Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 1, 1920, Page 4

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seems or some other body to ge! out what the tmue ituat board was re- 0 ‘matil ttoday there is no ‘where the price may go.to unless some- thing effective s done to stop it. Wttt b Tospode: s 0 o st Palpar Tt : <ot ithe storideld hy Attormey Gemeral - ndi- a May day ?fimflp«{y mu':u.‘ elo-| cates an agresment to prevent speculs ments in | tifls-coun 3 ition But there is no mssurance thergin . s going ito atemove all the trou t may have some.effect andl it 'is that it will tbut there is need accomplishment. The. iops ,point| ¥eloped do .4 Jarge ‘1o the fact that the same .element that | of -action iin Bygo has terrorized the country on previous|Sult that conditions have. been occasions intended t6 ‘carry out demon- ”» X 3 strations in this country that would be seems to be no/1 in sympathy Wwith those which have begn | to Where the price of suga: planned for certain sections of Fumme, ithe ;same .time .there .seems to be wvery lit but If the information .gained by the fed- one ‘months, with ithe re=| are provoking sf )| “tpoor down on your life’ | Dnited tle jin sthe way of @ -definite statement | jn o strike makes a satisfied” workman, dily '@as others. lly are 'is 'not -always. coat sleeve. We, ourselves,: ‘very expert in reading.character: then: Our lack of -of some ] . ¥ e iter O Rl e e by drink, and he was as lacking all kindly instipet. But ¥ it wes found that this man for a had been his - djnner ~ with e impregsion had to slow in pu ¢ | nation, ave. ‘sound asleep, ‘blissfully snc il oreion. radhicat, AT “tHe g men gain their point, -these . a ‘the most ‘disappointed -people in , because coming -out al eral officials is correct the aim here was| from thoge who should know as to%what | and ‘men, .joyous and contented, furnish not only o tic up 4 @nd ;yevo- | can ke idone at \this Wme lutionary sentiment but to actuglly cause ) Situation, furthermore _th: D! to the death of prominent citizens. cloger Attention Jo. sassination had ,been .arganged . as move 'to hasten the making.af peace with| that .are soviet Russia it could not fail to have |cannot ‘;::‘:‘1‘”“ that there fs a goad jugt the oppesite ffect if .carried .out.|Teason o The very fdot that theve ave ithose -0 | Who. fael \that the much in love with the soviet government ‘ of Russi~ that they would resort to sughthe Citeumsianees (i .& mantier ‘that will methods in the United States makes it| Show -Whare ‘the trouble is, fix the blame evident that not onily should this country| 8nd take such steps Aire get them started on their Way it that) 5%V dhe interests of the peonle. . land at the earliest possible moment ‘haye 'had 'this sugar teoutile oo dong. it gives reason for a long gober second|The promise ":;M made that it would thought as to wiether e want - bo comniletoly ¥elieved befare dhis hut & to do with a government if Such people|has Erown. worse insteatl ‘and indct gan bo considered rephesentative ithere- | S@nnOt be sanctioried lopge ot E Such an element plainly shows what WISER TO AWAIT RESULTS. respect there is for the privileges per- taining it. upan others. {f This -is the remylt of thie beliet e Fortunate indeed is ‘It /that federal au-{will ‘be fio more need for them any more thorities were able to uncover the plot.| than ghere will he for the atate fexm for, May the plans not only be completely | inebriates. 2 % e ppset but may the authorities be pos-| It is pe-rhu.pl 100 early to form any de- gessed of sufficient information to deal|finite opinion regarding that. It @ hit wiser Ho & “whil /most | the charge and it s still possible to get| suc-| drinks containing aleohol iu - sufficient the bolshevik lead- | the law are still at a stage Wheré more @re, and others have made peace with|should be known about their possibilities #he bolshevik government but Poland has| befors ‘anything is done in the way of #tood. and fought for its rights in a man- | disposing of Institutions which may - be ner whieh showed its fearlessness and its|needed. NRELTR strength. Out in Few Work state the Saivation Now in addition o the claims which|Avmy is Blanning o open & Tarm for the| | Poland is making for securing peact | handling and curing if possible of those #with the bolshevik government through | addicted 4o the uge of dr d ‘aleohol agreement to 1ts terms, there is a Pglish|Thet thers ‘4 mmm wrmy going forward into the Ukraine | the work among those S sonsiderable