Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 16, 1920, Page 4

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v DAY, SEPTEWSER 16, 1920 2 moua 1 s sevuy awse e 7| GYEANED FROM FOREIGN smmm RESOLUTiONS Redtoring Eldgticity of Rubber. In view of the efforts that are belng EXCHANGES. “That was George,” remarked the {who stayed late; and the mext was my | Tubber afficles that have become made to guard western Burop from the| 1, 1.. peen susgested that we should| brown haired gi ) , returning from the|bridge club, and then I had an excifing | hérd récover thiéff &idsticlty in & short e » "i 2 ’. - dangers of bolshevism it can be resog-|hand Mesopetamta over to Feisal It| tilephone. “He wants to come over to- | P00k to finish. Oh, you know how it tiné if placed in 3 per cent earbofic V 2 1 E{ln nized that such an alliance and the éf-| might be a zood solution, if he is eqial e g i jgoes! For weeks before there hadfit| water or 8 per cent amiiine solution. a 0 row Y or fect it may have through sympathetic|to the task; but that cohdition heeds to|MOREOW night, an ave to 1et B | feen thing happeming, ana then alt of | o o gl P Ut A o el onfied relationships with Russia because of | be very carefully examined. Failing him, -h“f"f fxchlrr‘ned hP]: b}(;n?‘ FEIE, 'a sudden I found myself caught up in & it : i CHtbone oo . - @ - Slavic conhections Will get setious con-|there is mo visible alternative but either |Who tav 1n the Rarmmoe om't €ee | maq whirl of gayety and my good re- | It nrist not be forgotten that black . 1 vthing so awful abgut that! You like | : k2 dertake it ourselves, under the in-|2n¥ything so 3 2 solves simply failed to worl 124 | YEARS ‘OLD sideration trom the entente group. Othér | {2 WIdeTtake, 1L urseh, MNT O 100 George, don't you? Why sound so mar- | *'T o ail about it." murmurted the alliances have been undertaken and urg- g B00ds- éxposed to it become gray Doctors Agree That Present|(Sgre s 2ot ot S0 0 ready for use 5 it is desired to pres the black irs taken with médid " ta leave it oven for futute agsression by | VTed? i to s sympathetic blond. “Things are ahwass | o g e ol nr: s that, ton,| Day Foods Do Not Supply |« or Sganic phosphate that ision.srin o sk Soaimenth 90 [ €0 In_that Tegion but the efforts Have|others This last course may appear| Oh yes: T like him. Itsoniy—r & |iike that s £0b0d, that, %| Enough hate—A Vital. | feses it fod & Token reguiarty, €23 ten not ceeded. Whether the new one|cheap and easy at the moment; but if Bact ngn lfle o !ed e“ k;lse e dofie. A 1 per cent solution-of HIOIP |grame with each meal, ought g ¥ “ o Towofics: st Norwich, Coma. 4 | Will hold remains to be seen. Yo are Teally anxious “to avoud future | Back In her chair again and pisked W| gy vt tnae T pavewt & firm it | Panfasuiphate of potash s emploved. | |y Necessary Element. wondertully urbotiding_ effect aitee, wars’—real wars, niot local operations |her kniting. 1| the brown haired girl went on defensive- | It is true.that this smells unpleas- :::fly fa ot are growing o #nt Telepbene Catls, THE PROPER OUTCOME. like those now in progress—we shall fot| 1 “foed resoluttion. You see, 1¢s |17 ‘TR do it in a minute if it were fige | &nt but the restoration of elasticity | Bitro-Phosphate a Common |“$ET if O i e catits. 44 . B ey, 358, With the calling ot of the outlaw| ‘X - Cox_Sir Porcy Cox, the new | thiS way. About a month ago 1 \\as‘i‘?&n’eql“?