Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 13, 1920, Page 4

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HER SERIOUS ADVENTURE “There is such a thing as being toovigorously. She blushed. sensitive,” said the pretty girl suddenly | *Well, I was afraid to look at him for and she blushed brightly at a Tecolec- |fear that he would be encouraged - to addition to its other troublss and the taot that it is practically set adrift to guide itself there can be no surprise that Armenia dreads the dark. There is no telling when all of the worst of the past may be reenacted umless there are g ion. hate to attract attemtion—" speak to me, and yet I could hardly keep steps taken by the allied mations, which | "Iy, e 16 SR TR e o 1 you Imow o dreadful fascina. and Goufied are and should direct affairs in that.re-| man fervently. ; tlon seems to take hold of yoh—r b ion to insure thef proper protection. “Well, 1 hate to, anyway.” said the el now,” sa young man 5 ™ p ith bitter asis. v It will not be possible to sit idly by |pretty girl hastily, “and when I see a | with bitter emphasia =~ e 124 YEARS OLD and have Armenia crushed before it gets|group of young men approaching I al- 'Well, anyway,” sal b ty girl, b —_— feet and there should mot be|ways hasten my steps and cast down | growing more rosy, “I could feel my arms Sebemistion prim 20 8 weak: onto its fee eves lest they think I am a flirt. | getting rigid and I was perfectly im- o such delay in insuring the needed protec-| Jo¥ S08 100 Bl (A0 v e group of pelled to look at him, so I glued my eyes Evtsd w1 o Fosofien s Norwich fven w | tion that when it arrives it will be too|ne Other Ga¥ % s VAEUES B TP 00 1 U %0r nd window on the passing land. L can late. With the situation presented as it| T % P " N (™ unistling, | scape and reached into my coat pocket Shutete is to time for arranging the safeguards| .a|ling after me and urging me to Wait. |for a handkerchief, intending to use it eaiets nownen OZiee wn. is now and the quicker it can be done|I ran wildly up the steps of an apart- | delicately to break the spei® you know. i ‘muiee. 406 Oiee 35-2 | the more beneficial Wwill be the results.|ment house and crouched in the lobby, | I seized something soft, drew it out— ilimastie 0 Cruwh S Tershne 5 | Armenia is entitied to its freedom and |and barely-breathed until they were safe- |still looking out of the window—and at S| t should be given the help that is need-| ly past, hut I was terrified for an Hone | et Eaial sucisient ' ol mpeve e Tho pictazes ch, day, May 13, . xfterward.” 3 3 . “The young rough- |and foun a ac Wewoth OF TNE ASSGCIATZD PREPS, | |ed to them should not be deprived of it,| YOURS, an fercely. 'Hho youns et Shie sl soves” e Amoclated Prass s eclustrey atlilct “You wouldn't have dome a thing” | “What?" expladed the young man. “OLD NAME—NEW FAME" e topuication of 4l vewr Comeich: GASOLENE CONSUMPTION. said the pretty girl sweetly, “becauss|“Your white silk gloves?” 3 Sa"ul 0 LSe"illawd || sometimes we are inclined to think | when my fwo brothers came home for| “IUs ouly too truc” i the pretty - Vopmlar for Uty dark, pleasing that there will be no others who will| dinner that night they demanded wildly | girl, dimpling uncontrollably. 5 thick, creamy remuticaion of ecial demaieh- | e the opportunities that revealed | lo know what ailed me to run away| “And that horrid man was looking all color and , rieh, AT from them like that, when they had three | the time,” she continued. “He flung his | This whele publicaion could bo fled with Zoact. The tacg and delicious, themselves to some of the men Who| . c.ynice men who wanted to meet |own window open and stuck his head u"""flw h"‘" P will please the | amassed colossal fortunes because they|.oi 1q parely glanced at het approach- |out, simply so I couldn’t see him laugh; | pess eaknees snd o By familiar flavor {were able to develop and organize the|ing cortege, you know, and in my bash- | but I could not stay there any longer. %‘“’ increase weizht steadlly, most eritical C[RCULAT[OH business of supplying the wants of