Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 29, 1921, Page 4

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7 ~ the Present control oyer- those _ - the professions upon it. WEEK ENDING nAfltfi &Lfll \ ulation and there are ¢ managed to fake the @ For instance it is shown by cengug that Alaska hag nearly §i Wmm.uonuxnnm.weu 2go,”and it appears to have lost about - 10,000 in the past decade. Alaska makes its. -appeal when some fmportant and. rich mineral depasits are |, disclosed. 1t also gets ltwbl hen it can offer something more W can be secured in the stal turns thoughts toward that territery t‘\enflnhequnmmn’ abounds in valmable natural some of which are undi ment and others are projectes \ war had its effect ig-also & inés exiaged tn SAUNBEIAL !m. that periodMand the hardships of were far less attractive. It is now that there has been reported . the dpening up of a new vein rock, that there will be q’n&fl m the part of those Aot othérwise v in that direction in the hdpes of gitting in the past- decade ?.hen ?2 %am of the fact sources that are guhh» 6 bE ;‘3& upon rich quick. But whether Alaska ha¥ more heavily 4s the yoars go by and that the| cussion, but I do wish to ask th the trade between Alaska and the states is bound to in . Regardless of the that is on each vear the m X forestsrand the meat and Ash in are far from being run at ;a{ls a storehouse, of ne ch development jas has been Iy scratched the surface. plans are being made for tal ezm =N % nation. Railroad flevelopmentun Eov- ernment support ghould be a bi; tor “henceforth for civilization and always, follow the rallroad, qiq When Alaska ‘strikes jts nace it will be lnhi to expand’ inpopulation, Sl by o g THE SUBSTITUTE 'uu: Efforts to put thmqh & bin who rt of healing have ral asgembly. . -Nro —engaged in the met with much bill presented to the la 50 much oppositién that measure replaced it, but dxs substitute like the original would place the ligens- ing of those engaged in the art of héal- Ing in the hands of other than thusé wh are schooled in oné partieular b Those who are concerned provisions of the bill have had an portunity te . scrutinize réquifement; ind sentiment as expresséd throughout the state appears to be quite as much op- gosed to the substitute Bill as to the inal. Instead of making thosé in A school of healing deh\blulrl!e lb the BQ. isfaction of these who ate proficlent praetitioners ih that line there appears to be an &ort to cen- tralizy the examinntion for’all’ hi profestions in one esmmission whith ey or may not have a representative of afl The oppor even though they do not use one reasonsor mou: um st o oy Just how much the submit a mmhm ed and who opposad- | for the discrimination against cnes who are engaged in healing the apparent, and it ig the owormq s given to do an injustice to othécs ta sition is being meagure. to ‘was not fully dxsclom at the hearing because of the determ ever, fails to receivi come on the part dications point to the im mittee will meet with the view that it is far 4 well encugh alene to adontion of any such propesed.” - Those . wh Te seek to enter the practice healing in the state, and are qualified ought to be. protected Dlaced tinder thé Gontrol of sote. othbs schopl or those who Practice W& R o R e DR LICENSING ORIMINALS. *No one wa# quicker to recognize advatitage of the a mngaged in crifiinal only saw the session dogfi't meap 3 of a fast ear provided it locate and get away with gne.beletgtn| But New York has been bmfl;t realizition of hoWw extensively crimi are being helped by the state in thélr erations by the dis been made to the of them ssek it in they do net eventually obtain llc:;oes to operate ‘cars. This is shown by the stal the éffect that the ¢ oo in g list of 2418 appll for 1218 1i penses, that. there were 38 out of 5604 /1919 and that in 1930 there '-fe m aut, of 4945 applicants who wi This year up to last week - criminals who applied affong m 1 l applicants, ~ 18 an’Interesting state of af- 'he Empire state wher;‘itn‘ or < is done In the way of ments which have 1435 | the Chicago grand Jury B ey others in addition, inclu Rome new. figures outside of un girgl hfifl “3’!’