Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 9, 1920, Page 4

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1 Giorwich Fulietin asid V"-u!_hf A i24 YEARS OLD 1 thed both, dnd carty the means of educdtion {o those _| ¥ho most need it and to whom in the g T T T T T past adequate educational opportunities ':.:-m-\-mu-n.u-.-n sue Bive bose' dalind: Eaueed i the Pestoffioe at Norwien. am. of = @hesd clars watier. PROPHECIES OF LEAN YEARS. Tetappzae Gaiin Prophets of evil are not welcome at ; dny i, Bt (8 & Werla Wedry of war S o 3s:¥ fanid post-Wir coriplicatioNs stieh a voice o sk Tieine o5 || sbuiids dAIBly omdineus. Yet fit such a guise appedrs Sir William H. Beveridge, June 9, 1920. director of the school of economics and political science In London, when he makes thé ton that riaturs 18 aboutt to affict (e world with a period of lean crops within the next five vears. Sir William has‘ .been studying the past as t& éyéids of ool and Bad crops; prosperous and lean years. He believes he has found a rhythmic return to lean years throuslt thé récurreniés of periods “of betweef fittedn dnd sixtefh yexrs fn- Eulietn fusiness Bulletts am e _mit Norwich, Wednesda; WEMIER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRERD, The Avciien Pra i elucien il Tex reputiieation of A1l mews Zempe ea 1o . 1 Stiecwise ctoiied ta UL cems oubitsbes AL gk o repeicatisn of gpecial desaten. e ueiein are alee caseered. 1A (Special to The Bulletin.) ‘Washington, June 7.—The long herald- ed budget bill is dead. It was expected ot d:;ld;s éach yéar by clmtmt‘ wu"" off ex travagant appropriations. i i ouvtressvlfuz the president Killed it by véto on the ground that it trod too he did not express it in exactly those words. éxecutive pero; adjournfhent, so congress took it back and rushed reconsideraptfion and it was passed by the house, with what the presi- dent considered ifs objectionable features eliminated. It was then Seht ovér to the: sénaté, ohly to bé Killed ther by a demo- cratic filibuster led by Senator Pomerene | of Ohio, who held the floor till the closing hour, making one of the most bitter #tump speeched on record. He flung | oSt rémarkable variety of fud and| slime at every republican candidate thus far mentioned for the presidency. His brush was thickly Coated with tar and by {he timé hé got (I With the speech—if you believed what he said—a | southern “black and tan” delegation | gative.” But it means the [ tervals which are in the naturé of @i me- téordlogical criid. extending 6VéT two OF three years. This leads to #bhormal wédther, Which first destroys fhe crops of fhe couniffy that fided rath By with- holding it and then the crops of the country which desire dry weather by deiding éxéessivé rain. Scatisé {né [ drouth vés usifally p¥ededé {hie deluge makes dearth in India usually precede dearth In North Ametica and Kngland.” From (he &xnéfieneds of fhree cenfir- i¢s he warns us that ofic 6f more of the vears 1924, 18%5 or 1926 #fll b¥ marked by the most Gmseasonablé Weather, pro- | ducing femine. Az a matter of hard fact. there is hope, since most meteorologists have been un- able to verify thesé recufreht rhythms for such brief veriods of fifteen or so. WEEK ENDING JUNE 5th, 1850 10.629 THE KEYNOTE. in the Leynote speech Chiea¥s convéntion of (HY fepab- vut hik finger with arefringsac- unon the out # issue of the the elimination 6n ) its stand for the s President or from M Wilson sachu- bring forward other but #en face the nz up the challenge of al to the people on the ques- ion of league. declaring that he wel-fysars do affect the &limate of the eafth Buied coniest along this lind and|has hésd QEARKSIY provéd by Ametféan Wad no doubt that ihe apBrobation of tHE | mstéSFSISEIsd: But the EXHSt recurréncs fl would be expressed for the senate|of simil¥ kind¥ of weather .over given iriotic defense of Americ Iperiods has not been established fo acy in the W nece! te Hou: ust be | ¥ short-range solar neridds and §iite baf cauge it has r fles exabt Gompuidiion évén ds fo Tong. range recurréficé. I is (hi§ uncérrdfity, therefore, {h&{ #ives ohé rédssn fo be- lieve that S¥ William's prophecy men or orga the American the world may post ! pone for a iim= their search for a Joseph ‘1o lead them through the'years of 1 nese, FUNLRAL FOR MR. BRYAN. | 7f the nlans of the Wilson demoerats ee represeniriive governmentiwor: ¢ut AS néF Schedule. the poli have alwayd cincéivéd and vea a of Wilitam Jénningd R wccomplished at the partd c ¢ of the country o 1 dominant is ith Recks ve 2d_the Wilson and the cer- s of FafriNG AblY {REy BEHEVE i fdki 1ments for the last long eleen of the Com moRér. i determ: “@ét Bf¥an ind S8 sail to have been the resident’s treat polics ence unon stirring un a fuss over demon rum have mariked the Néprdskan, i thé miadd of theé presi- 12 riérs; for the ceniral figh HE sugFs#iion that sad rhée. Vet aoaging tné po- § Wa§ exnhrié KSr Will B 66 hew expér- préfiteer Bryan dnd it Wiil doubt! :r to manv minds that he has shown derable that line. On Savsral veen of the Peer: heen so beaten dt 1t seemed scardely p th 8f Tife &sula &fill be as always pulléad through some- e wad not # lon# aco that Pr. dent Wilsor rhadé the sufgestion that he| ecared. Hé fis thing that he or) time, peonle wera > . - ‘Eardiées of 1iFles. cofisulting |P® Knocked Inf6 A cHeMEA hit. b + AéAFER of the mofment. The | ProsTamme v begah {o hesitate on e ain from| or go}® i ehelves M1 ab6As Brought 4 redutiisn pregent reduction M prichs i¢ but beginnifig of a4 midvémsnt w! W far more abruntly than it startéa © bontrél and IhfuéREs eaifed) ere Of Ametiea 13 mairitained | ooy, #aviii§ and eafe f hand prices | ed to ni their déeterm e forcis sudeésd in condacting how #hall his eiemiés LS assured th his ghost Will not fle¢ up and Haunt trem? EDIToRiAL The magic number af 493. illa, v in the ountains. HeF Wil pey. iciion . along one Mne, HEWev Witéhing thé faraéh #fow is a favor- UeEYRER if the mibhes ite dutdoor spori just dt this séuson. i other w P 4 tul 16 A If a dark horse Wins af thé Chitas nee ties Which c> with demand. It convénilon wé Hopé it won't bE a fliv- Ver. . so used on'y through safe in- Aceording t6 véur attitude wpon wo | fan's suftrage, litile Delaware is now 16ts WHICh Wil B6ti | famious or Aoterions. ed until opnortuni- B et L motove and which can-{ A pouha 6f etfaf in thé HOWI is Worth in value invest- | fiore than a hundred pounds in soms profiteer’s storehouse. n government gavings stathing s ‘1‘! cé rf!flczlrrs The; Otiija boards should be working 6ver- ®e the nation for ther are time now to tell whom the Chicags con- Me nation's strenzth and th carnot vention will nomimdte. ate in price bécause they are al- redeemable at the price pald for interest. Pope Bénedict’'s appeal for peace for- gets that peace hddl L¥en vetoed by the oihér iAfaNivle adthofity. BETTER Ebhy ecoghizing ¥ ATION. ; better education as one!l fundamentdl néeds of this couii- Natiohdl Ecoficthic leagié hds a commiitea, including many ng educators, to improve the Methode, raise the slandsfds ind broad: m‘mo influsnce of edueation throughout the Unitca AR 5n8 of the first steps s efd the comimitise rec. 2 cderal de- on. headed by au see- hoa sat in {ii€ presidént’s] The purpose of the départmefit 2, through ity Agentd, td vish, report upon the educdtional d States, thus pro- motinz unity in effort and efflclerey in It's Bééd a Bad &edssn for autoefats, witelher it Bufode or América, evér 8ince the arritistics was signed. The man on the corner savé: Thé rule against blowing your own hern is off in 4 prestdential camtpaign. 