‘?: ‘pof‘hi:'k\w its fair to Judse | is quité considerable. forens She ta ":‘,,,;{(.:,""f,w. strike among the railroad men in Chi-|, SIf Perey Cox—Sir Per - e D% | feeling sort of rundown and seedy, and | PeORle's wills power by what they do, 4o < Cssoe Otgatic Ph shate 1s What | U500, " 00 ok AmP 0ty , ‘high_ commissioner of Meriotamia, who | [eCUnE Sort of runfomn and setds, and|you2 of course lately there's jase. i i e cago, atter having carried it on fof hait | 14E"; SRR, °F A X went to see Dr. Haines. Te said there | 5001 OF S8 RN, SRS S aad Lo, Neeye Sick Tired Out Thi | m%gg a year, it will De interesting to noté| persia and Arabia_as probably few oth-| WE5E FOLURS Cf A COE WALER Wi v coming here. so I think it would bé | yrea a great poét, Natufe produces |NaHn u:," 'm,.,.,,,,,, What eftect it will have Uipon the unjus-| er living men do. He is one of our public | SRR (0L T 1S BITCE B fecded 10 B¢! f positively unkind to turn Lim down. T suith ith the HEpiast Pecple Need. s o B g BB tified strike that is at the present time|servants who has worked hard for many flemmims- 15 vo. 16 Dol sveic SahE be ldon't wanit to be selfish, even for the | the greatest résults with the il ‘r‘\rt‘m wreeks, who foolishly thoughl being condugted, by the raflway em-|vears in the East. He was consul-| 7ROVt 0 limmm Tntectors “F”']“ it e of my health." means, These are simply a suf, ployes in Brooklyn and that element of | general for Fars and Khuzistan, and e int fed only a Hieod lomic to_enrieh have eome for treatrpent, and shaking. their nefve {ores ot shansted, And.n mary Such Gtnee ring of Pitro-Phaeshath has dcrd secTimElY magieal resuitas If niervous peoplé would edt miore 61d-, fhey n ter and love. Of course, | faanioned éctator be withont the &t b and peas, the yolks 6f many €xss. : the whole will present hut a pitiful [and even the despised eircus peanut, they ; 4Aid, In that case, the sunpy (WM be S e Ty, 8 ané e veicinna ahd hosmitzis Have for sbme he wouldn' Ike | s mefely so many miles fn diaméter, hed rice recognized jta FAlne. eapeci the trées aré good for fuel, the flowers | - s (hese particalat fools ous conditions. 8o much so m:‘(hf dre classified by stamens, and the |pie know fi phosphorus, and, as most feo- tl rederick Kolle, authof of medical fext water is stmply wet.—Heine. omly G that? Well, the coal miners which is disposed to de-| Politieal resident in the Persian st Exer o ks a Peaalimion 1 pend upon radical action rather thas| 200 Achieied goof |\ refus TEAY TOP| “youy fina that the minute you do ¢ periaps 504 do’ look Sl e e A fadndership of the Indian Empire ehree|things begin to happen. importznt things {You want me to take G 4 S Conditions are constantly improvinig | neare nen® Ax meitica) tosident at | Bu. |that simply cam't be denied, even for the | hands for a week or so and let ¥oil gét in Brooklyn and from the efforts thal| shire, at the head of the Persian gulf. Sir | sake of health. have been made to bring about an ad- | Percy’s chief task was to keep in check| A justment it must seem to those who quit| the daring pirates that avaged the const,| Before T had succeeded in carrying | their fobs and left the public to got|And Were such a Sourse of {rritation and out my resolve one single time 1 About the oty the best it could that thett | anEer to the Indian government It|foiled by the arrival of efforts were mise I, graham bread, dried | i | “Of course not,”. murmurea the under- | flower {standing friend. “I was just thinking— |1} {hé s you do look a littie tired. Don't ows published of rooMicsten e @eclal des CIRCULATION me long lost was a job that familiarized him with the|cousins from California. They staved iietiet of K.Y, Phsl this 1% a vital elemént of not ;books 258 editor.in-cl . ‘merve ceile, but of every other |€lans’ “Who's Whe" is 1ed t6 make the body {stateme e Mould be : s pretty well ot & 1o Thers it enoughh orgaple phosshate || N o ind ured by every b rected. Certainly tha | X200 e . e-périence in | three days, and they are awfully fond of | 1 probably Compossi's Peculiar Méthod. I e Al (ool I 0 O T ik |tal 1o increase