Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 20, 1920, Page 4

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Sisrwich Gulletin und Poufies 124 YEARS OLD facts in the case and bring to justice those who had a hand in the activities and the deception. 3 It is unfortunate that the committee ‘which hss made such an excellent begin- ning cannot compléte the job but that simply sets a mark for others to work to. The situation cannot be wWinkéd at,! those who are guilty and the extent to which they have been caftylig on their extortion should be completely disclosed. One who has traveled 10 any consider- able extent this autumn the apple growing section of oup country must have been greatly impresséd with the size and quality of this important crop. AS a sta- ple article of commodity in thé fruit line here in New England, the apple I8 éasily first, and in &ll probability will nevér be supplanted. It would hardly be Neéw Bngland with_the apple tfee destroyed. . yes Enersé a: e Postoflce at Norwich, Conn., 2 ecuad-clae Telighace Calls, Duledtn Busiams Office. . Bullecia Bdliorlal Rocms, 3-3. Bulletin Job Offtes. 35-2. “illmantie Ofice. 23 Cburcs St Telepbane 105 Nerwich, Saturday, Nov. 20, s exclusteely asne S= ot repubdication are sl rerved of we: CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING NOV. 11,012 POLICING THE HIGHWAYS 19; entitlet de-paten wise crediied 1. utecciption price 13 8 week: S6c a month; $8.00 13th, 1920 TODAY. In its present stage it ié vers much. like Christian character In that it has not “siready attained” but it is “presiing toward the mark” Of a Higher develop- ment. The culture of the apple; like the culture of the Soul, has départed some- what from the old Puritan standard. Selence hds taken the place of specula- tion. We know more about the chemical eomposition of the soil than our fore- fathers did. W kiiow when and how to Prune in ordef to secure the best resuits. ‘We know that you canndt have a success- ful orchard and grow a big Woodiot on the same ground at the samé time. We also know that spraying is éssentidl to a fine erop. And thus the apple is marci- ing on like the soul of John Brown. But when wé eoiie o harvesting the apple we do not see the same degree of advancemient. . The business end of the apple trade ténds to nulliy the scientific progress in_apple raising. We are told that the apple treés this yedr in the state of New York have yielded a crop un paralleled “by any apple growing region in any countfy, in any year, in all the Ristory of the world.” That indeed i§ going some, thanks to sclence plus a most extraordinary fall. ~But a greater part of the crop is rotting because of the lack of re aftermath of war that It should|DPeople to pick the apples. This is bad it be expected that there will not be re-| enough, but it s 4 great deal worse not verses, but even though théy are sure toj L0 be able to get barrels to put them m. it we bend our backs to the but.|Blt Worse than all, bécause so exasperat- +and mee them courageously we witl| P& 18 the utter fack of transportation ! and distributing facilities. Think of it, overcome them and win. five milligns of peonle in New York city There cannot be disregardéd his sensi-| without apples, while within easy dis- view of the situation When he de-|tance aré tens of millions of apples of the that in order to respond .to the|rarest quality rotting! The terminals call for the renouncing of extravagances,|are all right, but the eonnecting link is as wionally, collectively and individudily rotfen as the apples. we should learn the “old and the new For its own godd New Yotk sfould in- sist upon going to the bed rock and e: posing the whole machinery, and proceed to make a thorcugh ecléadiu; New York should realizé that it is in the balance. n HARDING AT NEW ORLEANS. That President-elect Harding doss not disregard the tasks that are faced by the country in the yeafs fo come as it strug- gles to emerge from thé conditions exist- ing and créated by the War is fully dls- closed in the addréss whieh hé m:de to the people of Neéw Oriéans as hé Wis bout to depart for his visit to the ca- L He pointed out that reconstruction aid (ijustment have got to come and that hen they hdve been sdcured it can hardly be expected that We will have the old crder of things. There are reasohs Ay such cannot be and why in_sorne respssts it shouid not be, but thére cad il showld come stability and depends- and we must continue to bulld én| id foundatiors. Wéll does he point the fact in the unsettled eunditions en] come bl As one rides about the country he sees CLAIMS W, Jett Lauck, counsel and