Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Glerwich Bulletin and @oufied 124 YEARS OLD Sebseription priss 123 & week; 568 & meath: $0.00 » your. Entesed i the Postoffics i Norwieh, (van., Teleppzas Cattn. Sulletin Business Ofise 450 Bulletin Edliocial Rsems 35.3. Bullstia job OFies 33-2. Willmentle OMice 23 Churer St Telsohome 105. crime it publicly threw to the winds the laws which it was supposed to uphold and undertook on the spur of the mo- ment, without regard for the facts, to let mob rule take its course. Regard that had to bring about the prosecution of who engaged in that triple murder. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, The Amocisted Prem 15 eiclusivety catitled Comaten ‘monwealth. A PUBLIC MENACE. the statement of the New York Tribune to the effect that “It is difficult to under- fduce a justice of the supreme court to allow a dangerously insane who has been twice arrested for attempt- CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING JUNE 12th, 1920 10,644 ing to attack little children to go at lib- erty provided he was removed to another state” : This action was taken following warn- ing to the effect that the man should not be permitted outside of an institu- tion, that he was of the material that develops “rippers” and that he needed constant watching, and even after the THE NEW CITY GOVERNMENT. As the result of the desire expressed by the voters of the city at the election the city fathers named to irect the affairs of the community for the ensuing year have already assumed m connection a good bit of advice that was given by Mayor Lerou when he urged upon the committees and the heads of departments the importance of work- There is need not only of requirements of the city this month their responsibilities, therewith it and ing together. meeting the through the various departments but of doing it on that basis of efficiency which can best fort. It be assured by cooperative ef- to the fullest extent. As was to be expected following the lacing of the conduct of city affairs in new hands a number of changes in ap pointive office holders has been made. As Edwin W, , is returned to an office which he ber of years ago. Fully equip- by experience in this very corporation counsel, ice but by years of practice along sim. his selection assures high class legal guidance that|!s a rank injustice to other states and| couiqto M0 ra” “Though he spoke other communitied. In view of the dis-|the quiet tones of the classroom, with- Ct ton has long ago demon-|closures regarding this insane man and|out the gestures, the flowe! ed the fact that he head of the fire t as long as he will accept a reap pointment and as an assistant the ap. At e a yo ment and one In ret ears of fully qualified for the place. is given is certainly needed and it is to be hoped that it can be accomplished to the should be re- depart- of Henry R. Taft recognizes ung man who has given the depart-|time? . excellent service ning Superintendent A. W. Jar- vis to have charge of the cemeteries rec- to courteous and effi- judge is alleged to have said that he was a menace to any community. By the action of the judge in exchnd- ing him from New York state it becomes quite evident that he appreciated the danger to the children of that state, that he saw the necessity of protecting them against such a danger but it shows an utter disregard for the safety of those of other states. Except that it is much worse, in that a mental defective is concerned, the ac- tion taken is like that which too often prevails in criminal cases of greater or f|less degree. The easiest and cheapest method of disposing of law breakers is -| resorted to When they are told to get out of town or to cross the border into an- other state. It is simply an invitation to them to get out and carry on their activities elsewhere instead of dealing with them as the case requires. - If laws are going to-amount to any- thing and protection is going to be given to those who have a right to expeet it this practice of shifting the responsi- bilities to the shoulders of. others who know nothing of the conditions and are -| thus kept in ignorance of dangers ungil something happens should be stopped. It the way in which he is permitted to menace public safety where is the re- -| sponsibility for his acts going to be -| placed in case he does what the authori- ties maintain he is liable to do at any PLANNING FOR THE FUTURE. when the newsprint situation is serious and the supply of trees for making pulp non, “And, my land, when I think about the stand the reasoning processes which in-| Work I got piled up on me in my own