sirength and mervé fores EEX ENDING SEPT. 11, 1920 [|throwing up of the sponge by the rail-| Oriental diplomacy that wol prove in-|gavety, So what could I do? 1 had to 5 I don't want| \Tha world's masters of 4Ft and mu- |lea vers much {and to enrich the bloal” o o gg road doesn’t give them any encoufage-|valuable in his néw task. He is an|entertain them. One night there to pass my burde n. slc and literary geniuses have used | That is whi so mary péople of foddy | Any man ("\\n:v-'-v ¥ho Seaiies 40 84 10 941 ment, and from such steps as have been | Essex man, and is 56 years old dance at the club another Of course, blond friend agreed fooe ¥ B " are nerve sick, weak, rufi-down, have mo cOm o forey sl ,'M“m,: to 2 taken in that direction it becomes squal-| Teace Needs Fewer Bibles—The great- | there was the theatre e third night v “1 was just wondering whether | diffefent means for aroustng Mispira- |ambition and in mady eafes are simply |bu B horiars epd BEbeW - Iy evident that viclence is not going to|est contrast in figures in the Bible Soci- (something else—oh. know how that {you wouldn't ike to coms over tonight|{ion And stimulating fisefiation, an | “skin and bone y this_deficiency of |01d-time ambition can_procure this Sisph aid their cause anniual report occurs in the ofput |sort of thing developst o and meet my 1 c He's 2W- | axchinge récalls. Thus, Grieg, the o Yorie ave | remicay at lee & Osgool's, or &8y drug NG . e w Testaments, which dropped from| “I was a wreck when ther left, and | fully attractive.” = 16 b hoaphate . which | store g LINGS' DECLINATION. Whatever way {he raftway fhen fe-|of New Testaments, which drorped from| | L wAe A Wreek Whch LAY UL And | HUIY atrmctUeTe . 6 Heown hdired | Musician, ¥Bén hé was about f6 com- S s B Bk ey | rome o aesite siote ST gwwer. & " |gard their prospecis they cannot fal to] Mo tn JB JO18 A0, TS I N ha | highit a5 soon as it was dark. rl accepted eagerly. “I was just won- | posé, néed to héaf his head fof sov- : . 7 | woen, "athtr mind_ahd stuidy SOX n | be impressed by the fact that thése who| 1 s doés not mean that| “And then Arthur Brown ealled up to | dering what on earth T'd do tonight. 1|eral dnys, whéréupomihe would losé his | The most popular ofganic phibsphin ohfste all oF | " ar distribution. This doss not m rd do 3 D R s P g o plendid resuis { ‘\,»;wdrw;vnr;r! to \T(‘ l'hr‘.' mf:\::;:;r:‘! ;’2{\1]]““:}: \\m(‘br(-wnr pl-;’jn;,‘.w read ;m: ;1& l‘:fllvh;"dh‘wdm:m\';{‘;j !m';- cnnrz;n}\:; ¥~:m‘vy"; a thing planned, What are you appetité and his éyés would become W . - t 1 effort to bring about an adjustm e, thoush that is probable, but tha w show he ing to see, and ing o Ol | ———— e e e iy s i a[have quickly admitted the impossibilitr|during the war millions of men were| thought it would be a shame to miss that. | “Oh, nothing,” aid the biond triend.— | 1P med 4nd hi$ imagintion thereby ' ot ol of doine anything, The Brooklyn Rapid|awdy from home and out of reach of the| “The very mext evening we had callers 20 News. stimulated. Hamoey, - F | Transit company 1s in fhe ands of a|family Bible B e Bibled The qualities of a good mémory are, 4> . Subjugate. & c eceiver and under the direction of ‘the | €3m¢ back, we wonder? i 7l Sag o Tie eitieen vommtation | Chinese Skillful Cdnidy Makérs. | in the first place, to be susceptitie; | When an army was conquered $ eral court. Julgé Mayer ot that| Tale of wight SearesNo doubt Gen.