industrial and interpa-|more likely to unfit a man for leader- it Heretofore of course Mr. Hodver has|among the \least experienced in state- sean the necessity of urging the support[Craft of all the men who bave entered of the stand taken by President Wilson "% Presidency. try, and partially on that ground was he | mislead the country. He was selected be- regarded as a heir to the president’s pol- | cause he had been on the other side of foles, but It 18 also to be remembered that | the ocean for three years while the poli- he has expressed disapproval of his trea- | ticlans at home had been making bad re- { ty stand and that it has been explained | Cords for themselves. Mr. Hoover today apparently sees the necessity of clearing his skirts of any |Civil War, " ik possible entanglements with the present|2s in name the Keystone State. Hold- ons of efforts to re- According to m,p!,m_ ing its state’ election in October, Which- menis he has convinced the Journal that|SVeT Party carried it in that month was correct, al- | though it muat be sdmitted that during the early days when his mame was being | and that is how he was elected. b the selection of | MeAtioned for the presidepey the att- W6 ’:’e'::‘""\mmn‘ with efther party, for the nomi- |stecring wheel to the most extreme fac- ace® | nation, even though he was sincere in his i ‘; A Bty claim of not beb didate, i B S S Bt B & Eht which ae tgavoisced | on the ship of state as it was hurled up- Along with the need of increased pro- Twice did it fr1] to| duction there may well go a determina- e et The man on the corner says: A big salary doesn’t prevent a ball player from | tribunal. gagement to ge rjding with Lieut. Gales. It's too bad you don't ride” “I do at home,” she sald unsmilingly. away. She mever even. thanked me for it, although it was much nicer than her little fat old fashioned silver timepiece that looked as if it might have belonged to her grandmother. I really never un- derstood Doris Appsley.—Chicago News. its| | Five Minutes a Day With Qur Presidents Copyright 1920—By James Margan TRATION 1857—March 4, James Buchanan inangurated 15th President, aged 65. March 5, Dred Seott deeigion. 1855—Lincoln-Douglas debate, 1850—Aug. 5, Completion of Atlan- tic” Cable, Qct. 16, John Brown's raid. No president has come to the dis- fcial training than James Buchanan, who had been 40 years in the legislative, executive or diplomatic service. Yet no other has left behind him such a record of failure. Only a great leader might ha¥e sue- ceeded in those most difficult times when Buchanan failed. And office holding It is ship. Were not Washington and Lincoln Like the other president of his futile generation. Buchanan was chosen not ot lead on the slavery question, but to Besides, nominated in the hope that he carry his own State of Pennsylvania against the swiftly rising republican par- ty_under®General Fremont. In the political contests before the Pennsylvania was in truth almost certain to sweep on to a victory in the country at large in November. That is why Buchanan was mominated The new captain, always an irreso- lute character, at once surrendered the Thengeforth he re- on one rock after another in this most tragic administration. First came the Dred Seott decision, the very day after compromises tion for the restriction of slavery was in vain and that an owner had the same right to take a drove of slaves as a drove of horses into any state in the Union. That decree left the republicans and the Douglas democrats es well appealing from the judsment of the court of last resort, with the battle only remaining And the Lincoln-Douglas de- bate of 1858 heralded the impendnig ir- was duly scolded for his misdemeanor. “But you sometimes go out to lunch With men who are our friends,” protested the husband, “and I don’t objeet. I can't see why you should object. Now what is the difference between your going and my going in this way?” “Why, the difference 1§ in the bill’ smiled the wife. “Ope way you save it and the other you pay it IN THE DAY’S NEWS The Punjab “The Simla Hills of Kippling fame and the interesting Punjab country again are brought to public attention by newspaper reports of native riots aroused by the rumeored destruction of the golden temple of Amritsar, a iprincipal city of this province,” says a bulletin from the National Geogra- phic Society. “Punjab is a Parsian word meaning ‘five waters,’ and refers to an area in India, about the size of Oregon, be- tween the Jhelam and the Sutlej drajned by three intermediate streams. These rivers empty into the Indus, which forms the western boundary of the state. “Situated at the northiwest gateway of India the Punjab has for ages been jthe Belgium of most of the military expeditions from the west and the trail of many migrations, For this reason its peoples—Mohammedans, Silkhs, du Jats, Kashmiris, and Rajputs, all belonging to the tall, fair Indo-Aryan stock,—are not so slug- glsh in temperament and ways of liv ing as in other parts of the country, land many of them manifest a martial i spirit upon small provocations, Eng- land counted them among her