! 2 B&t&:}y nof only m%* o T 1t b Wb o "‘1{“ “‘M‘WWW b e ?' hdlchnmtr do m air bile n.g those | go 40 criminals m o.rm Amnmm u-h.zu e tfi ‘ bo:d “office that I've always ‘young “Old Norwich,” tan- d Wo- éithier ;finw either in > 1o ol Jittle. bov . ln‘\dn\ w 3 &ir. u u because ¢ ¥ i, : h‘;l Tespecttul ers hal m ind and lied m e re Ngnoked np’:’p as too _ old fashioned? 484 Clever men & %‘:INett c\ty Shae s sime varipty now 1n AR 2 of Housé ‘dontrol of the heitd be bosaam A it i the state. Aside of the biil on' par- come \mder The act in ‘the very vitale of ‘which millions _ in Suffering and ed: and ex- _.The dhly contertion ¥ [ Ly L e even o of l:‘(he ical Mn!m r to dm’wlémmlas read | attempt was made soon after P > heard | about? Well, now that I Jook I aon't think he’s so awfully al}" And my Reic)y miade e iy Y, ne :R.l;:eult \for wl:gl:og'. but Car- | ter!” the one able head. “T never"'—Chlc-go‘pmVI. o they not only, thought but-are de- termined that the days of. aufoc) rule, 8o far as jt relates to Connectl- et least, over. Haftford personally but ery. d&wn ter Liis and her émphatic protest against the iniquitous measure dis- | known as substitute for House Bill No. |- 860 by writing or any other way tha may be expedient— thelr representgtive at omge in a manner not to be mi derstood. ~ Many 1a¥ doctor® be it said t medico showld be given to understand that the time u past when the health of the individ or &:ople shall be controlled to sati y po- ical ambition or the greed of a trust. It is the duty of every residefit to de- opD nlcnnh W AMERICAN HISTORY \ A great deal of mystery hides the early stage in Unlted States. “The history of the thedtre from about 1730 until the presént time i fairly well recorded, but before that dgte comparatively, little has come down, /although it is well dtr- stood that acting was occasionall A | e met ‘with in spite of the aupo-mon to’] “I lighted on my old acquaintance Jack |tants live on this small phlm frown upon it There is geod<reason to believe t an n and his colonists had settled in Pennsylvania to give gonfé kind-of theatrical perform- ance, and among the earliest/ things the 0od proprietary in his laws xm;g: was mgz plays. been thought that Philadelphia had nothing in the nature of a theatrical performance until abéut 1749, when the cil er fined some actors for presuming to,Act plays there. N F of thumal as early as ances ¢ York, On| on the subect, it en 5 were ppets, after the £ and Judy: show But a few, vears ago there wa$ unearthed led The Fools Opera, by ubnsnecb about fl;'m in) fihu t of his! A& very crdde ef- poftn;t known to ex- 10 have been the Hrst actor in the British colonies of North America. , In the course of his history Aston says: “My merry hearts, you are to know me a gentieman, lawyer, voet, actor, sol- dier, sailor, exciseman, publican in Eng- land, Scatland, Irsland, New York, Hast and West Jerséy, Maryland, "Virginia on both sides of the Chesapeake, North and’ Eouth Carolind, South Florida, Bahamas, Jamaica, Hispaniola and often a coaster by all the same.” When Aston arrived in Ameriéa is not known, but he. appear to have becomte a nllt’erd dufl{n. his’ visit, for he says: “I arrived' .after ny - viclssitud at Charles-Town fu;;,e shame, poverty, ‘nakedness and hunge. turned play-actor and poet. and Wrdte-a play of one act on the country In the gossiny Account f him, Aston, giving whdt he would call, a merry tale of himsulf, neglects to, insert even ore date. Consequently, only the barest out- line of his life is known, and only a sug- gestion of s American carcer. When he was born and When he died is unknown, although he i§ knewn to hive been still living as late as the year-1737. At that time lie seems to 'have been an old man, and it has been inferred from certain re- marks -in_his' autobiography lhat he ar- rived ‘In -this gountry befoxe. 