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Sisrwich Zull etin résult fllfl ol The e g g m&?’m o timidating them to make purchases. The fmillér méfchart tailérs, particularly, dare squiffiifng in the H#Ads of the mis- drednts. Such 1§ the picture, barely otitlifed. What is {he rémédy? Unless there shall be sufficie: American 1aw for pfotectioh of Americans, what' al- ternativé 16 6péréd up? There is here no mere partisanship in proposing the ;L_ and Goufied = 124 YEARS OLD s u—uui-dr T Uk s e W E mnmnfifllmh&. = Terigvzes Cinx R Bulletia Editorial ‘nike. 458 tioe “imginte am o ifueh St Feisskene (64 | self-détémindtion neéd for 4 chatige of administration. «AFRICA FOK THE Anxcnxs' Possibly great negro race confer- erice that being held in Madison Square garden in New York may be 5i.4 |16oked -Upéri as dn éxtension of the principle. “Africa for the Africans” is its keynote and it e e e v o e WEMGER OF THE ASSUCIATES mn The Aondites Priss 15 @ % tbe use for répunileation of All nlflMhlluMimhufl- his paper aod also the weal cews pubilshed Serefn. Al rights of reputticarion of eeclal despaten- Barel reerved. makes claims to have 25000 delegates from every state in the union, from Va- rious parts of Africd, South America and the West Indies. It is a militant programme that its leadér, Marcus Garvey, a Jamaica negro, is preaching, predicting afother gréat world war in twenty years from now in Which the negro race will rise and seize the Whole 6¢ Affica. Burope would be compensated CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING JULY 3tst, 1820 10,783 for the fimprovements she has made there. Mr. Garvey, who is president of' the Universal Negro Improvément Associd- tion, is quoted as saying: We shall now organize the 400,000,- 000 megroes of Jtme jworld vipto a vast VOTE GETTING IN OHIO Having a covetous éve upon the votés Ohio in the electéral collegé, the dém- industriously circulat- havé a win- his own state have the vote getts ‘andidate Cox, Who elected governor. of the ch Mr. claim. ns for ir vears, nine but these nine were Won by Mr. Cox that he|Mr. has been touted as a winning vote get- fact 18 1912 been opifen that citions er in Out of governor is be that he Wwor they has three the in the last e democrats have cdrried only cause three th normal républi- have single one of these contests. The first sucee§§ of Candidate Cox, that was due like Wilson's to d never organization <to plant, the banner. of freedom on the great continent of Atfica. We will begin by framing a bill of rights of thé négro race With a constitation to guide the lifé and destiay. of the 400,000,000 The con- stitution of the UnMted Statés means that évery whité American would shed in|his blodd to defend that constitution. times| The constitution of the négro race will But an analy- gubérnatorial campaigns Cox ran does not bear out twenty-niné mean that every negro Will' shed. his in{blosd to defend his cénstitution. If Europe is for the Europeans, then Aftiéa shall be for the black peoples of the world. We say it; we mean it Withottt dispardging the aspirations of any race, it 18 & question Whether Garvey, ¢4n finterést the colored people of this country very greatly with plans for 4 military campaign on the oth- ér side of the world in 1940. This is not the first time that ‘“repatria¥on” off thé negro has been talked of, but it has come to nothing. The réal‘difficulty is that hegfoes who are -doing fairly well 60 ol‘ the ion in the republican {here do not want fo zo to Africa and ox was defeated on his fecord;those wWho are faiiures heré would do ame up for reelection in 1914.|Africa no good by going. - ‘America is time he had the go0d fortune|still better than Africa for the Afro- the effzct of the Wilson|Ameticans. 