the | fulness had entirely failed to recogmize| “I got up and fled from the train, four | bealthily, . Be well, be happy! people on a large scale, Perhaps it will| my own brothers ! stations trom home, and walked the rest | Yox should add earstoyour B nod havs far 1920 | le just as Well it such great fortunes| “Gosh!" said the young man feebly. |of the way with my cars burning; Ishall R s T ™ ave mot piled up but thers can be little|“Do you ever—I mean, if you ever cut | never get over it." : | gk ith changing conditions but|me dead like that could I hope that that S— oo b Mo, 7.0 was the reason?” “I should think that young boob's wiill bpjuruiing BTt . and de-) ™I wouldn't cut you mtentionally.” said |ears would have burnt,"” said the young e | veloping newdflelds With a view to serv- the pretty girl “but I might! I'm Tl mn with expeis P el hve - . § dally; needs SIa WLUL NEIGT0 UB, terribly bashful. Well, I was going to|been the one to get up and go. THE SALVATION ARMY FUNDS. In this connection it is interesting’ to| tell you about this good looking young| “He did,” cried the pretty girl. “He re of the experien thelnote that we are increasing the con-|man on the train. He—" . was as badly fussed as I was and he during t Sal },«u mption of gasolene at a rapid rate.| “Oh that was what you were going to | went out through the front door while I 1 th icy Our motor vehicles took 25 per cent.|tell me about?” said the young man |fied from the back and bumped spang in- Lighter 48 color and in body and E- " for | noro the lust year while in spite of im: | seornfuly. _“T thought you were speak- | to Mim on the plattorm. 1 | with 3 mere delicate favor than g & 8 L ing of being bashful— ‘- was why my ears burnf rr il ot oot gasolene production | ™€ 57 Ml PEMNACI, iy have pa- | he lives Just two blocks away and he Pickwick. of o - there was but a ten per cent. increase| y.nce v’ said the pretty girl. “He sat|walked home with me—- hat ously bLeen|in the. output. L opposite me on the Illinois Central, and| *“Why didnt you tell me this was a & 23 g suggestion many are W d | How this country is depending wpod |1 could tell—you know you can, some- | serious matter?” asked the young man, making 8 “muely” with Harva organized gement | oi i shown by the statement of the fed- | times—that he was looking at me." furiously. “I would never have taken it d of Pickwiek r g the |eral bureau of mincs to the effect that| “How could he help it?” gaid man )so light if. 1 known"—Exchange. < 2ad 3 dash wick and say now appealing to the p Norwich | i March this country used 44,000 000 sent free, postpaid by % it 1s delicious. for thelr ! S St oll T“:; it "’l‘"“‘i‘; if the southern stutes should have | ATrewChemicalCe,31 ' ok, e uance of fties . | 000 arels more - 5 e, H white governments, the votes of those R . sired| Mareh of last year and shows how rap- Five Minutes a Day states in congress and the electoral ¢ol- | rrom using the' ballot ' and from ‘ [y wo aro burains ol Thires-fve| With Our Presidents | isse woud imperi the republican pary. | ot J2° ot abore. 2o b f w . ars ago the entire world was not con- The conflict between Lincoln and con- | Mose'» and the “bloody shirt” began eat ¢ - cuming in a year as much as we used | e gress was forced to an issue on the 1ast | o waye from the political stump in ihe t March. 1] Copyright 1920—By James Morgan fj| dav of the session in 1864, when con-1pnortp, nmun J One effect of this is to increase the |l p | gress adoptel a reconstruction pan of its| “party anq sectional polities, North and = . 