|Ter L sayeriensy 0,000, sunplemented by | The Chinese are very skNlful In | secondiy, to be retentivé; and thirdly, | Roman times, if was oblized to "; o I T I e e e | When he tries to make oar flesh creen | senator ne He clearly saw ¢ et vearly ne. | making confectlonery. They afe able | to he ready. It is but rarely that these | nder the yoke” s an evidenéé & e ‘"’”"m_: -1"';"‘*(’»"" r‘ur:"“?::‘i"_ by the prospect of “cutting the Isle if \‘h(v hnr; !h duty as ;\rw-.m, hewed Jts chief indus! x‘ lies in .r<l to empty an orange of its pulp éutire- | three qualities are united 1h thé same | defeat at the hands of the ememy. Hisiicy. SRURUFAA S JHos T MSISES | Wight in two.” The danger seems rather|to it and let the chins ere they cre tourist hot and m that there can be no further dealiug remote. There is a good deal of erosion|might. His whole career the senate with the organization which has broker | gong on at Freshw: ter Bay, or we should | has been devoted to his country, WHich ' Fuyoly toutisk Iy and then fill it up with fruit JEIl¥ | person. We often indesd méét with a'| This yoke” was sometimes made 5y its con- | ne hout oné béing able to find the | memory which is at once susceptible | setring up two spears and putting & defeat in a try|its contract. not have the celebrated Freshwater arch|stitution and its flag. e mountain views from Lucerne are | smallest cut In the rind or even a |and ready; but I doubt very mueh | third acv@es the top. Our mfi:‘l‘ eing the| That the men ean refise to return to|and the Stag Rock, which were at one| It is a hanpy ausury days in many trivelers o Le nsur-| ting hole. Indeed, they even empts 4n | if such memories be Eommonly ery | ¥ord oS sugale (derfved from 1:' . 1 tes1| their work ig estioned. 'They are|time part of the mainland. But before n a St it any city. Cu half by | oo ST G dleas s | *sub,” or under, and *jugum,” or yoke! . o 16 T cars it théy do mot|the sea coild amputate tHis fragment of | the record and qualifications of Semator | the river, it \ natural amphithea- | 65, In this manner and fill it with a | rétentive; for thé samé set of habits J Wight which ends in the Needles it would have to break through to Totland want to, but with others taki s thelr randegee receive: the reward of v feliow republicans h or sort of almond notigdt withiout onie be- | which are favorablé to the first two | thns contalns in jis"gomposition a a1d those who want to ‘return e bestowed - g la which + craft of many | Ing able to find the slightest break or | qualities are adverse to the third— wvmul-r';@m from lf* military ¥ "| Bay, two miles away. Moreover, there|upon him, in a state so typically Ameri- 1s range rises to the | fneisio fife of {he Romimms. 7~ p run. I }: ng back simoly as new men it must| stands between Tenns@on's “rigdge of |can as our mearyy neighbor, Connecticut. | southwest and the Riga mountains span Incision In the shell, Dugald Stewart. - nistration |De_evident to them that the strike is aa noble down,” and that would be &|lt is leadership of the sort that he sup- tern horlzon. World farmous patio- : out | formidable defence even were the sea al- | plies as a senator which the nation sore. | ramas may he scen by walks jn almost Dérivation 6f “Hosdlum.” | may not appreclate it but there| lowed o have its own wify. Dutch Find Salt Wells Iy néeds today—the leadership of a man | tion out of the cf “who by the example of his own courage, Many quaint hous: Hoodlum now meaas & yotung, T0Ugh | [anand has begun to produes sait 2 ises remain, inchiding i is derived from a i i vigor. certainty and steadfastness wiil | the wooden structurcs whose inflammbile | OF03- The L B iy e | W ST SpeciY t highest qualitics of the peo- | ity gave rise to curious fire regulations, | £40g Of toughs in San Fran draw out t! n men In largs number|, 1:800 Deiths from Unfenced Machin- v 5 Ttq|ér¥-—Glivitiz_evidence against a Ted- izeNghat such an end ito|qgington firm, fined for neglecting 1o 1 every one bt the onitlaw striés|nave their machinery properly fenced; wilt ré iy two provinees, and may be able to ob- | ple; whose lute sense of d will | Wood for building could not lie in the |der the lejdership of ofi¢ Muldoon.