4 Dt us out 6f war” bBut ev- - ——— onls able to pull through| PANAMA CANAL PROVES IT8 plurality of 6.616, while in WORTH escaped defeat by a last! Measures whicht have improved ection of n normaily repub-)routes of travel 4nd provided betier The extent to Whick the guicker means of communication be- have exdggerated the Vo [tween the peoples of the earth or be- cord of Candidate Cox iS|tween sections of the same country the fact that he has neveripaye rightly been considered . worth Ha be # ralities Tep! 1 div widely ion cireula ut o of the dential Sut year. tion ted elections 1814 tves’ votes e had ¢ fon returns also a weak democrat inasmuch as| to com- in the coun- demoeritic .in the pres- is funda- te and it takes party's ranks or a deception war” do not those of Bryan 1908 ubli that f the played that coritest had on what on November for governor by to poll hdlf 6f the tofdl vote| ies of the state 71 the republicans at and since 1912 was, carried by Can- when in elected It is by 3 W pone to Harding United through | Senator that the true will happen spendigg large sums of money {o obtain, and when accomplished, have been hailed as epoch 'maKing dchievements. In such a class was the building of the Sue canal to conmnmect the Mediterrane- an with the Red Sea, and .in the same category stood the Pamama canal when it was opened to shipping in 1914 With the expansion 6f the merchant marine 6f the United States, the Pana- ma canal i§ showing its ever increasing valie as an American Wwaterway that cuts thousands of miles from the dis- ding swept the state by aliance to be made by American vessels of 10 in spite of a pro-|america’s spurt in shipbuilding during ~ote of 09. Harding car-iyhe war moré than quadrupléd her sea counties, while his demoeratic|gqing tonnage, bringing it from 2,037, carried 17 and Cox but 20. Had 000 tons when the canal was opened to almot 10,000,000 ton in the past vear. ight more coun-jNew York and San Francisco are only 'twé of the forty-one -American ports ot show that begin Ohio like to JITNEY REGULATION Other ¢ities ‘ound it srising *il 24 here. 7 each commuhi jon for. The he that situation besidey at ty these each communhity same regulationis that would meet one placek might not all in another. Local conditiohs in Norwich should be is natdrally 4 ques-| to deide. “He take Ohio republican ranks in 4 pres- have hecessary t§ make regulations o govern jitheys so fhat it is not sur- this city’s commoen éoun- should have found regulation need- importance on the Pacific, Gulf and At- lantic sides of the canal, which his cut the voyage between the two ports nam- ed by about 8000 miles. “Manilla is brought 5.000 miles nédrer New York and the distafice to the nearest im- portant port on the west coast of South Amériea, Callao, Pefu Hhas been reduc- ed from 9,769 fo” 3,779 miles. In the past year theré has beem an average of about six ships daily pass- ing through the canal, of Which 2,025 were merchant vessels anl 186 vessels lof the Amerfean navy.-for which the ca- nal i§ of vast strategical-importance. The canal cost about $378,000,000 which was considered a stupendous gum at the time of its construction, but |the results have fully justified the ex- |penditure, and the original outlay has been followed by the expenditure of about ten timés as mucH by the United States in the exparision of its mer- chant marfhe that is agdin to restore the Stars and Stripe to_theit rightful for to traffic and lines of travel, eithef|place on the ocean highways.. sehicular or pedestrian, enter into the problem. EDITORIAL NOTES' Some time dgo @riain regulations 28| i.y. the okt 6t Adgust. Oné Week to a Jitnuey station in Rose plaes were| gore. put into effect. They have been given a fair tridl 4s a result of which it wasl Xow for the So” spetoh of ac- apparent that public opinioh = dictated| ., iance. e . the need of a change. Mahy of thé jit- A ney men themselves have not helped Farmers and gardeners are grateful i r own case, if they wanted to have for éven a sn.m Break in the long dfy ed for them the station privilege|gnen, in Rose place. What With thé dfivers i >f the cars overflowing on the cross-| The only limit to Babe Ruth will be walk, playfally seuffiing or Wrestlihg,|the length of (the sehson and the stout- often to the inconvenience of pedestri-|pess of his bats, ans using the crosswalk, what with it e fond talk at all hours of the day and| Next ‘season Wwillishow wWhether the ight and frequently forming alife down|Canadfan Thistle 8 any luckier than which it was not the pleasantest thingithe Irish Shamrack in lifting the cup. In the world for women and girls te R run the gawntlet, the jitney men have| Tha mah on thée ebrher says: Weath- Irequently made pretty much of aler burean predicty: storm brewing. nuisance of themselves. Cruisiig au-|Here's a ym“ gmw for wets and drys tomobiles circling the square a ddzen or|ajjke. more times have not added to thé safe- ¢ ty of traffic there, and merchants have! providence is. inted that the hade The great complaint were blocked by the public service cars.