économisi = anthracite mine workers, = has chirged thay Philadelphid me it paying $3.25 a ton more than & able price for hard codl. ment backing up s the eolumns of the Philadelph! Ledger, that only a sweeping invesi tion ‘of the éntire industry could b about the constructive reforms i hard-coal trade necessary to mflfi the public fair prices for domestic “Thé attitude of the anthracite in: dustry,” continued Mr. Lauek, “is stfict- 1y negative and devoid of any sefise oi public responsibility. As a Mattér o fact, at the recent hearing of the anthfa- cite commission, they even claiméd that the public was not intérested in the ceeding. A furthef illustration of that &t titudé s furtiished by thelr réfusal at the present time to make any reports to the federal trade commission Showing thelf cost of production.” Mr. Lauck repeated his charges tha hard-coal consumes are bBélng ehal }an “excess or apparent’ 'profit of zt least $3.25 a ton, /and called attention to thé unanswered figures he had submitted o support the charges. He further insist | that if the problem were attacked at it | roots, and the vast hidden profits of thé anthracite combination be eliminated, “it is possible that the retail price of anthra- cite coal could be reduced by $5 or § a ton and still leave a fair margin profit to the operators.” Elaborate data and exhibitg on cite prices and producing costs, Lauck said, were prenared for submis- sion at the recent sessions of President Wilson's anthracite - commission, lout were excluded from the record on the plea of the operators that it was not thé business of the president's ‘commissio which had been created to seftle a wa; dispute, to pry into the cost of anthracitd production and its relation to wages and the cost of living. “The operators” said Mr Lauck, “were afrald of publlcity. They strenu- ously opposed the submission of our ev- HARD COAL PRICES ARE lessons of thrift and Providence,” | phasize our stability if we become and, It will add t) our power and em- this adv. in big letters on _billboards: | 1dence, and fnally on purely _téchnical United States Tires. Well, why shouldn’t | ET0unds prevalied upen the chairman to aour poor, long suffering country tire of | €Xclude these fundamental figures. b partment e state e t the ® stric romg any W the ot afoty 334 the of of the world from thé conquest of|first performance in Birmingham, it was widin r whic fu 11 powers. The doctrine hasn't|vathetic that he never heard her voice in the right « country more powerful at the! MiS greatest work. So profoundly Was of thie others. It hasmt eyehShe moved by the great composére un- e — = { timely death that she gave free concerts GETTING OFF EASY giving. this country trade| ;g rur as lier serviced were concerned— More ces to say nothing of controlling for the foundation of the Mendelssohn | b o, territorial gain. There has|scuolarship fund. Now this te soun » attempt to i greal talent is always an Sighe. ict of any of the Latin-American|Otier lives are made richer I t ni. It i§ an Ameriedn deelaration | the sob Stuff that has been said about her B o | headlong rush to destruction in the late Mr. Hard = et r'(""i,,‘::;w‘r“f",,’,?}:;:"‘:’ r",’"""::‘e":."[nn-xdenunl campaign? e U. S. will o ' adefship must meEL| ,rohably outlast any auic.uobile tire that At test instead of basking in the | has yet been made. It would be quite ap- that the government by itself cani propriate if some man in the rubber busi- onders There must be a recogni-| ness should put out this 4dv. on a big the dignity of productive labor, | billboard: United States Tires Still More re must ho eanity, cleat thinking, | With the recrudescence of William Jen- . cooperation and honesty,| INgs Bryan, who once more is running 1 the 1 omertous problems &t homd, true to form. This superman having dug \ couraze. wisdom and de.| P “hiS Meart out of the grave,” where ¥ gy 2 %€ | he said “it was buried” and where most termination the kctier able are We Boing| of g were hoping it would rematn, has to play our vart In modern civiliza-| broken out with this far-sighted advic It is a statement that cannot faill “Let President Wilson abdicate, Marshall o| to impr |be crowned, Harding put into the state departmext, and then Marshall resign, o that Harding will be free to work out his policies” The world has had nothing like this since Solon died. Surely in three presidential campaizn the democratic party wa v a special Providence, but doesn't it one the “creeps” to_think what might have been had this man Suc- ceeded at the polls? | simple living natfon once more.” won e faced W tion A CHOICE, | L declared by the leading pa- « Argentine republic that if the 3 c countries were given the xpress {Heir preference | dostrine or the league tney would favor the latter, it s tlat either it is rot well 1ed or elsc those countries must be| be Credited with disearding {he kméwn and Lo unce: tein One of the moast beautiful things in the whole history of music was the admira- tion Mendelssohn had for Jenny Lind ! That matchless voice was evidently ring i there js a cecided Gifference! ing in his rs, also “her s tual inter- the two. The doctrine doesn't|retation was in his mind” when he com- for the yrevention of wWorld warsi boeed his masterplece, “Elijah.! 