most valued soldiers on the Western Front. “The vast plain of the Punjab is about one thousand feet above the i#ea level and on the north runs into the ‘Abode of Snow. the Himalaya Mountains. At the southwestern end of the watershed stands Simla, and from it the mountains drop rapidly to the foothills and then to the plain. Jakko, the deodar-clad hill of Kipling’s stories, is immediately within view, towering a thousand feet above Simla. Here in this town, 7,000 feet above the level of the seg, in early April, when the heat of tRe great Punjab plain reaches 120 degrees, most of the European in India have gathered and around the summer home of the Vice- roy of India the social life revelves. ‘Within a 25-mile radius from Simla is the Chor, upon whose peak, 12,000 feet high, a snow cap is worn until well into May. Farther to the west the higher peaks range from 16,000 to 22,000 feet. “The heat-parched plain of the Jun- jab is cool in winter with an oceasional frost at night. The days are bright and clear and the climate reminds one of that of Los Angeles. When the moonsoons come in June, it also has a rainfall in the north which is ade- quate to produce good erops without irrigation. Farther houth the land is Even if the old clothes idea becomes popular the wail of the women can be ex-|lighted in Kansas and it continued to pected to remain, “nothing to wear.” Elsetion time in Mexico is apt to mean | ington itgelf, when John Brown of Ossa. a battle with bullets while there should | Wattomie carried the Kansan war to be no more than a battle with ballots. It the white collar a selves to rise in revolt against thely after the jobs ‘:’n nm::fll e:xv::“.;'.‘: masters. A peaceable pelitieal polution mean more worry for the laundry- Now the smaller communities about the state are adopting daylight saving. It Is action for which they are fully jus-|was the undertaker of a dead past, its tifled. PRI R a War bas fts ourious effects. In Af-|comservative president was so doubtful of ::3:,‘:"3‘.;,"};‘:{’;:;“’:! gt e Euneh riea the price of wives has undersone a|this new thing that he suspected the |g,inority of the government of I di: sharp advance while In Frapce there is a |Message of grecting to him from Queen - 8 o med Hime when Norwich used|all the members of his eabinst. Against 1a b WATDE T o the Tromerts oe'o|the ‘advice of some af them he took & Tooal baseball team but thoso days ars | (ii0ce,2nd fnally sént his respense b0 |ine”Sikhs and its golden temple is tten about a barrel aplecs of| fAWIY ting to find & house fo remt repressible conflict. The fuse of civil war already had been sputter throughout Buchanan's term. At last it exploded a blast gloss by Wash- Harpers Ferry, then in Virginia, in the wild dream of ineiting the slaves them- of the problem having been declared im- possible by the supreme eourt, fanaties naturally came to the front and attempt- ed to settle it by violence, by “direet action” as it is called today. Although the Buchanan administration sombre record is lit up by the first flash of the submarine telegraph cable, The Victoria might be a hoax. Before ven- turing a reply he cautiously summos the queen. Soon afterward Tomorrew: Adrift in the Storm. A Bargain. It wes evidently another case of the homes was thrown on the screen: “Gee, daddy, if you could get that for $300 yowd get a bargain wouldn’t you?” Thrifty? Yes. their greatest ehrine. B O o e O omer o s | middle of o large square tank, it can Germany might well have anticipated tics felt justified in their jeers at the that the allles would tell it to make good | wild absurdity of the invention. I Stories That Recall Others as barren as a desert, except in the river valleys. This dearth of plan life is not a fault of the land itself, which is extremely rich, but there is a lack of an adequate water supply. It now supports only scanty jungles vegeta- tion, where camels are sometimes grazed. The government is irrigating | much of the territory, and the Pun- jab possesses a large well irrigated area than any other province. Its wheat fields are among the best in the British Empire, and within recent years the province has-been planting about 9,000 acres in tea for the trip- plers of Britain and Ameriea. “Before the days of the transfer of the capital of India to Delhi, Delhi and the surrounding_district also_ were Now the principal ies are Lahore, the capital of the province, about the size of Indlanapolis, Multan and| Amritsar. “Amritsar is the religious eapital of Built in the only be reached by a causeway, The whole of the structure except the bot- tom ten feet is plated with gilt cop- per.” The American Cow Abroad, vasion of the world markets. A state- ment by The National City Bank of He bdn‘ldhan't decided -to_say noth- ‘which sheuid be % iR nert uuhul it to his wife, But the tattling nd who always learns of such affairs Ainstead, and. -that~evening he four grown means of = & Billien and three-quarters board feet of r.lmmmnh of pulp wood, m‘::v‘:-?:‘bul M‘Lth:hih}“‘ :n‘:uwmmwu ey “Wmbunt for poles, ties and other uses bz g Mhat New York needs to increase'its tim. | Samuel Gompers says the voieo of la- Ber growth five to eix times In order to|POF MUSt be heard. There is no question Teplace the yearly inroads that are be. | 3DOUt Ita baing beard; the great diffieul I8¢ made and insure an equal supply for | 0447 I8 10 make & good impression. .".;:;":"f'-‘l-flmun:.mmmm!mm 'nm—-mhvmmm: eges pelling in Delaware for 15 0 Wugded land '-"m'f"'"“":d“— cents a dozen could have rushed into .