1t yéu t6 add to the esét of foifig high. fake 4h aifplane trif from Bostoh t6 New Tork af §150 per. Whéft 4 cénventidn iS to name thé fiext présidént it_is 6f méré than usdal im- Femm'x. That is the Way the People ook at the répiblican convention at Chicage. Another leak m;,he-i diséovéred at 2 _ | Washifigton. Aceofdifig to the man in Moy n'xb\""d"! the committée ré88-| i cas abiout 100000 Flilons 6 Bobis a ision for Vocational éducation| ovin’ (o gétting #Way ffom the bonded § all sclools for punils under 11 yeafa| mor ' 1o o W azé and the cxtensioh of voeattonal| ™o o oUTes ®lirses o the secondary schools ani sollegés. is virtually unafitthdts in secomifichiding that all sEhobls, Whether roealigndl or not, aim t6 preparc stu- lents for the proper use Ard enjdymént W their leisure, in addition {o traififfig Nem for their responsibilitiés as work- w8 and as citizens. There are Wise sug- @rtions also for the extension of éduca-| fo n_i§ FébouAding upon tHem- THéY 4ré fiist starting at im- §éivés. mense cost to return the valuable W#orks 8t art théy &t616 #Rd to féstore thE 1i- brafy. A sblaier Wwho appeared in persén be- re the war depaftment was unable to f#n among the colored people of t{hé| g to tHem hé i§ fiot déad. Xéw the; quih particularly in the Furdl dls- g:;;;: me;‘;a::g :a 6},& that he 1 Z wiots, dnd a récofhinéndstion by 49 pér =nt. of the committee membership For meh fducation of adults that foréifners| Eimias e e T nay become famillar with our languag$,| THE United States supréme cofirt de- mr government &fil otif codfitr¥. Py an|cided that whed th8 coRétitutién said Jmost equally dec: i alttes récommends that the educstioral| islatures of the states of by convéttibn: weourcks of the public high schools and|it means what it sald. A stéut @ stub- plleges be ¢ availablé té the Wirk-| BoFn oid AbCuieht bubjéct for a cemetéry by showlhg him his corpst. vears| any further That the variations in the maxi-|but they could not see him. and de mum solar sun-spot peri6d§ over eleven| thé me: of| th> corpse. | aftnistation - éstructi¥Enéss in the liBfary] e vote the comi-|athehidmedits fuist bé ratifled BY the lee-| i woxgd have looked like blonds compared | with republican candidates for the pre de: at the-budget system would Tefitce taxXation did nof anpzréx':‘iéz’ intér- est the ORi0 senatér in the least, if het must forego the opportunity {0 besmirch | candidates on the eve of the Chicago con- vention #nd then sent ciit Wi§ speech free to hundreds of thousands of voters; throughout the country over his congres- fdilure to pass a; ic legiglation rests squarely on the shoulders of President ‘Wilson and the democratic sie of the; senate. Not one republican {60k part ifi | thé filibuster. Prestacit Wilkows conditisi such | that it was foun@ impossible to bring him sto the capitol the day of adjodrnment to sign bilis passed at the last minute, as the custom. A delégation of senators went to the White House to ascertain, as i aldo the custom, if tHe nresident had iness to I before them, is { #¢ through his secreta: 2 The téply from the président Wwas brouglit back < them by Mr. Tum- ulty, then theéy returned to thé capttol jand made their report that no. further | business was desired by the vresident at that time. Any bills which the president failed to sign fow die zutbmitically by Wwhat is khéwn as 4 “pocket veto.” That i8. théy must be sigied before the rap of the vice president’ vel dfil his an- nouncement the session is at end| j brings the se to = formal close. Dur. | g & cession hills become 2 law if mot | SRR Witk {65 journment unle: 1 dent. the pre The senaté ingsiry ints can penses of presidlenitial candilates | 48t Sihort 6f hitting the democritic as- republicans, E after t tb republi that the hear- @ later date ome time ago @ bill passed the Monse X fi nt of- in tie paten he salafi that