Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 2, 1920, Page 10

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to Th mlamrnmmn Is that while ‘Wé so unceasingly pro- claim the principle, we make such a pool 'showing in its appheation. * * * In ears: for the these's - 1ife . there's . hope,” and . or nntll'the fim \mby 18 born., art of governing oufselves we not «;nl: ‘Shoul ditearded prematurely. . Betors H ;all shor!lo! :vha.t we sth(;u!{:ue!xnm mal gy :'f: there was R ey for e fel. m&;‘ on;fi*;:;!;‘fflfi;“ m‘&:”{;m T T 5 s Tt " el e T 0 B S Gon o S S o oy it 5 R il g slwwufl Jeep‘tho middle of the road; A feceiit. government. ropart showed | And, as | gaze in wonder at| the sight,” Well, what do yeu thisk et i, fellow Heaven Help s to d ;;'FPB-'“ g:';s‘:d“;:t‘zg:snm i:“ use. e « ‘While, yet the shadows darkcn on- the hills, - ARNER. ? T ’,,,.,‘:,‘i‘:;;“‘:“,}‘;;; : ; pu TR IATE mcre-mtfin i ‘A senscil oftalwe steals’ tfilx;o ‘the. vexhnlg‘ hghg1 interests, A mi Enme > Mrs. G faterests, extit oxpect 4o - Bave imhih OF \ i Jotn s?.',‘-‘* wriose. herses. have .My heart leaps up to hear the Soul that nlls. in any way by the other millions who | the ju I-t a h '!dlk e have gone crazy in their wild chiase after | “His wife: belhvu! avem.\un; ho. tells el recent ‘New orse [ her : s uid i Thereon my-fancy.sculptures s.most rare; _nME TO SIT TIGHT DRIVE SLOW AND KEEP ;‘:&Wt of gold at the end of the. rain- h“‘Tlut -o'l How does he mnl,:‘ m- ‘' The wives: of: Stamese' mblemm cut Where H}; erectys & g&d andts}fl%r thl'OIl MIDDLE OF THE ROAD But what are we going to d6 about it, "Efs i1t ‘a practice ngt to. tell her their-hair. g0 that” it t;uull straight up Crem . ouspelvedti ittt fomifion 4y 6 Vol | it Dekier 1 U8 Press. kit The average length is) | Man’s. goal of yearning; past our world so fair. o H ('rmm Specially For The Bulletin.) I{ax\krun: their owners and bully-rag to take? What are going to be our aits —116 ¥ ) vou know her teeth | aboutioxe “Wh and’a half. } in the crisis which impends? "E'g:g.srm S * Hungary. grows a wild flower whh:h is We: bulld a‘dream Sfience deep—-unknown. A7y bright-minded friend of mine, | the government and starve the cities into| sry we going to lay down the shavel Tuzedo—When she was dancing the | the exactfioral .‘image - of ‘a humming b t-x%gmemonr:e‘ue can't do|rlot and revolution, ~unless they. aIBling"the m:v Are w:;um: Yo desert: the |othér night they :l(rnd outi—lowa Fri-|bird, /The-breast Is green, the throat is bolitics when It is outvoted.” | Prompily given another raise. armies, of work and go over.to the hordes | Vol - . sellow ‘and. the head -and beak aimest |} THE purple hg,hted lsllands are-no more— g - As it generally is. Here are the great factories of - the|of loungers and loafers: become what| “Tall ;.bou: nnsemh devcuon . ven & B 7 Exactly the same might be said of ev-|land, paying the highest wages for the|they used to call in contempt “afternoon| -“Well? i ool niisa asia yhsestwho But hea jewelled Crown forever glow; eryéhing cisc human. Common senselshortest hours ever known in industry,|farmers?” ~Are we too, going to enlist|. “Iibway will drop his biisiness ‘st any | geepcwith heir bitnds up nd tmat, in || There-is:no cruel solitude in store, - e matl\e! reporting with practical unanimity|under the flag of ‘the Molly-coddles? time and spend the day, helping his Wife | symmer. time, wh few h are that, the more ‘they pay the less pro-| I wonder if all\of wus .appreciate ‘the |hunt for a cook” ::.ny, dark, e‘u,;,-g:m:; ;wmx,m::.fiuh. Drem) fal' off- stars, tfll the greater Bnghtness fim‘ duction they get. F;I:::tl of trememle‘l;s ?m;enmm:‘y “Umph! That isn't devotion, Jibway ; | Said 2 lady in charge of a rather large|Which is on our shoulders? Sponsi-{ eats at home.”—Birmingham ‘Age-Her- EL 27 private oty s b e TS it oty b st wud e oL agiinn TRw e posiottics 1n & vilisge ta- Poland day: “I'm paying my girls more, twice|llies, but to the nation and to the world?| oy v s o st e | TOETLS that thirty-seven men formerly over, than I ever paid before, and I can't| ‘Plant an orchard for posterity?” |y toiom B8 S T mvm.h yoat o | eidénts tHers but now living in' Ameri- 2 | get half a,day’s work from one of them.” | sneered the old grouch: “What's pdster- % i T m"“l‘”dmuch pére ca, send hnme an average of $665 a man s ity. ever dome for me?” Which is not EpLer Lo 9, imate.;} 5 year. | Tere are the farms of fhe continemt, Sat between a California native son and thy ti t all. [fust as'many as ever, just s willing as 0 TSR M 2 man from Florlda.