1 S seal o of oil. Another is the possibility | . = oyn, under which it was to be the fin-|goutn still was the marplot of the A real strength-giving tonie. Iy, as other ¢ fa shortage sms it i & deeation he | SUESTIAITERE G5 TAGE EMSORS OX] ¢ judgs of (he Mgl Sove oo the| Union. As it had fostered disunion be- YVery efective as an aid in re- oring s wa can expect to keep up this rate waR e e i e fore the war, & was dolag s worat to ntng sirevgth snd in bring- r g forced to rely for the greater| April 15, Vice President An- |be took no action on it before adjourn- | oue'® dastid p _ing one back to normal. A most 4 . ‘ e STk Eretacats acea 56~ | Wit the sadlng of the. war, Linoola| Temeemews The Gevet Tmpanchment xSt ombarion /18 | 0b- I striving m ry especially when are already d 2 . i he endi r, ows. = 2 i thus getting Mexlcan oil at the rate of about| 1866—April, Congress overrode his |\was roping to complete the work of re- taiped by “Hall and Half” of u Su g WaY | gix miilion barrels a month. veto of !l:-e Chl[‘;“ B:hu bl“-d construction before congress met again Stout and Pickwick. cannot . af} sely 1 is is| August-September, his “swing around |ang could remew its interference with . | For 1y all oil is not found in this poh s o e it ol 2 T e Intoriernoe it Stories That Recall Others r miry or Mexico, but with the con- . ; bim. Instead, the n in } e " e ol Sairat e e dbiE nd lican vietory in Comgressional |ang n Johnson attempted to carry s o o | sumption o creasing a s and oot Y e o Wy B 3 untort | the vrice mousting the epportunity forl o TCITL L ot door in| Lincolas: abiest,. whith he. vetained,| ecently the newspapers sontained the : : Poigd tions, | 10s¢ who are so irclined to bring forth} o gingion awakened the sleeping vice | congress broke into open revolt. He ap- | information that the doctors in 2 certain A ol . + " some other fuel which can bo used Lo preyigent to the startiing mews that the | pealel to the people to stand by him, but | ity were thinking of formiag & union. /OU will find these three beverages well distributed among the ¢ e B Ty 1A operate internal combustion engines and| pr.sident had been mortally shot. Even|his “swing around the circle,” as he de-| M. A, 2 lawyer, read the item to his 3 = e { . o i . s method i 13| do #0 more efficently and more coonomi- | Letore Andrew. Johnson took the oath | scrbed bis tour of ihe Kast and Middle | vife. Now that looks fair he comment- dealers in your eity. They are all * Harvard QuzYity Products yearly mainte f han gasolene does it would se he ne s - | West in 1866, destroyed the last shry 3 o e numbers w » L boonle s it omiiteo o el e - SR R B e e S Balf for overtime. ~They surely desorve ~real wholesome heverages, and it is for you to choose lending | vious that there will be a greater con-|him reverse Lincoln's enerous policy | Face to face with hostile, Jjeering | AT A8, Well 88 other working people” “ the one which best snits your taste and needs. who w | mot n hicl be e el toward the conquered south. erowds, Johnson cast aside Presidential | . y - | samotion By motac venicled efors there | o, S on tienea. Alndotly. Mromil g Ienics BAn 1AL Tols s Mocy e or | 7N pubnese. D6 7E (bt Sppilsl dep suring s less and the gasolene supply i g poreL Ty S i Sl HERILY gd Jctoohe A tor) will still keep us on his overtime In many rcies| and the gasolene supply s £0MNE} yy, "geah bed to order the imprison-|the Tennessce mountaineers. General | lop 2 IARVARD COMPANY, LOWELL, MASS. B 40 MSed ail “thio selief 3 com gt ment of Jacob Thompson, the fleeing|Grant, who unwilingly acompanied him, o e ’ s 2l == confederate emissary, whose arrest Lin- | had to step forth to quict a riotous chowd o R s Boston Branch, 45 Commercizl Wharf : | WILLIAM DEAN HOWELLS. coln had refused to sanction only the|in Lincoln's own town of Springfield. The| A sroup of automoblle men wag dis- - | A conspicuous example of going from|evening before, and he offered a reward | yeneral recalled the disturbers to a sense | CUSSIng conditions and 1“‘“"‘*5“:‘18' doing "I the hottom to. the top of the ladder is|for the capture of Jefferson Davis as|of propriety simpy by waving his hand{an elderly automobile man appeared on t rease elie t turnished by the career 6f William Dean |&n accomplice in the president’s assas-|toward the target of their hootings and |the seene. One of the younger men ze- B e —— ; ple of Norwich w " | iRl ano Hak vork as a composi- | Sination. saying, “The President of the United 2 " gt » itions | Ho¥ells Who began Work ws composl-| AU the ' same time radical republicans | States” In the presence of a still