the bus! cotidueteti more sneditions¥. Under the best fien are to private em- “much de- 18 very cut and | i i ttente. an@ ReEnte- vas soméwhat active in | the hill. by request of the | a sneeth in its favor | house. . Mr. E hore time had reported | wortly after | f i { | bl out the is dvantage of ar t this wo d~ eommission and #xolo! of patents, ¢ i i terms of the bill it w cd States compete = ag 1oy iem at their 7 expense. Merritt. It appearcd to Mr. Merrit: it this was a broad ane rid 1a not only he to vrivate amifacturers would also tend to npset the éntire patent United Stedtes. He is ther hg to nrevent the r g ment through the senate on | the grounds ahove stated and on the fur-| ther zround that such lezislation ousht to be considersd - riflar to another bill. uld nass the senate, it . in view of the new lesisla’ the Dill Would have to be referred ! hack to the house committee, and a cof- | { ference at the present time could be pre- vented. n .t mefits and not 4 The closing o7 congress has left Wash- ngton like a deserted village. All roads led to Chicago, and before congress ad- journed there were not @ baker's élozen of leaders left in town. By 4 gentleman's agreement it had beén drranged that fo roll call should be demanded or a quorum asked for after the special cirs which were to take the delegates, party leaders and newspapermen to Chicago 16ft here early Saturday afternoon. Niglit sessions’| lasting till daylizht had préceded the ad- | journment and the business had been cleared up iust as intended excepting the budget bill. The great stir over a sol- diers’ bonus may as well havé been left out of the house program and thus savaa much personal récrimifidtion and many party splits, for. just as prédiétéd in The Bulletin many weeks ago, it did not get | before the senate. it is probable a new | and much mors Workable bill for soldier | relléf will he put before congress at the | December session. ' One of the Inst measures tending to benéfit New England which came up was the Walsh resolution authofizing the in- térstate commerce commission to investi. j gate the high price and scarcity of coal. Senator Walsh.is hopeful it will lead to an émbargo on coal shipments to forsign countries or to some action by the bresi- dént which will hélp Néw Bngland out of g‘e‘ terrific_shortage which now exists. énator Walsh stated that the billion ton8 a month sént to Great Bfitain, Italy 4fid other foreign cotintries at prices Which the United Stdtes consumers could m’sg afford to pay led to the recent famine héfe, coupled with the low productibfi at the mines. He belleves the investightisn Will bring about remedie: 1 SNAP SHOTS OF DEMOCRATIC CONVENTIONS Copyrighted by G. M. Adams Sérvice _ THE CONVENTION OF 3 Wheh the democratic national conven- tion assémbled on April 23, 1860 in| Ch}r&ei_wn, South Carolifia (mebting for thé first time in the south) theé party 11;15{ already fallen préy to that “irfesist- ible conflict’ ihat was leading the coufi cildbly ajvide into civil war. 1 Was irrecon- on the quéstion of slav- i m-.aA ie _ferritories. . Meanwhile; tepheni A. Douglas u{h Tiiinois, Wwho Hbnorgils Séodis Wikh Lincotk Taons given him 4 fame commenswrate with declared the girl with the distractiif to save the eountry hundreds of million$| dimplé in her cheek. othérs Who had drdppe 5 heavily on his executive toes, aithough|quired judiciaily, siiting down with the I think he said”it “infringed on} " That Was the day before | dreadful!” the romantic girl closing her boak. “This di@ you d6 this tiffi€, Henrietta ! gdfi the girl w { could move, why, I tr i grabbed each other ahd he said, ‘I bég | your pardon,’ kind of frostily, and so did {edge of my skirt had cadght around a j about not talking M with i | > “You'll never in the world believe it!" “Thén tell us af omeet” brdéred the g‘zgémkmg when camé in, she beifig that kihd of girl. hat would be fhé use?’ she in- r of a person about to relate a story. “You'd simply say 1 was-making it up?