flat it makes me sick. I ever get anything accomplished, what degenerate, | iy “getting threo meals & day and all, and folks running in all the time want- ing me to do this, that and the other and then worrying me all the time to get 'em done in a minute. “Little bits of jobs they are, too, lots yowd think any person ought to be able to do herself, and yet they keep 'phoning me to how their things is getting along. about spend most of my time running to the 'phone. Not that it worries me much, those sort of things. ‘em lay till I get 'round to 'em. “What time did you say it was a while back? “Well, wouldn’t that jar you? near supper time ain't it? better hurry seems to me it's kind of foolish for a person situated like I am with a hus- band and a couple of kids, to try to do outside sewing, too. Every now and then I work when I'm really sick abed—and at that it ain’t so much the work itself as that it is the nervous strain. I get started real good on something Copyright 1920—By James Morgan It fell to Presi then work in that department. will not last for more than 25 years, better selection could have been|that successful experiments have been!ed, » than the > of George E. Fel-|made in Virginia in producing paper yws for eet commissioner. This im-!Dulp from cotton fiber. It is to be hoped| Were s portant office ealls for a man who un-|that it will prove more successful than|and the requirements of is able to measure up to them, fice an viously demonstrated. There still remain filled as stration but it th ation that the others have received. D COAL. uch as it is not time it may well the of- Mr. Fellows does as has been pre- some offices to be the resGlt of the new admin- is to be expected that y will get the same careful copsider- the present time is| r the coal situation and| n to be for New Eng- ng the coal that it re- a period of the year when it be stocking up for the winter, and having its needs become some of the other experiments along a .| similar line, but whether it does or not it is quite evident that it should not de- tract from the efforts that need to be ests that have been removed. There has been a tremendous increase in the use of all kinds of paper. We are as free with it as with anything that is | manufactured and yet there doesn’t seem V the necessity of providing for the fu- ture. There must be due allowance for time for new trees to grow. We cannot wait until the last acre of woodland is reached before thinking about giving at- tention to the growing of more of the needed trees. 1t is now, when there is time in which to permit of put forth in replacing the pulp wood for-| the t~ be any too serious consideration given|°d: excl ‘The presidency I got home, Much sympathy will be expressed with| time goes to. of times, that It is interesting to note at this time | Soy AleS the president" ane: peasantry, anywhere. “If it is, I guess I better be on home. It don't seem like Mostly I just leave EFFICENCY SYSTEM ' “I wonder whether your clock's right, Mrs. Brown,” said the dressmaker from it as the act of a community|the second floor, making a vague move- been Incensed by the crime, Of| ment g though actuated by a hazy idea in whatever light one may, it is impos-| of leaving, sible to get away from the fact that if|going. According to it, I have been here there are not going to be frequent repe-|about two hours and a half. Funny, ain't titions of just such acts for all kinds of|it how long it takes a person to borrow oftenses determined efforts must be made | 2 couple of cups of flour off anybody? “Now, this mornifig I just ran down yt|to Mrs. Malony’s, that ‘lives downstairs of us, to get the paper—it don't seem rests with Duluth to determine whether| Ju o “Sios *nardly worth while for us fo it is going to stand for law and order|tsxe one, when she has one sent to the and the punishment of criminals as the house and her husband always gets one result of a fair trial or whether it is go-|besides—so I just go down and get hers ing to commit acts which are a direct{ When she's finished with it. And, honest, contradiction to the laws of the com-|I suess I went down about 10 and I had to wait till she finished with it, so I didn’t start to go home until about 10.30, and it was 12 o'clock before I just don’t know where the know about I just 1 guess Sometimes fter 10 Pretty Just as sure as youwre alive something happens to stop me. If it ain’t one thing it's bound to be another, especially when a person ain’t got real good health like I ain’t, “The other day I was working on Mrs, dance or something like.that. I was get- ting along fine and seemed like I was ge- ing to