Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 11, 1921, Page 4

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deep concern for China and its future welfare and there are now waiting to be adjusted the guestions that have de- veloped as the result of the land laws of the Pacific coast and the still later mat- ter involving the island of Yap, the as-ip signmént of the mandate of Which to Japan by the supreme council has been |y protested by’ the United States. bl These are all matters which will come under the new ambassadors and the its affairs in that part of the world' are| ¥ to be placed in such able hands. ¥ CITIZENS' TRAINING CAMPS. urging the young men of the coun-|of a this summer for the purpose of aiding| the war department to bulld up a reserve trained citizens organized to meet the emergency of war, General Pershing opened the campaign of publicity which , May 11, 1921, WEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED The Memecisicd Prow o exciusively et 4o e e for tepubileatio of Al news de-oaich PEESS, arouse a sufficient interest sent to make it nduct the camps. lope is that there s, but in view of *h the confidence of 1alen a few years ago will be no T the manner ‘when it had | g that civilization had gotten to nt where it would never permit|e clash ft will be a long time|ti CIRCULATIO WEEK ENDING MAY n in spite of all the horrible at the war has taught. of the camps General Persh- | says that we have persistently o train our citizen soldiers in peace and have walted until eclared before making any more nd. We have relied upon a sponse for the defense of the| e has been no setting obligation of the individual ire himself to serve his country conditions. This may be due that has been taken GERMANY'S ACCES Comzmon sense to th n ANCE maintenance of a of a powerful fighting tricting our efforts to war- fications and relying upon ower for the most part spring- er night. ot universal military training of the citizens’ training camps | advanced and the appeal is to en, who may through such are given acquire great- v constituted authority, val- and resulls in the en- f initiative, the creation| confidence in their abilities ring of the national spirit. 1s fed up on war line tacles strode solemnly up the walk to the were thrust deep in his pockets. His the shell rimmed spectacles. comntry will be grafified to know that{coed, rising from the porch swing. “How sliding into one end of the swing. “Rest 10 attend the citizens’ training camps Smashup ! say’ gave me a terriffic bawling out. Called me a fine sample of 1920 model son— threatened to cut off my allowance—act- i recognized as necessary in ordered in this|off. worth while to|Showed him that it miles, out an accident according to statistics, 1 car, but at his age the country | pope to acquire another son, and that he Jury, iy such view will grip the na-|cidents!” accomplished statistician " murmured the pretty coed. youth. first bloodshed that led to the Revol £ tionary war, oceurred on March 5, | nnels than the maintenance | Regiments of British troops had been sent to Boston to enforce the Townshend acts, swer to the taunts and jeers of the peo- | Dle, fired on the latter, several of whom | bu the spot where the tragedy occurred burst over the land. The youth with the shell rimmed spec- u. ome of the pretty coed. His hands row wa ecorrugated with thought. His!| rown eyes peered owlishly from behind |up “Why, Herbert!” exclaimed the pretty ou startled m oadster’s honk. “I left the honk and a mud guard in garage,” laconically replied the youth ! 1 didn’t hear your Why, t the car meed mew parts. Peach of a “Oh, Herbert, what did your queried the pretty coed. “The governor went up in the air— father best? like a hot box until got him cooled I had saved the motometer and registered . 30,000 which is the average run with- eminded him that he might buy another he could _scarcely course hould congratulate me on escaping in- especfally as statistics show that very year one-tenth of the entire popula- ion of the United States meets with ac- | hats!" “T had mo idea that you were such an “I'm there with the goods,” grinned the “Have to be up on statistics ALL ABOUT ECC/)MICS “Watch my girl, the whole game is based on statistics. the restaurant proprietor know how many spuds to cook for a certain day? Or the movie men what kind of flimflam to give the people in his neizhborhood? salesman which district is likely to bite The answer every time is, ‘His- tory repeats itself—consult your emeyclo- pedia of statistics.” “It sounds very pretty girl, suppressing a yawn. “Why, Virginia, I've got it all worked out how much a couple can live on next year and what the price of gasoline will By the time 1 finish this can advise my er—er—wife ex- actly when the cotton market would favor stocking up on linens and when to buy— sugar and even the best time to buy her be next spring! thrilling The sky's since I've gone in for economics at thel It's great stuff Virgini the limit for the fellow who understands| $00 Miles In the Stralght.