® And, anyhow, you think I was perfectly “Oh, I am so glad I'm here!" sigi®a is going to be splendid, T know! What “1 think fringe 1§ perfectly awful!” be- tite distracting dimple. “I don’t se¢ Why péople ever started the fashion of putting it on dresses! Thefe was I, waiting to~ cross Jackson boule- vard and the wind blowing and a regt- lar jam of people and When at last We ved and lost my balance and so did he—and we sort of I because he wouldn't let me go—" “What I" “IWeH, he couldh’t! The fringe on the lace fasténer on his shoe, and there Wb were. - You should have $én us hobblé, skip and jump to the sidé bf the build- ing otit 6f the way. And the fringe wouldn't come 1008 but tangled itsélf up in the stubborn Way fringe has of doing, and he yanked and tugged, and J said to break it and it was too strong to break—and he looked so mad that he simply wonderfully good looking— and then of a sudden he laughed up at me. “Remembering all I have beén toMt to strangers. I at- témpted a casual expression. but it was not to be done in the circumstances. S6 we stood thsre and giggled—at least, 1 Stood while he kf€lt. Qiite a crowd gathered and it was awful until he sud- denly whipped out his knife and sawed himself loose and then we were so rat- tled over our notoriety that we just turn- ed and ran in ovposite directions. “Oh-0-0h!” groaned her audflors dis- appointedly. “How could » “You eannbt escape fate,” proccedst the dimpléd ofie serenely. “After I had tan 2. bleek T recollected that when the catastrophe occurred 1 had heen goifg the other way so I turned a corner ahd that of Linclon, reached the climax of his political carcer at the moment when his party had entered upon the throes of temporary dissolution. 2 The Charleston convention was in ses- i with Francis B. Flournoy; chairman and husetts, perma- . From first to last it was bitter wranale. Threats of i to appear on the third day a long fight over resolutiofs | ¢ close A ins Holtitig by and af ended , ddopted = by a vole of 1 ate After onvention adjou June 18 became 3 b no; sit thHadt the few retma ganized a second boit convention a John €. Breckentidge bt Keh-| for ident and Jost Lane of } Oregon; for vice pre The originil! Lbltefs ffom the CHiFle h it m Richmond, these Mednwhils, Baltitiore _cofivention procsedsd to h o its dubious toil Drughis was nomi two 1 tzpat for vie declired t the nat ¥ in_the found themse ued torhoirow with story of the Convention of 1864 “iyz Minuies a Day With Qur Presidents 1858—0et. 27, Théodore Rbosevent born in Néw York City. 1880—Graduated from Harvard. 1882-4—Menibér of New York Legisla- tiite., i 1881-6—4 ranchman at Medora, D. 1886—Defeated for mayor of New York, il Serviee Commission. —Member of New York Po- lice Corimissiofi, Assistant Sceretary of tHe 1897-8. Nary. 1898—Colonel of the Rbugh Riders— in Cuba. 1899-1900—Governor of New York. 1900—Elected Vive Presidént. Theodore Roosevelt was the most pop- plar of all our presiGents. With the ex- ception of Lincoln, his was the raciest and the most interesting character that Wwe have had in the presidency. Yét he was borh-apart from the mul- titude wWhom he led and he might have lived and died a stranger to the masses of his countrymen but for one thing: He had rot the health to enjoy the lifé of ease whith openéd to him at his birth. Roosevelt had to figsht for his very breath in his gaspirig, asthihatic child- hood. He had to fight éven to see until he wds thirtéén, wher it was discoveréd that thé awkward, stumBling boy was i need of eyeglasses. He had to fight to get into Harvard, without the stimu. lating companionship and tompstition of schoolmates, his