Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 18, 1921, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

TR NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, JUNE 18, 1921 4 ~ interest in government ‘property or con- racts, hence the ciaim of conwpiracy 1o| VHE MAN WHO TALKS ICEBERGS FROM GREENLAND’S GLACIERS get control of goods that the department| Well done, Kandas Industrial court! : held by government employes for their Tlou "nlvldurouaad hostility of both em-| The Newfoundland sealers have just | each other about. An ledbers has. baen 4 > own benefit. ployers and workers through your in- born. a.ffl”‘h g“”‘fl Tt Is reparding this featurs that tho|sistence on settling industrial disputes °"l Impisted theif atnual “““;’ amonig the | 0L jually the water besofues ealm, the president has seen the need of breaking| DY, the orderly judicial process and re.|icefloes off the Grand BanRs. They re-|nojges cease, the huge Bepx finds its and gcuf ef the contract. However much the depart-| QUIFINZ hoth parties—to observe the rules| port that the crystal fields are unusually | equilibrum and thén, frém out of these i ment may have plunged n the way of | OL,Justice and equity.” We do not bless| heavy and extensive and contain a very|glacial solitudes, bexins its long jour- o7 30 . this’ court merely because it has pro-| great number of bergs, so that as those| ney southward: 'rha Bml F anklm 1?5 YEARS OLD investing )‘" o h equipment there is no | voked onposition, for there is no merit in | aré carried southward there is certain to| The cause of /the splitting of the berg yel' r uare reason Wwhy the proper return from its| that, but because it stands for the or-|be a very considerable element of danger | from the glaciér is better understood now o= e [ disposal should be denied to the gov-|derly and impartial administration of | for the ocean liners traversing the North| than it used to be. It is the upward Sumeription price 13¢ & week: 3o & month; $.0 | ornment. law. We are 80 constituted in this coun-| Atlantic the present summer, writes P.| pressure of the water on the fleating end o o, i try that we dislike compulsory arbitra- | T. McGrath to the New York Post from | of the lacier that breaks off the bergs. Romd Steak, lbzsc LEAN CUTS _‘_'"_‘",‘_“."_.:'."""" “ Worwi 4, Owma, 8 PREVENTING THE WASTE. tion. But where eapital is obstinate and | St. Johns, Newfoundland. The ice-pack| 8o that they do not ordinarily drop into Telepaene Call g labor unreasonable, let the matter he put|-will soon begin to drift south across|the sea, byt rise from it. coRNm BEEF : i, Not only what need there is for pro-|into disinterested hands for setticment|the path taken by passenger steamers,| The first yéar of the iceberg's exis- BEST B e Moo, Wh viding a proper degree of protection but | rather than make a whole commun 'y |#nd not a captain in any fiver on the | tence may be passed as part of the flos ;3 Bulletin dob Oies, 353 | the bepefits that are furnished wWhere at-| suffer from the effects of a strike, be-| 6cean but will feel more or less anxie-| in which it is seeurély loeked by the Mder lb sc Pound 8c WiNimantie Offies, 3 Chuwh Bt Peleohens 105 | tention' is given to such needs can be | cAuse neither side “will nof give :n.* |ty until his ship is safely past the berg| winter formation. But When the spring 1] $.8:9 — | seen in the struggle that has been un- [ That is just what the Kansas industrial | belt, comes the berg pack is bhrekem up by —— T Neonteh, Saturday, Jume 1 1981, derway for a fortnight in the fighting of court’ is doing, and, comsequen‘ly, ths Abont ence in ten years this condition | fierce storms and the herx is released ol Bt hot-headed ones in both parties denounce [ occurs and such seasons have generally|and swings out into the Aretie eur- NAT[VE VEAL "‘_Fm'“r;r‘:!“‘s"‘:: ;"‘l[-n “"‘:- petag this court. It has done anether thing| been marked in the past by ocean dieas-| rent to take its nlaee in the procession ] Maine are worthy of all acception, and that /s it has | ters, It is hoped, though, that with the| that moves malestically #ounthward. MEMBER OF THE ASHOGIATED PRESS. || gront natural resources. 1f some 10| deciaed that whtse wemien 4r6 déing 16| powirtuf seareilights which stemers| Now its ddys ais skmierba ATl Gt SECE D, .. ... 