size anil with ghe apparent|narcotics canmot be @uestioned. Everfy' purpose of cleaning up that country for|bif of relisf that ean be given to such the benefit of the Ukrainians. This|people, alang Wwith the insistence upon fioes not appear to be an act of human- | the restristion of the use of habit-form- | ity on_the part of Paland but the indica- | ing drugs, fs' werthy ‘of encouragement, tons are that it is the result of an’ un-|but this ‘erganization ap- derstanding which has been reached with|parently believes that there are still Fetlura, a prominent leader of the peas- | enough peaple suffering from alcohol and ant forces in the Ukraine whereby Po-|likely to be i the future 1p 0 fand will get East Galicla and in return | such /@t (s country institution. Tt is| frequent # will drive out oppoents to Petlura|in fact not overlocking nrovisions for srnment. 5 three months of prohibition. during ‘which This is disclosed by the annownes:|the enfercement has been. more or ld¥s| ment to the effect that the Poles are go- | uncertain. It is evidently felt with good ing forward with the Petlura forces who| reason that there is as much weakness in found refuge In Poland with the idea of | prohibition ‘enforcement as there is re- foceing the soil of the Ukraine from for-|garding marceties. =~ ° ¢ign invaders. This of course means the forcing out of the bolsheviki from such EDITORIAL NOTES. jj'sugar. In spite of 4l sthe explanations |ibrought on by a hungry ithere iare those who |a perverted brain, is the | #hat rthere | Ntoeis mflgfi:, a strike, ‘because - dist ithe strike continues. 'workman hungry and ugly, then he epsi- ly ‘becomes a- revolutionist. - Disease, ‘stomach and, field in - which: ‘bolshevi: fattens. 5% llnj:;nh is involved in freedom of | speech? When .all :eyes were fixed on ‘the deportation of Berkman, ' Goldman and other :apostles of radi some quarters-came the cry that this was muzzling free speech. -As, free i is ome of the' pillars of demo prohibit it is undemoeratic 1 jean, It is futher -stated ‘that terances of Emma Goldman weré noth- «ing Dbut the mouthings of a woman. No one questions the {doings political parties or any -other «far -that Anybody has & right to fretest d 0 13 lic person. If-it is believed that p ‘#ire ‘indurine, the pitblic anyone ‘has a right to say so. a ligitimate function' of free speed to defame character is ' quite -another! ‘matter; -so also is insulting - language -against the flag and also seditious. utter-. ances agaiust oné’s country. We shouldt ‘soon have a fine state of ‘society. if mo 4 curb was put on tongues disposed to be slanderous. s ? % In an excellent ‘afiress ‘the ‘other day 2 speaker said “We ought always to com-. mend a boy for acting on good lnten:iqna» ‘| country’s’ external commerce in general, and so. - The little fellow WhoJnew. ‘that_milking time had come. though no one Was about, let the cows out of the ‘pasture that did considerable danwge, 18, a case in hand; or the little girl Who| picked a neighbor’s choice ilowers and| gave them to her sick mother, saying “I got oo these, mamma!" To punish children, rather. than - instructing ~them ‘un@er such circumstances, Shows little ‘knowledge «of the psychology of youth. “Thieift ‘s +the habit of saving and any- thing that is worth saving ought'to be saved. We.make a . great mistaké in supposing - that thrift .applies merely to ‘the saving of money or . other visible’ property. ~He is -decidedly :a_thrifty yer- .son who makes such a Wwise: use -of time that not a imoment is needlessly wasted. Failing to gain time is just as truly thriftlessness a5 failing to acquire prop- | erty, and how many there are . whe squander it @s though it were absolutely valueless. Strength is another thing that is to be gained if we are thrifty. Science t€lls us that laziness saps the , .and .also inj¥dicious work more tly than overwork. -Real - thrift means the conservation of energy. - The Scheme to save the daylight is not & mere passing fad of the industrial order, but @ 'flb ly-devised. plan for larger produc- tion. be @done by day than by n the daylight is thrifty. A e;.veia in South «Americs, Whose word is not to-be ‘questioned, vouches for ‘the following ‘story: While in_the deep forest one day he saw a little bird fiut- tering about in great excitement., Liook ight. To save | Ing up into the branches'of a tree he yo- lorces can be expectedl to petire. Mexico B 1 In addition to such territory as it is|Shoepolish to Mexico are growing. ticed @ mest