—Which is economics " “I can’t imagine you connected with|without a curve? anything that has economy in its make- | tralian railway time-table we learn fhat " declared the pretty girl. smoke ! replied the youth with the shell rimmed spectacles. the old fogies predict bread earthquakes the statistician reads up on | cotton, wheit, steel and immigration and | finds out just what the country needs. modern__ businese How does said the “I'm not sure T'd care for an economics husband,” murmured the pretty rather like to buy my hats on the spur of the moment.” “Girls are €o darned literal!” exclaim- ed the youth with the shell rimmed spec- tacles.—Exchange. girl. “While lines and | Or the 'who do mot tot, but collect rags and bomey ;and slubbers, who work in the leather trade. And in which section will they place the sloshers, the wipers-ont, and the placers? . | the tongest stretch of metal railway From a trans-A on that system there is a 300-mile| straight run, with neither a bend nor a waver. “You look back,” says the his- torian of the time-table, “and the shin- ing tafls run on towards infinity till they. seem to meet in the dim distance. You look forward and see the same twin threads drawn out til] they melt’ into] one another. Elsewhere there is noth-! ing by the plain and sky.” The circle of earth Is “unbroken by hill or val- ley. by tree or house, or any of those things that we look for in ordinary landscapes.” Fishing for Millions.—Gold valued at a quarter of a million from the Esthon- fan government has just arrived at Hull after being very mearly lost in the ice of the Baltic. Cargoes of gold have not always been so lucky. Attempts are still being made to saive a million from the wreck of the Lutine, which sank in the Zuyder Zee in 1799. Lost for ever is £359,000, which went down with the St. Domingo in full view of a large con- voy. The Gyroseope Man.—Mr. Louis Bren- nan, whose flying fort is startling the war exverts, has stepped into his 70th year without- witnessing the chanse in “7 |locomotion which he expected his mono- rail idea to produce. He calls himself, a pessimist, never believing in his own inventions until they force conviction upon him. Engineering genfus is not an Irish charactaristic, but Louis Tiren- nan, since he bezan to “strike ofl” With 1770 and a few of their number. in an-| ed. were killed. The victims of this ma: d on March 8. The hearse cre were met unon in front of the custom house! by and thence the procession, in platoons s deep, marched to the Middle burial ground, wherein the bodies were denosited. The bells of Boston and adjacent towns tolled a solemn knell and a cry of vengeance | the Captain Preston and the eizht soldi place at night in the court all much larger crowr was his torpedo, has bestowed on his native e———————————— | WT0te : “G00d God, is it possible? I win|isle one of the greatést mames in the 7 not believe But both Adams and [modern roll of inventors—London ODD iNCIDENTS IN AMERICAN §| Quincy came out of the trial with no less | Chronicle. : HISTORY jof respect upon the part of the right- = imi“dm citizens, nor with anyone daring{TO TRACE EARLY MAN to cast any reflections as to their lovalty IN CHINA'S INTERIOR 2 = v |to their try. They ha Shilgiay { they were considered the foremost pariot | ARdTews, explorers of dark spots of The Boston massacre, practically theiawyers of the town. the earth and seekers after knowledge As the firing upon the citizens took wee ¢ t. it was not difficult to raise a doubt whether Preston or someone else | had-cried to the soldiers to fire, and on | SPOtS, Of that doubt a verdict of acquittal was obe The public acauiesced but was offended at the manifest want of upright- “The firmness of the judges was vaunted, to obtain for them alaries to be paid direct the feeling of the veople as recorded In Baneroft's History of the United States. (Tomorrow: Our Centennfal Celebration.) s S oo Stories That Recall Others of the past are on their way to the Orient to make an exhaustive udy of the tribal life among the primitive nterior China. Despite the fact that the far East is regarded by scientists as the cradle of civilization the land of the real “Garden of de! where the first primitive men walk half a million years ago, search has been made into the and habits of Chinese peoples W present development corresponds turies ago. organized by the New York of Natural History will last dt five years, the exact time de on the nature of the discover who did the firing, after a lapse of seve months. were placed on trial before Ju Less Work For Mother. Promotors of the trip have ra: 000 to finance it. Mrs. ed § Andrews, d no thorough lives ose ith to that of Europeans hundreds of cen- The Andrews expedition which was Museum the It's suarante excess oil and itching scalp. Osgood Co. sells it with money back Beautiful hair, thick and