0. CUTLETS, bb....... 48¢c SHOULDER CUTS, Ib. 16¢ e o T ctsawe oot 1o || i7ed efforts made to prevent and eppose | number of hours fthey shall have the is paper and wige the Joesl news publisbed || fires therein it can be realized that mil- | 8ame pay. This, alse, has met with nersin N The Amecatd Prem N exelusvaly entltledelection is not given to them and orfan-| same work as men and work the sam>| now carry the summer may pass without| well. however, as it sweeps down threugh RUMPS, b a repetition of such eatastrophies. Davis Straits. Its apnearance is sub- secene Most of the people wWho crowd to the stantial and formidabl Zflcl Its walls rise o da || Vions of dollars can be quickly sent up in sh opposition, but is’t it sheer jus-| rail of a big liner in midocean when the, almost perpendicularly for oyer 300 feet.|| s B X IRRRUR ¢ S °® Bl imoNs. | Fovest e pidtestion las mhde | 31081 word is passed around from the pilot| Its sides may be seamed and _grosved FRESH CUT Boned and Rolled its appeal there as well as elsewhere Iere in the north, we belleve that all | house to steerage “Iceberg to starboard from its contaet with the mountains = Pom(; BEB', lb.c 19 ih the result tnat lookouts are main. | Fight-minded persons, irrespective of par-[have but a dim idea as to where the | which it has passed, but its tep is eov- B“f Lwer’ zlbs zsc T ot advantageons poimts and. at| (¥ lines, will commend President Fard.|strange visitor eame from. The num-|ered with pure white snew. LEAN PORK LOINS MACHINE SLICED CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING JUNE 11th, 1921 11,185 SHOULD PULL TOGETHER. contributed to the re there this month, hut what value of the situation s worth noting What seems to be greatly needed in 8 5 ing for the emphasis he puts in his re- | ber of people who have witnessed that| As (he bery rounds the Newfeundland the first sian of smoke the telephone | oo "I (5 FRRRINS AL BOE B Y Aec] arand and awful sight, the birth of an| coast it first feels the warm lap of the GENUINE NATIVE wires are kept busy and firefighters are| (jon in regard to the race problem. Of | lceberg, are few indeed. Those 10| Guilf Stream which is to destroy it. Its at work when their services are bound| course we can understand the righteous| have tell us that it is one of the most | progress up to this time has been some. Fo lb 45 to accomplish the best results instead | indignation aroused over the Negro's|awe-inspiring exhibitions of any of the| what rapid, but now it oes more slowly e C of waiting until the fire gota beyond any | brutal disregard of the sanctity of wo-| forces of nature. Through the eves of | The reason for thisls that the Smericn ossible control. manhood. But it ought to be kept in | these bold investizators let us trace | rent of warm water vi % 3 Fire ";,mn: 'of such a character can-| mind that all Negroes are not brutes any| one of the icy mountains of the deep| Vet it moves on against current and PORTERHOUSE OVEN BACON, mnd S not accomplish the impossible and it is|MmOre than all white people are not saints. | from the cradle to the grave. wind, for the great maes of the berg, 2 it : Absolutely nothing can be said in fa-| Of course, we look to Greenland as| which extends eight times as far under g STRICTLY FRESH not to be supposed thatyrain has mot| o, "oeyon o Jaw, but almost everything| the home of the iceberz. That vast and | water as it towers at‘r‘ave it, is urged against it. For any man. or set of men ! mysterions island, which some explorers| on by the underlying retic eurrent. siagiies & 1o Dot S Bk w ing| to take the law into their own hands is| say should be called a continent, is en-| By the time the bers has reached Ne w‘fl! HAMBURG, “"P' PRD | e . . ttached today to getting | suhversive of government. Russia is a| tirely covered by an ice cap. The im-{a point opposite the northern coast of together spirit. President Harding call|o,1 anq fignting such fires where in | good example of law overthrown on a|mense falls of snow yearly increase it In| Labrador, the warm sun above and the ago to the fact that there is need |\ "y, n themselves out. It is simply a|Passion and nrejudice, always acts un-|but as this melts it sinks down and|zun to changze its appearanes. Its toy P L R ¢ overcoming the tendency to dawdle.