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- diorwiris Gulietin and @owfied i24 YEARS OLD wmm--fl:mllflxu -.':.“;.'."..fi““"" ot Nerwieh, Rea. & 2 EE Sullettn Py o B z'ofinn-t ®ttmantte Offee 21 churen st Teissiane {03 —_—m Norwich, Friday, Jane 11, 1920. ehess, Assoctated .1!!. 1 “ht‘l*'-flr 'nlhvu‘ e o rapullscation ot &, redivea e 15 b Aot Stbarwise 1- Dll'l' and sl Uir Wisl cems publl -z--(d oF THE ASSGCIAT) n Aghte of ripublicans of sidelsl despatcd. w berein are also fserved CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING JUNE 5th, 1820 10,629 YO SETTLE PEACE PROBLEMS, In a commencement address to the ciads at Swarthmore, Mr. Hoover brotght to a head a thought that has beeh in many practical minds, whén he sald that what we need today is to gét back to a level where the call for “a citi- zenShip based upon daily obligation to the community” will be a clear call for evefyone. He had been pointing out that the war emetgency had revealed a.“vist sense of natfonal service and willingness to sac- rifide” when the mobilization of all our resdurces was called for, and he Went on to ®ay that it was just thid same kind of disinterested service that {5 needed to be applied to olve the problems of peace. If such a thought could be accepted and put into practice by everyome it ‘would furnish that long-sought thing, an actual specific for most of our social, industrial and political problems. 1t is to be regretted that we have in ways already thrown to tha some of the most practical les. sons of the last few y The reaction from “the high emotion and glamour of war “has let the whole country down, as It were, to a lower level. We talked then about keeping un morale and dis- covered unsuspected c: vice within ourselves continue to do in peace those things that we learned to ‘do so well in war we showld not be confronted by &o m: seem to epring up on eves And if the generzl publie, as wall rabilities for ser- I we cotld how crises that hand 8s the young graduates. could but fe- even partly to this obligation of anselfish service and set up again an ap- proximate morale of war times as exein- plified in even so simple a thing as tol let feasonableness prevail it all tutwal industrial under the stress a mon atriotic impulse, man rings t eicaf up look threatening would nd for good and to the benefit >f Al BEAUTY AND BATHING, Now arises the Hon. Councilior Davia Clark Tunbridge Wells to inveigh against mixed bathing in England. Not prudery but patriotism he de ground of his opposition nevef, while stars shine should this menacs is the and never, ho nd waters fun, to imperial England be allowed. For menace it is. slhéé the eouneillor has discovered in it the ventlon of more marriages than a ér cause that hitherto for a decrease in the DAmp frights he cal they with oth- has been blamed marriage rate. dear 'merge from an invigorati the waves. Hear the Hon. C A lovely Kefitish maldén who has énraptured some sturdy Kentish youth Huring the course of a DFilliaht Satur- ay evening bail appears before him on Sunday in a homemade costume, with a Nulgarizing figure, her hair bunched un- def a hideous cap, like a wet Scotch ter- tief and, bang. goes romance. Afe we to infer that English bathing tostumeés are as as all that? O have the opportunities of the Hon. Coun- tilfor been limited for observation? What lhe needs is a course of study at Atlantic Efty or any of the hundreds of beaches m the United States where femininity Visports itself, contiguous to the water, And—sometimes in it. Homemade cos- fumes and hidedus caps indeed. s it sossible that the Tunbridge Wells coun- {Hllor has never had his intefest awak- ed by a vision of feminine loveliness birayed with ah eye to the