lustrous, is easy to have if you use Parisian Sage. a positive remedy for dapdruf; May that have been made. Gilbert M. Hitcheock United States Senator from Ne- braska, and a leader among the Democrats in the Senate, only woman of the party, is official photographer of the expedition. Headquarters for the explorers will be established at Pekin, where George 211 son of the Andrews, will be left. | The party will leave for the inte: accompanied by a proffession- al moving-picture photographer. The work of the first two years has been | carefully planned, but after that pro- ceodings will depend upon discoveries r The expedition will besides its re-l search among the aborigines. endr to gather the greatest collection of Astatic wild life ever brought to this| country. the United States these specimens will be mounted in a New York Auditorium t0 be fitted out to imitate an Asiatic jungle scene. Andrews hopes to remove the center of Asiatic study from Lon- don to New Andrews is a comparatively young man but he has had wide experience in gathering both wild-life spec and thr hunt for whales, 1 hard life of the Alaskan whaler. In ad- dition (o securing more' th graphs of whales he brought back a rare si er. another whale s est excitement Perhaps his mo trip, him was the sear ger of Asia. This the was known to e had ever been Although Andrews imals, W a than capture or kill it. On that trip, how- ever, Southwestern China was explor- ed BUY ONE TODAY CRANSTON'’S Poet Lauréate of ‘New York Nebraska has A poet laureate. York City, with four times Cebrasay population has mone. If .nntflg really wants a leaureale Who persona grata, Phillip Berolzieimer s in the fieid. Horace had his but never got $15,000 a year out of him. —Brooklyn &s_ll. Where wa Beat the Swiss The raid of a bank by thres ban- dits in Basel, who wounded thé cash- er and stole 20,000 francc is deserib- ed as the first case of dayligiht brig- andage in Switgerland for nesfly & century .—New York World. When the party returns to York. nens mera ng for months the In 1505 he led a c: n 300 photo- eleton of a humpbacked 1913 he e pout- world for In When a mon's wife suddenly puts Ber arms around his neck just before making a touch it's & case of being ciose pressed for money. Tell Your Friends who may be Pile sufferers that quick, safe and lasting relief can be had only by removing the cause—cutting and salves won't do. Hem-Roid, a harm- less tablet, is guaranteed by Lee & Osgood Co. on which his wife accompanied h for the biue ti- are species , called “lying Dutchman of the Jungle” but no_specimen ptured, dead of alive. w one of the an- e maltese gray rather unable to either blue, —Louisville Courfer Journal, Malted’ asd Substitutes. Extractin Fe fants, Invallds and' Eerinfunta tovalits snd ronineCHIS | R CookimsYiouricbing~Digesinie S offer = for ft even though it MaY 'y )40 for murder. Captain Preston’s trial b m _robin feathers its Lanke that Is made to the train- | anq Jasted until the 30th. The trial of the Ir o= Donls aelsmdia Stras is of course voluntary. jember and ended on the Gth of Decem- (i LT W0OT, et Dt ol I'ME STLESIAN TROUBLE. GLdohL San i Smnent lpwetton il Do e e e the very thing that w:s'l\t"\::\s 2 fevere ordeal for bis iner i e bl e - A void inflaming the already | dence of spirit. v i mibthice s = ~ et @ smoldering fire WO of tho necused, having for colleague A doro T ef than the presence of Ger- [ 7o i (otiecd: MaviE foF S oung man whenever out of town A hose eloquen ice” had of| t of writing to is best girl s sar what thus far doesn't ap-| Robert Treat Paine, afterward one of |1 4o pi n plan mnd Bogets of s b e S 8 B B ST 0 4,5 (i Yo ey e hange 1hat hea aves w e B iainieresfon and fir ot bt o) 9K Tuonilon I o -nm']m” one. of There are two separate ovens—one for coal and one for gas. Both ovens may be used at one time s utm Poland that will clear| n b i 0 habit of his. e e —or either may be used singly. In addition to the two baklrv}zfl c{vens, tt};erq lls.s a bronl‘el:') t:vi'lez., n whic has developed D Rat e pecting us fellows to do it, 3 1 e e e o GG e e o There is room on the coal and gas sections, at the top, %ox{ NIN targe &.11 nsi ", 01‘11 glnhave — DEALING WITH to be realized that Po- ng from them fac were mot | HITEE, and L your cooking at one time. You can do it better—with less waste and less wo U e s s cxistonce to tho only irmeiosant to the case in hand but |y, ivineive T e for Winter, to keep the kitchen warm and comfortable; and gas for Summer, to keep the kitchen cool. , y have given encourage- | dishonorable he towm {dy could ne 1 tales in a breach of . 