—-"'--“:"’"m by Shthin u: that state it would have been slightly growth will take care of the sit| " #od that we will have no.reason| Those who are having trouble with the A8 yorry any way. That may well be the | advanced time are those whe bawe —x¢ e M:w‘:;uhofi?dk;&::mfl mmuueuomqm r y to figu .m-n.uwbm compares with the standard time, a mat- vl 18 Dt solely W - i s & o T Y & s 3 S ol A B sl The other day a professional man took | value of about $125,000,000, and that re out how it|Oone Of his women clients out to lunch. United States in 1919 at an e countries, colonies, and islands of the | 19: world. The American cow is keeping com- (25 much as in the year preceding the pany with the Americap pig in its in~ wr‘:d and the value nearly one hum- times as myeh. This tremendeys increase in the ex- g:;: gurg a fltew w{sel;n lg:‘mlhowed porm:llnn of condensed milk now rep- e American pig is rapidly eap- | resents an or buy that caused a small ehild in 2 |turing the food markets of the world, at the beginning of the war. The phe- nomenal growth in exportation of this | 25,000,000 statement by the Bank, covering the |class of merchandise is apparently due |in 1918; 157,000,000 in 1914, and world activities of the American cow, [in some degree to the taste which |000,000 in 1916. shows that nearly a billion pounds of | Purope acquired for American The quantity of condensed | the milk sent out of the country in 1919 is, | which made ar 600,000,000 Tarim . STARTING TOMORROW | Men’s Suits - $372 " WERE TO $55.00 THINK OF IT—-Starting Tomorrow, we offer approximately 500 Men’s and Young Men’s Suits at $37.50 that sold up to $55.00. The sale price figures actual cost to us without one penny of pro- fitadded. Thisis our Bit to Help reduce the present high cost of clothes to you and at the same time reduce our present stock which is the largest we have ever carried. When you see the fine all wool fabrics, the elegant styles and splendid tailoring that this price of $37.50 represents, you will concede that we really have done something worth talking about. TOMORROW FOR ONE WEEK At ONLY 500 SUITS WERE TO $55.00 UNDERWEAR ROXFORDS CHALMERS B. V. D.S 65¢c SHIRTS BATES STREET LION BRAND CLERMONTS $1.95 121-125 MAIN STREET period, the quantity sent in 1919 is|ly 112,000,000 pounds against 41,000,000 In 1913, and to the United Kingdom, | Yo% 5, Africs events, the quantity sent in 1919 is con~ To France, |in 1919 is approximately 60,000,000 period. acquaintance | pounds against 2,000,000 the year be-| This 1 Oceania $37.50 ¥ product, condensed milk, of fore the war; to approximate~ " which the present output of the fae- bl Doing Our Bit To H Reduce the High Cost ~ of Clothes For Men A SALE FOR ONE WEEK ONLY SALESTARTS Your Choice i*Season’s Best Fabrics, Styles Colors, for and Young Men. This is a, case of your Getting in Right now or Getting Left. It is unusual to find clothes of even average quality today at so low a price as $37.50—But to find clothes of our standards at this price is an event extraordinary indeed. FURNISHINGS AT LESS THAN TODAY'S WHOLESALE COST HOSIERY INTERWOVEN ONYX MONITOR * 39 These Prices For One Week Only — Starting Tomorrow | Mavkaltan “The Kuppenheimer Store” o et g abied 20,000,000 pounds against about|tories 2,000,000 in the year preceding the .~ o 15,000,000 ’::1 dwln‘ e . pre-war whose supplies of dairy products for-|South America :’nnl'olhlluly 18,000, expert trade of $125,000,000 fierlybdmwu t{lomwnlnrth-rn Europe :‘ooo on&\;n‘dx 'g'" st a little less than a yean against a little over $1,0 ve eat nimized by recent 1,000,000 in 1914. pieture house to pass the following re- [and it now appears that the American s e " The quak e mark as one of a number of high class | cow is keeping it company. A further ang One especially interesting feature of pounds against 270,000,000 | the rapid growth of this “war 106,- | lies in the fact that aithough its chiet development occurred during the war, The tropical world and the Orient|the “lusty infant” has continued its condensed milk were sent out of the|densed milk during the war, for the |have meantime developed a closer ac- | growth since the termination of hos- Qquantity eent to Burope has advanced | quaintance with the American product | tilities, as the quantity exported in from 8,362 in 1914 to 99,541,000 | which had been consumed in those sec- | the calendar year 1919 is it was distributed to no less than 90 |in 1916; n‘::‘s % ded g ¥ actually 50 ,000 in the fiscal year | tions in limited quantities in the past.|per cent. greater than In the calendar pounds in|To Asia as a whole the guantity sent yul;dlil!. most of which was & war i

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