1702. It has beep suggested, and probably. ot wi Teason, although eéntire- ly éonjecturalfffthat Aston was the An- thony Weston Who. offendeqt the firovincial governor In the early days of Pennsylya- nia by Dresefiting what they record s a uregn!gble" petitiod, and forthwith the sentenced the' petitioner tg Whipped in the-fim k tes It Anthony Aston an are one and the same pe: fi A to be outside e it_is easy {o imu,;i pgrmhnlon to do. 'He knnvrn kind ot ln tric stoni_before mg? ¢ _the performance is- Mot 8o well ascertaified, but Students of thé Ameri- can stage do not fegard them as having been_legitimate in mddern sense. From Aston's auteblograp] Qt seems that ho arrived at Charleston be great majority ef the half million inhabi- o a’fi‘i zh?\é health,” Her me are many qzd v;nqn. and?“r other member of the famil; depcnddspymuck(m her. ‘%emmhat? cries the id you do with my coat?“nks fl\e d}uglltq‘ “] ca t find any handkerchiefs,” i THe fiousggfle )l,s usually-the advisor and ~of the family. ‘Lydia E. P‘mkmS ve,imble Com,found- mgmtzm a happy home by Bopuinet St e Tertme e f L ol it ptmwuknihl housew: eeping thqm in g T1L—*T have taken six ydia and b a Q! 1 e trouble h 0 interest back- E. Pinkham’s f 1was had. such a for m; ork. Imld not cook & meal or cluh Wpa rm wmmut ‘would rub ) began to g:!:s me. 2!:!‘?380111 n‘:mg:xd hum:y a8 l‘l‘l than Pl Charlten, tenulnz dnd also that Brave, ' honest, ‘m gefitleman, Capt. Henry Punnn W] ose sb! the Fame, was burnell in the Bermudas. He. to the Best of his phility, ‘assisted me so that after acting, Writing, coursing, fight- aste: passage to Virginia.” “Aston aoted i New York, and then re- turned to Zng!: ‘where he became con- nected with the- n of Bartholomew talr, and married one of the wofen who ve to show that Aston was the first to ask permission te give a performance in Amgrica. As there seems no evidence that he had a company, his performances could have been mothiggd more than mono- logues, seasoned /wit] comedy and ribald songe. (Tomorrow : 2, The Moumaln :Meadow Massacre.) IN THE DAY’S NEWS CPSTA BiCA. Costa Rica, -mentioned in press 'dis- patches ag involyad with Panama, in- the latest Céntral ‘AmeMcan bounddry dis- pute, is described in_the %ollowing buils- tin - issued from the Washington, D. C. héadquarters of the National Geaa(npm Society: “Costa Rica constitutes bne of the.best demonstrations to ‘be found among the republics of the New World that a coun- try's . development may be strikinglé af- fectedby iphy and economics, Most of _the other Latin-American countries were built up on the basis of the labor of large Rumbers of natives, -and With this assistance théy fave utilized considera~ bla areas. GCosta Ric# has had de- pend since golonial times largely bm the labor of 1ts colonists of European de- scent, and.the development of the coun- try has beerrin a restricted territory. most of the other Ldtin-American coun- tries there has been a piarked admisture of the blood of the Spanish settlers with that of the native Indjans, but since the téw Indians in the partnf Costa Rica set- tled by the Spanigrs were practically extermin: ted uu irly dafe, the popul lation of 1! abife has remained pre- domhmuy tum “Becausp of these fumdaméntal.. edon- omic differences, and because also, of geo- graphical isoTation for a Jong peridd, Cos- i Tne noverty-stricken community of {aays nas e republic is mere than | groar ,m,mmy x ta Rica differs in many ways from its neighboi twice the siZe of igidm and approxi- ‘mately equal In area to West Virginia, but ,practieally the government is thit of the people congentrated on.a *‘pun in fringed plateau in the center of thie - try, ot much over 50 miles square. The there Yecame a player and eft curgmon for Nesw ¥ trary wind bléw his shin Capes, and after some di rived at Elizabethtown. IT WOBKED N %’% atea itioh in i'r ol hial tubes or throat? This eo) inishedt by a few dola‘o! Pa . 