1t is said r s n der | thal he made a study of her yoice. Some b @ not an understanding Between, ¢’y sreat arias of that oratorio so con- formed lo the peculiar quality of her voice that she made her grentest suc lijah.” No other greéat songstress ever sang this composition so splendidly. Al though Men¢lelssohn lived to conduct the » the aititude of this country con-{ the western hemisphere, primar- its own protection but with the ng the republics of this fore we are morally bound to sultivate it What this country has un- y for the good of others. | destakon to @o under the Mofifoe ddetfine! tell the countries of Lurope and c ris of the World that it doesn't It 18 still inpressively true that “truth is stranger than fiction.” Ofe may Tea- *h to meddle In their affairs and Lfliolnm':}: Gus lLlun it \b‘\c;.f:'lsor\l i Srioge ‘fo permit sland” or the weird tales that came from - of . e e e e b0 o &5 the unfieaithy brain of Ldgar Allan Poe - | pubiics. are so vitally interesting as the Autobiog- > Wher 2 5 raphy of Andrew Carnegie recently put on i w Y 1ow miuch hélp has Leésn givah to the market. Eveén the 1ad willadmit when wa veak and heedy and how much pro-i ahsorbed in an excl g story that the were they have actually received be-! keen edge of pieasure is just a bit blunt- o i of the existence of the M<fifo: jed Uy the feeling that it is made up *hieh SOt 15 Lok and the acceptance of by | whoiiy, or in part, out of “whole cloth.” tulck 4 | ot Juntries none of them probabiy!1f @ writer maies his story too extraya- o the fact stmas, Wiy deadly It was this I’Annunzip ever retires to a mon- wohol that ry he wil probably insist uponm tak-| Breughont ¢ fent n rs fron L milar The president experiences relief that ®abodetions by t ope election I8 out of the Way, but he will mes than ssed. The et on have congress on his hands again. Romane Brool Wil do - New Y, t The fall of séven per cent. in Whole-} Bsser charge | c ccurea| sale prices in September didn't begin to ¥ Massachusetts to e tried on the in-|Teach down to those Who pay retatl letment for first degres murder, all of | Drices vhich ca fall to bs regarded as be- - e SR & Mg favor for delsy pofth °"| Just at present there seems to be wh- utlons much more difficult or appreciate. hen ning from Argentina gant it palls éven on the lively imagina- tion of a boy. In reading the life of Mr. Carnegic onc is made to feel that herc is unflitching fidelity to truth and yet it has all the glamour of romance. We are with the poor Scotch boy who came to our shorés Seventy vears ago; we go with him ifito the factory, the telegraph Juty as he seés it a ding a help.| office, int6 the Civil war as an operator, e mece It and lenting A helo-| e stand with him as he builds bridscs, P 7234 | e rise with him step by step uatil he % Eratitude there are those oo ! necones the greatest irgnmaster of tiils or Wwho are so ireonsiderals a8 iy age. DBdyS, déii't £ail to read it! hands of taose who feed ang Our near dpproseh to Dec, 20 makes it perfeetly natural to fix ouf {houghts on ‘the landing of those noble men and wom- an on Plymouth Rock three hundred years ago. While we womder at the singular sternness not so much of the Pilgrims 48 the Puritans who came later, we for- st that possibly they, were tiey ac- { quainted with our thought and action, would weep because we had gome So far in the opposite direction. That is; our departure trom things which they regard- ed as fundamental. But they had so mary stalwart virtues that make for the highest manhood and womafihood that we can overlook what seems to us undue Severlty. The most popular means of pre- seiting the Pligrim life and tiries is the | pageant. What a Whirligig has Cattainly thers such e | have preferred to have Bech mercies of tHosé With iterior but be that 2k it miy f. isw't] eve le Saffi fi96 doing EDITORIAL NOTES, s is the right timeé of year o let| those hints as to what you want for| condeffifiéd hié spectacular! To theif thinking the theatrical was' instigated by the devil. And yet in some of the chufchés which they thmeselves fotinded élaborate preparations are being made to Tepresent these early ‘times by pageantry. derstod that the consumef of coal a a square deal, But how Iéng#¥in such 4 feel 1 v Sl Ts rosrrok. uch & féelfig tustt The world certainly moves. B thong 9 GO I R gy e Out staie legislatures are not such e Brought against Fresident DFingen|Red Crosg ::gd h(r :}1‘1 (l::! ?nd‘ 1'}“7 s e Namoving SIS . ousht again lent Brindell| R o can get whether for relief| they are sometimes pictured, when some the bu trades council in New| work or the handling of local endeavors.