| jitneys are useful, public eonveniénce, but considera- tion for the general public good must ine where they can properly ex- 0 be allowed to operate. that government authorities tigdte and bring to accouhting all per-|Chairman White does not seem to have Sons engaged sponsitility. like acts. in the their THAT CLOTHING PLOT It appears strange indeed thit the| As an advance Interpreter of what inves-{Cadidate Cox would or would not do, do not alleged The Departiént of Jus-|primirose path to the tice makes formal statement of 4 con-|anq prosperity programme, alliteratively Epitdcy to hold up prices ahd to limit production by shutting down mills and sideatks and often a if cohscien- censtrs did not give “her 250,000. But 237,595 still makes her the second city in New ngland. - There’s , no. feuing where proflteerlng may net bre.k ®it. A womdn in New York has: agiplied to .Have her allmony increased 1,680 .per cent. clothing|iage a hit With the candidate. plot that reaches from the top to the bottom, with the retailer, tious less culpabié in the 1fh€ of re-|yjgus Today we shall hear the Cox porten- flmnsuncemn(s pointing the Peace, progress | peaking. All 2 mistake say the bolshevists Why does not that department take{ibout the way the Pollah envoys weré coguizance of the fact that it Bow recites|turned back.. But there i8 nb mistake that has been a fact of common know-|about the way the bolshévik armies are ledge for two months, namely, that the is guaranteed, In violation of < the Lever law, aaginst any decliné in retailer prices for six months of more. If the department has any power to Jacito, chiet of a Digger tribé of In- function undér thé Lever law, jariven Torwatra. Longévity experts and gland surgeons have not yet been called in by Domin, it has|didds in Califéthia, who is 144 years|, power to function adequately, and that|old, and get around wlthéul a cane. implies such action as shall break the tombine by smashing 2 alone the lime, from the top to thé bot-{erty and fraterni retailers have prices and M been in_upon it e to As far as we can sq:m A BRIy 18- ‘all ity that the Russian tom. It is to be believed that many|Prolétariat has gained is the liberty to v the pre-|sacrifice and suffer to elévate their fra- terhal lrothers, Lenine ahd Trotzky tb and that the shutdewms are ajthe place of the esar. our age, and lpulu, of coufse, Liwe are certainly sponger along h tarian lines than formerly., The agency for uplift of beénighted peo) the missionary enterprise, and om- oldén modern mua\onnry saciety m; a little over a century ago. This bé!n- tiful spirit to bring sunshine and )ey into the lives of the little folKs HV! gested city quarters is séen in air” mission in. which the Tribune is so deeply interested. children are,said tp have been placéd. in Norwich hor Theére is rio finéf fllus- tration of practical Christianity than giv- ing “a cup of cold water, in the name of a disciple,” to one of these little omés. The fragile life of many a child—méstly foreign born—has been saved by this noble work. And it is doing much to offset the prejudice against us for otir sing and omissions in other directions. Have you ever noticed that literdry people, eveh those who dre clever enough to write great books, #re véry often mean spirited and selfish? They are very chary of the praise they give to one another, being outclassed in this respect only by aspiring prima donmas. ary el Mitfordi—who certainly did not belong to this class—had this to say: “I do not know one single poet who cdres for any man’s poetry but his own. In general they read no Dooks except such as may be necessary to their own writings.” The absolute ignorafice in which Wordsworth lived of all modern works is proverbial, and his utter contémpt of