Sunday sup- plement i a bathing suit that looks as| Tor ¥ it were designed by an impressionist Kho drew inspiration from liberal pota- fiohs of homerrade “hooch?' And for fhoee who actually get wet. have the Bngtish girle not learned that utility fbes not neeessarily mean upliness? No, {ike Yion Cotneillor iz hardly eonvincing Khen he disclaims prudery and puts his biea on the ground of being an “fnper- 15t patfiot” Rather should dhe pleasurable fainly, that there is no qifl appears o better advantagé than Whén eutting her way through the waves if she can really swim. and thatl thefe is no Better proof of vigorous hBalth, ®hith is ihe foundation of beau- ¥ Beanty and héalth are fQualities in s future Wife to which the rharriaké- ibie younz man should not and will not{ S biffd. the Hon, Cogpétilor hasten to the| American beaches this summer and ac- Yuire a liberal éducation He will not t the experience. he eonsi steps o ahd take aseertain cer- place where a WHERE IMMIGRANTS COME FROM. The changing character of the soufce| imiigrants to the United States is 3iscibsed th the report of the immigta- iioh burean for the last six mohths of 1818 Other northern Burepean aave displattd Rustia and Gerthany fom the lead Rinee Rustia has beby E ¥orld and Germany all but| During the péfiod there wére immigrants from England than St eountries more "&om any other country. Ttaly was i kes- nd place. but Frahee, Ireta®d, Beotiand ihd the SeAndinaviah Gounteies 4l 184 the southern countries with the exesp-| tion of Italy. The returd of imtigfants to Ttaly¥ and | Poland is pa larly noticeabie. *Stimated in New York that 300,000 Poles in the Uflited States will rtirh 10 their native country to help in the es- #blishment of free Poland. Applications for passports to Poland are being re- chived at the fate of 1.000 a day, but there are transportation facilities éBly about 800 passengers a month. As this condition is bettered, it is predicted that this country will increasingly feel It i8 for - | Being. tefnational war. “What!" the presiden®j ce when emploved to perform.an H8n-|ekelaiméd. “A war, and I coopéd up edt da¥'s Work. A deciaratlohi to that|{here in the White House? Never!” effect in the |looms up more and more as the isle of by another attack at San Francisco. rid of the high eost of democrats will be the firet step fn | Eoi¥ing the high cost of living. a supper but was more profitable to Ca- s % Tiouse. Although 23 intensely DL e nhou\d' ha\e .be!n American as any president, Roosevelt was scheduled to play in the Windy CitY. |ai5o a man of the Zreat World, who in: PR T terested foreighers haraly less than he A British nobleman seés ifie road tofinterested his own people, the kaiser alone making a little money By tufning land-|rivaling him in international eslebrity. ford, ern landlord. | plant hi | the Marne, the effécts of 4 SHoPlAgE 6f évEImON 14- r to Italy in firgé fumbers, but they are not stay- ing. Post-war omqu in Italy appar- ently ac not af Ita#tian who has|out the beoum 6 High Wages in the ::"";"‘" §m5§_ fright stit The &hifting chidractér of the immi- Ber gtanté dnd probleffatical eledt of in- ga u,el, nner—" ereased Shippifig Aécomim on the| “HoW dan imx stand fhese long sép- tide of inmigration sefve to mmm aration$ ahd mere snatche$ of visits?’ m, ddoption of & S6urd. i y., ,,.,;_ his_roomitate wm, interest: beyond megl” icy Which ¥fil be fletibie entugh 16 in a2 vy i (: s _things,” mmms dufing the fext five ! ¥ of tor mofe GulEklY mflm burig min, poh aséimilating 1mfi!mms, the “fiicrédse ] paek 6n his head Mfl mfifi fréf the nofthéfn Buropédn eountfies gut W#ith ofie &h fortunate 4fid should be éfcour: Atfte .fi the shiiie msefi it {6 nesesdary to l\;:;d gl partiality in fixifig the s| B 5 for damision from varissdSoueie, (56 deon tyfintm In houses that was and it must be borné in Mind that 14t Froulili 16F @ MoNe"" His rooie: tude is nbt & guatdntee of gotd éitizen- ,fig}f told hifn d\eerfly| ¥ Say, but 1 M“i you:ti with m in His eyes. w 86 i:f hn the how pursued his hnt way over- d_like méan eclated the fifét yourg mai eq& 1 86ft of thousht furniture jus happeried; like fn€dls and symmer an winter. But P P SN S g LABOR'S SHARE IN HIGH PRICES. In {he fepbrt of thé executive couneil 6f the American Federation of Labor t the delegates at the afinual wh\efiam of that great orgdhization; now in 86&- ston in Montrédl, much is me abbut. the high cost of liviig eF e “She had fits over a room size briental isting high and éXees¥ive fifi&fi afe due ;“fugzt] :::tp;;c?;d:‘fl :‘:flm’tf; : ::imz w:xe!n d i ed to dis- to_the presefit jufdtion of mbney: dndjy ool "l Jamittea that 1t oA b creaits, fo profiteering by those Who|y o pig for anything outside of & hotel manufacture, sell and market products,|and turned to some utterly darlifhg Chi- and to burdens levied by middlémen and|nese rugs at $500 apiece. She said oné spéeulators.” The Teport #a¥s csuld build up such a sweet blde room “Labor is fully cns¢igWs that the wofla| with a Chinese rug for a base ahd that needs things f6f Wse afd that standafds l;‘:uhigdfleefl gome t;’f't"fl"ful f“;im;e G am h in blue that was extreme of life can impfove only & predietion | ZENGRS N B (T T fnat thers for use and consumption incrsases. La-| oou1g be no pictures except maybe a bor is anXious to work ot better meth-| print or so and lamps made from clois- ods for industry and démands it-be|onne. And she knew a place whefe they assured that inereased Productivity wWill| made lamp shades to order to Suit the be used fof Service and nbt alone for | 1aift profits.” No recognition is zivéh in thé report to the fdct that unfler éxisting condlitions in industry, unsatisfaétéry as they may be fegar#éd by frade #nion- ists, a responsibility fests #Hpon labor to assist production in IoWering exist- ing abnormal living costs. The report shows, however, dissatisfaction with la- bor's present lack of contrl over hdus- trial entérprisés and suspicion thdt efn- ployers are éxploiters of thése who foil for wages. Sucl views, unmodified by €véFy WindoW full of chair and thinge that wé passed Bertha had td stop and look at, and the way that girl Went 6n Was a .caution. t hew much salary do you get™ | asked his roommate in intense horror. ‘Three hundred per,” said thé first youns mah. “I tried to remind Bertha t, but she had caught sight of some chirfl dohe in needlework upholstery that cost so much you wouldn't believe it if T took a long breath and related it to you and she said it would be jhst the thing for our entrance hall. The chair i question never would be sat in by mortal man unless He put on a gloth of gold robe and his wife's tiara. Why, you ot aaw the tmm AfieF gving pia 4| sens» or what? Mflomdl!fibht 61a_coat and slippers. hen she stopped Hort bz{m‘e & win- ining one orthosg arttul grand s t lgsol $o simple and swaet W salesman would tell ed thé 1. sfi: gm she thought a pi 4 ton a house and jt was cheapest to get the besu The Wheels were going drotiil- and around in_my head by then afid I seemed all gore from my throat. down. “Thére she ¥asd trlxnln- along. chat- tering away happily and tristfully about aome za 000 wotth of futnishings ahd 6 bréak the fiews to h;x;hflm; U fvr n totd] was our 1t iv‘mgi‘ ifie lnS’- as he ate 1 g rom_ His Wl nlhir shc womd 1 just walk off and leave me flat tie I opened my. fnouith_ to ge with she would have found some Mherl trifie which was jist the thing. “T was steififf butiers