|great humanitarian bill comes up for ac- fork, ant b n all pro Norwich must recognize its duty. lon. The director of the bureau of war ried thereunder, the investigation which " tisk insurance of the United States gov- WS disclosed such rotten conditions| When it is estimated that there will| ernment wrote to Governor Smith of New MEht 1ot 1o be permitted to end at thig| D¢ twelve million automobiles in the | York that theré were 845 ex-service men piat It has been shown that Brindell| COUNtrY next yeat there is furnfdhed in- l"a“m g mfl!):{m: "Wg‘tmirx‘\m e oaseseed such control that he sl | Creased reason for watchin R - o0 LB ghreC. for n ity o e R RO R Lo wtap, nine hosmitals and sanatoriams. Becauso panded and those who relled upon labor| FAmilles Shivering with cold cannot un-| 01,10 ST Sondtion the directar Vere completnly Nis mercy. There|d€rstand why such things ds milllon dol-| proper attention &nd that thesé soldiers Jas the alternative of meeting his de.| 12T coal mine fires should be permitted sands or being p b the extent that tho: ribites didn't dare rebel or hé trap in which they were hel Great credit is to be given to the state pminittes Which has brought to light| Snce his fight it Is useléss to listen to be Geplorable conditions. | Trat eommsi.| German pleas for leniency in the treaty e, howeve was terms. alized otherwise, even made to pay big disclose ppointed for the pur- bse of Investigating the housing situa- Would really suffer if provision were riot at once made for larger accommodation. The govérnor found that the statement was abolitely correct, so that on Sept. 19, 1920, he asked for an appropriation of $3,000,000.to build tie required hospital on Long Island. The bill passed both branches of the assembly that afternoon without a dissenting vote. Rapid dction can be thade when rccessary. when they canfiot afford to buy coal to burn b4 sent reported $25,000,000 have been to the former kaiser by Prussid Inasmuch 88 lie isn't going 8 stop in| . There {§ dotbtléss a good reason for ton. and mow that it finds it impossible| Mcxico it will mo. be necessify {8 agl| the existérice of evéry created thirig. %e } EiTe forther time 1o the conditions| Senntor Harding Whethés. Anblhés. dovt| &1 ineltied 1 dotit this fact becatite we bat have been brought to light, there ernment has excééded i=®ights in talk- cannot seb the reafon. Mueh annoy: hould be an eagerness on the part of | ing to im. e T 18 Biat, JU6 Ia Shled by Shb s be Néw York city administration to go| = d d other, things hard to uni » the bottom of fae matter, Not a part s It 8 A6 argument against the ex- bt the whole of the wretched situation hould be uncovered, and uncovered now fith the view to cleaning up the whole ful mess. The shooting down of three Negroes, by o Georgia mob indicates that that state must have feared it Was going to lose its place at tHe Head of tHE iist of Iynching states. istence of afiything because we do not undeflulldk,l‘!- As a matter of fact, the things we oW ‘very small compared {r b, Uik tbtal OF things oomoore. | tion, in time | made of some of their notions! How they | ‘“The exhibits which we had prépared and which we weré not permitted to sub- | mit_showed:— irst. There was no relation Between wages paid at the mines or labor cos'S and the prices charged consumefs for | fuel. Second. The anthracite industry is to- ddy dominated by seven different fall roads ,each of which controls the produc. transportation and sale to _1local dealers of a certain proportion of {he to tal anthracite consumed, a proportion which tends to remain constant. “Third. This domination has resulted from a consistent cffort to render Seeure I for all time an adequate pronortion of a- thracite traffic to these railroads. Th only surcty for this lay in buying up the majority of anthracite lands, reserves and operations, or securing permanent eon- trol of the output of independent opera- tions. “Fourth Before the end of the 18th centnry fhe rai'road