¢ain snough for all its nesds. wdsa ¥ that could happen to|an inspector said th et arly 3 v 5 led him| ls the heat ining fhat could haphen {0)an inspector said thefe had been M€Y |brush opportunism aside, whoss sympathy |streets moro fhan 24 hours. No smithy | They were called for the name of i o % | ; entirely to the neglect of simple precau- | 4nd truth e e e vemmers and (117 | their lender, the syl!Ables of WDOSE | isery loves company. That I8 why | WASTING THETR CARFARE. tions in_this matter of fuandeg work-!gold fa% the o ,-‘m.‘;“m, i s Aon. Peners 4 porential e | name, out of contetnpt, were reversed |some people get married. i hers have| The coming to Connecticut of a dele-| M€ machines - C 0 aor “WWhat the nation needs foday i | called to a fire | t word from | ind slightly modifled. Intead of Mul- Says this Woman Until Re- tior of those who have opposed the| DOt iy V"‘C‘l‘;n"'““',{:' Wil have to|more senators of the same calibre, mor mayor Women were re- | doons they weré calléd Hoodlums, ¢ miltede. SRR oo o 2 senators whosé concentio £ the gro: ed to aid . o1 of suftrdgs in Tennessee is go easy with doors and windows. Apart 5 49! Gongubegliiy X 5 4 ely 1o have any influsnce What-|from the question of labor and profit;| S5t deliberstive body in the world" o1 Coanecticut’s action. Théfs|he cost of matérials alond soars con-|SIuAres with that of Daniel Webster— fact been no reason for believing|tinually. A merchant states that sash|Doston Jranseript. ¢ Connecticut was about to flop from|lines and bolts head the list of price- opposition to suffrage to the approval of | stretchers, with Indiciticns have pointed to the fact|Dor Cent. respec ; “'F“‘! 'A;”t;?&“;;;'i", Months of Winter. M OTH ER' 3 :h,l:: ;Vg‘;y Compund > Astronomically winter is reckoned to n b ; | Carroliton, Ky—"1 suflered atmos§ o A begin in nérthern latitudes when the . 3 | & years with female weakness. T avances of 275 and 350| IN THE DAY’S NEWS |r = sun enters Capricorn, or at the sok | “California Syrup of Figs” : ly. Locks have risen Stories That Recail Others \ stice (about Decémbér 21), and to end 200 per cent. Lricern could not walk T « : s 4 ’||||” 2 "Nm any distance, ride that Connebtient Woln undeubtadty rats 2 Il at the équinox tn March; but in ordi- Child’s Best Laxative ‘ or take any exer- . g endment when the| The Next Viceroy.—After the com-| Lucerne. scene of important confer-| “rhought Too Much of His Childreh. | riary kpéech Wintef comprises the thires A cise at all ‘withe e e = the governor-general. | ences among allied statesmen, is de- ness man when solicited for a ont resting. If 1 - time cama to take action thereon, and it e Rnea | actthed & o Bulltin from the Washing \css man, when solicted_ for 2 eoldest months—Decemmber, January S e e o Joubted that the southern delegation expires in April nest,|ton, D. C., headauarters-of the ional his community refased iatner | 81d February, being reckoned the win- did any kind of , Il Favs any infuence In stirring up|and it will be necessary soon to appoini | Geographic society as follows: b nased, | ter monthé in the United States, and lonposition Inasmitch as the detion|his successor. Lord Islington is per- “Lucerne is a precious jewel among work it would Bring my sickoese 1 was weak, lxnmnd had no energy and life wis a misery 6 me. Iwas under physician for #év- eral monthd and triéd other remédies. 1 had read of Lydia E. Pinkham' Vegetable Compound and decided to try it. After taking twelve bottles 1 found myself much improved snd I fook six more. I have never had any more trouble in that respect since. 