ant footmeh by this time and knef that ol Wwis over. Then I gave # gilp and talked fast. I told her we could afiord just a four room apartment; withont any maid at all. to start, and that we's have to fdfiiish the Whole fiat for the price of oie of pet rugs and that there wouldh't o serap of rose and lavender brocade in the place and 8hé might as Well know it now Biid et the heartbreaking act over and dorie with afid that I'd néver forget her and that it 411 Seemed like a nightmare ending to a hippy dréam— “what did she day?" asked his foom- mate in sympathetic éagerhess. “Well,” said. the young man of the wrecked life; “Bertha just loshed at me out of eves iike two blue saucers and gald of cotitse She kheW all that and she was perfectly cotterited an@l if 1 wasn’t ah idiot I'd have known she was just taiking about what Would be hicé to hav: if We could have it—and fof heavan sake to 8top ldoking liké ah undertaker's asSistant! Arid she siid She had loeated thel very flat for us and it was less than $: a month—and didn't I think shé had any You could have knocked me down With a feather! How'm I goi to tell when she medns what she says Your education is just beginhing iy son,” said his roommate. “And_you'll graduate at about 75 or 80."—Chicago | News. any call to servicé, déem well calculated to discotifagé production. Johin Donlin, présidént of the building trades denartment of the federation, was helpfully frank. He told the convention wholesome truthe; that ibor cannot af- ford to blink. “The Wage earmer,” Mr. Donlin, “is just as wuch for the high cost of living As any other agency. 1f every worker doing physieal Inhor would insist that fifoduction egual pre-war times there. would s66n bie a re- duction I thé price of eommidities. The higher wages go and the mdre produc- tion falls off the moré the worker is gb: ing to be hurt” It i8 hizhly impoftant that labor #hould réalize the force of Mr. Donlin's words for Iabor's awn well- Five Minutes a Day With Our Presidents Copyright 1920—By James Mérgan LXXVII—THE BIG STICK 1903—Feb. 6, Rooseyelt induced Great Britain and Germany to akBitrate with Venzuela. November, The Panama Revo- 1atlen. 1905—May 12, Jdpan to agree peace. Aug. 29, The Peace of Ports- Brought Russia and to dibcuss Tet 1t b coficddéd that better andl mbre extensive fnethods of ed-bperation awarded the Nobel Peace prize. e e o bl Workers Bl L, ¢ Gutset of %he Roosevelt's ad- Ereatly to be desired. = Lack of such|iiiigiration a fearful citizen beged the mEthos, ho®eter, canhol ekeuss sueh Rough Rider not to permit his fighting lazzing production as results from fall-lcpirit to piunze the country into an in- ure ot Wobkers.to &ive full vAlug in sk exccutive countil's report would have done honor to thé officials -of: the American Federatioh of Labsr. Many forgot the first half of the old motto (hat Roosevelt made hi§ own. “Speak softly and carry a big stick.” No man éver had 2 simpler faith in the ef- i ficaey of first it over, man fashion. an adversary, whether sefialor or an ambassador. The meddlesome German the earliest to feel the “bi to sce if it was ony stuffed with straw. Ger- imany and a Tory goverfiment of Eng: were on the point of seizing: territdry as a security for some ms against Ven ash 10 uelan citizens, when Roosevelt su dissuading England from suc but he failed to induce Gefmany ¢ the matter. Thereupbn he A a Congress has from ah &xils American soldiers in A iser was Mexico's tigubles aré fist Bver vet. She stit has Villh ana bubonic plague. About now. the horees should be chaffiping Ih their §talis for & 4 the Wike. Deciding on how to spend a vacation| anks with the difficulty of naming the|: Jerman gibassader that unless | first baby. the