full of little birds. Soon e | ‘discovered a ‘large ‘snake coiling gip the | trunk presumably after the Iittle birds. While Watching the mother bird flew to 1a meighboring shrub and - frantically calism, fram) cessfully controverted. ~ Al of our d | eourse or .newspaper , discussion Tortu- Jtted. without .any 3 %:am and to the sense of honor; | ligation and reason in Japan. against the Goings of ay pub-{| 12 More work and befter work can ~ But I am discuss<|z i side. z | In the year 1894, Japan's total trade Ameriea to rabout three | ‘yen. In the year] % pans ‘tratle in buy- in ‘selling” from and - amounted to «ne thousand one i and. fifty-six millions of yen, America [ took no less than 27 per cent. and Ja-| pan. bought .37 per cent of her total { imports from- America ! tical friends on the other side of the: Pacific - Ocean—that gommon pighway which an all-wise Providence gave us | for use ama ot for .abuse: The remarkable retord of develop-lJapan for Americans? In other words, ment .of itrade intercourse between ourjwhnal lines of American goods can best two -countries ‘is but a ‘beginning in the e hitroduced, and their market enlasg- cle: of development unless indeed we'| . in Japan? I am persuaded that tae to pe t an unreasoning and an | lines of WML Wis un.u ready saie) insane policy ‘to break the steady flow|in Japan at least’ for some time o come, development of in-Yare &s follows: of all kinds, iron nad steel paid, and ouf Qifferences have been set-|tors; foodstuffs and agricultural raw #led without a breach, the social rela-!materiais; material for paper manufac- tions and the understanding have stead- | cure; and special lines of manufactured ily improved, 1 say this advisedly, con-i paper; hides, leather and their manu- facture. ‘ »Among the goods coming ler these heagls, 1 think the prospects fare bright- est for the following: (1) Dynamos, electric motors, trans- formers, converters, sewing and tailoring machines, spinni apd weaving maa- chines, Knitt madchines, gas engines, petroieum engines, hot air engines, etc. (2)" Pig iron, bar iren, iron Tods, plate irom, ®erap irom, iron aire, .iron ¥ ica. which tell of Japan's re- | pipes, iron tubes, nails of all kinds, rails, nfir America. Japan’s Toreighiaaterials for building houses, bridges, ng the last tweufy-five yearslehips, docks, etc, lead (lump and tab- on an average to 957,000,000 jety, mickel (lump and tablet). yen per year, the average exports beingd . ¢3) ' Caustic soda ashes, 490,0000,000 yen and the average im-|sium ochlorate, ichromate ports 467,000,000 yen. ‘TTrade With! formalin,’ glycerine, .cocaine, _America during the, same period tetaled | avid, wosin. N on an average to 249,000,000 yen aj (4) Varnish, pitch, asphalt, aniline year or 26 per cent. of Japan's foreign| e stuff, printing ink, paints for coat- irade. Similarly Japan's exports 1o ing ship’s uowcems ,other paints. | America per year were 147,000,000 yen (5) “ Petroletnm, vaseline, paraffin, and imports 102,000,000 yen, the Tormer} wax. 1 AB) Motor cars, their parts and aec- y| cessories, railway cars and their parts. (W) Cotton, tobacce, wheat, flour. (8) Pulp, printing paper, wrapping paper, straw board, paper for photo- graphic use. (9) Qattle hides, buffalo hides, belt- ing and piping leather. | (10) - Typewriters, their - parts, ' plate glass, photographic dry plates, film, as- hestos and their manufacture, -soaps, Jewelries and trinket. 4t may be bardly mecessary te note in conclusion that the future may kl}- ly -be judged by thé past. The futu! of the commercial relations of the two countries showld continue to be bright ‘as {ldng ds 'the causes for development.up thirty-five countries. Nevertheless, 1to fhe Ppresent are fostered with care, _America. still occupies “the Highest andjas long as the two countries contniue to 1most important place in our foreign jadvance in civilization and to make pre- trade, is, in short, our best customer. gress in arts and industries. ‘Sunday Morning Talk CHEIST'S SE0OND OOMING. “Then shall ye see the Son’ of Mun feoming in a ‘cloud, with power and great glory.” - Luke 21, 27. 