the rising Dickeéns ‘reveals the quality of his spirit. Carlyle, who undoubtedly stands in the front rank of historians, was very grouchy whén talking of the excellerice of other historians. FHe sneeréd at every American writer save Emerson and a few agnostics. Great fame and great person- ality do not always go together. Even our owr Emérson, who was a truly great man, was in some respects narrow minded. For instance, in “Reép- resentative Men” he says: “The human mind would pérhaps be a gainef If all the secondary ~ writers were lost—say, in England, all but Shakespeare, Milton &nd Bacon, through thé profoundeér study drawn to those wdnderful minds.” When the Sage of Conéord wrote those words Scott, Thédckery, Ruskin, Irving, Dickins, Tennyson ahd Carlyle had gained fmmor- tality by their writings. Emerson says his rule Was “nevér read any but famed books.” . 1§ this fair to new authors? How can & book become famed until it is read? If people had néver read any works but Shakespeare,” Milton and _Bdconm, what would have bécome of Bmefson? We are told that Emerson oncé inquired of a for- mer president of Yale how many students the college had. Being informed that the number was about twenty-flve hundred, he remarked “that probably a half dozen were worth “educating.” Let us thénk God that college men can lead useful lives if they are not identified with the finical, Bostonesque, Superfine culture business. There are diseouragements that are pe- culiar to hot weather, and as the latter has come, we cannot escape the former. One of the things that' hardly anybody escapes in July and August is that “tired feeling” which makes our daily_ toil irk- some. It probably does not show the ex- istenice of orzanic disease but is Nature's way of telling bs to let up for a_while till the tired faculties get rested. In other words, ‘she tells us to take a vaca- tion. The preacher gets discouraged be- cause so many of his flock are spending the week end at the ‘seashore, and he speaks to a vdet Sahara of empty pews. The doctor is upset because =o many of his patients are getting well by substitut- ing sea bathing for medicine. Al profes- sional men and shopkeepers are in the same boat, but let us not feel that the existing order - of things is eternally smashed by hot weather. September is a great restorer. Is that house of yours insired? If not, Why not? The pathetic incident that hap: pened in @ town adjacerit to Norwich some Wweeks d€0 is being repeated contin- ually somewltere: A workingman while away from home and family was shocked to learn that the flames had@ made him penniless. - How hatrd it will be for that man to get another start in life. He must support himself, wife and several little ones, before he can begin to build again, and with ne insurance money as a starter | What a long. discotfraging and apparently hopeless task it is -zoing to be! Why will men run such hazards, when by the outlay of a few paltry dollars easily savéd (especiallyin this era of large Wages) each year such a tragic calamity cafi be wholly averted? To believe, as some do, that insuring property jis distrusting the Credtor is the creed of fanaticlsm. If you haven't insured your proyerty, do it now ! Wlen you pack up your kit for the fuch needed vécation trip, what will it cofitain? The tennis rackel, golf sticks, fisking tackle, possibly a baseball bat. Now that is very good. But is it a com- plete outfit? Do you pronogs to invigor- ate the body orly? That mind of yours has dohe you good service during the last twelve moriths, and dren't you going to stimulate that also? Add to your luggage just a few choice books siich as Thoreau's Walden, A Yankee in Canada, Irving's Sketeh Book and Walton's Complete An- gler. Simply gat your mental muscle tip to the level of your biceps. As you want to do with your muscles just the things that you have not been doing in your daily toil, so let the mind work along the unustal lines of thought. Rest i8 not se- cured so mueh by eompleet inaction as by changinf the channels of operation. Just another thing. go to church Sunday morn- ing, for this may be a complete change. Help the noor, diScouraged preacher in his small seaside church. This