Beflin’ Zovernment consented to ar- Dbitratioh in 10 days, hé Weuld send Ad- firdl Dewey tb stop ilie Gefmans from | 1anding in Venezudla. The dmbassador protesifhg that the kaiser could hot back| Roosevelt replied that he was | s with Rim, but was simply | telling him What would Happeén. i AfteF waiting o week WithGat an an- swer from Berlin, he told the ambassador | that he was going to cut the limit to hine deys and that uniess Germany | agreed in 48 hours to arbitrate, Dewey would sail. In 36 hOurs the ambassador came back with a Wi€8sazeé announcing that Gerrhany conseitted, and the pres- ilent chukliig behind a straight face, | publicly praised the kaiker to the skies as a devotcd friend of the great princi- ple of arbitratisn. Burope was a8 quick as America to see that there was a Strong man in the White supreme court de Since the sion Cuba the blest for the bibitlous. Our quadrennial Bpasm is proceeding merrily at Chicags and is to be followed The man on the corner says: Getting Singing hmugh( Yittle Tommy Tuckef! ruso whom burglars have just robbed of half a million n jewelry. One thing was omitted for ‘the com- plete entertainment of thé delégates at He'll make like the temants' it if he fs anything conception of the mod- “I saw two tromendous forces of nature while T was gone.” John Morley siid on His return to Englahd frof America “Ofie was Niagara Falls and the other the | President ot the United Statés, and I arn ot sure which is 1hé more wonder- ful.” Germany replaged her ambassador at Washington with an old personal friénd of the president, and the kaiser sent his brother, Prince Henry, o this coutnry on 4h étrand of propaganda. Not to bé out- done, France dispatchéd a distinguished etbassy and aiso chose fof ambassador, M. Jusserahd. Who could not only talk books with Roosevet but who could al & quality for th» “Tetnis Cabine which took the place in this athletic ministration of the “Kitchen Cabinet.” England cast aside her trained diplomats to send to Washingten James Bryce, the best liked Englishthan in Amefiea. Meap- le, emperors and kitigs entered into personal correspontiéncé with the repub- lican mazistrate as if he were an inti- ate of the roval cirete. In good time, Roossvelt employed the influence of his unitiue position before the world t6 bring to an énd the Riisss-Jap- anese war. Shrewdly chobding the richt moment to step in, he appealsdl to the two belligereits With # Eommibn sepse and a simple dirécthess that would use in bringing together relsome nTighbors. Afteriard < ied the Péace Confstente dt Dortsmouth against its w1l steadily toward 3 peaes of reconciliation, an Iipatient Russiah declafing that his “stcél § haminhe- ed But a treaty that néither of the Pow- ers Wanted at that tiie ahd nmt “the One man shys he will nevef agaif lome garden uhdér his bed- room window. The beets, radishes and lettuce grow so fast 4nd thake such a hoise about it that he cannot sleep. New York ean't get over the sHock of the census figufes not being largs endugh and Mayor Hylan proposes to have the police check up a number of distriéts to discover serious omilesions, if pwssible. *There was rothing of thé piss¥foot about the way Hifgm arrived in Chicago. The timeé honoféd Potdto face 4t a Sunday school piehle mikht jist as well be playdd with g6ld nuggets this sea- son. President Wilson has appointed a pro- fessor to membership in the Anthragite commission. If this intellectiial does as well a8 the sugar pfofésser the public is goinZz to gbt high-prited hard &eal ar none at all. Deinpséy ahd Ci Bhtier afe Sald to nse powier huffe. ¢ hear a loud guf- fa¥ from across the Sl)z Whel‘e the shades of John L. Suilivan and others of the rough ahd réafly type talk