companies, either on- erating companies. had come ship of over 90 per cent. of the unmined coal. If we add the amount controlled by mtract the percentaze of unmined eoal frea from control of the railroad com- panies. amount to less than 4 per cent. “Fifth. The mafority of the anthra- eits ronds came to be representcd fn the mining of anthracite by saparately ingor- ported coal companles cither created by oads or acouired by stock fur- ntil the period of reorshrl on the entire stock of these eodl com- s was held by the separaté rall- into the owner- xth. The ralroads estaBlished gnch high rates for the transpartation f anthracite that it becams impossible or & enal commany to onerate at 2 profit The coal companies were then supported ectly or through their their coal { i ‘:m\'{“ at 16W rates E? a Jhe eccordingtién _of the fes which muigr each nitiragite Systéms is con- Bl sty B it poliey from 4 | 4‘3?3 _railroad coal | ictically without exception to make a proft. have appeal- 6r In the dividends, re- ifteresy of the seven s—reecitly : %5 In div- salés compaties by the stockhélders ‘Bl 1‘» ¢ higtery of thé the larg- &8t compantés anthracite industry méthods which savy over-caltaliza- & basis for high ot exces- 63 with the con- losges - has fur- | apparent justifieation for hisi 21 ;aioi' ages. &nu xmm:m;d » & losses of the Mmmlu g'fh. cost of trans- o & ooat ortation, thus justifying high prices to the esngumer. this connection it -:ha\fifl be pob out that the enormous {infiation of eapltal and bond# through H i he assumption of coal company losses y the railroads and through payment of inflated prices for coal lands has re- sulted in enormous fived charges, which enter into the cost of anthracite (rans- portation because interest on bonds is treated a8 cost and not at a profit. “Tenth. The resu'ting high rates have {enabled the anthracite raliroads to pay |dividends far above those of the other railroads far above thoss of the other railroads in the country. “Eleventh. The process just described from which these hich profits have result- Ied in such that it is well concealed from ithe public and difficult to reach; for; ihess Mmethods have enabled the anthra-| !cite corporations to show margins be- tween the cost of producing anthracit and the price at which it is sold at the ine, between the cost of tramsportin: nthracite and the rate charged by the | nilroad and between the total cost of the | nthracite before it is delivered to the idealer and the price at which it is de- fivered {d him, which to all outward ap- Deararices no more than average. “Twelfth. The anthracite industry made up Of these sewan distinct rylway iystem8 {8 closely kn'tted into a single reat, monopoly by interstock owrershin, {by jnterlockine directorates, by informal {conferences, 81 in generai by the M- { grossing_control of a New York banking group. This group dominates companies {shipping over 75 per cent. of the total {anthracite tonnage. ““Thirteenth. As a result of the com- ination which %3 heen achieved, we {must losk for aathracite profits, not in | the coffers of the coal companies but in (a) -the profits of anthracite railroads: 1 () the profits of sales companies: (c) |the profits of those who control the ‘hank- !ing combination which has engineered the |anthragits comhination. { _“T®s ghove facts, althoiigh excluded by {the chairman and the operators’ repre- {gentative on the anthracite wage commis- ision,” Mr Lauck said, “we have so far {heen unchallenged. 1t s the miné { workers' earnest desire and it should he the earnest desire of ever consumer of {anthracite that thess facts be investizat- ted 2nd made known.. Certainly the op- eratard can have no ohiection o A com- plete investigation of the Industry which 18 now under a cloud of suspicion.” i By JONATHAN BRA XLVIL ARIZONA Histatigally,| Arizona {s both *the youngest and probab! the oldest of our statés. While it ie the last of the mitted to_ the Tnion ahd as such dates its existence _only from 1912, its history before the advent of white men dates batk in- to the dim past. Hhre were located those interesting people the CIff Dwellers, and the ruins of their citics high up in indc- cessible places have caused much gpec- ylation as to these dnclent people. It is cupposed that thess CIiff DiwellerS were the ancestors of the Pueblo-Indians and were decidedly more advanced in clvil- lization tah ntheir neieibors. They were probably of the same race as the Astées of Mexico and understood irrigation, agri- culture &nd tne bullding arts. It was rumored of the great Puéblos that instigated the first visit of the white men. Padre Nizan in 1539 explored this territory and he was followed by Coron- ado in search of the mythical wealth of the Indian cities. Cofonads, though fail- ing to find the reputed gold did discover HE STORY of Qur STATES | tates to be ad-| CE—Oonvrighted 1920 the Grand Canyon of the Colarado Wwith COMPLETE CURE *OF INDIGESTION = E v | 01d Chatham, Columbid Co., N. Y. _“I was bothered with Constipation, Liver Trouble and Indigestion for three years ; and tried all kinds of medicine With no relief. 