Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 25, 1920, Page 4

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NORWICH BULLETIN, THU Forwich ulletin und ‘-fizf 124 YEARS OLD Suteeripien price 2 a week: Bbc & month; $6.90 OF TME ASSOCIATED PRESS, wcisid Pram 3 exchusely stitied - of all pews despaich- s % er mat othewim crediied o sec 454 alse e local hews publisbed o reutiicstion of weclal des- | ! 5 are aho reerved. CIRCULATION EEK ENDING NOV. 20th, 1920 11,074 THANKSGIVING, as arsuits of s eall thought t tefal giving the im-{ acknowledgment should serve to mpre: respect have mit recognize ald not be t ] rries been | asting s allowed ¢ thanks. THE 30 TNISHING | of the country do not warrant it. omm . " 1t go! The can g ose who ef all members| are & ranee of t . e & o e expense | as angendorsement of the re mber: second, but in appro- eing carried eampaign blicavs forward their g up of the a fin n with - $he AT BETTER PROTECTION. 2 rate from motor ve- e of New York has large extent to the man: « 2ave ooccarred in the zardless of the appalling eich month the Bmpire le in the way of can- ses of the auto drivers n sach cases, or thos ving. with the idea of cre- respect on the part of fhe for the laws of the highway, tions and the rights of oth- step which appears to be a re- t demand for better condi- the recent order for a enforcement of the auto police of New York eity. ve they been airected to ses e laws are respected but they are mired 1o inspest the automoblles and cards to the cars indicating that AT waring them have been carefully 4 over and are without defects - » would make it impcesible fer the siver to comply With the laws. This system of supervision appears to be a move in the directlon of greater safety. »0d it can be agpreciated ~ that b ia When they- are found mot to be they are crdered to the first garage for repairs. Just what the effect of this innova- ‘tion will be rewnins to be seen. There will naturaily be raised the question to how mueh the police of New York o auy other city know about an auto- Jmobile as to whether it is in condition for the driver to control it. It apparent- 1y means a new branch of police service with sufficient qualified auto experts as ralicemer. to take care of the not small Job of inspection. But whatever the re- ®ult there appears to be a recognition| of the need for a greater amount of pro- tection for those who use or cross the Streets. It there is an enforcement of the automobile laws in ‘all respects in keeping Wwith What appears to ‘be the plag concerning inspection New York should experience a decided reduction in. veedless deaths. FLOOD TIDE OF IMMIGRANTS. From the statements which have been made by Immigration Commissioner Wallis at Ellis island it cannot be over- looked that there is still need of giving 2 Jarge amount of attention to the immi- tion question. Not only is the immi- gration station flooded with business but from reports it is evident that there are great numbers who are simply waiting for the opportunity to start for this country. This large number of aliens is coming a time when the industrial conditions The rush that was connected with the war.is over and in the readjustment that is taking place there are more seeking Work. than there ate jobs to be had. It is not expected that this condition will continue for long, but it doesn’t appear just at the present t that the country will be able to provide work for and assimi- e the great horde that is Waiting on other shores for a chance to get to this country raises the question as to how great a restriction should be placed upon migration and what the restriction ouid be. There is much to be said in of the idea of turning back those cannot expeet to be admitted before leave for this country. It is well own that make the trip to this| and are denied admission who should have been informed of that out-| come when they undertook to embark. Likewise there must be efforts in need of safeguarding country to see that barred. . Whatever be doing in behalf at home they going to restrain garded as undesirable! iz responsibility rests up- ration stations of this coun- aws under Which they work many keeping Wwith other countrie mmigration question is one that before the country for a con- period of time ipation that is now threatened, conditions here plainly sale immigration Beither needed nor desired - SUGAR PRODUCTION. we months ago sugar refineries! were going at full blast material was receiv- time that the peoplef Souhire o raw at tha sorts of fancy prices for r and they were being| ed in the amount they could buy. | Now the situation appears to have| mpletely changed so far as the prics s concerned but as ¢ e price drops there| uction. The expl: ratio tie refiners is that the| Lutdow temporary and that it fa fact that demand t fallen off. In other| heaver the people are| the people are| 5 less than they wch higher figure. when the regn.