Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 4, 1921, Page 4

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TN JORE 4, 1821 Zisrwich ul{efi 1 and QJoufier others but there are good reasons to be- lieve that it has reached its limit when Lenine declares soviet Russia is bank- rupt and calls for relief from such as- sistance as the much decried capitalism can furnish, Russia has been going Lhrvn:h an ex- perience which the world will never forget. The .end is of course mot yet, 125 YEARS OLD etwaaien. piee 130.0. wed . hm at the Postoffics &t Norwi swcond-clus matter. Telepaone Calls, Ballctn Basiness Office, 50 Bulletls Edliorial” Rooms, 35-3. Bulletin Job OZfice, 35-%. e & month; 90.90 Cona.. 2 but changes are being effected in a way that plainly shows that it is turn- ing on the radicalism that has been rampant there, that the dream ‘of the reds has had a rude awakening and that different conditions can be expected within that country. The pendulum has swung far in one direction, but it ap- pears to spent its force and is turning THE MAN WHO TALKS We are ‘informed that government agenclés are preparing what they cail “slacker lists.” Judged by some that have already been published, they are showing the same degree of pains-taking care and accuracy that marked the work of the zone finance comngtice of the war department which dealt with the soldier's allotment. It was the custom of this committee to demand payment on dues already settled as evidenced by. tiie cancelled check. Of course we ought to pity rather then censure the;confusion of the war department under the late admin- istration, and yet it was rather hard for | the soldied to bear the brunt of this in- competency. N<w in the lists of slackers being published, why mot take time to FEW WINTER BIRDS—ROBBERS 1 INSTEAD OF BOBWHITES. faith may tfar | P | sha |tree sy s our usual s are concerned. .One THE QUAIL TRAP KEEP A DATE—HAVEN FOR SWAMP SPARROWS—RINGNECKS When we hear of a songless Eden our waver a little, bat we know that we have had a birdless winter so featheved back-door young ed observer said she saw but one ow and only two small bunches lof i Nothing, she says, but the good-for-nothing stay-at-homes — crows, |jays, starlings, and English sparrows. iThis is the first winter in twenty-five| N FUR AND FEATHER—BIRDS CAN side, The crow of tne rmgneck cocks has been heard on every farm in the English neighborhood continuously from April 1 till the middle of May. The hens began laying early, laid more eggs than usual, and many nests have been found. Ivy Paine found a nest with twenty-two eggs, the second week in May, but on a second careful visit the shy hen was not covering the eggs and a third visit made sure that the pheasant had deserted her M. J. OBRIEN’S SPECIALTY SHOP 108 FRANKLIN STREET How far is O’Brien’s from Norwich? Two blocks from ‘Franklin Square. Better known at 108 Franklin Street. verify the record of each man? Nothing t no pine or evening grosbeaks |large clutch. Very different was the ac- = - ks i 1) e, Ve, e A 2. [y ok e x and unjust than to|have been seen in the English neighbor- (tion of a hen that CIff. Hibbard tnnm‘: Eventually you will learn, hecause they sell high-grade — ——— ; Ihcod. Maybe the influence of the mild ! breeding May 15th within three feet of . . . - e of some who have been | 1004 : reeding May merchandise small Pause a moment, Norwich, Saturday, June 4, 1921, SRl LSy awarded medals for bravery and .oth ® on {he Atiantic seabosnd has kept |a road used for@riviigsand ‘motoring. at a very price. a m- ——— SR Y i tracted » i ‘e, s l' se and t! mmer | F° standi rock, - . — T et e ave b clalmed Cor e Tt 10 ofhes i the morth and wost. A stlelons somd s, e DIre® cps witnout|] vestigate, get acquainted and find‘out how much money MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, tinople to the effect that it is the fear blunder like this is absolutely inexcus- | able. = In statute law no penalty is attached ed d ded woodpecker has been report- here, indeed a rarely, though quite on when I first looked wup local |disturbing the “setter,” and on the morn- ing of the 13th eighteen young were led safely away, leaving one stale egg In The Assoclatd Press u exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news desmalch: # eredited to it or pot otheiwise credited