1 bave done all kinds of ot 484 4t present am an attendant at 2 Staté | Hospital and am feeling fine. I have recommended your Vegetable Com- | pound to dozens of my friends and -| Tuesday was regarded as beigg without|haps Sir George Lioyd's strongest rival | Swiss cities, with the lake Governor Folomb had |fOF, the position. ~ One of his qualifica- | name for i PR ’:1 s arat l‘m;num is that he was under-secretary for |beauty and, to the legislature regarding the|y,gi; for three years and that he has|ed. y of action at time is well found-|gerveq as governor of New Zealand.—| ~On that lake" t may not show just what will| London Chronicle. | ba done next Tueeday but from the vote — 15 taken fthere can be no quéstion but|HOW § what the legislatrire Wil as been in-{so legally at the of the same setting—a lake where varied storic association are blend- beral. She | November, December and January in on fsod here. I|Great Britain. reasén for the change. 10 me for money em; affer sg;« Autointoxication. of miserable - poi: s eame i °L miserable | Autolntoication s _self-poisoning Next vou brought an | 20d has nothing to do with the modern e. After - those [ auto. It is dué to toxins produced by the in _ail| pacteria within the body, from pus ons, ¢ g it evary i ¢ gt . pockets, decaying teeth, pyorrhea, bad Lubbed every toe skin- 5 2 P g and S| {onsiis or from bacterial fermentation en tco weil to give to this|in the intestine. ve th.i) exps 's shores William Tell is reputed to have exhibited his mark ship to the discomfiture of Gess! on, its waters tradition holds ¢ seizing the rudder of the ve: that tyrant held him pri which my TOR BRANDEGEE ratify and do| IS VIEWED IN MASSACHUSETTS ecial session mext| This is a senate, a senaté of equals, of R g el mén of | indivdudl hour &nd ~ personal gided it to the rock whert Tennessee In fts treatment of the suf-|character, and of absolute independence. | 2 1»“3?(“ L e finge aman " e We know no masters, we acknowledge no | SOT'S he: i go amendmuit has cértalnly made x| Y8 RO N0 HROlers, He SCMOWICIEE 20 uresque, but more significant, mess of it. It his poceéded in & mAR-| ot " 4nd discoseton, not an #RAd fbs | W2E_ the. formulation of ‘the Perpetuai r which makes it a quéstion whether | hiation and discues 7 arend 197 | league. famous instrument not only . . amendment has beén ratified by the (1% X the antecedent of the Swiss confed- LI TR S Backs. 5 siitss. By the declaration| " AT all men comnt more than meas. | ration, but marked a mi e oy ot e rmor Holeomb Connecticut by its|ures in the minds of the thinking vetors | Manity's political freedor they aré built; some afé hewn stones n Tuesday would have done mothing o make up tfié soversign | . -Beloved by touriéts and crowe ‘;flr“ th iy ready to form a part of future edi- ear that uncertainty, but rather|majo American electorate. Es- [ hem in rormal yedrs, Lucerne has re- ition * of post in hu- s to do the o and whic . i s 4 5 s recummend it.”— 4 tained many of Its ancient aspects. Its | proper. flcés; some aré quarrles from which | Accept “California” Syrup ot Figs| Shall alway o e A o et of 5 sotaier f Do EEel Al |orumbling wall with lis watch fowe stones dre fo be split for shaping and ok for he name Califognia on | LIUIAX T. Taaxe, 824 5. 6th Sty fdling of | s k"f”;:nmr"i::“ e hete| Witness the cags of Frank Bosworth |it @ medieval stamp; two of i 2 cm that there | after use.—Holmés. you are sufe yo Carrollton, Ky. il = t Deat Hhelr| i andegse, renominatéd yesterdad by ae. | Wooden bridges also serve as art ilicg he board which Pre- he best nd_ most| If you have any symptom aboud clamation at the Har Biive {lefies. On the walls of one are depi (s Sénatér Prandéges €ald in hie|Clamation at the Hartford convention for | == | harmless physie for | Which"you would like o know write . 