| stock of sugar om to make prompt are prepared Erages. comes Likewise it a a time when dropping are large qugntities on and last wife of looking ively. i ception will be vented fad put_all why it have to “Can' asked ti head in wi “So I goose!” when I “T hadn’t noticed that you were,” eaid the husband with the tall fore- head, in some alarm, cried a trifie snappishly. think that you could see I'm not a par- ticle larger than I was five years ago, but everybody gets fat and homely un- less they get scrawny and homely, and why should I be any ex- main fair, young and beautiful till they are buried, at 90, but nobedy has in- hopes of being the first to start the When you weigh too much no- body loves you “I shall always loyve you,” said her husband, promptly. wife perversely. ticing how wonderfully "attractive all the 20 year olds are and meditating on get wrinkles and double “There!” cried the pretty little wife tragically, “I knew you'd feel that way—and there isn't anything to de! And you'll blame me just as you are doing now—" was just trying to help vou,” pro- tested her massage your face and—" “Are wrinkles showing already?” demanded the pretty little wife tragic- ally. “Oh, my goodness! I never dreamed of such a thing! A minute ago there wasn't the sign of a double chin to be seen and now I expect a {riple one has developed. Look quick and see if there is a gray hair any- re—" 3ut,” said her bewildered husband, “if none of these tragedies have hap- pened to you what is the occasion of worrying about them now?” at,” he protested, FALUNG INTO LNE ' . “How I hate to get fat and homely,” plaintively murmured the pretty little the man with the tall forehead, into her long mirror vindict- not!” the pretty little wife “1 should thin and ? I suppose some time there women on earthiwho will re- that kind vet, and I have no “No matter if you the scales out of commission!” you won't,” said the pretty little “You'll just begin no- is that wives pall so. And I'll chins and wear false hair.” t you do something about it?" he husband with the tall fores alarfh. “It sounds pretty bad.” husband. “Why don't you can do something about them, she told him patientl: “a_minute ago suggested doing something you got mad at me and I must say I don't Understand you at all, Albertal” “Hushands never do undersiand theit wives,” ghe informed him with a pro- nounced sigh. “No matter how thor< cughly they understand and sympa- thize with a girl when engaged (g her, inmediately, once tney bave been Duarried her, their minds become a pex- fict blank when reasoning powers ar required. Why, if you betrayed the siightest symploms of comprebending me, Phillpot, 1 should know tnat some- thing perfectly dreadful was going to happen. Unpatural things always are a prediction of calamity. There is pothing more heartrending than gray bairs and wrinkles and fat, and yet ¥you remain perfeetly calm.” “Why,” cried the husband with the igh forehead, “but you haven't any of ta0se things—" “Yes, but the time is coming When T shall have,” the pretty little wife in- sisted. ““The only solution that I can see is to dye my hair and starve my- self, or have you eloping With some- body else.” “There isn't a bit of need of going to all that trouble for me,” insisted the husband with the tall forehead. “Just you go ahead and forget all about it—" “If you really cared about me, you wouldn't be so joyous and carefree about it!" cried the pretty little wife resentfully, “Youwd want me to take trouble and make myself pretty and—" “You couldn’t make yourself prettier. than you are, Alberta,” he told her with a burst of inspiration. “It would be an impossibility! I can't imagine what you are fussing and worrying about—a woman like you who doesn’t look a day over twenty herself. The idea of wrinkles and fat in your ecase is utterly absurd, and it will be years and years before there is a hint of any such thing. In fact I am sure you are one of the occasional women who ap- parently never grow old! You are prettier than when I married you, and I don't care who knows it!" “Phillpot!” cried the good looking little wife, rapturously, “you darling! I know you don't mean a word of it, and of course it's impossible and I'm sure 1 look heaps older than I did— but do vou really think s0?” “Of course I do!” insisted the clever husband with the tall forehead. ‘I know what's what!"