| o DUrR, themsclics cut Is simply & | B G etimes an Innocent man auf- | under preseure of many tons becomes foe,| is no longer a level prl‘ll;;su, But is B > The special session of congress was| Bl S e eservine and | fers the penalty which the law woutd | clear as crystal and almost as solid anu| mounider into queer shapes. sou BEST HEA . Jled for the purpose of taking action :'h':":"” h:("]j p“m‘p,_r :m"l"","'(‘w"ff‘fm;”:; impose on the muilty. Lynch law al-| hard as marble. wind will set the waves to carving out LARGE MEATY PRUNES, 2 Ibs. 25¢ s At Attt oatil iy : > 10| waya stirs up race hatred to the utmost| The pressure of this great mass, €o|na great cavern in ite exposed side. Th RIC lb 6 Rl gt - hrbe“:m';:n{(":d thay | Undertake the work of preventing fires| which resalts in many lives for ome, to| enormous that we can scarcely realize if. ts ton will melt and run off voseses U so far as possible and to establish agen-| say nothing of those injured and damage | does something more than change snow s has not been made but thers | < in impetuous eataracts that . cies for detecting and fighting them than | done to property. May the pronosed com-| into jce. It causes a slow but graduall wear away the walls until they look like il P 25 . be a certain unWwillingness to | ¢ o gtand the loss that would other-| mission find remedial measures. movement of the ereat ice cap over the| spires. Toilet aper. .. &9C | LIGHTHOUSE . e conditions that exist today and |00 pe involved 3 A E surface of the country, which slopes| Soon the wave caverns are worn until t accordingly. The situation is of course no different| s ne * prmile e o e ot Aves|gently to the- coast. Thus mountains|they form arches. Jutting cliffs are 6 ROLLS Cl " ! be refidmbered that in sy Juout ST 0T O BOERC BA SO | s nivilese ot amocha g UL ten o elnters. formed, which break off and fall into eanser, can. .. bc n to matiers Which it wag 6300BM | wrore fheve. 1s much woodland, Heen|in & great variety of ways. To meéntion/| . TH® rate at which these glaclers move| the sea. -The berg Iy Wof oo :l: ":- P w congresd would have to hamdls| g eC e E EE OO 0 e mafe| ohly one Mustration, take that of walk-| !B 0 slow a8 1o be ipercentible_ thise; water Iine aud belew H. & BT E S0 MILD, WHOLE MILK was (BESWR ower chis Gb tiina i Connecticnt; st rovision 13 made | ORly oBe TR o, e e o aoes | OF four feet a vear at most. We will | comes top heavy. Then it toples aver wit Strawberry—Raspberry X & congress Much business ‘that | (°F Eetting an early anGon waodiand HIE B AngRIET (PEEROD, = '] m does| ok at the mount of one of these Arctic|a great crash—“turning turtle” tne : ot TR | fves rwmere. there arg ntities of | 0Ne care to take a long walk alone. PA™ | rivers of ice. The scene in summer is | saflors call this—and woe to the ualueky JAM ]b Zoc CHEE‘S lb 19 ¥ ave been disposed of months | i nqing timber. : 5 Henlarly, ',;"'r‘y‘i;“l oo (:;f”'m';"‘ 3| one of decentive tranquility. You canlship that happens to be in the way when 9 e toin ot - C s $ of checking losses and conserving the | L B e o OO e O dar In | See precipitous cliffa from between which | this occurs! «n as tachled an? put through|qunly at the seasons of the YEaT when S irention Ters In New ¥mgiaid ho| the slacier\protrudes. A wall of lee the berz gets farther gouth the - i dolayed meagires ns th |the fire danger is the greatest. . The| will have some hard bits of tervitory to| {fom. 350 to 400 feet high has been| water grows warmer and the rays of the P Pom = lsc t the measure restrdéting im- | alue of such means of detection and| mo A o Tt ke, the ausn | Pushed out into the bay. Against its|sun stronger. It changes position eften nigration and ratified the Colombian| o cvstem by which the fir S little easier if he s walking wity | fo0t the waves lap gently. The great|and is split up into smaller pleces. These reat here are. howevar, at the Pres-|are reached should not be underestimat.