tincertain health having| put him out of step with his fellows andj xcept for a few months, he at. tended 4 public or private & the while he had to fizht for {» to hold his own among the hafdier, the rougher boys, who, boylike, picked on the timid weakling, and hé built up his frafl body and Braced up his courags by con- stant exercise at home, in the flelds and in the woods. Finally he took a post-Eraduate rourse ! n physical culture in the Wild West.; Where the four<yed tenderfoot had fought the battles of his youth all over agaih in a strange world, with entirely different standards for measuring a man. As a_ranchman out on the bliz- zard-swept plains of North Dakota, he Hdd to mdke good by working as hard and daring 48 much as the hext fellow ; keeping his dudie tor forty hours at a stretch on 2 “round up," and shoWing himself on occasion quicker with his fists than some barroom rowdy was with liis guns. In the &énd *he frontier miade over the raw material from Fifth dvenie to an American’ of the type of Washington, Jacksoh and Lincoln, all frontiersmen. Hdving dvercome, the disadvantage of being Born poor ih héalth, Roosevelt néxt overcame thé disadvantage of being born with a _rich father. In the entire story of the presidency tlere is in reality no better example of a “sélf-made” man. ught his wiay ta a ro- velt found that he could bb content fo Hwdle ih a club windo® or bé 4 mere looker-on in the world, Having contracted the fighting walked back dowi to Wabash avehde. 1 went through a revolving door into a shop and just as I got inside a fat fidn | crogsed my path at stumbled and Yes, dears, the shoe his my hair tet. but my ihe Waves ofi that &idé de Y this intéredting could h: predicanignt. .7 stspielon, iicredhlity and petiifdetio was 80 frlgas tha the fat fiah I had ifipped was so old that 3 1 TTY. cause I réalized my Michigan avénde young man must thihk 1 was puttiig in a day of it entrappiiig unsuspecting men. Maybe he had concluded that I was a pickpocket and he was even now count- n;g his chdnge and feélifig for his scarf- pin. on my trail passed plenty of foot r&6m. Sélf just ad folitaty as a huinan béing cdn bé—and right ahead of mé whom { The sdme! ! fought his way into fiolitics and into thei ihing 1 | soverror: i 1st, right angles and '9 rly smashed His nose. rihge agdin! stooped to 1d88en it tr t sleeve That v hat went “When o of iy hedd skid- And y yoing fidf camé by just gnuhgqfl(; 1 wish you ié ook a8 he foted rily t was a Ule nvfnlfpfiiel, 4t ve Seé I was crimson, &hd he was 88 about if; sb I Ebt 1 felt d wdy in a ireadful; bé. Possitily he would puf detéétives “1 procéeded iip Wabash avende with niy chih ih thé aif and my grdndeést, most aloef walk. 1 gave everybody I 1 made my- Should I se¢ but Mame Dimmick walk- ing alohg With—with my young mafi! “And from the way she was latighing 10w and velvety #nd making déép eyes at him I knew he must bp worth while dhd I owe her one anyhow—theréfore, | just as I passed them I swung my bag so that it caught in her muff and, of course, we saw each other and were so glad ond all that. And she introdueed him to me just as willingly as she would leave a small boy alone in a room with a big box of efiocoldteés just séiit hef. owever, I felt it my duty to leave ho stone untufned to convinesthe young man that 1 was a nice and respectable person” wlo nevér would wear fringe again so lohg 2s she lived and I think 1 was quite justifizble in dol ting up, by two yards of fringe and sew it o niy sergé dress! So theére!"