—Exchange. opD T in the quarter h umber One « low fev occurred in known since it he to his In 15, the city and nes banks a moving disease n first tim great ha ho f aiting to be disposed of. | th rice Phgar that the people couraged in large buying under| at there was danger of a| no | with prices dow ndicated and the pos-| rtage not being faced| governing their purchases by intention of getting of the cuts as they ocerr. t, however, there should bo less a normal demand for sagar is diffi-| to understand. In the readjustients of business are feeling| refineries may be justified but the stopping of pro- sction cannot fall to impress many a ort 1o prevent prices from going| R R | which to be really and truly| none t thankful Tha man on the corner says: This the turkey beomes one of the family s still an opportunit atting in to do some beh&lf of less flies burning cu disappeared but it e curtailment. ) hasn't en-f as undergone a » price of sugar contn candy makers are high priced suga for the return of Constan- courge be cheering to his Bill Hohenzollern, to drop working & outlook stine must of brother-in-law, When New York truckmen vote not to strike it looks as if they were governed by conditions instead of ums British ale wifi Hind legs, but to have it acecepted it ought to bear the stamp of “Made in Winsted." Mexico nmeeds United States cotton, says a Mexican despatch, and it might have been added that it alsp needs United States friendship. i It may be harder to make New York| bone dry than some other places but the bigger the job, the higger the accom- plishment if they succed. The only fortunate thing about the collapse of the steel frame of an Indian- apolis school buflding is that it happen- ed before the building was filled with children. Probably Mr. Cox will notice that even after the election is over the -republi- cans are met trying, to complete that $15,000,000 campaign fupd—or was it $39,000,0007 Chicagn's pelice got a wet blanket power. it was a case un-| the malady-in New Orleans and St. Louls. Middle The such a t in 1849 to and hea in and frightful blast the land with death on| | every side. carrying terror to every home | ping tens of thousands| York thi i | eth at noond | Again in 1853 terror and panic. sei: the land from another visit of th | low fever, or plague. It spent i £ force upon that oft doomed eit: leans, where in the short kpace of three months 10 per cent. of the whole popula- fon fell victims. Concerning the origin or producing causes of these epidemics authorities have | differed so widely that little of a con- clusive character on these points is clear {and the epidemic rents asunder, over its self-pres Such dismay, people’s Carey t of the i to walk gars any Wi peelally = (o] will throat tested when judges proceeded to dischargo many of those arrested in the recent rotind-up and let others off with a light that khmlfim There isn't much ‘encouragement _Auch v enforpgmest | | e e ——————— GREAT EPIDEMICS IN AMEIRCA marked improvement in and il the prompt checking of any epidemic Ipox and similar contagious diseases. rom the map. ships from the West Indies. Following this was the = malignant spotted fever, in which the patient had large red spots here and there. It broke Massachusetts in 1806 and cor- tinued until 1815 in the various north- erns states. It usually attacked persons of the most hardy and robust constitu- | ons, and often dead before a physician could be brought assistance ed in New 1822 appearance numbered North, and in the Southern States it made grave about the middle om December, 1848 continued estimated to that remained The same epidemic finally reached New | was its spread that during the week ending - July 21 more than seven hun- dred deaths occurred. The 3rd day of August, 1549, was appointed by the Pres- ident, of the United States as a day o g and praver that Gould would the pestilence that walketh in the darkness and t modes of In no hibited more wives from their husbands. All the ties of affection and consanguinity were rent means make it convenient fled the Of those who remained many shut them- selves up | Terybosy werft about wmoking M- considered as a preventative of the diseases, freely and some kept it and shogs. places of public resort were closed, and those persons who ventured abroad had handkerchiefs . of sponges m- pregnated with vinegar or camphor to their noees. Citles | other than Phffadelphia which were es- appalling terror. (Tomorrow—Fate of the First American INCIDENTS HISTORY IN AMERICAN §| Govern- local sanitation has ~resyted United States during the of a century, but in the of our country there of great ravages past early were a of cholera: of the first of these was the yel- ‘er or gue” of 1763, which Philadelphia in that year. hed h a degree of malignity | threatened to wipe the ¢i en- 1t was popularly as the “Barbadoes distemper,” med to come up the river in proved fatal in Not