bver thé good old am Présidént WHEbE famillar “Ma§ I|tefrible Ameticat President—1l Sirenu- not” should hate béén wiittth “knét" | oso—wns capable of ibtking the conferses Wifen he produskd the tréaty ah@ tie| into a room and Sarving them ifte sub- league. They were so successfully knot-| mission. ted that (He tAiifle NAGR'L baéh Straight-| Instead st Sartlng & war, the ‘g ered oiit vat. 1 stiek” stopped the only aréat ar that g BT 5 broke it In the PeFiod of 18 §tvay. Not a éoufl appeared evén muifienlmly &n our 6Wh Tbrizen lg\ the BeVEA F8ATE dnd a docevelt's l&g'lmstutlda Anid rophy 6f his présidaicy was itary faedal but the 2 prize whith wai a%raéd him in 19(15 as the wvfi&n foremokt pe: Geéneral von Kiigk WheM the Germans blarle for thd 13ek of the first battle of has Teft his native country for Switzerland, deelaring life .in Ger- any 15 ihtolerable any longer. No re- gréts are recotded in his Fatherland. b z= o the F6f 4 néW republic. Géfmany is evolv- 5“ Aickc! Was (ReUERd tn Rookateits ing political fethods supéklor to our own "““"?!,‘! with, ""1‘,"“ S Ciat ot long éxperience. At ohe mesting, those| ¥8¥, T2 or 6t CBlon borosed to the HiafoFity, brought thelyin . far zrting 1o, cb d5to 16 08 the whole mieetihg to an abupt close bY|chnal &trip for §10.000.000, broke his furning a hosé 6fi the Pedple in the hall.|,araeiant in 4 1-8iF5 16 g5t fbre, This might orove a suggestion of valuelRoszevelt f¥as fot to be Eldbped ih con- here ih the pFesént heatsd campd's: stfucting the canal any more than a | endowed that the few in that tiving po: escaped eritieism. When Union Pacific locomotive was Stopped byt the rope which the Indiah drew atross | the track. After he had drafted a mes-| sage to congfess, proposing the taking | of the necessary lund resardless of (he government of Bogotd, thé State of Pan- ama, which was anxious to have the ca- nal conftructéd dhd was eager to ather in the $10,000,800 for itself, scceded from Colombia undeér the protection of American_warships and the ca- nal was dug. While tlie Rocseveits were ita téhants, theé White House was an exafiiple and the center of the simgie famiy I of Amet- fa . ot a second-rat palace,’ the presidet said; “but the home of a self-respecting Amerfcen eitizen:”. A few | months after sraduatinz at Harvard, Roosevelt married Miss Alice Hathawny | Lee of Boston, whom he had met in his college days. This Bride of his youth | passed from life as her daughter—Mr Alice Roosevet —Longworth—enteréd On the same day in the same house his mother died, and it ws of this double hereavement that he turn- ed to a new life in the Wild West. Nearly three yéars afterward ¥ ed from New York, d'rect sail- | ¥ fo lowing an | 10 = P unsucressfiill campaign for magyor to mat- | ¥y a friend and ncighbor of his caild- hood; M ith Kermit Carow, who | was sojourning in Blurope i6 wedding took piace in London George ors may Theodore afid on the Hxnover 1 the “m Rooseveit, nan. As Roosevelt w the w e of the President, cniled upon to act as ze numbier “4nad va a “1a than | residence ther® with {"\IIdl‘“H she fou: her the 91 mansion was transform comfortable home, and the remodelled White House, altér:d without : sac-| rifice of its char: testifies to -the| good sense and ¢ of bith Mis. Roosevelt and the Pre dent. Tomorrow—NMoral: Dresidents Are Born Not \nde SNAP SHOTS OF DEMOCRATIC CONVENTIONS Copyrighted by G. M. Adams Service THE CONVEXTION OF 1896. The 1896 democratic national conv. tion, which gathered in Chicago on July| 7, was destined to split the party quite| as the later 1912 convention split repub- | licanism. The issue .upon Which the di- vision came was the free coinage of sil- ver in the famous ratio of “16 to 1" and the new demoeratic