I just whis- per in your ear. Seldom has listory presented such pa- thetic human reversal as in the case of ex-Empress “Eugenie, whose death was recorded last month. The most “brilliant queen” and “handsomest woman in Eu- rope” of the mid-Victorian period has lat- terly been called “the most tragic crea- ture in the world.” She herself said that ten centuries separatéed her from the glo- rious days of youth. How suddenly was the tinsel glitter of her imperial Parisian life blotted out! Empire, husband, son, home and reputation blighted in an in- credibly sfiort time, and she was allowed as a fugitive to live in England bechuse Victoria had & big heart. But Eugenle’s life teaches us a great lesson and that is where one is endowed with great talents afid uses them he is apt to live long and be very influential. Eu- genie's 94 years were very active. She was profoundly versed in the politics of Eurcpe, and Kept up her interest to the véry 1ast. When the great war broke out we find her pale, rheumatic, bent over and nearly blind—this ofice “handsomest woman in Burope,” giviig the use of her English palace for a h tal for wounded - English officers. 0.9&5 prayed that she might live to see Lhe ai grace of 1870 liffed ffom her béloved France, and when the armistice was signed we can pardon the old fugitive, over 90, lifting up her hands and & claiming: “Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord !" Bout 60 That Battermilk Cocktafl, A Delaware chémist says that butter- milk contains as high as 3 per cent. al: cohol. Thus dairies are in plain violation of the Volstead act, and there was some- thing jA Charlie Fairbahks' “buttermilk ‘cocktail” after all—St.. Joseph Gazette. The Farmers Regret. Every farmer in that fix regrets that he has but oné boy to ploy fir his ~“Harrisburg Evening News. Children Cfy FOR FLETCHER'S i CASTORIA New York| . DAY.A Aueusr 7: When it comes to applying legal biot ;%u pdpér to aléoholic moisture the usstan bolsheviéts havé it on the Anti- S#toon & like the Kkick-packed bot- tle of twenty vear old hootch has on that eontdinéd in 4 glass of “half-of-one- Percént.” The Rissian Red soldier can grunt a Slavic “Here's How" just once rifie bullet puts an end to his m& dctivities forever. 1wh§hers of the brass’ rail beat the eighteefith leportation—provoking uets are warned to stitk to the more pedceful climate of Cubd or Montreal by. Morris Shtooten, who has just fé- furned to the United States after five years in the Near East, four of thgm spent in the South Russian city of Lu- ., During the past year he has béen ehgagéd in thé activities of the Néar East, Relief in the Caucasus. “If a Soviét soldier gets drunk he 1§ shot immediately,” Shtooten declaréd. “Thé nenalty for civilians is not quitd 86 Sévérs. Théy #re sent to jail and kept there for a time. Before they are ré: leased they have to pay a heavy fine. Shtooten, Whose home is in Far Rock- away, had takén his wife on a trip to Russia for her health when the world war broké out, marooning. him in Lu- gansk. He formerly had .worked in a foundty in Akron; Ohio, so he obtained a job in the locomotive factory in the Rus- sian city. Heé remained there after the bolshevists seizéd contrel, “The only difference between ~Soviet Russia and Impefial Russia” he siid, “ijs a_différence in who wields the axe. Thé present regime is just as autoeratic as wad the old with only the difference that now there is no real governmént. I Was born in Russit and lived there until 1 was thirty-five years old. “Russia iS unitéd at present becanse the Russians hate the Poles. But When the war is over I feel sure that the So- viet government will be replaced by a democracy. General Denikine - would have succeeded if he had carried out his pledge of amnesty to everyome, evem those who had been activé in Soviet cir- cles. But he didn't. Cossacks and bolsheviks have turaed | Sunday Morning Talk GOD'S PRGVIDENTIAL CARE, To our, Héavenly FatHer, and to the angels whom He sends forth as min- isters of His benefits, it is beyond doubt apparent, as to_us_it far too little is, what a close conmection there is between pfoviderics and grace. How much tlfe interest of our Souls may be involved, in