wild- I > sl Ba pwa Y * JAMES E. MOORE, NORWICH o 1d- | o COMNIY TEWEPREL offce at dese cus at Washington were haling|er mob at Indianapolis, Grant feit it ||S,;DORL corly conguians Jefs: UIOEr 4 S 3} can | (han 73 cents & day and finished a5 the | in change of Jeadérs a5 a godsend. “By |prudent to opder the president o re- |, 10 which the clder replied: “Tew 1 DISTRIBUTOR FOR HARVARD PRODUCT. ? Se 7 | of American letters. It was in rec-|the gods! there will be no trouble now | treat, Kor he had been greeted by a|noye beeh here some litde tme = When D & ognition of his g work in literature|in running the government,” explaimed|storm of bullets, but which were prob- growing thick along the Jbauks of fhe o { that he was crowped with the high hon-|Scnator Wade of Ohio, as he grasped |ably fired in the air, D o e R e A Sak Mty . t from the world’s leading universities. | the h: \d]qf the r:ll’«“' urczll"fm-p Sl Apart from the republican politicians | prone to disturb the quiet of the even- ST o A was not alone among the fellow anwhile, as the southern people SaWiand a mere faction of extremists, the{ings by their continual croakings aiong: 4 22 2 E : workera in (ho field of literature that nis| S "Door white” of the south enthroned | pory* R £ICIO0 G incoln's sapderate | the b:nkts " anything else you it 1] PERLIY $100800.000 g year. 1"'5 to make deliveries in Groece as ll’eovk before its industries can be re- worker eld of literature that his| 15 ok § g s L B ihenie Africa contains a smaller amount of | quickly as do their competitors from he " e ¢ has|OVer them, they sank to a still lower| jolicies. But when it became = ques- | know, sir? % R £ it of | i petitors stored. Even the Turks have suffered b be 1008 1 tatn Eatuis Tl Lty 6 SAMALRES | joyal of despair thad ttiey had fallend {ooFRl SEIIAL TS B APCE ©oal than any other continent, but otber parts of Burope, 3 @ marked decrease in numbers. < e before the readbes af books 284 ien ele arles syrrendered. - When¥ing it won. ovorsatlningly in e L A RN 3O total reserves are estimated at more| Lorraine’s steel plants are in diffi- | North Ching could probably produce . . US| magas for many years and his woi Davis heard of the monstrous charge that | conoressional election of 1866, rom the Consular Reports. than 57,000,000,000 tons. Cuities beczuse of the railway erisis in {2,500 tons of asbestos each year, if the ¢ | en regarded as standard. There|he had conspired with Booth, he made| With a two-thirds majority in the new| Ko0l% in Russia, lies north of the arc-| Doctors in Poland are worried be- | France. business were properly stimutated. a er re those of whom it has often been said | the bitter retort that there was at least | hoyse and senate, the republicans over-jtic circle. The town has from 500 |cause of the great amount of medical | Great Britain looks for nothing ex- Saskatchewan has more motor w . e vote Hindar. dlis SR e i e er R PR sppate th eople and the harbor never | supplies thz: are constantly going out |cept a steady rise in th - | i y t they wrote bigger than they act-|one man who knew Tt t true; | rode the president’s vetoes, and eon- |t0 10,000 people and 2 y e cost of clath- | hicles than any other province in Can- 8 r | ually seemed but Howells measured up{‘Johnson kiows that I would have pre- | zress took command of the government, | freezes solidly. of that country. 2 the. ada. i all particulars to the high ideals that, ferred Lincoln to him.” The reconstructed states were outlawed. | Brazil is about 10 take an exact cen-| Heavy inoreases in {reight rates on| Asia Minor is dcereasing in popula- | American hardware and iosls ave b Sortay A fomans T, ly as a| Fower auickly cooled the vindictive| phe south was divided into miitary pro- |Sus, for the first time in fifty vears. |hides and skins from Calcutta to New | tion. During the last five years many | selling well in Walea. % : [ b th and towered not only as a| UOWer WOy coced the VIRAIELWe| The 3 _ : n is losing its condensed milk | York are demanded by Japanese and |Greeks and Armenians have cill- y ' v he | y