to of the sublime porte that the allies are getting ready to support the Greeks in you are in pocket. There are two good places to deposit s paper and algo the local uems Dublished their fight against the Turkish nation- erein Al Hghts of republication Lorein are also reserved. ot AhLULATION REPUBLICAN CITY TICKET. Alde V. PEN weclal des- WEEK ENDING MAY 28th, 1921 alists unless the nationalists give up the British prisoners that are being held. The allies have not felt any too well disposed to Greece because of the course that it followed in recalling Constantine after he had been driven out of the country because of his pro-German pro- clivities and connections. There has in fact been indications of a more tolerant policy toward tho Turks regardless of the |fact that they lave no claim whatever upon the sympathy of any nation. The need has existed for a long time for the allies to give the Turks to un- derstand that they could not expect to carry on their merciless conduct toward to forgetfulness, unless it can be proved carelessness. And yet oral law it must be regarde s . One cannot help comparing the status of wo- men in England during the what it is today. A well-knowr newspaper writer - has expressed righteous indignation in a recent the Review of Reviews. She show wonderfulness of her com the country neded them to places of men called to the ~war— where 50 many of them remained. women of England saved the countrs from bankruptcy during the war, but now that fact is forgotten, and they are ing displaced by men, and still hold their positions ha wages reduced to the pre- d 1 found an old time record the nest. In the Kelly brushy orchard your money, one at the bank and the other at O’Brien’s. ston. also of set o awk left February. in his ir drflling a hole forty feet from | nd in a poplar in the Hell Gate, 0! In the same faded rec- um 1= an account of finding three eggs plover on Blue Hill in Boz- seeing but not taking an- three on McCall Hill in Boz- rd set of four eggs taken from | sits opposite Greeneville record of this big sand- I knew of several pairs ing on Plum Island before the is was occupied by government forces. usual bloody If goshawks were the spring, said my young| we could not raise any chicks | A bold fox seized a hen - eyes in the open lot near the twenty young pheasants were hatched. Other large sets of eggs have been re- ported. Mr. Lyon met a mother lead- ing her newly-hatched chicks. A mock- (ngneck with two hens, seen repeatedly in the public road, lends color to the suggestion that more than one pheasant helped to lay the large sets of eggs found here this season, when fqurteen has been the average number in former |vears. The young observer properly |puts in the last word here by saying that she cannot really see the use of having an old stuffed pheasant in about every house in town when both males and fe- males can be so often out of doors alive and in motion. C. LR The more you spend here greater are the returns. Every Saturday will be known as BARGAIN DAY. Don’t over look our offering—step in and inquire. Always glad to “One Satisfied Is Better Than Ten Gratified.” We want our customers to exhibit our goods—advertise them, not put them away for keeps. satisfying to the merchant as well as to the customer. DIUS V. I the Armenians. The fact that Turkey |intense feeling of inere it our loud clapping and SEE O U]l SPECI‘ u 5 g e has been divided and portions of it set| PSSt (. i pped its prey, so that we; - Connsilmen, off to the control of certain of the al-|2hd can anyone say that it dinner instead of the ] ODD INCIDENTS IN AMERICAY 30 dozen LADIES’ HOSE. ............. at 10c per pair EDWARD CROOK not ababive fham from vespon fled? foxes; but later the little dog! HISTORY n connection With the long sut-| During fhe latter S i e Armenians. hether the allies have broken with the Turks to the extent that they are ers it is manifestly time that they took steps other than what have been taken for living in this locality impressed with the prod cherry tree blossoms, e cherry. It seems probably th derstood the working of natu ter we would' use another ably more than female cooper got just one a raid on has missed four or five fowl me old fox that car- ing hen turkey last »ur coops in twenty- go birdsegging soon after day- WASHINGTON AND THE KEY TO of THE BASTILLE Washington by the Marquis de Lafay- ette. This key today is one of the 4 dozen BOYS’ SUITS, all sizes. ........ at $2.50 each 9 s going to give their assistance to the | than one in three or five e T it] ™ Ohe o7 theTmsa itestg tusten | I S 100N BOYS’ SUITS, all sizes ..........$1.25 each Greeks in their effort, which since the|fruit. Why this waste of natu e attempts. Though |relics that ever came to this country » 2 Constantine affair has been withheld, [on so large a scale? O t soar noisily overhead |was the key to the famous Bastille in 2 dozen BOYS’ SUITS, all sizes............ 75c each because of the holding of British prisen-| in calling it waste? FPos as in former breeding seasons, they have Paris, which was presented to George 3 dozen GIRLS’ DRESSES, all sizes. ...... $1.50 each ' DRESSES i R e e one-half many interesting things to be seen at 2 dozen GIRLS’ D , all sizes. . $2.50 each e solution of at deplorable an 14 . am an early riser I have|the Washington mansion at Mount . i produced from the 1 y the ashingt 0 y existing situation in the near east. Why? One of the f m four times at robins’{ On July 14, 1789, the Pumans 5 dozen LADIES' WA.ISTS, all sizes....... $1.00 each The Turks are mistreating the Ar-|nature is the n before the nests were | stormed and took the Bastille, an 1 & ***** = == ans in the same cold blooded man- | Forces may cb leaves, and later, forther | thereby may be said to have com- 15 dozen LADIES’ SILK HOSE, all shades. .. $1.25 pair bt . it ey | whi r op ther blue eggshells { menced the first French revolution. REPEATEDLY MEETING NORWICH'S has prevailed for years. Turkey | which they ope up o blue eg : # . ina spevillen fir e T M e btz hieves. ““Frougn | The sreat ey of the Bastine was tak-|| 10 dozen LADIES’ SILK HOSE, all shades. . . $1.10 pair SR v been taught the much needed lesson |Portant” lesson fro ponchiErie el t}l}:rel!ginot:.lm\&lg.s’{::fldil:w;fig 204 18¢ | ing the Armenians, or the fact |Ereat deal of hard bluebird and waeup it had been built were subsequently " 3 : ‘\}'_h‘ hat the allies are determined to see that et crevices in the three old |used in the construction of the bridge e ion WIth | they are protected in their rights. This But it? ur gate, I must give them de la concorde. The command of the s one of the war problemg that has suf- WORKING THE COURT. How well those who are versed in the the court room and the way in appea and influence can be :ht to bear is interestingly illustrat- occurrence in a New York According to a ligious journal the ed with a ne the fundament were not already strikes, financial of unemployment, long-established . re- a act is of on its every day bill plunjage, pillars, serious charge against| les that have rifled and| cunning fastenings two t You may think | atoned for by fine| and with | as indestructible ding their young on the|national guard was gvien to Lafayette fered from serious neglect. we cannot see re: ed caterpillars from the |and as a special compliment the key — — that they do not ex 1 the stone heap. Again I|of the Bastille was placed in his hands. He determined to present it to his friend George Washington. In March, 1790, Lafayette sent the key together with a small pencil draw- ing of the destruction of the Bastille to Thomas Paine, then in London, to of|he forwarded to Washington, dated The 13th Series of the Norwich Building and Loan Association, Inc. B oy bac |March 17, 1780, in which oceurs. the BE,(;INS JUI IY, 1921 ol Hins et b, . ing, »w very early the s came back | following: v S a e e R S e year is a common remark mot quite| “Give me leave, my dear General, b i ead: the couble the barn-door records. As|to present you with the picture of the ASSOCIA |dered, even when it Coesn't appear to be|and hope chests ons, In the ups and|Bastille fast as it looked & fow days BUILDING AND LOAN TIONS HAVE g |actually in his favor. Those who com-|woes we must face : r we were startled by |after I ordered its demolition, with the HELPED UNDREDS OF THOUSANDS |mit crime for the purpose of having a|shape of a ppearance of individuals from main key of the fortress of despot- H S Ou TO s roof over their heads and enough to eat|Isn't our ok s e e B has rec- | g BEL ook at a sentence to imprisonment in a rent light than others might. Also rere se who consider it a time