1 was so bad I would have & dull, heavy feeling in the pit of my stomach ; generally about three or four hours after eating. 1 saw advertised in the “Troy Times™ *Fruit-a-tives’ and sent fo R. W. Seymour’s drug store in Chatham and bought two 50c. boxes. Before I had finished one box, I was relieved and now have no more trowble. I can eat anything I desire. 1 would advise anyone in the same condition as I was, to take ‘Fruit a-tives’; itisa God-send, and I would not be, without ‘Fruit-a-tives’ in the bouse”. VR ‘WILLIAM GALE SHEPHERD. B0c. & box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢, 1| need it, at just half ths priee fifl:‘i"&{é{é’;‘sfi% T'Q'T{.vm goed colors to choose fromi. note merely the Republic of, Hayti which occupies the western third “of its area. The possibilities of confu- | sion are increased by the fact that the island is also known as Santo Domih- go and San Domingo, namés applied likewise to ‘the Dominican Republic, which occupies the eastern two-thirds of the land unit. “The name Haiti is' much used be- | cause it was the descriptive term, meaning ‘high land,’ given to the isl- and by its aborigines. This was the ! favorite island of the West Indies to Columbus, who reserved for it the most complimentary name bestowed on the lands_which he discovered— ! Hispaniola, ‘little Spain’ Something of the impression waich this beautitul and promising island made on the | great discoverer can be gleaned from | his reference to it as a ‘Gerden of FIFTY MORE OF THOSE BOYS’ COATS $4.98 We succeeded in buying fifty more of those warm Winter Coats for Boys from 215 to 10 Coats Actually Worth $10.00 A most fortunaté purchass gives you this chance to get ths boy a Winter Coat, just at the time he will begin to YOURS FOR LESS THAN IT COST TO MANUFACTURE SPECIAL $4.98 you expacted to pay. Four Eden’ and from the fact that he : i3 named the peint at which he first set e T A foot on Haiti, Decémber 6, 1492, ‘The | tEir et Gf bifice. Voo OF Paradiser [ Eive were assussimaied @i inost of History_has beerl prodigal to the ! o0 island of Hayti and has crowded one | interesting and tragic event aiter, an- other inco the relatively short spih of years since the eyes of white men first | first, ‘Emporor’ have compieted even from the co: ry. After 4 par- ticularly bloody incident In 1515 President Guilaume Sam wis taken from the Freuch embassy and drawn . erer in -the streets th behold its towering peaks. On its an infuriated. rmeddeth it R tes occupied the fsland. A T S treaty was enteéred into’ imilar to dhe Colutibusi st £ the with the Dominican Rep ; but g0- wrecked on Christmas evi from its broken, set up by the crew the fi ing further in that it provides for an = -3 8 2 e 2 Ed H ] matters pe erected by Burppeans in mition, and thé appoi Hemisphere. This was rican sanitary e of Navidad in which the men methods for clea Santa Maria were the ropublic. T bus was on his re d by globe-trotte to report his epoch-making discovery greater afiront to h rostrils of ‘the Indies.’ any other communities in exist- er to the east on the northern i wonderful scenic beauty, which has| become one of the great assets of the state. | _ This reglon was considered padt of Spanish territory and when Mexico de- a Mex After the Mexican war | the scction #orth of the Gila river was ceded to the Uhited States and the soutn- ern portion s acquired through the | Gadsden Purchasé fn 1853. In 1863 Ari-| | #ona vias sepaated from New Mexico and | {tade 4 territory. Indian uprisings and the great xtent of desert land tended |toward Eettlement. With the suppres- {sion of the Irdian and the development bf irrigation, the state has made st Eains in populztion. The Roosev: 8am, thé sécond largest i nthe world, was apened In 1911 and irrigates 270,00 Is uneertain, but it possibly came from ihe Apache staté. Its grea Is 113,956 squere miles fanking it fifth state in Arizona has three presidential The derivation of thé name Arizona is uncertain, but it possibly éame from the Spanish feaning “dry Bell” The staate 18 sbfitetimes called the Apachie state. Its area {5 113,956 square miles, ranking it fifth in size. Arizona has