uncommon a few the patient was 22 the vellow fever again 4ppear- York with great virulence. south of the park being fenced off iy deserted, families, merehants. nd even the ecity government re- to a distance. But in 1533-5 the was far more virulent. the Asiatic cholera made e in the United States for the e. coming by way of Canada. It/ thousands of jms in the oc amongst the slave population. ready and easy subjects of its Fatal bevond all precedent was States never before knew errible visitation. this awful seourge appeared § In New Orleans it broke through were lts devai > dec the winter. So tations that it i€ ated the in hab- in some wards of = e following May, and so violent destruction that wast- same may be said respecting®ie treatment other place, perhaps, were the ions and effects of the deadly of 1793 upon human conduct px-’ rikingly than in Philadel- of the contagion drove from their children, and even i and humanity was left to mdurn own selfishness in the ardor ‘of ervation. was the degree of consternation and affraight which possessed minds that, according to Mr. he histordan of that period, most nhabitants who could by any city. #heir houses, tha street. being afrald d_tobacco, even women, which while others chewed garlic is their pocket Churches, 1ibfiries and otrer affected, experfenced the same | enarity Born Child) A man usually pute his best foot forward, but not so with a mule. IdFolks’ Coughs by more than Sfty years of e Stories That Recall Others I Her Gift. A young woman was interested work and in one family where she visi hair was W the ‘same shade as her own. itor's Kindness, the child called age, saying it ber, and was = fittle present for then ran away. thing she had in abundance. Heirlooms. Family heirloor and embarrassment reditary failings. up to and they have than any other to be venerated. They are always displayed proudly to no in whieh the appreciative spectator who family heirloom of his own, case the proud possessor of the antigue fairly overwhelms y5u with his family history K ow has Miss A was a perfectly nice girl in all respects but one; she had a family heirloom, a gold bracelet studded Wwith pearls. It was very beautiful—for an heirloom—and evéry "chanee visitor| had a glimpse of it. Then followed jts history and the history of all the fa-|accession of Queen Wilhelmia in 1530 mous people who had owned it. The|when the egistence of the Salic Law— visitor usually departed with. the im-|that anti-deminist outburst of the old pression that an Indian prince would be| warrior Franks—brought the Grand Duke proud to have it. It was a long time before Miss A— could muster up courage enough to take it to a jeweler to have a valuation placed upon it, but one day she took herself sternly in hand and went to the jewel- ers. the next day. As Juck would have it Wwhen she Was on her way to the Jewel- er's shop the next day she met an ac- quaintance 'Who had - no ancestors to speak of, and who was properly im- pressed every time she saw the bracelet. It was the golden opportunity. The meeting was_rapturous. “My dear,” gushed Miss A- “I'm glad to see you! You must have lunch with me! I insist on it! If you will only 2o with me first while I get my brace- et. You remember that valuable heirloom I have? eler's to see what really is. o ts of course but one is eu know. I think you guard things more carefully, too, if you realize how much money they are worth, * s B take only a m'gute to get it. am after Miss A 's bracelet,” she ex- plained to the clerk at the jewelers. “And what is its value?” she asked gra~ ciously. very the intrinsic value ous, you “Eight dollars.” IN THE DAY’S NEWS Luxemburs, latest and smallestyof the countries of the world to send a diplo- maic representative to the United States has a ruler with a better popular to her throne than per! a reigning monarch. Though it is relative- insignificant in area, it has a history reaching farther into the past than many of the great nations among whom it now takes its place. These and other facts about the little grand duchy with which the United States is now more closely linked are re- counted in the following bulletin issued by the National Georgraphic Society from its Washington, D. C., headquarters. “Tiny Luxemburg, which is smaller even than Rhode Island, has its national roots far back in the history of Europe, if jndeed it may he said to have bem rooted at all; for it has been buffeted about like a shuttle-cook by the coun- tries that hem it in, and at one time or another during the past thousand years has been under the coptrol of nearly every one of the principal nations of the western part of the continent. ‘It started as a_petty principality in the Holy Roman Empire,"and though it has