indulge in & bit of sarcasm. But neither reason existed in the New York where the prisoner was given four months' jail term’ as a’ pickpocket. so profuse in his thanks to the that the judge was moved to ask he reason for it, and this is the revela- t was made: are £ |court would' win your honor’s great- consideration and get off with less work through and through wit have we done to set up the the: ing denominations more than most pcople lm\p worked out or actu ter of fact it is attempt of react this scienti formulas of the in order will chemistry for for astrology ile some groups ha: grosbeaks v for their advent like and cuck- re keeping a date to the closely do ospreys stick i , it has pass- nests on St. Patrick's ‘rom the school- dren have noted ds of birds that there has been no de- mmer residents under ism. It is my tribute which I owe as a friend and son to my adopted father —as an aide-de-camp to my General— as a missonary of liberty to its patri- arch.” After some considerable delay prob- ably caused by the difficulty of find- ing safe persons to convey them to the United States, the key and drawing were sent to Washington by Paine, who wrote a letter expressive of his grati- \fication at being the medium of trans- mitting such a present, and his regret ve ‘Washington wrote to Lafayeite on August 11, 1790, acknowledging the re-! PROSPERITY—THEY HAVE MADE TENS OF THOUSANDS. HOME OWNERS— THIS ASSOCIATION CAN HELP YOU. JULY IS BUILDING AND LOAN MONTH / schoolyard last year, the|that he should be unable, from his de- UR NEIGHBOR BELONGS u . . your honor, one of the boys in e the purple finches and tree|tention in Europe, personally to place Yo To rr er print room said I'd get a year SfN0. 00 ew most spectacular. They |them in Washington's hands. 1 r nd I bet him $50 I'd make a|%" ASK HIM TO INTRODUCE YOU ¢ e v with an apparent in-|ceipt of the letter and gifts, which last TO ANY OF ITS OFFICERS— hat sbx. ionths.. Fe Mteok mer oy e il s sparrows, orioles, and |he described as “the token of the vi e - ; P s o e e Iso notice with tory gained by liberty over despotism. J 0 lN lT 1 or Hard luck pleas and all such efforts to ldered, massive, wel 2 There has been considerable doubt 14 on the mercy of the court are con- n broadcloth), wo to escape from raids| |expressed in certain directions as to | ! whether the key at Mount Vernon is |tinually resorted to. The court has to co. rows, actually the original key to the Bastille much because experience has B iy painted cups.for alA french journal in 1860 claimed the its own lessons. But this indi- 1 damp meadow, the key was in the possession of Madame i £ afveteran at’nlu)gaine ibadTent | ol e o0 I flushed three|Santerre, the wife of a man who dis- | their attention called to the fact that 1 made such a study of the court |generally represe from their hidden |tinguishes himself in the taking of the|the key was at Mount Vernon, they Stories That Recall Others ance : that was knew what kind of a plea would ults and he had confidence in lis to make it in a way that would his purposes. He won a light sen- d $50 in acdition, and tne affalr ses the gwestion ag to how in state legislature. older society life are reasons why i uous life of egant leisure t land, on, I and, witho should of near a record for eges in each nest s of song spar- say Were no cowbirds’ | swamp sparrow | fortress. This French lady may possess a key of the Bastille, for there must have been various keys to certain sec- tions of it, but undoubtedly the origin- lal key of the entrance is the one in the glass case at Mount Vernon, In commenting upon this claim of ut made the explaination: “There are two keys to the great Bastille—one in the on of the King of France him- self and the other in the possession of the governor of the prison.” They claim that it was the King's key that fell into the hands of Lafeyette, and that Why He Couldn’t Pail Tora was making his first visit te the country. He enjoyed riding om the eid gentle horse. e When his aunt arrived to epend the nany others 3 g 1 visits to this|the French Journal, a writer of half|they dispossed the key which was in it | many ,;1»_ rs actually accomplish the |The complexity of okeds 15 enes, while in |6 century ago says: “At all events|the custody of the Marquis de Launay |Nekend he was a: ...4.