2 " L in its ambition. The wo of the soldiers, Montsomery and | promise smite i 3 reelain enamel finish—so neat and attrac e i T e A mles et The illustration below shows the wonderful pearl grey porce hould herefor es that not friends. - That the e nent 1s not the leader in ! e is made | : . ¢ that it is o g o to prevent| o E s will call upon it to| 3 of its people even if| g be termed irre e, e ely unde# the circum-| A I the fallure to ta nst them is open to the in t 1 nothing to | onditions which can hardly The action by the insurgent aken with a view i : That there is a settlement can ted but intimidation on r musket md guil were br It was brought out of Preston and the troops, as well as to th a number was engaged, that was not more bloody than it was | When Josiah Quincy accepted the invi tation to defend the soldiers his father remonstrated against his doing so, ous [ but ma and | farms as their conld get with the crowd shouting i the exasperated soldiers we imag-| Leafing ined that they h com- | many mand_that all doubt| have wel- | will hav comed, but it was duc self-control | the com {be returns from men but ich are in the ming “loafing” ficial flow census office connection with census will be the translat- nt terms by which nu- known. cl Gleaned from Forsign Ex- i nd with his men | nicely on a small allowance. I was committed to n his own ac- ed that it was difficult, but said count of the affair he averred that he did |that if she would hand her wardrobe not give any order to fire, but that he did |0ver to.me I wouid undegtake to aress his best to induce the mob to disperse and | her for that sum. We made out a con- terfered to prevent a repetition of the |tract; she Days me quaritly, as sho firing after the first disch. ys her rent, and I underizke to give better value for her money tkan she in the shops. a Living.—One of blems wh solve There not tramps, vers. Then pig-lifters, who work not on| In blast furnaces; totters n court and di: | s | changes. A all the circun are | ! - ny pictures of justice and | Whi 145 been aaopied by several wo- . aracte I volution | Men in an up-to-uate suburb. “A pro- forever der of the i¢ssional woman came (o me the other ry that rican juror: y and s: at e co not spend air of the Bost the dre who is responsible foi minutes. | the innovation told a “Daily Chronicle {ton and the soldi Preston at once old her it was impos le to dress the will It adds but it Poles fsn't going to en- belief that justice Is sought prevared to respect the | he allies unlesg 1t happens | ; cinz. Poland I8 of course . rested but endeavors are be- he - to force the hands of the al- | wer ch can hardly be up- tion to it anyth EDITORIAL NOTE should becor SRIE. bec on corner says: argu- taxes will m uldn't very far it there - o be two sides amount of B o nsel for DGergdoll failed to check L X4 voi of gold story, but close i B he kept on the bank account. ditlon cof tha e e me people should be told to imi- h o L in order to reach 100 years placed by the pu 1 never leave the backyard MORE AMBASSADORS Announces encouragement on the b G. S rden activity ought to : cent. increase imme- “or ta meet sut the as if the weatherman was do- 5 t to try to bring about a post- of the opening of the straw hat gold that is on its country will be open to much suspicion as the bolshevik as been told about ag plain- be that it is useless to try 1o eseape its obligations by BB o Rochester to this country. thes well equipped for car . e Sffer the interests of ¢ n protection for the mallg is st Pekin and Tol men . r proof mai] car. Unless it iIs aad standing in t { of & success than & non-sinkable ! it win a tastiy thowe upon =y mount. to_ ltte. B S <ven a5 he has in the ¢ | by the 12th the allles can be ex- BRI R et o this rome | to occupy the Ruhr the next day { it s Friday and the 13th. Bn the acceptance of the ambn 8 dinties in those countries it cannot fal | day m. 1o be realised by the appointee and the | ome that cond mpose | cide whet responsibfMities on their shonlder aight well Do realized at any t UR § partlewiarly the case now in|With joiuing the cleanup movement of yomr Interest in the far ocast| whenever the spirit is indulgent or the ~We'have ;atways-muimained | §00d Work ef someone else inspires. e you realize that next Sun- » the opening of the straw hat wving just time enough to de- er last season’s will do. fons s mothing whatever to interfere = never subtracts Here is'a food,made from wheat and malted barley, which gives gtrength to the bodywithout tak ing strength away. ipestion.Its is%es?x:nilaxcdwi The Made by Postum Cereal Co.,Inc.,Battle Creek, Mich. Grape:Nuts sustains and nourishes without burdening the stomach ortaxing the tional nutriment none of the slow- up of energy, or drowsiness, oft- en caused by heavy or starchy foods crispness and flavor of frape:Nuts are a delight to the taste. No more soiled hands, no more dust and smut. to enjoy the comfort an rself tive. By simply passing a damp cloth over the surface you are able to clean your range instantly. 1t banishes the old time task of blacking the range. d convenience of the Gold Medal Glenwood range. Call to-day and see for yourself how a modern’ Glenwood Range “Makes Cooking Easy”’| Shea @ Burke 37-47 Main St.. Nerwich

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