chie the occasidh made, iva nings Bryan—then only 3 —who Wis destined to dominate sub- Sequent party faiths for 20 years. From the moment the ‘gavel first fell, the- convention fight raged around silver,” and from first to last “free ver’ won. The hational committee had proposed Senator David B. Hill of New York for temporary chairman. piomptly unhorsed by a_vote of 319, when the convention Senator John W. Daniel, a “free sil- verite,” from Virginia. The committee on credentlals then decided all contests in favof of the “free silverites,” and | thus augmented théir convention con- | trol. The résolutions committee then report- ed a straight-away “free silver” plank which, after terrific debate, was sustain- €d by a vote of 626 to 303. It was in this debate that Bryah=——who got into the conventioh only when the crédentials committée unseated the “gold delégation” from Nebraska—sprang into white-heat popiilarity and dominton with that fa- “free He 556 tb substituted {ahd last from the shadow | o | Extraor FOR SATURDAY 0N 500 pairs Men’s BlueOvenlh,doubkbu&o—— Boys Serge Suits, graduation, in blue md_ hn_wn $13.50 Boys’ BlueSergeSuits,amlllot,allm...,..... smu Men’s Suits-—prices range from ........ $15.00 to $35.00 A saving of from $5.00 to $10.00 on each suit. Young Men’s Suits—A large variety to select O PR et ) | Our complete stock of Furnishings always at reduced prices. “ALWAYS MORE FOR LESS” THE NORWICH BARGAIN HOUSE 3-5-71 Water Street Norwich, Conn. ceding presidential voting). MeLean of Ohio led the thut Joseph R. fouith ballot, thirds vote. Tw ks later, the populists nominated -Bryan, but linked Tt Watson of Georgia with him place. The national silver adopted both B . on Beptember democrats” gathered in Indi with tes and three. tefrito ated J of ballot. Arthur Sewall of Mainé led the Hfth Wwith {he necessary tiwo- also emptying into the Tndiin Ocean. Tt the southern Boundary of North pany el sia and _is Livihgstohe, jult below the ¥ can mAde_ cantilet , By an Ameife Cape to Caird railrogd plunges 100 feet 2 to be developed i to cArry the Wires on Stéel foles® ioned like oil defficks, to the Kim- berles mi Johaineserk, Prétoria and around to Cape Town. on thé oile ha and up through Kha Aecorate At 10:000 fights, siti€le ballot, and Gefleral Simon B.| by & country 1ike Rhodesia Fhere Buckner of Kentucky for vice president| pers ave 8 sither zood, bad o by acelgmnation. - about i A Al The teeult of this campaign was the biliod .,. first election of Prosident McKinlew flah useful. so N ' Which. to qiete T6 be eontinued tomorrow v the story on of the ‘mn {3 of the Convention of 1900 IN THE DAY’S NEWS November hi ceretnnies sewing and reaping. of October. It ing, hoarding grain, of the wood ashes. “No matter how hot the days are, ed, teaus, the nights are very cold. only pays three shiliings per month. ambezl river st Africa, )0 miles and eas cel rises in ward for d « - the first crop of millet attend The dry sea- son begins in June and lasts until the end s occupied with thresh. storing wood and biirning brush on seed beds for the sake thel nights are cool and camp fires are need- On the elévated table-lands or pla- axes are not oherous in Rhodesla. as a ich is 72 céhts, or % rate of six{ Portu- | flows southward for 1000 miles, | H s of & lohg pots % May hangs and his body more or less sub- n zoing across a river. The P up a chant that =ounds like of lost &piF #hd it never to them th pRssenger !l as happy as If ‘h a Pultman ¢ When at Inst hé frodhd Ioua they = put and gather them on the bike. tribes have y can commit of 2 ‘ext 15 not com- Ira®n {eteg- ail of arme, and ani bogk, biit 11 | prehend the mp Mr‘! raphy, typet jete, wilh Wonderful ra nothing Is more dear