even the interests and transactions of ordinary life, wé perhaps do not re- flect as -6ften as Wwe should. That ques- n, “What shall it profit a man if he gave the whole world and lose his own soul? ‘is something more than a text for sermons. It is a practical matter. Meeting us every day that we live. The world and the soul—these are the inter- ests; not, indeed, ificompatible with each other, but still so related in the present state of things as that in gaining the one the othéf may be lost. Must we not suppose that a matter which God has caused to be pressed uporn our attention with such solemn émphasis, is of vast ac- count to Him? Should we not antici- pate that His dealings with us in re- spect to any worldly imterest, would have respect always, ultimately -and above all, to the soul? Everything, be- sides, small or gréat, which to His per- fect view is seen to bear upon. the soul's interest, will gain consequence just from that fact. So it is tRat. lobking down upon us from amidst the glory and blessédness of that heavén to which He would lead us, the whole scene of our lives is judg- cd of, by Him, with reference to that other life; and _infinite motive for all that is claimed in the doctrine of Prov- idence is found in the myriad ways and instances in which the lif¢ now- must af- fect the life héreafter. He may see my heart cold and, hard towidrd Himself, giving all its affections to presentthings, and He may see it necessary to break it with heavenly hope. If I am alfeady it wtill heavenly hope. If I am already His child, He méy see if me a thousand things which need correction and disci- pline, by the tHousand methods which life and experience supply; and if I ever want to know why He deals with me thus, or thus, it may be only necessary for me to look into my own heart and see. FACTS REGARDING THE CARE OF THE BABY By U. 8. Public Health Service. Fifst Aid dnd Mome Réemedies In giving the following list of home remedies and first aid treatments it must be distinctly understood that the Theasures are to be undertaken only in an emergency pending the arrival of the doctor. Whenever baby is ill, be sure to calll pfomptly on the doctor for advice. Ne- glect of proper medical care is danger- ous and is respenstble for the dedth of rhany babies. Colds—Rest in bed so long as there is fever. Give less food and more wat- er. Open the bowels freely with oil laxative. Apply few drops vaseline to nose every few houts. For older chil- dren, spray nose and throat freely with oil Bpray or ane-fourth teaspoonful each baking soda and common salt in one cup of warm water. For compli- cated pefsistenit or repeated colds, im- prove hygiene to build up the child’s resisténce, nad apply to physician for treatment. Consult a_surgeon for ade- noids and diseased tonsils. Shtooten’s ' hair gray. the “I had a féw When I left the United | §tates; put look at them now. When the Ishevists. were first chased out of Lu- gansk they were going to shoot me, be- ‘He pointed to cause I wouldn't go with them. Denikine's Cossaeks threa the sdfme faf se with Soviet Wi tactory. No bece km, en up to tl Jewish hories. they @id, he said. Several tirfies Shtdoten was point of attempting to leave thé city but was held back by -the almost posi- tivé assurance that he would be search- ed ahd the money he had mandged to He only es- caped being robbed by the Cossacks in residents acquaintance and political Save for his arip home. common with other Jewish the city because of his with people of all creeds beliefs. ‘When' Denikihe’s forces city from the bolshevists ond time, 'aftér having halkalaki, ifi the Cauecasus. He was among the relief workers evac- uated at two hours notice at midnight from the city on May fifth becatse of ‘the From Akhalkdlaki he went to Batoum, where in relief work until las: Bolshevist threat to Afmeni he continued month. “Everything was in turmoil ominous. fifty cents in American money. responsible. bitually ; one ounce olive oil emérgency. dress, place child inh a tub, b tén minutes. your own bare elbow. around head and neck. are caused by eating give prompt enéma and lax: warm-water emetic. sult a physiefan. press or il chest. and follow