—Chicago New: habit, he eould not stop fighting dnd He | iticlang did not want any recognize the We aré making a spé hats for the specially app: A New Hat For the Little Lady For Children’s Day The little gifl’s costume i$ a fiattér of a§ mucH iff= portaricé to hét, and to her mother as well, as is her mother’s own, afid there is just s fuch chaficé té demands of fashion. | display of daifity trimmed little onés frofi 5 to 12 years of age, roptiate with pretty ribbons—=there ate Panafias barided in white and colérs—and there are daintily trimmed Hamps and Javas = all of them clever and fashionably correct. THE PRICES ARE 36 LOW THAT EVERY LITTLE LADY SHOULD HAVE A NEW HAT SUNDAY - §250t0 $3.98 from tho “Avénue,” and|I fzil to seé any confiection between | néafly équal to an unskilled laboférs the gHded 3 Hill “whol tiiis comimittet and the job. 1 winj¥asges Now 48 I do fiot wish to pro- never whrked dnd hever will” snicker-| giite for thié benefit of the public um}“’““ e gl 8 ed at “Teddy” for mixing up with “the | > pcbenr s represents no party oOr Organizd 1 groom and the #Aiooh keéper” at the dis- [ he MOW has in his possession the full lSt| hope this i final 8 trict headdtiaftéfe. But he retorfed thay | mailed him last Novémber. 1919, attach- GRO. B FOX if this wias the gotérning lass of New |ed in boid type to the bottom of the Nofwieh, Juné 7, 1980, 3 York, fe waned th Belotz to it Stlli| ument he has 8 misqtoted in B o Bha. e . ey kent “lonetitin ni htn 4 cohty | DUS lettéf. Now. if an employer of ¥ R Bsina vears, until one {4y tHE¥ saw hims lugh, | Plumbefs, and we believe ex-secratar§ of May Be Worth the Price. at thefi ffom a window of the House. i Toos eit cut his eye teeth in politi- &l leaderklifp in R cbffupt, machine- rufi giclaiure of New York. He could fiot lave n A more thorough school nstruction in- {he hiaded, muddy for springs of parties and politics. His .- at Albany pit fealism into his sm and rhadle the academic reformer into the mosi intensely practical | ¢ had in the presidency. over it his moral eraneo, along “Tim" 1ld not in the York. For on the Civi ted to a: state 3 - 18 eaded { it was soom| the public could ! fiill of teeth for dets 8o far and that head rfters the sublieal ficliticins, was the iet for fea to keep things sol ar-eyed antieipation | that the éntife ad- 18t he ive o fhe fighting front th the Spanish war. In five nonths he was.back trom C more troublesbme rolé of a! ro. The New Yofjk mmachine | h sore need of a good name to rough the pending éleetion tHat it met him at the wharf and hurbly laid 4t his fect the reptiblican fiomination for But in the goverfiorship he realized the Worst feafs of Boss Platt that he harbofed, as the s naively wrote him, “various aitruistic ideas.” and $hat he was “a little loose on the relations of capital and labor; on trusts and combi- nations and . . . the right of a man to run hi& own business in his own way.” The only thing to do with this wild en- gine was to turn the switeh and shunt it on to the &ide track of the vice presi- dency. Rooseévelt loudly protésted that e wanted to be re-electbd goverhor. And while Platt was tf¥ing to push him on to thé national ticket, McKinley and Hafina just as earnestly tried to push hitn badk on to Platt. The feéfpublicin national eén- véntionl rose up and roared hi§ nomifa- tion, flinging him, in Spite of hifmseif, upon the tide that led to fortine. Tomorrow: The Squire Deal. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR! Afiswers “Employing Plambér.” Mr. Editof: “Ah Employing Plumber attempts in this merhing's paper to dis- entangle hiffiself from the issue of misleading stdteménts published by him, but onlysucceeds in sinking deeper into the mire of his oWn creation. _While declaring that the mattér of dateS is not important he immiediatély rocéeds to quote dates and postmarks to bolster up a false statement made by him in his previous lettsr in which he states that an edict igsued by the strik- ers ovér my name, designated working ule:];le:)i regulations, was issued on May This agreemént betwéen the Journey- mén Plumbers and