three presi- 8ential eltcors. Sunday Morning Talk Fillness of and Boldsess in the Spifit. The relation between the fullness 6f the! Holy Spirit,and boldness in servise is very ‘Intimate. There can be no true Christian courage ‘ofily as the Spirit sus- tains and implies. This statment as ample ilustration and confirmation In the lives of the apstles. There i oné conspicuous instance réc- orded in the acts when Peter and John returned to their own company from the DPrésence of the rulers and they gaged in prayer, entreating the Lord to behold the threating of their enemies, and that With all boldness they might speak the more, to stretch forth His hand to heal,'and that signs and wonders might be done in the name of Christ. And it 18 said that when they prayéd the place was shaken where they wefe dssembled together and they were ail fill- ed with the Holy Ghost, and they spake the Word of God with boldness. In every age Boldness, such as is bofn of the Spirit of God, is the first requisite of God's witnesses; and it has beeh tHe conSpleuous characteristic of all_ thels who, like Elijah and John the Baptist, have been the religious reformers of s0- eletly or spacial messéngers of God's power to His people. We do not appré e the fact that, since the fail of tfith and piety have never coi the vote of the majority. b‘fi‘ Lord in that matchless serméfi & the Mount, teaches us that broadness and mullitude always go together, and naf- fowness and fewness: “Wide is the gaf and broad is the way that leadeth §truttign, and many there be which gb in thréat; because straight is the te and rarrow is the way which leadeth tri- to life, and few there be that find it.” all en-y The fact that the mayor of the city 88 been brought into it shouldn’'t mean ML pedaliing. Even though the mayor Vkes the position that he was decaived | promised ‘shall not go Jat s all the more reasoh why he| terial aid uhmfinm tould be anxious to clear up all thelis being cont increased pay or agreel Vihefever labor is waiving demands for AT T At theéré i & reafon for the things that are is seen In the tenacity with i yrios; Ehms HuealljOfhicy l which they cling to life. For instance, Made a Difference seo the leaves after oy 1 i Afl ardént supporier of ong of . thi ERIEATRAE e T £ oct the game. for the most part, in preserving life. "Rgbbfl', robber,” he yelled at one of lose decigions. “Why that ruiing was in favor of us,” his companion whispered. “Oh," he said, “I thought 4gainst us.” it was Their Cholcé The chifdren wére going to have & stepfather. Mother had just made the dnnouricement and was waiting to heaf theif opinions of her cholce. Nine year old Ruth's came fiy. “Blt mot\r, he kdsn't any hair,” she rrotested. MNother smiled She had been afraid {they would offer worse ones thap this, | “Pit yoUr %n ddddy didn't have much, she gmiled. For 2 minute Ruthi was sflenced, but ehe was thinking. I kfiow mother, she ldrriit!n?, “but you were young when you chee him. i &:ow ::nv: more and it e it b doed eogin ought to be a better IN THE DAY’S NEWS F Hiyti. . - “Plcturé ah isidhd mere wonderful, morb_beautiful_and more richly en- dowed by maturé ever the fapled isles that medieval mariners loved to dregin about; 4 ooufitry of pleasant peakts, charming vales and fertile plains; an idyllic land set in a sum- mer_sea, “Plcture then a land where the “T e 8t w&ufi, rithlessly explo ng, ted prothiges of progress; where thé passioris o{ then have Fiot] wheré tyrafit Aftér tyfant, som Sl Loiie petty, Avs watbaTH pow fro dus th,” says the National Géo&‘- hic Society, in a bulletin issued from ‘which the gods of ts Washington, D. C. headquarters, “are p:cmrqg,-; rmfi. the relations bet ten which country and the Unit- ed_States are now tndef discussion. 3 LV tai ull | h Arizona | through pools of blood; & land ! siring foreibly to gain coritrol. pehce and in- seem to have furfied away.” coast of the island, Columbus bui ‘he entire island of Hayti, with its j his_re first whit _has af ay jin_the squore miles—e town of Ireland or the T | made hi a. THhe republic of rea a trifie grester with him to h: sachuset d has a | fleet bearing a larg population of about 2,000,00 {and adventurers. 