since lost territory it has gainea prestige, being raised first to a duchy and finally to a grand duchy. It emerged with the latter title from the witches' cauldron of the Congress of Vienna in 1315 largely-to mollify the king of the Netherlands, to whom it was assigned for the loss of other territory. “While a part of the Holy Empire, Luxgmburg furnished an emperor from the German throne. Count Henry IV of Luxemburg was elected to that high po- sition in 1308 as Henry VIL Luxemburg later came under the control of Bur- gundy and then fell successfully to Spatn, Austria and the first French republic. It remained under_the sovereignty of the king of the Netherlands from 1815 to the THATUNEASY FEELING fon, that dragged ’s bilious- other ness. Why be out of sorts with your-| self and everybody else when one dose of Schenck’s Mandrake Pills will do wenders for you? . Eighty years reputation for bil- iousness, constipation and bilious headache, etc. 25c per box—unceated or sugar - coated ._H. Schenck & Son, Phila. in ted there was a little girl whose ing o show her appreciation for the at her house one day and gave her & pack- n On_opening it qut’ fell the child’s lovely braid—the only s cause more trouble he- They have to be lived She was to return for the heirloom | I left it at the jew-| It's the senfiment that really| ~ SHATTERED Eruita-tves”, O Frult Liver Tablets Gave Refief - 885 Gravwy Sr., Bogpaio, N, ¥, “T bave heen Paralyzed onm the whole right side since April 80th. .1 referred the case to a physician who wrote me, advising the uss of 1 would not be without ‘Frait-a- tives’ for arything ; Do more strong cathartics or salts ; Do more bowel L trouble for me. 1 recommend ‘Fruita-tives’ to ell. T {feel more like 40 tian 62, which I have just passed”, WM. H. OSTRANDER. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢. At dealers or from PRUIT-A-TIVES Limited. OGDENSBURG. N. Y- —_— Vice-President 'B:othedmod Of Railroad Trainmen William N. Doak, Viee-President of the Brotherbood of Railread Trainmen, who has taken a leading part in the settlement of the so- called outlaw strikes of railroad workers which have been staged in various railroad centers during the past six months. of Nassau to the throne. “Even while the king of the Nather- lands was sovereign of Luxemburg it was a member of the German Confereda- tion, with the city of Luxembereg garris- oned by Prussian soldiers. Retentlon of this garrison in the city after the divi sion of” old Luxemburg between Holland and Belgium in 1831, and especlally aft- er the dissolution of the German Con- | federation in 1866, almost caused the Franco-Prussian War to start three years ahead of time. The matter was com- promised by an agreement for the with- drawal of the ‘German troops and the demolishment of the fortifications of the city of Luxemburg—so strong that the fortress was known as ‘the Gibraltar of | the North’ In addition the grand duchy was set up as an independent state witn its neutrality zuaranteed like that of Belgium, by the powers. This guaran- | tee Wwas one of the ‘scraps of paper’ of ] 1914, : . “During the world war Luxemburg was practically a prisoner to Germany, hut because the inhabitants did not resist, the | Germans treated them With a acrtain de- gree of consideration, and several thous- and Luxemburgians served with the tri- color. This _popular svinpathy for France and the bplief that the reign- nz Girand Duchess, Marje Adelaide, had pro-German dealings made her unpopu- |iar. After the armistice 'sought about the retirement of the Germans, a blood- less revolution broke out, and Luxemburg added another to -its long list of sev- ereignties by being a republic for a few brief hours. Conservative elements man- aged fo rescue-the situation by bringing about the abdication of the grand duch- ess in favor of her sister Charlotte, the present ruler, and by liberalizing the constitution. Marie Adelaide has entered a convent and become a Carmelite nun “Grand Duchess Charlotte probably h:é a more popular title to her throme th any other roval ruler. Suffrage in Lukc emburg was made universal in the sum- mer of 1919 and in September a plebis- cite was taken on whether the reigning ruler should be retained, whether anoth- er grand duchess should be chosen, or whether a republic should be established. The vote resulted in an overwhelming ma. jority in faver of the Grand Duchess Charlotte and it is believed that the vot- s of the women Were largely responsible for the result. “Luxemburg would have been sold en one occagion to Navoleon IIT had nat the gruff Bismark interferred. Even the area of the duchy seems to have been ‘matk down’ to catch the eve of some puf- chaser with a penchant for odd figures, for its