—New York Evealng [, T mole 15 not bind 1 meny per Canadians Bresding Foxes. furntsn mazy wm—nnndm.». i ever to produce their wonted harvests,| In Charles Kingsley’s story book for|Post. i n oy g o Mo arten fully ;i lic' Ledg but untyjled or only. balf-tilled, because|childfen there were two powerful falr-1" “ghe 1 wwonldn't ‘stand = for that if 1 : £ 4 some countries the fox is hunted : In the boys and the girls and the hifed men|fes,' Mrs. = Do-as-you'd-be-done-by and|ore" oy Why don't you pall him & lias?. g;fl:::l‘:lfim;"%“a‘i;““ and dirt by means |ong iilled for sport, but.if ome killed| —Charlotte Carson-Talcott, in Toronto Mail and Empire.‘ g SR 2 : More Peopls in Hawall, ° have deserted them for the shorter hours|Mrs. Be-done-by-as-you-did. And the fol-|, ’ a fox in.the Canadian prov!neo of and the bigser pay and the handier|lowars of the latter lady always had -a |4 e ’u'”“;oi“,“ ?:}:;hrofigq"fimm Japanese children’ are rarely permit- |Prince Edward Island he might wipe| 12 the ten-year period from ' 1918 : cifv | amusements of the cities. hard time of it. . They mostly lived °“|Faflsup ted to keep pets; and there is a pretty |Out three or four thotisand dollars of [ 1820 the population of the tersitary Y1 And herc is the cost of living, steadily | the simple principle of holding every- : : custom teaches th t the |the assets of some citizen. ' For they | Hawail increased from 191909 to’ gods hv::‘cgznder_ c::e “Tm 'f:;u or- breed foxes in Prince Edward Island.[992, a net gain of 5¥083, according i 3 rising higher and higher as a result of|thing they had and grabbing everything| Fathér (upstairs)—It 18 time for that { Even Avraham Lincolw's famous dic-|these combined follies, till it threatens|else they could .reach:; of always:keep-|JOUIE man to go home. : g @i of bl 1t is estimated that there are'about 500 | official statistics of the _people | to knock the roof off and leave us _$hel-| ing both eyes open for the main: chance Young Man—Your foxes on the.various ranches in that|census, just made public here. The eits terless. and never giving a glance at the other| Father (overhear: *J. E. Pomeroy, siiting in his wireless | province, and it was recently estimated | and county ‘of ' Honolulu, which ' 1¢'s exceedingly unpopular fo. be a|fellow's chance—except to gobble it away|You don't have .@- self-starter ,a crank |station at 'Bath, Me., and hoiding the|that In one year $2250,000 . changed |all of the'island of Oahn, gained - prophet of ‘evil. Cassandra tried- it in|oOn opportunity, AL of which resulted “in |Comes in mighty. handy.—Pitt Panther. |telephone two inches from his head, heard |hands in the fox industry. while the ‘city’ of Honolulu proper’ N8 | doomed Troy town. and was accounted | their invariably ‘bringing up in- the fair-{- . M“"p lunatic for her foresight. Jeremiah|les’ big jail at the other end of nowhere. dding dally con- 1 “That young lady is"very striking.” “A’ handsome “girl.” t ed it in Jerusalem, and Zedekiah the 0 not inhabited o; “But_I never saw her doing any work undoubtedly with popular appro- m?:x'y ‘medwgyugl:od Saimieepor | around your law office.” silky thread with which It makes its|i2°SS,-and there have been incorpor- |35 latge < population as the entire: ut him in jail because he saw fhe | from it. It is & world of hard and stub-| - “She's valuable, however. When the | T,V noi an experimenter once drew out | several fox-ranching companies. |324 o 2d 2 decade ago.' ble coming and cried out agaimstipom facts. That is, the' dirt world un-|other side has a pretty witness we find f f™0 (ot (FTEGI T SO ST oy While the particular fox it is sought must ‘be Lkept' in mind’ that en the ostrich, when hard pressed| gor foot which we work and sweat over |ller very useful as a counter .attraction.” d8.6F the o > to produce -is called the black fox, it is | census figures- no' "account 'is 2 ariby jsomo stronger enemy,' ls reputed 10lls of ‘that sot. But.’glory’ bel .That|—Léulsville Courier.Journal. e thirehd. really the animal known to .the.fur [the naval and military forcss.sts __| Stick its head into a sand-heap on .the| ot o1 our world. Over our heads ex- Prof—Jones do 'w“ $hink | You /ean India has perhaps a greater variety of | markets of the world as.