get it dome right on time. And then I was took with one of my dizzy time to start getting supper. ow, I leave it to you if she had any right to be crabby with me about it. Cer- tainly I hadnt et a thing for a couple of days but boiled cabbage and coffee, be- cause the lady that lives upstairs of my sister told her that when a person felt like she was putting on too much flesh a good doctor had told her there wasn't nothing like boiled cabbage and coffee for reducing, so it couldn't a been any- thing I'd et. And yet that Mrs. Jelliking I was telling you about acted real kind of provoked over the ’'phone. She said she'd been counting on wearing it that evening and all. As if I could help that! “The trouble was she ‘phoned me kind of late in the afternoon and I says to her why didn’t she ’phone earlier and have let me know she was in a hurry for it She told me she'd already told me a cou- ple of times and she didn't want to bother me, but if she’d known she could ‘2’ finished it herself. 1 says Tm real sorry you didn’t know, I says, ‘I think you'd ought to 'a’ 'phoned me. I guess you know as well as anybody that them that hollers gets’ I says. Even then she seemed kind of peeved, but land knows what she expected . me to do about 1| it. it! “Well, I guess I better get home and start my supper. I meant to get the potatoes kind of peeled before I come up here, but I thought I'd better get the flour for my pie first. I like to have ev- erything ready to work with before I start in. I'm real kind of systematic about those sort of things."—Chicago News. the braiding oratory, thundered above the roaring Armageddon, making themselves heard in the entrenchments and the capitals the enemy as well as of the entente. He became the master propagandist in a war of propaganda. the White House was the Big Bertha of the range of Pots- miles away, and raining its shells on the roofs of the Hohenzollerns and the Hapsburgs. The German governiment at first scorn- distorted and finaly suppressed indictments of it. cd over the border by spies s. Enemy soldiers and peo- ples were forbidden,eunder the penalty of treason, to pick them up; but they pass- ed from hand to hand, from mouth to mouth in secret circulation, or were hid- den under hearthstones in the cottages of who treasured them as a new gospel of deliverence from war. was carried to summit of world influence, becoming the lofty tributne from which the: judgments of humanity were pronounc- For no European speak of the elected chief, of America, whose speeches were accepted as the im- partial verdict of a great jury of 10! 000,000 detached and disinterested peo- ple, the largest body of public opinion “It is the voice of posterity,” med a French statesman at the re- ception of the president’s war message, which was_read in the schools and posted on the dead walls of France. getting f Vienna, Five Minutes a Day With Our Presidents his winged words His_typewriter in 4,000 premier :nt Wilson not only to lead the country into the great war, but it was also his fotune to be the spokes- [ joiced as he sat down to the well-filled man of the allied people. stood before a joint session of congress, or amid the white headstones of Arling- ton cemetery or by the tomb at Mt. Ver- he had the civilized world for his Whether he or any guns They moral could Then he crossed the room to her. “Oh, om,” he whispered. “Try it out on ad's pants, won't you? May be it will pull the change out of them so vou and I can have a little more spending mon- — What Counts. Having come home from college the | young man’s mother cooked up all the \ special dishes that he liked and he re- table. “T'll tell you,” John,” began the father beaming at the boy, “the hap- piest time in most people’s lives is right when they are eating, isn't it” A John looked at mother, who acted as In! cook, and then at the rest of the fami- ly. “Yes, it is” he agreed, “provid- ed that they are eating Wwith some peo- ple for whom they actually care.” of of of SNAP SHOTS OF DEMOCRATIC CONVENTIONS Copyrighted by G. M. Adams Service The Convemtion of 1892 Although there was bitter antagonism to Cleveland in some Party quarters, he was once more the dominant party fav- orite when the 1892 democratic National Convention assembled at Chicago, on June 2. Cleveland’s old and persistent enemies in his home state if New York, were again the head and front of such opposition to him as existed; and they left no stone unturned to accomplish their the | purposes. ; No sooner had the National Committee issued the National Convention call, than a New York state convention was as- sembled—four months ahead of the