3 in, ormed there. There is every evidence | In | b with coho d lt but iaf! of Vegétable o woml an I glve my my health fi 610-W. Walnut St, Next in importance are the sections Which, fo this cenfral irea, would make a nar-|has row band across the cOuntry from At- lantic to Pdeific. Even this belt'of gred ést_popuiation: constitutes hardly a quar- r of the area of Costa Rleca. , | gions Bordering Nica @ on the Wwest and Pana on the southeast dre alfmost uninfabited except fop lh| few | glons. Indians living there. | “The central plateau which is the heart of Costa Ricd has a rich sofl and 8 eli- mate described as . that of pérpetual spring. It is from 3,000 to 4,000 ng above,sea level. When the early seftle established themselves In this promising country sfiey conld not livé in citles ufl réceive fhe tribute of many. workers, found it necessary ‘to do their awh Wark. Their situation was -uot uniike that ot th jcan pionéers of the Mid- dle West. As a result the Costa Ricans Jucquirea nhablts of Tindustry that havé stuck with them until _tgday. “Costa’ Rica has- always beén & coun- try of ‘little landers” as contrasted with the -countries 5f huge estates- abgit if. The early colonists#had & most it time making & living in thelr fsolate positfon. = They were cut off from: obm- mercial thtercourse with the Atiasdtic by the lowland jungles to the nor?!#ll‘- and less effectuaily. by motntains 4nd upland { picTys from the Pacifc. They had na pro- duets sufficiently yaluable to export eyen if coramercial chanhels had been avall- able. It was pecessary to live al wholly ‘on their own products. They came - poverty-stricken ; and the name Gosta Rica, which s ‘Rich Coast,’ came to be regarded as & joke. “The intrgduntion of coffee early in the: teenth eentury had much to do with bettéring the country's progperity. A cart road from- the plateau to & Pacific port was_constructed in 1346 -and coffee e3- perts grew steadily. . The Central Plateag nme morgand more densely populated and: now am‘sz évery sqiare foot of it is devoisd to Small farms. A~high percent- age o{ Costa Rican§ are land owners. his has madé for comparative std) y in government, afid Costd Rica has had fewer feivil wars than ghost of the Central Aforican governments: but it ha54oL been altogether free from ‘Hill- tary coups™— . “In ‘yhe iag thirfy yeary wlb Costa Kiea hagsshown great deve 3 iy Seen transforged into b bandnd indis- try has spru ¥ GTNn the hot. mofst At- ptic loyia None of the frult ¥@m exported u quarm— ntuty 4g0; nOw Tore than tén million bunches ars. sent buteu:h year, mostly to the United For,Goughs Calds, Bronchltis THIS TRADE MARK ON EVERY B TRY'IT. Ex demonstrated that knows no surer’ ded, e orth- 1 difticult to find, except s the husband. . - sell °,-,ne_w hfi the m oluun. .ug' 2e e io serni-civilized natives d the Ifi‘: glons. Ne vagéy home Wh gh has a s , end Costa Ricins ¢ yéars they have ng ,xpore scheol w than soldiers.” | starion That Rocsl otoury | | LS e e e New Even to Tescher. Jammés had besn out of school and his ‘teacher wrote his mother a note asking whn was wrong with bim, Back cam¢ w'" 15, very mick n&a or'or him. He fiome {Ar several Tds information on the 4 ‘m to the g a g‘w I.'I er m fl‘ifi\l 1¢h “Shoky ttle gu.ll Plnth'fl m( % g l“ They pinché evvn worse -R@t Were Seated at tFn tohié gnd the o ‘l! l‘d (ow & wi?u woman decidéd 5 46 & véry thing. So careruly $ié managed her hand dowh “t6 hér foot, leosen the shoe and slip It Gff ‘hér foot. Just as e the waiter 28 | black ;é triend ‘i There Was rothing alse to do but ‘" plain’ thé Sifuation, Which she aid very amusing 'ty But ly ¥Wat ghe 'l& in wear tight 4h0es (when solng eut to diggec. £ ‘Now rds political ecan wifié:iguqqllh Nup& n rl mn‘f“dud worde." vows steadi. e} e

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