- the - silver|on th‘xj island. -And, unless comgress s | silly assumption that, when it camts ®2¢| ands the infinite . blue. : Under it the |hindle the English. latizaage?” *" | plants ‘than any other Country in the |gray. It was:the pelt of a box, from |Carrying out its:policy of economy'leaved 1] jts pursuer, its pursuer can't see it world, having 1,500 native ' spécies, - or | Prince' Edward Island that brought the|the country: almost defenseless, ‘we:shal b b clouds drift and the birds circle. ‘Far off| Fresh.—Sir, my knowledge of the Eng- g : Hive Bafe’t ")Wmcn is imperfect logic and pitifully | pove it the sun: shines by day.and the|lish lam a4y Sheet 1. | about 50 per cent more than is embraced | world's record price of $2,900: in the|have here in the next few. years;apprex< - | poor judgment. wolainn Wits WD by night. (It ia Bufliess m‘é‘*" o Y, 87¢4%" | in the flora’of the whole of Europe: London market :some ‘years. ago. Lx;uttgy 35,000, zsex—met men: The eivilisng oAt e oy 55, ‘*‘é;s?;tfi; iz to ol Mt I i alio odr privEl: ron—~chbbi: ‘tdke'" thls LAidlonary | CTRS Varican, poisciis bue jf e on- O e | Ribor Tirets A;‘S&L’.J'H’E;:,‘;’:,‘!: <ol *, s D o i ng est ishments in lo-'world. - s ‘4 > 2z [ the ostrich for the cagle on its banners? | Mooy o mectiotty Bamer 0 SART.A d";:‘o“‘:i‘ :’;";:“"”:"::::‘:‘:tm Tt wes fnaed T 1856 and onls e oies et e O ey i the B s service mtet ! sinéss ‘m =5 e cets. rlg; in Making Above all, ‘wo have the best chance In | together when an elderly man passed by, | Stervard already vossessed the charad- | Now York has mow supplanted London, | now.hers and soon to come e ¢an’ cane creation to take long and large ooks at| ‘That's Brown; he works for me,” | o7 Of twenty-thres different languages. iy, fajien -in thirty years from. 2,000 | servativelys figure that Honolulu's popus the world and its; problems. We live in|said.one of the two. The skin of £ reindeer is so impervi- {5 about 300. lation: for the city and. county, will sson a clearer air and in' saner sufroundings| “He’s an hofiest-looking chap,” remark- |Out to.the cold that any one clothed in| In‘the old days the wilds of Canada, |bs mear the 150,000 mark. th impregnable reason that the|inanare granted to many others. We.do|ed the other. , “Has he. any staying|Such-a dress with the addition.of a robe | thfough the Hudson Bay company, yir- _— ndamental cause of modern political!poe have to associate with bolsheviks nor | power?” « . | | of 'the!same. matérial may bear the in- [tually” sipplied the World 'with. furs,! TWhen some men eat: pork-they. mmst corruption and inefficiency. . . .| populate our persons with cooties. 'And. |- “He has that replied ‘the first. “Ha |tensest colt of an arctic winter’s night. |but now semi-doriesticated : animals |feel like cannibals. - general fl‘;‘;‘f;*s“]’)‘sfnfchfiwz“:’;‘;:; to-whom much is given, of them shall|began at the bottom.of.the ladder in 76 S : - I practioal aditnlstrationss (A0 Tobmatnad. and he's stayed ‘there’ éver:since."—Bos- The other day, Charles E. Hughes, one] We ought net to be expected to wark | ton Transcript. ie leading lawyers and rare states-|twelve to sixteen hours a day to provide| Mother—Did George talk business last n in public life, in a formal address|cheap food for I-Won't-Works who grum- | night, dear? o Harvard Law school, said this: |ble at eight hours, five days a week. Nor| Daughter—Yes, mother, he did. He splendid conquests of science, | ought- we to be expected to sweat in-cal-[gaid business® wads _rotten'—Yonkers chnical skill, the|ico shirts and denim overalls that loaf-|Statesman. ary increase in the facilities of | ers may wear sllk shirts and $15 shoes. communication and the enlarged re-| Anyway, We can't do it, whether expected sources of comfortable living and en-{to or mot. joyment which give the content of owr| But, if Wwe continue reasonably united civilization show an, advanee.which we!in our adherence and devotion to the old: feel should have. its counterpart in the |ideals of industry and economy and effi- ‘exhibi\iun of a highly improved practice leiency, we:can exercise a powerful, ‘it distinctly the music of a band playing at | The success that has attended some|Da8 a population ‘of 30,369, as ' Ossining, N Y. breeders of . foxes ,has. caused very g: . fas. Y&;fl R The spider is so well supplied with the | D20 others to enter the ranching bus- = e Droper. now J H w Kind| Theselifyn: contéhvative s ol phuiel { th somewhat = v publication The Political Science - Quarterly h declares in polysyllabic language Popular government would 'ALL- OVERSIZE ‘l’tres ':&KM in “DAISY” and “SKIDLOCK” Treads P ioge Tires Are Sqfn Guides to Big Milsagel ‘Which is Some Defect. The right to strike ‘would be less ques- tionable if it did .not opérate to inter- fere with the right to live—Columbia Récord. | i The Eagle Clothing Co. On June 26th,fplunged between the public and high prices by reducing everything in the store, consisting of the choxcest apparel for MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN to exact cost at time of purchase which is much less than pre- sent market prices. ; THE RESPONSE to this effort at price breaking was very gratifying, and to prove our sincerety in accomphshmg our purpose, we will continue PRICE SMASHING until after the holiday. Thereby, giving everybody the op- portunity to procure their needs at prices that are possible only through our willingness to SACRIFICE ALL PROFITS The appreciation and co-opération of our patrons, we prize and accept as our reward. BUY YOUR APPAREL FOR THE WHOLE SEASON NOW Women’s and Misses’ Coats, Suits, Dress'e@, Sklfls, Waists " and Summer Furs, AT COST PRICES. Men’s, Y oung Men’s and Boys’ Suits, Hats, Caps and all Fur- nishings, AT COST PRICES. = 132-154 MAIN STREET and convine We have quoted Mr. sphorism about 4l the people this particular er: heels over head mental mal-adm to get back on th management. And th wages have alrea three times, are tion, faet under to OUCH! CGENé! % LIFT CORNS OFF ONE hundred and fifty years ago, the scanty population of Amer- ica was clustered along the Atlantic . seaboard.” The land’of ‘golden promisc —the west and nonh—connndy’lnnd'insw venture into those unknown wildernesses at the peril of their surest and safest method of travelling was by cance. But when of the lake or river was reached, canoes and trappings had upon the backs and uhouldus Then the hardships and .fithmmmd“mthcm Only the strongest survived. . B ,1nmfinm-¥qt-c.mmmuwamuv i rivers and lakes [inked sogether by small Periages. - Many of these latter aze ! * " unknown in history but fhéic importance can be messured by the fasie of the . forts that were built upos them. | How much history have the names of Fort X CMMMMMWMMFMWMEH Nicholsonwrapped withis them! From Albany to Montreal these Portages scaall and great, were the key posificas for which hostile fotces of Indfans, French, Y Eaglish and Colonial treops fought and battied. The history of this early years ‘dmu—v“h“mmwdhm s 0 5 'I'EN’mi Wfih Time and money have not beea r rtage Tires. They were so . considered when their expendi- “‘named because we designed them ture meant increasing the mileage ° to be. rugged, strong-muscled and and- endurance .qualities of the ithful “carriers.” They were buile tires. . The 1920 Portage Tire proves !0 give generous mileage and posi- | the soundriess of the investment. tive service, And they lived up to WLt gt The has shown its their historic name. : ’ a'pprmm Wb“‘m‘ es b ; TodzyPomzeTuumbmthan sequence the demand for Portage .ever.. Every advance -in the art of =~ Fabric Tires and Portage Cord _drehufldmgbasbemufl!nedby Tmhsmwnflmflhmd:u Pom'e engmeers and chemists. - our cap.dfl for hmldmg thém. Doesn’t hurt a bit to lift any com right off with fingers [ -Drop a ittle Freezone on an aching eorn, instantly that corn stops hurting, then you lift it right out. It doesn't | vRin one bit. Yes, magic! | Why wait? Your druggist sells a| timy bottle of Freezone for a few cents, safficient to rid your feet of every hard ofirn, soft corn, or corn between the %gee, and calluses, without soreness or frrftation. Freezone is the much talked ofi ether disoovery of a Cincinnati genius.

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