3 “Threughout fhe most solemm and pa- thetic series 'of predigtions in this chap- , Christ is speaking of twe &istinct évents o' simultaneously that it is at ‘times difficult to say of which ‘he is ‘speaking. Undoubtedly the destruction @f Jerusalem was a true shadow of the ‘great day of judgment and our Lord’s £t appears now fo have passed from mearer judgment upon Jerusalem to fident ithat the assertion cennot. ‘he suc: ferences of opinion in diplomatic inter- nately and reasonably have been set- appeal except to thejj sense of justice and fafr play of A-me: ob-1 call to”the . business I therefore potas- of potash, carbolic ter about 22 per cent. of the average imports. It will thus be seen that fhe growth of Japan's trade with America in the past has followed exacfly. the same rate of. increase as fhe growth of the invariably asgisting the other. Again the figures show a°regular and | steadily increase not only in heamount of trade but also in the varviety of goods exchanged between the ‘two countries. Another important Yact i that with the advance of years the number of for- eign countries with which Japan trades has gradually increased, and today she is selling to and buying from more than should have done, but mot what he conld have done: Many iave said that if Jackson had been president he would have stkmped oht secession' as, he stamped-it out in South Caroling, ‘in 1832. But a blaze which' 3" bugket “of water may suffice to stop- at the start may be beyond - the control -of. an entire -fire department when. it ' becomes 2 conflagration. The North itself in the bewildering winter- 0f 1860-61 was far from agreed that secession .could er should be ‘Stop- ped by force. “Let the Union sfide,” the abolitionists said. “Let the erring brethren g0," said Horace Greeiey. “Wayward sisters, depart in peace,” General Scott would have said to the seceding states. The poor, :old helpless president him- self expressed mo wuch toleration: or resignation. Although he held that the government had no authority to keep a state in the umion by coercion, he denied that the states hag any right or any just cause to secede, and he ordered the com- manders of southern forts to defend them from seizure, That policy was con- ‘tinued - absolutely “without change by Linceln when he ‘came in. dous collapse. this overwhelming . concl . sien of all that we see and are most con- versant with The date of this judgme- i8 in, the hands of Ged, Tis own powes and it eannot be conjectured by us with- out -risk of folly and disappointment. With God “one day is as a theusand | years and a thousand years as ome day.” If He seems to delay, it is in His mercy no tin His forgetfulness, still less in His ce. \He is not willing that Perhaps the rug is wom. Beter change it to L room and come here to select a new one. s T Ty 5 s 1 us rings in Ta , Axmi a Wilton are here in various sizes. How about a new Stair or Linolenm for the kitchen ? We carry Seal Congoleum Rugs, too. You know where a new piece is needed. Supply that want now. Spring goods are arriving and 2 new set for the living room, dining room or guest room would certainly add cheeriness to your home. —_—— |SHEA & 37-47 MAIN STREET BURKE EVERYTHING FOR THE HOME AT PRICES g B ordered Major Anderson, ‘without knowledge of the president, to stay defenseless old fort in Charleston bor imstead of transferring himself 'Fort Sumter, as the Major had d ‘defiance of ‘orders. The secréfary Mississippl, testing against such language member of the cabinet whirled u with the charge that he Bad been ng public bonds. ~ Before the middie of January fthe cabinet was reorganized and Buchanan was surrounded by staunch Union men, who swept him along @t a pace which sometimes left him breathless, The new secretary of the treasury, John A. Dix, quietly reported one day that he had sent to New Orleans his now §eiis e Buchanan exclaimed. “No,” Dix replied, “I telegraphed it.” Had Buchanan been a man of iren in- stead of putty, probably he could have done no good in that chaotic interreg- num bétween the election and inaugu- ration of his successor. If Tie had taken any step whichs should have hastenéd Virginia and Maryland intp. revolt, there would have been no national capital on March 4, 1861. - The retiring president would only hawe made héavier, perhaps impossible, the task which he wearily laid upon a stouter soul when he trans- ferred the presidency to Lincoln and sadly tottered into the shadows. Mondsy: The First American. ' EFEETERGE Stories That Recall Others Quite s Commen Wish. Tt was at a birthday party of youmg- sters where they were all having a gogd time including little Henry. Sinoe Ppro- hibition has been enforced he had heard many remarks made by people Who had been i the habit of imbibing occasienal iy. On this occasion he electrified his e ders by his remarks. E The birthday cake had been brought in for the admiration