Na- tional Convention—and a “snap” delega- | tion set up to support Governor David j B. Hill instead of Cleveland. Around this nucleus (which was bitterly assailed by those who were called the “anti- snappers”) the Cleveland opposition ral- lied; but to no avail. Out of 909 1-21 votes in the convention, 607 were neces- sary to a two-thirds choice and Cleve- anxiou TR a proper growth, that e ot ; land’s vote for a third nomination was anx it be shut off next winter VHouphts’ sHonlA bo ihured® tor e rs Avenues, strects, square and bridges | o127y 5 on the first rollcall. Governor and be ed to experience worse con- Ercni: 5 of ancient cities were renamed for the |y, “honeg 114, and Horace Boies of ditions than thoss during other short. | orestation through the setting out of thelpregigent. - Men toiled up Mt Blanc |y o POeq, b S, (O O S by trees that can be converted into pulp,|ywith the Stars and Stripes in their At the present time coal Is being ship- ped out of the country that ought to be It is going to coming to New England. Europe because a much higher price can be secured for it over there, and the ex- cnss given for not supplying New Eng- land needs is that there are not proper nsportation facilities. Strikes and in- rdequate rafiroad equipment have played | their part in blocking the movement of | s0al but there seems to be sufficient and motive power to haul the coal for export from the miner to the ves- sels. There are great crles of distress at the suggestion of placing an embargo >n the exportation of coal. The coal men point out that there is enough coal and such Is unquestionably true. They| also insist that if there were cars enough all would be supplied. That is also prob- ably the fact provided labor disturb- ances didn’t interfera. dut the fact can- not be overlooked iwat New England is facing a serious coal shortage, that if| shipments to Europe were stopped what| s going abroad could be sent into this part of the country. In other words what should be coming vp New England with the present railroml equipment is going out of the country. It may be next to impossible to get legislation now establishing an embargo but the suggestion cannot be ignored that it lles within the power of the in- lerstate commerce commission to so as- slgn the coal cars that New England will get the relief it needs if in fact it isn't possible under the Lever act to shut oft this forelgn trade in coal until domes- tic requirements are met. New England isn't any more exercised than it ought to be and it s wise in not waiting until snow flies before express- ng itself. A BLOT ON DULUTH. Although we are justly stirred by the atrocious conduct of mobs in certain southern states when they undertake to ske the law into their own hands, we ire nevertheless accustomed to such con- duct from that part of the country. Pos- sibly it is ‘no worse for the people of Duluth, Minn., to resort to such a dis- regard for law and order than it is for hose of Georgia but somehow they have been given credit for displaying better either on land that hes been cut over or ply that will be required in come. years to It was hands, to bestow the name of Wilson on waste land, and thus insuring the sup-|an Alpine peak. neither Woodrow Wilson nor yet the President of the United States get paper making. without list of plagues. shown that a state makes nor breaks a candidate. judgment and a higher regard for law snd order. There can be no question 5yt what the erime that was committed|!lke @ bar room mixup than what might|are history still in the making. Such 2 nged should appeal to these who are directly concerned but it is evi- dent that much help can be given by|lied front at home means of a national pelicy which would the support and assistance of the different states. There is need for more forests for the production of timber other than used for|for emancipation from militarism Forests are needed for the protection of the watersheds of our rivers and the quicker serious considera-|Diece, it smegaphone, and giving his words tion is given to the situation today and something dome to aid the natural agen-|28 the words of none other cies the quicker shortage be averted. EDITOBIAL NOTES. Italy is getting a new cabinet about as often as the style changes. will Now that prohibition has heen found to be constitutional the nmext thing is tol wrestle for power and trade, but a duel | make it work. Conditions in Mexico were bad enough having bubonic added to the You see the sult of denim oecasionally but most most peeple are better able to provide old clothes. In Harding's case it threatened is econelustvely primary