2 natives the condque 3 : . | the south coast and there iald the W the Slest SNt foundations Ot the clty of Santo Do-| A edict from Moscow had closed Rus. mingo—first permanent city est “lsta to tourist Howbver, very féw of ed by Europeans in America, and fore. | us have been intending to shénd the win- | runner of tne countiess cities arid ter there—Cleveland Plain Dealer. lages that are the seats t industry, commerce and cul three Amerie: “It wa a wonderful | seemed to of his fellow Voys session of the tilles. Those of vision among th saw it in the future, no doubt, as a mighty island treature house, yielding up its riches of mine and forest and Brazil’s First Commercial Attache To The U. 8. future that beiore Columbus und field; harboring a _great and prosper- ous 'population. bLut the avarice of man stepped in and blotted out the prowising picture. .The Spanish ad- venturers, unwilling to work, enslaved the nativeé Indians and drove them sp crueily that they died off by thousands, When death threatened to rob them of their laborers, the explofters im- ported large numbers of African slaves who were better able to bear up under the heavy tasks and who multiplied rapidly. Soon the natives were ex- terminated and the negro slaves and frep mulattoes far outnumbered the white land owners. “A brief goiden age insofar as the exploiters were concerped; the arous: ing of envy on the part of English and French buccaneers; wars which di- vided the sovereignty between Spain and France and finally left the latter in complete control—these were chap- ters that followed oné another rapid- 1y in the history of Haytl. By the | time of the birth of the United States the blacks and mulattoes in the west- ern part of the island, that part first dominated by, France and now the Rq public of Hayti, outfiumbered the whites four {o one. 4 “The seeds of oppression bore fruit under stimulation of the Frefich Revo- lution, and in 1781 tHe sldves rose, etk i & Seonds oflacolined Bol 4o revolting cruelties ofi both sides. nally in 1804 independence was obtdjn- ed, slavery was abolished, and the negro republic of Hayti was born. country passed through the stag a negro ‘empire’ and ‘kingdom’ before a republic’ became the accepted fgrm Mr. Sebastiio Sathpato, BrAHI'E first commiercial sttache to the Unit- t ¢d Statés. Mr. Sainpaio s one of the Okttt g;gflf'ihgng me| atest additions fo South Ameriea's part of the Isiind, bt 1 1844 the Jat: | Qiplomatie representatives in Wash- ter separated from the pegro republie| Ington. fae established the Dotfilnican Repib- e “The hiStory of the Republic Haytl, as well as 3 zl(lngdom,‘ Has been 4 f lons, assassinations of rulers, and eneral strife betiweeh factions in con- ol of the governmetit and hb’{:fie_ he twenty-eight rulers of Hayti since its of the ‘empire’ &nd ?rle! of revolu- STORAGE IFIT I8 rs were driven from office 4nd | gy year than did the -4 W801. The bed I gearcely worked 5 ¥ |1 chinmetce -as Faph From the Contular Reporls Sugar beéts grown in Uermany eon- tith & much higher pércentage of sugar previous crop. Tiris is dub to & more liberal use of fer- titzers. Bolivia ham a great bed of peat ot wihich the fuel value is greater than hard- Géritiany is offering gods for sale in Breiani at about half the price of Eng- 1i8h made afticles. Belgtur is once more préducng gleves for - exvort In important guantiiies. All he articles entéring ito their yroduction Have incresked in cost. Before the war the érg yols chme 4n Eisks fron Tuussis afid Chiffd. NGw thay come from Italy. Harbin, Manchuris, has fafled to grow v a8 had been ex- pécled, owing to bid chmmunicalions with the interior of Stberia. Tiirke Qeposith of ofe and lmestone in and aré attracting attention. Médésts 8t Coal Baroks. écepting the Umiverse” is the title of John Burrotighe' latest book. Preb- ably it _doed not réfer to the coal bar- on ey dof't want the whole umi Verab. y dre satisfied with the earth—Hamiilton Hearald. Fii Wab and Idealism. A soldier at Dubuque has returned $25 he won on the fixed bascball games fast year. nd yet some peopie claim that TAKE A WISE PRECAUTION _ AND LET USs TEST YOUR IT WILL BE RUINED IF IT FREEZES FULLY CHARGED, IT WILL NOT FREEZE The Ngmioh ‘ Es;&mtco. war troyed idealism !—Charleston ews and Courier. THOROUGH WORK 1t yéu sufter from backache— From urinary disorders— Any curable disease of the kidmeys “Use a tested kidhey remedy. Doan's Kidney Pills have been tested by thousands. Norwich phople testify. Can you a#k moré coavincing proot of merit? Mrs. Jennie L. Spaulding, 21 Tanser Avénué, Norwich, says: “Exertion of any kind Seemed to make my baek tired dnd achy. Diszy spells and head- aches were trequent. 1 used two bozes of Doan's Kidney Pills, which I got at Utley & Johés' Dfug Store, and was citred.. | hiven't feit any need of kid- ney medicine since.” Price 605 st all @ealers. Deam't #lifiply dsk for & kidney remedy—get Doan's Kidney Pills — the same that Mri. Bpatlding had. Foster-Mlibira Co., Migra, Buftalo, N, Y. BATTERY

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