area is 999 square miise. It is about the size of Rhode Islany with the District of Columbia's area substracted. A part of old Luxemburz sogewhat larger than the present duchy Was given to Belgium when that country was created in 1831, and is now the Belgian province DONT DESPAIR your convenience. great special offer. The Plaut-Cadden Co. ESTABLISHED 1872 135-143 MAIN STREET Easy Payments 10 Days’ Free Trial 7 Try it yourself! Just gee what a Tor- rington Electric Vacuum Cleaner can do. We deliver to your door a bright, new “Torrington —on ten days’ free trial, Should you decide to buy it after the ten days’ free trial, you can make arrangements for it by our easy-payment plan. Think what that means—to opm and use a Torrington while payments are made at Phone or write us today for details of our See Our Store and Window Displays NORWICH, CONN. of Luxemburg. “The Grand Duchy of Luxemburg is hemmed in on the West and many, and on the south by pre-war France and the recovered French prov-| ince of Lorraine. The southern part of the duchy is in the basin of the Moselle river. This section is the garden spot of Luxemburg. producing quantities of grain, vegetables, and fruit. Grape cul-| ture is carried on and considerable quan- tities of wine are produced. In the ta- ble lands of the interior c-dftle raising is an important activity. Industrially, Luxemburg is_known chiefly for its iron and steel production, which in 1918 was valued at more than 450,000,000 francs. equivalent at par to more than $90,000- 060. “The capital and chiet city of the duchy, also Luxemburg, is most pictur- esque. It i built partly on the summit- partly at the foot of a cliff-rimmed pla- teau, portially encircled by rivers. Im- posing viaducts Igad to the higher p: of the city where most of the public buildings are situated. “Like Switzerland, Luxemburg has more than one language. Some of the inhabitants epeak German, some French and some a mixture of the two. It has n6 coinage of its own and the coins of all ity neighbors may be found in circula- tikn . French, however, has lonz been the official language and the franc the official monetary unit. The world war and the unpleasantness of the German occupation brought Luxemburg closer to France, and in the plebiscite of 1919 which ushered in universal suffrage. the Luxemburgians voted for an economic union with the republic, which has since been effected.” MORE ARRESTS FOR THI DEATH OF HENRY T. PEIRCE | Wheeling, W. Va., Nov. 24—Peter D. Treadway and Marie Williame, giving their home addresses as Philadelphia, were arrested here today in connection with the de=.¥ late last Saturday night or early Sunday morning of Henry T. Peirce at Philadelphia. They foid the rolice, according to & statement given out at headquarters, that Peirce was killed by two unknewn gtran- gers who escapeq in the victim's autome- bile, after forcin? Treadway and the Wil- liams woman to accompary them at the ey Fonbie Resinol aids poor complexions 1f your complexion is rough, yed, of pimply, don't try to cover up the de- fects with cosmetics which do not con- ceal, but usually attract attention to the reason for their use. Begin oday to clear your skin with Resinol Ointment and Resinol Scap. is treatment not only cleanses the skin and enables it to breathe but || usually removes blotches, redne.s and point of a revolver. ined by the police separat north by [to the latter. Belgium, on the north and east by Ger-|admitted witnessing the ki adding that he and his woman companion were in the room at the time. The statement of the Williams womaa, say the police, disagrees in some impor- the most notable departure being hér de- nial that Peirce at the timeh ¢ was slain. Accortling to James Mulgraw and Har- Iy making the arrests have pany them morning After the arrest of Treadway ind the woman today the police say they recover- 2 from a local pawnshop a suit of clothes soiled with bloodstains which they had been pledged by the prisoer. valise in Treadway's possession, the polics The two Were exam- according Treadway, say the police, ling of Peirce, declare, they alos found a “bloodstained sweater. Waterbury—George L. Platt, chiel mustering officer on the staff of toe G. A R. for thé department of Connecticut. died Monday at his home in this city after A t detaifs with that made by Treadway, SN HutsTie wes Snt of 1 S29. surviving vetgrans of the Civil war who witnessed the surrender of Gem. oRBert she was in the room with Heanley, who were instrumental in the two - prisoners xpressed a_willingness to -aécom- to Priladeiphia tomorrow ithout extradition papers. say In a .ga{gmlachnm& roughness. - Ask your dealer {or Resinol Seap and Ointment. 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