f t D Y &, | vinces. The ballot was thrust jnto the | Japan is 3 04 = been kill By Australia’s recent election twel i » thej -‘wwll r of ihe pen v‘mx "“f user of sim-|jier feud with the southern leaders, | unskiliful hand. of the freedmen, motwith- |trade. other non-American steamship lines. |ed or have emigrated and the eountry |farmers were seated in I';. L- -1 e oy Dl but wendertully expoesise language|and he returned to Lincolm’'s policy of | gtanging it was still denied the negro in| Because Canadian money is at a dis-| German business houses are prepar- [ must receive a considerable influx of | representatives. - ing ¢ wept| Lo foreh dn his own graceful style but | reconciliation. Wisely, no one Was pun-| o) byt gix states of the north. At the|count of from 10 to 15 per cent. com- Wellhus o ished for treason. Happily, vengeance|game time a Jarge class of southern |pared Wwith the money of this country - ‘ e @ man of constructive ideas, ayfor a great war was not wreaked on|whites was disfranchised for disloyalty | the Canadians estimate that they lose 3 + s, and w ' Willl lcver of work, a close student of great fln;;) mfh\'uldu?h iy £ joic. | 18 the war, which left several states to oS ‘ - of c cated Inf pen w 1d preceded him and in so he radicals, who had seeretly rejoic-§pass under the corrupt government of e 1 15 poreible o close associate of older | ¢4 1 Johnson's acgession. turned wbon | northern “carpet-baggers’ ~ and. southern ‘ o ded | Leriry meil as well 48 thoss morenear-| exoite the doubt ‘of the Noeth i thin] s ees e ot ancd power by ma . . s ag 3 nipulating the ignorant black vote and - g age Southerner, and to estrange the republi- | Gbo held it by fores of federal i ° ) ‘s - s as a novelist that Howells has|cans from this democrat. e & flmhmm 4 . - on | gained his greatest distinction and| For the first time even the sobriety of| " s northern “fire-caters” pressed to the e ny are of course familiar with what!® president was called into queation. GE e f v We bave witnessed spch remarkat view at 5 D |front, on one side of the Mason and ible : he liked best of his own worke, Silas|Johnson’s unfortunate condition at his| Dixon line, Southern “fire eaters” took results with this soothing wash of cils u . ndian Summer, The Quality of m,mgurm@n{as vice president had sl\?qk>‘ the lead on the other side. By night that we offer you a bottle an the suaran- v o : ¥ and A Hazard of New Fortune. | ° Chiries Sumner Into starting a Whis- | the Ku Kiux Klan rode their sable hors- tee that unless it does the same for you, ! ! ¢ ; H i 8 cnsts you nota cent. 25c. 0r and $1.00. = . - | In spite of his advancing years theref When be became president his in.{ =5, 12 & campaien of terrorism to friht | an arra el 8t} wag o evidence of any deterioration of | +ammerene i o e coent 118 In-{ the blacks from using the ballot and | LEE & 0SGOOD CO. 4 wo In fo==1 s 4 | his literary skill, though he had found | gerated reports of his intemperance in i x i ssary to curtaill somewhat his|drink. g { regret of tho: It is an unanswerable question in his- e » had 8o long and cagerly followes|!OrY Whether even Lincoln could have °-urs ¥ th t problem the inherent ability stands out as| For two years before Lincoln died, the | prominentiy as that of & captain of in.|Tadical leaders had been insisting that his regular contributions. Death stegs|Mastered the rising opposition to him in a spec .1 | st congress, not the president, should fix | . L ! eftect th e u ’ the terms of peace for the southern W\ 1 ’ ssessions T b R states. They had angrily denounced him \ p e EDITORIAL NOTES. as a despot, an autocrat and @ usurper, r it w 'he idea of taxing bachelors will of|because of his policy of reconstruction. { | ] same as the naming 5o another holler about inter-|And congress had persistently refused to 5 BB SRt & smail comn nce with personal liberty, admit the senators and representatives ° SRt s 4 Sons from the states which he had construct- 1 doesn’t alway n m B 4ty s s | There were patriotic men who honestly e ' The eff not a new or designation is confined