neither Who had the power 5o to fuse the peoples in a fraternity of faith and unify the Al- and abroad. The man and the magistrate had become 2 symbol of freedom, the banner bearer, of a hope, the tongue of the silent, heav- ily burden of masses of war-stricken Eu- rope giving voice to their mute longing and imperialism. A mighty force had laid hold upon him, making him its mouth- such a dominion over the minds of men ever had yielded With the donwfall of the Czar, the most sinister partner in the Entente, and with America drawn into the war, the president saw the conflict in the light of those two events which happened within three weeks of each other, as a Fageses - truggle between the free peoples and When Marshall sympathizes with | gutoeratic government, a fight to make Coolidge that shows he realizes he s go-|the world safe for democracy, a war ing to win. against war. That alignment simplified the issue to the popular imagination making the war seem at least no longer a between democracy and autoeracy, With the American President and the German Kaiser typifying the contendnig hosts. The President himself has sadly ad- mitted that some of the hopes which he innocently awakened resuted in a “meta- physical tragedy.” Was it all only a dream??. Was the beautiful vision which rose before a despairnig world only & mi- rage of the desert, the desert which the war had made? The years, not the hours, will answer. However far the reality may prove in the sequel to have fallen short of the ideal, this republican chief was at least When Bdwards starts to mix things|enabled to doom the autocracies which with Bryan at San Francisco theres will be business for the movie men. From now on it will be the duty of the democrats to see that the third par-|suitors for peace. ty doesn't lack for encouragement. The man on the corner says: Consid- ering their price no one refers to an- other these days as small potatoes. ‘With a triple lynching in Duluth that part of the country will have little to say in the future regarding the south- ern weakness. he had challenged. The German and Austrian Emperors themseives made Pres- ident Wilson the arbiter of their fate when their governments came to him as If the wireless of the Nauen Tower had called London or Paris, those Kaisers might still be wearing their crowns; but when instead ‘Washington w3s called, the answer flash- ed back fro mthe White House that the peoples of Germany and Austria must speak for themselves before the president would refer to the Allies the request for an armistice. That was the death sen- tence of kaiserism, and down went thrones that had stood an age. The rest: The president’s journey to The tragedy at Dartmouth reads more| gurope, the treaty and the battle over it, Many by those colored circus employes de-|De €Xpected at one of New England’s im-| years must pass before that extraordin- served the full penalty of the law, but|Portant colleges. In a civilized community it should have been imposed In accord with the provis- ed to lynch three Negroes it showed that|POUnd but the handlers of Cuban sugar it had lost its balance wheel, that it dis-|2F® Out for much bigger profits. regarded its own laws and that it set out te correct one wrong by committing an- other. Duluth has placed a blot upon its for- mer good name which it will be difficult lo erase. When it overpowered the po- ary chapter in the story of the presiden- ey will be finished and may be told in Sugar can be brought all the way|the spirit of historical impartiality. lons of the law. When Duluth proceed-|ffom Argentina and sold for 15 cents a ‘When Bryan lets it be known that he has no use for Harding, it means that many democrats are geing to take more interest in the republican nominee. Demoeratic liee authorities and wrested from them [thoroughly that Harding the men who had been arrested under|make a strong appeal. suspicion of cemmitting the dastardly{consider his nomination so unfortunate. That's why they THE END ——— Stories That Recall Others l A Happy Thought, A new suction cleaner had been pur- newspapers understand | Ch2sed and mother was enthusiastic over it. She showed the family how it took pins, needles and other foreign sube stance from the carpet and rugs. Little James watched her a while. to o of eleven candidates. One rall-call for second place showed Adlai E. Stevenson of Illinois leading (but not with a two-thirds vote) with 402. His nearest competitors in a total fleld of eight were Isaac P. Gray of In- diana (who had been a spyctacular con- tender in 1888) with 343 votes, Allen B. Morse of Michigan with 86 votes, John L. Mitchell of