fitters with the sheot metal workers was adopted and issusd in November; 1919, and not as &tated, on May 1st, 1920. This agréément which | had nothinig Whatever to do with the em. ! ployers and had no date Whatéver at- tachéd also had no blank spacek left for. thé émployers to sign as &tatéd by him in this morning's letter as it in no way concerned them and was distinctly separ- | até and apart from the employers’ agree- tent sent out on April 4, 1920, and to take éffect as of May 1, 1820, ‘this be- ing the only one of the three documents requiting the gignature of thé employ- ers. This was accompanied by 4 circular lettér addresséd to thé émployers and contractors of sheet métal work: and signed by the séeretary of local 55, with no blank space left for thé employérs to sign 4s this persbh Well knows. Ini his attempt to confuse and mislead the public he duotes the _employérs agreément as of May 1, 1920 80 as fo make it appear that this date applies to the riles and regulations issued in No- vember, 1919, withont dry date ditachéd and further statés that tha daté is as he stated in previous letters. Much trickery requires no comment. He furtlibf states that when Mr. Fox furnishés him with & list of four plumbefs who signed the working rulés. we éar all téll why plumbers left the co court house roof. Whi of New! i the local plumbers, wh all about why the phe and his employer doos plack him in 2 bad lig lic; let him eause t0- Iy reasons as_he knows t e public he is o solici bet veen full harrion as we are fully competent to 2ffairs and will, f oni - thé very well plurber on the court inute rest. wiil state 1 question are open to 1 as the ne-teriths workis cldifn to b i part o to nccept their judgme: and-straightiorward statement of fand the garbied and distofied f leadiig stateiments claim &es €rom s, you ra to 96 eé continuing nd by easy vaneed wages to 62 1 fo his attempt to creat: the plumbers metal workets who are fow workiag suggestion nother hour on s ed no secref documents. The three i public 0 certainly kno#s nber 16ft not thini ht hefore the pub- e printed the true congressional, junket to the £ expénsive, but, after y rth while to keep 185 { congress oul of the coin- New York Telegraph. itous about in sus- prreciate £irl doesn't fu : s eon- Dbedlity unless some remiinding her of dis- | her ohe and to take the hai ho @ W ki ¢ quedtion 0Ws. how hi roof toul house have broken his agreemient which atlov one hotir's wo®c on any one job and do- me job this is (oo 1; that as we b the public at an is compose: panple andl % . We afé willing nt between & t m fen L1 \), mindtes before ¥ou go o bed: Killsall mosquitoesin 1/} Black Flag is non-poi Kills is but is b hu- 8 but 1a barmless 13 ho & of an anor e ns this is a ttef, perhaps ¥ 1919 when y« 41 cénts per ho sed youf chi fils an this stages, finaily -2 cent§ per hou Required for Jiffy-Jell Desserts They comé ready-sweetened. Théy come acidulated with pure fruit acid, made from lémons or from grapes. __ A bottle of liquid fruit fiavor comes in each package. Wé crish the fruit, condénse the juice and seal itina bottle. So Jiffy-Jéil is a real-fruit dainty, rich in froit b Simply add boiling watér as directed on package, then fruit essene from the bottle, and let cool. 1f you used fresh fruit, plus a lot-of sugar, you évaM makeé nothihg more delicious. Serves six—at trifling cost Oné pa of Jiffy-Jell serves six it mold form, or twetve i yét whip the j8ll. "And the frdit dlone which we use in it would cost you more than Ten Flavors in Glass Vials Raspberry Loganberry Strwwherry Pireapple Orafige Lemon Coffeé Bé stre to is the odly the whole dessért. ” T fiyJelt Cherry gét this package from your grocer, for Jiffy-Jell essert with thése liGuid fruit flavors'id vials.

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