to salmon and|ghrank from entrusting the liberty and W27 | tions point to the f: at it is noses. Otherwise they are scarce. welfare of the millions of freed slaves S rhinister Chiads . | \With great accomplisiments and rich|son’s hands, with his lack of Lineoln’s M A A {rewards. His example as to what can|good-humored tact,-modesty, forbearance I e where there is the will to make |and hold on the public confidence. lon nse of SR Tespects pleasing to Canada = to the rule of their old masters. ‘There R R &8 the idea has h presented t Tf it is going to cost $38,000,000 to|also were «caleulating politicians who A LT UTGNS i pears 1o be no reason for objection o | eNforce prohibition those who do the vio-| were troubled only by the thought that S5 Bart of this country - | lating must be expected to foot the bill. e 8 = e The impression: is at - last getting il iy ARMENIA ONCE MORE abroad that an article does not have to While it has not ble to ver-|be put up to the top notch in order to My all of the alarmin oris about | be sold. conditions in Armenia at the present time, they come from a region where| From the present Indlcations there i the worst has prevailed, and the only|no danger of an overproduction by the surprising _thing In ¢ on with| tillers of the soil unless the farm labor them would bo that thex. should be per-| problem changes. gnitted under the existing state of affairs writh the allied nations standing for het-| When Mr. McAdoo modestly doubts Afl“ T&n Yflfi, Sfil FM ter things there, recognizing the Ar-|his own qualifications for the next pres- ] ' 9 menian republic and tell urkey what| ident he is of course making an earnest, HEHE‘ lfl es not be done in that| indirect bid for it. T 0o 5 . “ L congress and restored the Union on the | proved. 1 . (£nd @ brilliant career which ex-| plan which he had adopted. That plan - 2 | tended over a long term of years fil . had small chance of success in John- “Cleans as If Polishes.” ! $1.25, $1.50, $1.75 sizes. & must and mus quarter of the globe g The Turks have persisted I their| If one candidate wamts fo fhrow a| 307 SACTO Avz., Sicmawsro, Car. menacing attitude regarding of the re.|brick at another it seems to be quite|, “I had Stomach Treuble for ten years, sult of the war and the knowledge that|an effective method to insist that he con-| which became so bad that I got the allies are committed to an Armen-|trols a big slush fund, j & s ma fan government. Increased trouble is e e Stomach Cramps twoe or three fimes threatened from the fact that the bol-| The man on the corner says: Happy| & Week. shevik forces have been getting new con. | 1010 be the owner when he feels safe| . After years of terrible forbure, I : 3 trol fn the vicinity of Baku where the|!n 1eaving the backyard ganden out over| read about Fruibadives’ or Frait As It Sweeps Az It Cleans effoct upon the Turkish influence in that|MENt Without an umbrella. Liver Tablets, and sent for a trial box. ocion o natarally viewed eom | tter Wi R Eo b s : : : || SEE THE HOOVER g 4 3 said| After taking the I felt worst standpoint. With the encroach-|gpout the administration there's mo pos- of The Sitat dox, 14 - s » y “Pruis-atives sment of bolsheviem it has heen necossary | gile chance of letting him have a thue| Lo 30 bept on seking AT THE DAVIS THIS WEEK Zor the American mission for rellef inlro 4o with bettering the sugar sitme:| JOTearly a@yeor, and am theokful to the mear east to withdraw from territory | {jon say ‘Fruit-atives’ ssved my life”, . » b ey Arscicas iro nie, fo o e Norwich Electric t s the polley of the mission to keep| The tobacco aereage In the United MES. F. 8. STOLZ. . . gafe distance from bolshevik *influ- | States will be increased about tem per i Ay : Gent this year over last How shout| , orAPO%,8for 82,80, trilgine 250, 42 FRANKLIN STREET With thess mew conditions menacing | potatces, corn, wheat, sugar beets ana| 2U4ealersorfrom FRUIT-A-TIVES | pew- republic right‘at the start in{other quite negessary foodstuffs? Limited, OGDENSBURG, N, ¥,

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