his_directions. mustard tréatmént nécessary to health undertaken. calt, give warm salt emetic to induce vomiting. by cold compress. ing child to inhale steam. boiling water spoonful of vinegar. a serious mattér. previously ailing, may the wind-pipe. in calling a_doctor. cry hard. from side to side. baby is hungry, from indigestion. is sleepy or uncomfortable. ing may be temper. or may be A mother should nature of baby’s cry. be a tall man in 4 big great c than a Frenchmian, muck poodle. The common by scientists &How that races of mankind. feet 10 inches. Of teally the dwarfs of New Laplanders. and feet 9 inches. This height equalled by the tall Constipation—The diet or habits are at fadlt. THete may be & deficiehcy in the 2mount of fat in the diet, too much or two little sugar, or not enough fruit and green vegetables. A deficiency in WASH time. 81-87 FRANKLIN STREET American races. Aftiohg the shortést men South Italians. ans, where the usual height is as low as 5 feet 2 inchés or 5 feet 3 inches. SUITS once to the chest for téen minutes, If severe, light bldnket over the child’s head and spout of kettle of boilihg water, ollow- Add to the two tablespoonsful compound tincture of benmoin or a tea- cgptured the for thé sec- lost it Shtooten and his wife escaped to No- vorossick Where the Near East Relief had established a station. Because of his knowledge of the country he was ‘re- cruited into the service of the relief or- ganization, later being transfefred to Ak- a. when I left Batoum,” he said. “The British were getting ready to leave and the reports of bolshevist activities dainly became more Exchange was demoralized. It cost 150 rubles to buy a pound of steak. [ But this amounted to little more than the amount of watef given is sometimes Do not give laxative ha- they make constipation worse. Send the child to stool at a regular time each morning. Usé erema of one-half to Milk of magnesia or cascara sagrada may be used Convulsions—Without stopping to un- temp- erature 98 degrees F (blood heat) ath Always test water with! Keep cold cloth| If convulsions improper food, ative Keep the child ir bed until he regovers from shock. Con- Cough—Avoid cough syrups, are dangerous for children. Plain honey | or stewed fig juice .is soothing. vaseline in the nose at night and coke to throat Ask the doctor to find the cause Croup—A child subject to repeated at- tacks of croup should be examined by a nose and throat specialist and any improve If breathing is diffi- or soda - water Apply heat followed throw a Croup which develops suddenly i 4 child previously well is not likely to be On the other hand. croup which develops. slowly in a child b due to the formation of a diphtheritic membrane in No time should be lost Crying—The very sick baby does not There is a low moaning . or wail with gometimes tufning the head A whimpering crying suffering A fretful crying baby Lusty cry- Crying “with tears handling is usually pdinful to the child. learn to recognie the Desert Men Smallest. Habitually we think of Japanese as small men, and imagine a Russian to| oat. The Englishman, according to popu- lar opinion, is supposed to be taller in the same way that a dog of the St. Bernard or mastiff breed surpasses a terrier or a idea is .very far wrong, for measurements madei differences exist between the average height of Generally, varies between 5. feet 4 inches and 5 dwarf men, urider 5 feet ih height, there are few, chiefly the bushmen of South Africa, | tral Guinea and the The tallest race-in Europe i& to be | found in the United Kingdom, southwestern corner of Scotland, where the average height is 5 feet 10 inches. Scotsmen, on the whole, are a tall race, on the average measure about 5| only Polynesian and is are Sicilians and Sardini- THOSE WONDERFUL DRESSES AND are still on sale. While we sold a whole lot, there is still a very nice assortment left—it will pay you to ¢ome in and get some. Every day is Bargain Day at this store, but for this Saturday it will be double bargain day, such values youetnonlyfilfloncemlgr&twkfle,mdrquthé mursw JACOB. WECHSLER NDRW!CH CONN. Stores at Jewett City. hen ntd me with had worked n the 1cn.omolhe onder 1 am gray.” Accotding o Shtostén's story the city becamé. nofmial after the first day of Cossdclk oeciipation. That ddy was giv- looting of Jewish shops and ! Though the bolshevists idn’t mdulge in pefdécllhdn of the Jews they shot every omé that aidn't believe as which { Apply not so stature in the ALL SODAS AND I6E CREAM 5c BELOW THE REGULAR PRICE. the fresh, and of | cent. from regular prices. Salt Water Taffey Bitter Sweét Vanilla s cifon i, dosi. . 