“0...1,""'": lary in-fsame the same thing even though they|hids it. The high cost of n song »w’s nest T found this| sovernor of the Bastille. n ) not not be able to place a bet on the city evid comn ficiency endab and EDITORIAL NOTES, v degrees are being handed out at on of the year but we still have it more and more proh due to the dearth of g The wise farmer soak his potatoes plant Tt will pr getting scabby purpose of a germi in one or two eggs es dipped s, with- irds. Few seen here on the ve found none though the widow Santerre may pos- that he should be unable, from his e- sess ‘one’ of the keys to the fortress there is direct evidence as stated in Mr. Lossing’s ‘Mount Vernon and its Associations.’ that the main key of the fortress of despotism was placed in the Hotel de la Ville of Paris; that Lafay- ot at| To use it appears more probable that the storming of the Bastille, and who Lafayette who personally assissted in was extremely popular in Paris, on ac- count of the gallant services which he had rendered to the cause of liberty should have been presented with the bedded in the horse's mane Tem rode ly off. “Be careful or you will fali off,™ ad- monished the aunt. “No I won't,” was the reply. “I got hold of her hair."” — e el % = 1 data of hobwhite and | ette sent it to Washington through |key actually captured when the prison e v off e This unfortunate v i gt e e " | was taken than that he should have be- 1 = Mifers 1 ni time of it, for . so we will take a look at|Thomas Paine; al ashington a: 1 men yuld e is something cheerful about the e o ThE o tus of the big gamebird that|knowleged its receipt by letter to|come possessed of a duplicate (if euch continuance |S0ng from the coal chute as the anthra- |y oy : t 11 possession of the country- | Lafayette, and that it has remained at|there were) held by the King of the an nominees |cite trickles into the cellar. which we must fig Mount Vernon ever since. country. object s —_— b 5 At a popular auction house in Lon-| (Momday—Gordon and the Warwich . v at home. It is| WHeR you go to the polls Monday pull | the fair fac h of despond. It is simply {don in 1860 a key to the Bastille and Plantation.) t and let it be|the republican lever to insure the con-|Green Mount: alk is the name of an un- |2 Stone from that structure were sold —_— t r ates gooq |lnuance of an efficient city government. |been soaked at public sale for a considerable sum.| Unlike most rapacious birds, ospreys nment and demands its con- | AR i “|able to quench s ‘When this firm of relic disposers had |are gregarious. . There haven't been enough fiies to | Wicked” Now Sunday Morning Talk |swat thus far this season to really get ! Once upon L o 3 ;. | Working For Good. swatting arm into first cl boy went al FILLING THE i plassialupo. |y as ' Ann his s H 4 gs work to- ™ difficult rently The man on the corner says: It you knew that he no:‘flfll hem that love God. ’ being Hard- |haven't already cultivated the habit of |} g ttle h so loved the world that He ng Wi ship- |SuPPorting good government begiu Mon- | plame for the couh. begotten Son.” 1 r nc to those were | 44Y i bacteria were in the h , ® u Pr Wilson M Ser e teacher went and with " 4 : elisaiisge lie end in the Nott murder case came | the way in which he' mad - t B T st ol [T @kpek;xv.u!l’ It was undoubtedly the|hyde fly was a caution, but it rooted out |1OL g “““l'lh bel"“‘”‘g‘s" b TAFTVILLE GREENEVILLE FALLS . : o £ only thing that would prevent -{the scab from that home. “He that| TV m that love Him is the : n the few The revelationg |2 prevent a convic. e that| E ; — Che revelations | o, Fath exta toieprt 1ol i Reacs obj providence. This is not 2 Front Street 285 Central Avenue 133 Sachem Street Fasanasite |2 idea on the part of perat nce the time of t in o them . . i S Cookes, Ib. ... 22¢ RICE, 3 bs. ... 18¢ unquestionably been |, oo & PUOCt CT8 O8E ¢ S tion as an absolute queen; for, may chisel out the ,finest s, e e THE BEST AND MOST iy reports are correct con-| 1 Ao s combined Withly means ,as to no one else. the trans in the saintly character, or - » who have been apj eq |them there s no wonder they resort to[ uration of the whole of her ex s of the desperate crim- T ECONOMICAL % head of the board. In thete |tBe+COUrts in New York for punishment.