5 scenes of the city's history and the othe N Afus v of the kind usually found |liver and bowels. CHildrén love Its| to the Lydia E. Pinkham icing a fourth term as d States sei cenes of the ci histo: and thé other N> had to refuse, Lavémaking of the kind usuall und | live b4 and his|statement favoring ratification in this| & [0Vt termn as Taited States senator |\ " iniings of the Dance of Doath. . |she al ¢ Jetusal cn e ael | romantic novels makes the real thin | {ruity taste. Fuil directions on eack| Co, Lynm, Mass, for belpfal advies e: “The co decided that|ot the Smuts-Wilson-Cecil league of na- | - FPerhaps the most famed art object of | cisions declarations of thid &ams|iook like thirty oéis. You must say “California” | given free of charge. men were | women _should right to vote.” | tions from its birth, he has been from the | (h€ CIfY I8 the Lion of Lueme, cons Sl e e MR ats, the mail|§ unques the verdict. hut | beginfiing fast Suppbrter of “any | 0¥, OnE CTEE e St appropriate | Oe vouncater it.-on tis - AdETOR FoF ] o i t rests with Connecticut to remove thé|association of nations designed to pro- | \0UCHINE monument in existence 39 S e IO rott I3 AT o roved, A sim- | technical obfection that It is possible fo|mote the development of _international | EFO!0. hewn from the natural ro th raise in view of the Tennessee situation.|1aw, fo agree upon an international code | 9Yin8 lion. pierced by a lance, wi N 56 et b ® |paw _protecting the fleur-de-1 onidébicnt 6ah fo it @3 the Fesali oF e relation of mations with |PAW Drotecting. the tion of the governor. Tuesday's|®ach other” and of “a great international | o o0 R AOEFE TSR, ¥ & | court composed of men of recogn pcued s it G tion can well be considered a straw i who, aika iR sesKikE Lo Proteé in_international law, compet T L e ote of what Will be done next waek and e crnat oRetent | against the mob of Paris revolut onatitution ennessee , e CEC on e nat stormed the Tuilerics in 17 constitut Tennesset | tins," that would “promulgate its juds. | "3t Stormed ¢ e sting their | ment according to a code agreed upon and hj”‘“”“ s - ,;" the, abknowledged.” Yet he was placed in | rcrc It rushes from the cross- ote in one of h School boar ed nt, wiss guard A Copicus Fall. Louis XV Fomists There are parts of the Midlands | where an unrelieved drought has now been endured for two years and nine months, ma-|visitors will be the mall | carfare ety : e while in other happier spots i o e T tion by an ardent advocate of s e e it A f‘n”‘” | some showers at odd intervals have | # M EDITORIAL urieonditional ratification of the Smut by ApIgve s & iy & o en jus Tust a o Wilson-Ceefl Whyr Porms {carriage road, and from roadway to a | Déen just sufiicient to enable farmers F c 3 s long as it is on the dectine su- iy aus R g, o prom roane 5 t Sl Sl I Wk Lt Toagte: ane | Failway tuinel. By the St Gott line | to keep thelr heads ¢ water— [ ¢ much :m gar is headed in the righ :_r:x!on, bt ot fanan s | iterE miles from Basel and 130 | Rand Daily Mail. N 5 e ™| And vet Frankin D. Reosevelt iasist.|the credit of Cornecticut’s senior senator,” £ 2 ! 4 i thet ¥hai casn't % hopeless for the| [T Outweighed any differences. over past & e continuanes ed that Maine wasn't 80 hopeléss for the| or pending measurts. A conseientious op . 3 nding 1etters to|democrats. ponent of the suffrage amendment, its re- ¥ publican advocates refused to _enter a the democrats are Worrying|candidate asainst Senator Prandegse bo- YOUR THROAT THEY b nOt 86 .ouch me plans or the lesuse wme sucerisy with which he stood h ST E stand, the good erace with which he ac- 1 at all keen regarding its | cepted the popular verdict, and good sena at Washington it must realize|faith with which he insists that it shall that Watson be beaten by voting for a|be faithfully. executed, command alike the Sebilean econfidence and admiration of the rank and file of the republican women of his 5 o man on the cormer says: Many |State, regardless of whether they were " le don't mind & Huth pelag Mréns suff:agxsfs or anti-suffragists. 