408 Bitter Sweet Peppermints Assorted Chocolates, made by the Mirror in for and and the of CANDY SALE For Satu:ggywm Theandybmmwdmntflwmwuflmnnfly drops off a little, and because we wish to keep siir stock oiir working force busy, we are having this sale. Everything in the storé redufidfl'alflmiuso per FEW OF THE SPECIALS Store of N. Y......... 55c| Sale Only, Ib. .. FRESH COCOANUT CAKES, Dozen............ 33¢ S. F. PETERSON, Inc. 132 MAIN STREET Tuesday PRICES ON IGE CREAM AND §0DAS REDUCED DURING THIS SALE om.v A mixture of Hard Candies, For This H'Ul EVSON:: | OUR WINDOWS in the eyes and clenching of fists, in-| The lowest average in England is dicates paln. IrritaMility and lustful |found in the southwestern parts and crying at night may be a symptom of|in Wales, ranging from § feet 6 inches seurvy. When that condition is present|t0 5 feet 7 1-2 inches. In Northumber- land it rises to 5 feet § inches, and among the burly Yorkshiremen it even goes as high as 5 feet 9 1-2 inches. This leaves the nearest rivals on the continent far behind. Even the North German, Danes and Scandinavians, who are classed among the tallest peo- only range from 5 feet 5 to 5 feet 7 inches. Frenchiien generally smaller, measuring about are 5 feet 5 inches and the Spaniards an inch shorter. Stature depends a good deal on cli- mate. The Bushmen live in the great Kalahari desert, the tall Polynesians on the Pacific islands and enjoy all the advantages nature can bestow. The Hottentots, of the same race as the Bushimen, but inhabitating more fer- tile country, are appreciably taller. On higher ground the people are usu- |ally shorter, so that the Swiss and Cén- Europeans generally are stocky rather than tall. Sométithes stature yvaries with the class of men. Early emigrants to America, before things were made easy by the steamship com- panies, were always taller thah the races from which they had sprung. { They were picked meén, full of physical Vigor and courage, Stature varies al- g0 dccording to profession. About half the professional * ahd ecclesiastical classes are tall men, but only about one in ten of the cobblers, weavers and tailors reach the height of 5 feet 7 inches.—Nofth China Standard. the Keeping Them Mixed Up. “We encourage the mingling of our officers with our department heads.” The |head of a large manufacturing concern is telling a aiethod he uses for getting company policies carried out consistent- Iy by men all the way down the lime. “At our main plant headquarters, lunch- eon is served to forty-five of the prin- cipal sales, shop, engineering and other department officers. This luncheon is served in a big dining room, and: wa |endeavor to arrange the seating at the tables in this dining room so that there will be the maximum intercotrsd among the men of the different departments Lately we have put in teffect a-pldn by which every month the seating’ at the various tables is determined” by 16t ithe object being to prevent permanently fixed groups from getting togather, as we do not desiré to have the: shép men or the saleépeople or others get off dy themselves.—System. Thieves in v‘:ev\‘ng. Owing to the’ umrrecedented number of thivese in Vienin#'af present the de- tective bureat has begun a_ spédial study of crimintlegy, the first result of hich is that.ih@ old-time”thief with dishevelled . hair, . no collar, -ragged clothes and dejecteq ‘look *has disap- peared: The thief is now one of the best dresséd citizens ‘of the Austrian capital.’ The male of ‘the spegies wears faultless clothes and | smoke§ ~ zood cigars, The female is gowned with equal régard for styles .and never ap- pears without' a' veil.® Sunday ~during at the Beach'a The 3 at foot" fMfii(etfiflUe at’ 10.30‘:.111 at 50 clockmnuh‘“uom at sso S S (REeR Sait gL T e