|physical, mental, moral and" spii ich makes the mighty, the : b5 R e she displays a little tyranny in planr nce, is the presence or the Stuffed Ollves OF ALL are not how under the stres| ReMember mext Monday there ls also | for her muptials, remember that | ic love of God in the soul ! o war fons wr m)m[ captaias o i s s e ::y”; spend the time in praying, that she may cumst into blessings. RED LILLY & t el y to lay aside ; be strong enough to stand the strain of * most anythir v of private et-|th®Y Want a commission to unlertake! giginusion without breaking, when = 18c_.27c__.39c VALUE 1 iy idiey that work. At th believing ion of the struggle and the next thankless task that is ahead {n conmec- 0 much there is little surprise that few ion with 80 that are desiroug of serving thereon. the shipping board, IN RUSSIA. I observer of conditions end its struggle, diction but in larations of Lenine it matter of time allowance. But there have been other evidences May 22, we- weré lolling about in the : VEGETABLES which backed up the claim that the| It is a wise provision that was incor-|shade while the mercury . was lolling KEROSENE . soviet government could not hold out [porated in the proposed state absentec|around 90. degrees?’"And the next day{ - F. H. KENYON, General Agent : unless it recoived outside aid. -It has|voting voting bill, that would also permit |3t the same hour mén were goins about G- N. been able to defeat gome who have at- as to ma t to admin- upon a there are reasons t there is a full recog- was more than a year ago that one in Russia gave the bolshevik government six months te It outlived that pre- view of the recent dec- is possible that the viewpoint was incorrect only in the “Robbed his employer,” says a head- ne. Another one of those cases where gratitude manifests itself in a peculiar mannes, High prices are bad enough but when Those Boston policemen seeking rein- statement seem to think those who have been faithful to the city ought to be fired because the unfaithful have seen the error of their way. to Insurance men coming from the west to Hartford insure their lives for a mil- lion dollars. They probably have noth- ing against Hartford but are just prac- ticing what they preach. ‘What a grand thing'it would be if ev- ery city had someone would emulate Ed- ward Bok's example in Philadelphia and leave a yearly prize to the one who does the most for the city during the year. those disabled and prevented from get- tempted to erush it by the use of force, |ting out to vete a chance to ‘participate and it has compromised with certain |in elections. God bless her!—the sweetest, the pur- est, the loveliest flower the June has to give orange blossoms wi wedding day is hers 'hv her reign in this little world of lim opens her eyes to the cold and cruel fact that she is united to a common man and | not to an uncommon saint; that disen- chantment—which is sure to come—will enrich, and not embitter, her nature. Again T say, let her blaze out her own pathway through roses and music and romance to the coronation scene when “she shall walk with him in white, fo she s worthy.” The world bas always had great minds capable of dealing with most subjects, and some of them have been bold enoush to ‘attempt it. There is one subject how- ever, as far as I know that has mever been dealt with seriously, and that is freaks. We have had the philosophy of almost everything erplained, or attempts at explanation. But no one been rash enough to write on The Philosophy of Freaks. Why was it that on Sunday in’ their overcoats? s it that hu- man beings presumably governed by rea- son, will one-day be' on' the mount of will transfiguration and .the ¥ery- next. C &t er pitieth 's greatness is mot ith His lavishing the very| of His thought upon the least in nature, and we believe that his _children, - Lord merciful unto them that TELEPHONE 352 FANCY FIG HAR Cuticura Soap —— The Healthy ——— Shaving Soap Cuticara Soep shaves withoutmug: Everywhere %e. DELAP, Special Agent D. W. LITTLE, Special Agent Hartford, Conn. New York SRR A S e o New -Haven CHALLENGE MILK, can.... I5c KELLOGG’S Cornflakes, pkg 10¢ FRENCH Castor Oil, bot. 15¢ P TELEPHONE 611 SNOWDRIFT FOR 15¢ TRY IT NOW BUTTER,b. .. 36¢c 2Pounds...... 69¢ BLUE LABEL Catsup, bottle 25¢ FANCY FRUITS AND TERMS, STRICTLY CASH TELEPHONE 1632 BLUE ROSE

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