Wisconsin with 45 votes, and Henry Watterson of Ken- tucky with 26 votes- Following this one roll call, however, Stevenson was made the vice presidential nominee on motion from the floor, without a second roll-call The temporary chairman of the con- vention was William C. Owens of Ken- tucky ;the permanent chairman was Wiiliam L. Wilson of West Virginia. The adoption of the party platform was preceded by a bitter contest precipitated by a proposal that the tariff plank should carry an implied promise to “protected industries’ 'that there would be no sweep- ing tariff reductions. The convention refused any such expedient, however, and by a vote 564 to 342 adopted a sub- stitute plank denouncing “protection” as a “fraud” and declaring that the govern- ment has no power to levy taxes except for revenue only. The result of this eampaien was the| second election of President Cleveland. To be continued tomorrow with the story of the Convention of 1896 * BEST ONEARTH } /_AT Y_OU!R GROCERS f el ‘The only sure way to get rid of dan- druft is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. Jelliking'’ dress that she wanted for a|ounces of ordinery liquid arvon; apply it at night whea retiring; use enough to moisten the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. To do this, get-about four Do this tonight, and by morning, spells that come on me sometimes and Iimost it not all, of your dandruft will had to quit right that minute and g0 1a¥| he gone, and three or four more ap- down for the rest of the day till it Was|p)ications will completely dissolve 'and entirely destroy every single sign and trace of it, no matter how much dan- druff you may have. You will find, too, that all itching and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is inexpensive and never fails to do the work. LEYTERS TO THE EDITOR State to be Cougratulated om Governor Mr. Editor: The letter in Tuesday's Bulletin by Annie B. Austin is a fair sample of the selfishness displayed by_the advocates of female suffrage. They have tried to make us all think that we have no right to express or entertain poinions in the matter which conflict with theirs. 1 think they would be sur- prised at the very large proportion of both men and women in this country who really are not in favor of female suf- frage because they are satisfied that it would not benefit humanity or the country. They have a right to their opinions, and are justified in expressing them notwithstanding the clamor against it. Connecticut is to be congratulated upon having a governor whe is brave enough to stand back of his convictions. If there had been more like him in the last few years the female suffrage craze would have been consigned to oblivion. UNCLE BILLIE Eagleville, Conn.,, June 16, 1920. —_—— e Them Was Jappy Days. ‘That 126-year-old Nebraska man who who died the other day probably could remember when you could do something with a nickel besides putting a couple of pennies with it, and take a street car ride.—Macon Telegraph. ® Have Xo Principles. ‘The Indianapolis News publishes an editorial on The Principle of Profiteering. Principle? Why, it'’s the most unprinci- pled thievery going.—Houston Post. Discount Sale —NOW GOING ON— Make Your Own Deductions From Our Low Prices Y A Columbia professor advises the far- mers that a heavy rain will stop the ar- my worm. A heavy rain in would stop an army, too.—Kansas City To encourage cotton raising in Spain the government will give cash prizes to the foreman and laborers who most dis- tinguish themselves in its cultivation. Missouri Mud. Times Have Changed. ‘Water used to separate us from Mu- rope. Now water is driving a lot of us over there.—Nashville Tennesseean. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Missouri No. 524. Wo- men’s Ipswich combed cotton,’ . i 7 SERIES -HOSIER for Good Value 98 Years Doing One Thing Well For almost a century we have been content to do one thing well—knit Hosiery. Ipswich Hosiery fits right, !aoks well. and Wears Satisfactorily. No? just a moderate-priced hosiery — but stockings knitted up to the highest standard, yet Moderate-Priced—that is Ipswich Hosiery. The wide variety of styles include numbers in cotton, lislc, mercerized and fibre silk—knit to mect the needs of human feet—for all the family. Look for the Ipswich Trade Mark—it is the Sign of Good Value, IPSWICH MILLS, Ipswich, Mass. Established 1822 Oldest and One of the Largest Hosiery Mills in the United States LAWRENCE & CO., Sole Selling Agents Bosion and New York \ - a8 No. 15. Men’s Ipswich half hose _/of combed cotton yarn, medium bw-wn. with re- inforced heel and toe; great value