3 they do haviig Oinea tal thém The great war was only a few months old when Senator Brandegee was re- 3 elected, in November, 1914, for a third ey " term by a large majorit Of English, . 1" gy rm‘:.-if&n:.?nn:w?rfmiz French and Dutch lineage, he was 100 - —y luer ! b €T Sstat per cent. American in his attitude toward A NEW ALLIANCE. than the struggle from the day Europe went all ¢ to wai His thought all the whjle was of America. His voice Was one of the That ysurg woman of a wealthy fam-|first to call for national preparedness and ily who ran away as a boy to work on | defense. The same apveal which Augus- a farm has done enough to make her a|tus Peabody Gardner was making in the A moving pietrre star. house of representatives as a congress- 2 i man from Massachusetts, the same ap- 2 8 With Maine performing as it aia af.|Peal Which Leonard Wood was making in | ter hearing F. D. Roosevelt, Daniels and :he arlrr has}.ls janking general, the same : Mekabo Wit Novs i fhe) Bigediic ppeal which Theodore Roosevelt was yt making from one end of the country ta ha for the rest of the country! fl;‘e other, each in a brave effort to arouse the nation to the real sigmifi ‘ W Even if g!s throncxm'n very hat:l ;h-t maighty struggle oVerseu.an;?{mm?afn:i?- o advice to overnor Cox to stop talking| gee was making in the senate. He saw s o came at & time when, if obsyed, It|from the first that our defenseless ::cmdl- "SR\( (AS “RV\E GuAR ‘\“ TEES ‘)“R\ s of Poland eald & ¥ i s tion was a standing invitation to 3 quite seriously nvolved| wion tne attorney semeral sets out fo eforts did not conduce 1o popularity. Nb = seche and thers o among|enach the ralstn trust it means good | USed EVEFY resoufce at Hig command fm e s more o 1ee eympa | iirisng ut hers e il s o feue |20 DL {0 Ghmpet & DGR i THEY RELIEVE ALL THROAT e Pussians ev h their : etions a3 56t be toward e mol|If Do Works the way he did 1o ringing | n emcient navy agamet ihe - aey b p - P St dhare R ey S B adoption b¥ (le senate of anamendment thers have ben recent ef- 1s to bring about a peace ar- ¢ between the bolsheviki and sia. To the suggestion offersd iby which, if the house had agreed to if, high will cause more worry to those who| Would hayé raised the army from eighty can afford them than it will to those|{o oné hundfed and twenty thousand men wWho cannot afford them but who will|long before we entered the war. He of- Suy Just the same fered other amertments to increase the rmer, Rumania Bas. replied in a . | Humber of battleships for our navy. He r which indicates that it may be| When Governor Cox licard of - the| WS one of the first to SxE e sk My our merchant vessels. Long before 4 & discultian of stch.a, théd- | Maine election results, he seems te . 200 DTS AT, LROS SO b ek The conclusion of mich an|have boosted the republitan campalin | g in the sandte in dcferise of American anding would, reduce by ene the[fund total up to $25,000,000 or $35,000- | rights were among the most inspiring of © of states surroundig soviet | 000. [ 47 - ¢ BRI GGS SOMPANY A But the longer Cox talks the less| the patriotic utterances of our pubiie cahsmm‘.: ¥ w: @t present.berrated |the republicams will mum 1R the WAY|men. In times which tried the souls of Presigent Woodrow Wilson, Photographed at his desk whils transest- ) mfizzflxm 2 aid fof “frmds. the.stromgest, when deubt . sid_hesitation | D& his regular morning business, COUGH ALMOST AT ONCE

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