of the gathering. It was aglow with candles and everyone was tefking about its beauty .ete. Fimals ly it came 's time to say some thing,and he did. He looked at the cake. “Gee, it's all lit up,” he sighed, “and I sure wish I was, t00.” " Country Cared. The city folks had gone (o the coun- try for the week-end with friends. At the breakfast table the wife exclaimed: “This is the most delicigus ham I ever ‘want to taste, so rich in flavor and mnothing like what we get in the eity. Would you mind selling me three slices for my sister? She i§ just crazy abeut The farmer's wife found it was possi- who fiked delicious ham exclaim- “Country cured! Yes, country cured the city. Here's the label from. the delicatessen it was bonght from.™ i 5 HAND BOSTON UNION MADE MADE MADE HAVANA FILLED the Best SMOKER'S Ciga: t Can Be Made. )‘hoAlu_}lh‘ EHAVEJUSTRECBVED 7500 yards of New Cotton and Pouné Goods—Remnants of very fine designs . ehd patterns; they will be on sale this Saturday, at very low prices — Alse 9-4 Hamilton Sheeting at 80c per yard ~—Wide Lace, valve 29c a yard, at Se 37 WEST MAIN STREET Shea’s News Barean Like every: other form of injustice and believed it will receive there will be th T it S0 B ed behind a wire entanglement of consti- tytional dogmas, court decisions and 1 ic technicalities. Men of .all par- ties anl of both sectiéns, like flies in 2 spider's web, were eaught fast in- the political and legal ‘metaphysics which Sophists 'had been spinming ever since the republic was born, In common with te politicians of his | fast vanishing time, Buchanar clung to the .idea that freedom rather tham slav- not | €TY, Was to blame for ail the trouble. God fs. but a |He bad not gone with Douglas and the surface incident in the history of exist- | northern wing of the divided democrats js nothing: T in the campaign of 1860, but had sided £nee with the southerners rand voted for 2 Breckenridge. When the first state seceded he was already within ten weeks of the end of his term, with a 'hostile corgress in ‘front of him and behind him a_country as irresolute as himself, As he saw the | Union falling to pieces, he hoped on that it could be patched together again by another old-fashioned ~compromise. All the while, there were southern members his cabineét who were staying in " |'Washington eniy to shi War | 80! t. supplies south and to ‘a Edwin M. ~Stanton of Ohio, although enridge nt ‘ble to spare the ham ‘and. the three . oy twisted off a sprig containing three green | should perish but that all'might haye life slices were taken. Monday morning the leaves, and then she carefully lay it'over |eternal. The last judgment will come the nest.' She then perched compla- { home to ‘every one of us as clasely as ‘cently on a high branch and began to |anything possibly ¢an. We shall all see sing sweetly. Meanwhile the reptile was | Jesus in His true majesty and glory, and approaching the nest. arches his | we shall all see ourselves as we truly| meck ready to. strike, but ‘Wwh 3 are. The day of disgnises and hali- ‘that green spray, his muscles relax and |truths will be past. The ambition, tifles; | he falls a }imp inert mass to the ground. |stations, positions, will be nothing to us Soon his strength returned ,and he shdf | then. : through the underbrush at Magazine Specialist Union Square ‘Well, there's one- thing about it, this r hasn’t been giving much o~ s encoragement to the €arly ifies. its frontier in that direstion with the Uk-| taine as a buffer state. Poland seeming- 'y considers itself able to zccomplish the task in spMe of its other trowbles and fs] “being given to them over| The man on the Our Mill Ends Remnant ° will be CLOSED during Fri- day and Saturday of this week to permit of our taking ac- PONEMAH MILLS, Taftville Why is it we nre so chary it doing the Tlittle ‘things that. make for happiness in other lives and add so much to - the ‘pleasure of our own? 1Is it because fheir Ssmallness makes wus' feel {1 }ufi' to God or come from | Five Minutes a Day J street, and he has just heard that | . % S Copyright 1920—By James Morgan little boy. He wants to - thing in_the right way. to grip B! e s ¥ I3 's hand ‘a il shes ] H o days iate a few days him: “A, nothing" as ‘that nds] 1 i g8 ration for destroying the himself 4 Breck od Secretary of the Treasury. Feb. 1, Six: States had seced- ed. ¢ Feb. 4, The Southers Corifed-, \March 4, James Buchanan from the Children Cry (FOR FLETCHER'S - ASTOR

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