to the than ceremony. ther mo | over parades and the morning and evems ing flag tactics. The buglés sound, and all the \lllnge pours forth, and while the flag Squad of the ‘Askari’ or natiye troops. slowly elevate the colors all winda of instrurmehts are used. the crowd cheery and When the RalyAtds are fastened salute the flag and the bugles kre sdund- ed fof thé disfnissal. The evening ere- OIN Breaks Motorcycle Record mous spesch which conclided in these burning words—*We shall answer their dernand for the gold Standard by saying to them: you shall not press down upon the brow of labor this erown of thorns; you shali not crucify mankind upon a cfoss of gold I The “Silverites” were now so complete- ly in the saddie that the “gold stahdard” delegates realized they Were hélvléss to prevent a “freé Silver” hofination, even under_the two-thitds rule. They did nbt Withdraw from thé convéntion = at the time, but 178 delegdtes refused to vote on_the ‘pfesidential roll-calls. Richard B. Bla#d 8f Missouri 16d the first ballot, with 235 to Bryan's 119 votes in a total field of 14 cx}nmnm Robert E. Pattisoh of Pennsylvahia Q3a1)1 Hor- acé Boies of Iojwa (85) and Joseph S. C. Blatkbutn of Kenticky (83) were the other principal conteniders. Oh the sec- oftl anél third ballots, Bldhd still ted. On thie second andl third baliots Plina still léd. Oh the fourth ballot, Bryah twent inito first favor, —just 12 short of the nec- essdry two-thirds. Béforé the result wad aiihotinced, 78 délegates transferred to Bryah 4l he had woh his first of three presidential nominations. Joseph C. Sibley of Pennsylvania lod for vice pré#ideat on the Arst ballot in a field of 15. Ambng these 15 weré folir who had_eontehdéd with Bryan for. first place. Bland led the second and third baliots (just & he had done in the pre- COPYRIGHT. KEVSTONE VIEW. CO. NEW.) Gene Walker, of Birmingham, who breke the World's International Mo- torcycle record at Daytofia Be#th, Florida, recently, He went at the rate of 116.08 miles ah hotF. 3 TEEFRSITS FOR CHILle EN, A Certain Reliet for yari: Destroy W E:ifi Golds nadiois. A2l sobuliis. GOTRER GRAY G0, ooy, N1 and Have $ 135-143 MAIN STREET Enjo records 1yymxrA ttlefle miehthr'yflvinhge‘ in bilying yeur Records from The Plaut-Cadden Co. (ESTABLISHED 1873) mony I8 evén moré claborats. n‘rv 18 mafe to teash the ha- lo Be @1-Fubrs k. to Talwe of tifnk, B 11 the rR-m e Sest man- HER alid th AVEM famdy utp “ThE Haiid commidetoners have & thouffand aid St Varietits yof quarrels to séttle and Fecéive conshlerable amsis #hee from (he headmen ahd chiefs of eac tribe. but IIttTe or ho éffort & medk to ©ombit SuperStition. That task 18 Jeft to the misstonaries. “In thodt of the {ribes are to ba fourd ekiiful artificers Show them a imported furnfture and ti i 11V duplicate it. They < fabelre jot every kind mnd monufacture musical { instruménte, keyed, sirii§. wind and per- Sm-\m\ Y1 "Wherever suitable @liv i Pound thes make po tile# and bfick B every 1 bas a pictu: &! of brick Wwith rounged bi bepii {fal g1rar +When Rholi¥ih g3 s tFARSHor. thtion facifities, it &1 sy the E ila roof, The ChicaZe strike shirts and coliars i3 Spreading we want to joln 18 a sirike starched hafidkeréhiefs and n —Houston Chronicle. What against tshirts Barely Toach Part The natives of the Andaman average about seventy bounds in weight They are 5o short in stature that their i feet oniy just reach the ground in time —Lenden Punch. iflands Honest !hen do whal tl’ y can: die- honest men do whom the\- cah. Ohndnn Ory FOR FLETONER'S CASTORIA OUR Victor Record Club PAY $1.00 15 RECORDS DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME. WEEKLY PAYMENTS. ' “HERE’'S OUR METHOD” paying for them. NORWICH, EONN.