| somebody, male or female, preferably | Mass of ice looks as stable and as solia | small bergs do not last long and finally nt time three bills which have occu- ; . . . s ke as the rocky promontors beside it. All| disappear altogether, leaving mot a trace P Sal d Dr l bttl 3 ; S Lils Which have oce|ed.. Repeated are the instances’ lise | female? Just to-have some one to Haten |58 L8] dpnenr slozetner, leaving ot 2. +%s| | Premier Salad Dressing, large e 38¢c d of time and whic ; ention of | Patiently to vouw o that in Maine where thi ens. Wit c cradle wi (" aommo- one to comference becanuse b r e the tediousness of Suddenly something happens. With a| Arctic cradle with so mug 5 0 o n(( ren ause }nf Wil okt “wantes ustifioa all nse that | Wil relieve ”‘M;d uemess _f“r:ad::avr‘l‘ {remendous roar and crash like a peal of | tion only a few months heforrm H S D P s ed action by the respective Thousesiis entaifed jiPIeven 8 Jwestleaas Loy Yo a0 St b r a biz secti he glaci Teebergs of large size are seldom seen |l FRES] ELECTE! 'URE WHITE Limited and in spite of goMditions and the de-| > T o o | ings. and remews your strength. Morai: thunder a big section of the glacier foot g - or' TS ps off, and before the echoes have|below latitude forty-one degrees, which is Aevoting of early attention Don't walk alone. i ey 3 : e s ena voitog ke some| svomy evponite vew Tork: and.mey nev. |l EGGS, dozen. . 27c | LARD, 3 Ibs. .. 35¢ matters as taxation and | TR ATING wIIH AT AN Thy mot earry that idea out tn the | leviathan. The water is lashed into foam|er get farther south tham forty de- t] ozen. . C t] ... of a long fight| It Will be generally f larger rezlm of practical life? 1If it is|all around it and great waves chasel grees. era s pron hrough life with some- | gifference between their little faith and [ went, who insisted upon all or nothing. e e a1 wich " meths ot ks onten o o | o T o Wk T it o —— Best Shoulder POT ROAST, Ib. 12Yc Thess include the army ‘shl S5¥¥ h:‘“ciflm questions that have arisen between | Iv 500 to walk 1 1 b an eace resolution. 1In connection | this country Ja s the ideal onePody? If walking with semebody is a|the greater faith they might have exer-|He sympathized with the effort made by “ e first two there must be recon-|#nd that it ougz to result in an amica-| 2000 Dhysical and social exercise, why|cised. Perhaps if they had not met that|Calhoun while secretary of state l: §" 1e demands for econemy ble uuuunv»y W S Hughes | 'S_it Dot coually a good demestfc exer-| fajlure they would not have discovered |the British to aceept the line of 40 de- # A < Wwith the| CIS6? In the early vears when we be-the littleness of their faith. Great fail- | grees-as the frontier, but the British gov- afeguarding the nation's interests : ould be| 527 t0 toddle we had to walk with par- | yres are sometimes great discoveries. | ernment then rejected this propasition. and in connection with the peace '950'§' ere’ sh f,?w 0;\4HA: whose strorg hands lovingly hetd | Sometimes the best experience which &| In 1844 the democrats made their cam- ° hew livision as to just what | < ' N8 Offours. The time will come sooner than |Christian has is a humiliaing and shock- | paien upon the issue of “54-40 or Aight,” el Sl Lo i o o e nk, wher in the gathering shad-|ing failure. Then he finds out how little | and Polk, when elected, felt obliged to in- f war. A bit of serious at- for clearing up | ows, we shall hegin to todde for the |ne believes, how little he knows. how |gist upon this campaign houndary. To directed ought to hasten the |aNY misund second time. ‘Then, perhaps, we shall|gmall his strength is, and how much he|inis, however, Great Britain naturally 1 of these matters in response| Instead of taking up the questions in|nred 10 Wa/ [“‘”“”'!t""‘ "'“]"$ protection | has depended upon himself. It is a time | would not consent; it was, indeed, fdle to what is unquestionably the wish of | Ecmeral way the discussions will con-y o0 SIEE Sengs W Tea nation cern different subjects such as the rights of Japi concerning pr s subjec United serty and otherw nds ves. But|of personal inquiry. The Christian asks | expect her to do so, unless things should en we are in the prime of our strength. | himeelf why his faith is so little. He|pe kapt as they were until a fairly large ng the intervening davs, if we are!inquires into the cause of his spiritual| American population had grown up aleng s, we will walk with wife and ch - 3 weakness. If he be much of a Christian | the Pacific coast and had thais put her in G MACHINES. dren. Without there is ne “fulness | e E oy B 2 he will at once take steps to get out of | 3 position where she could hardly do| sking to the M- e S coun-|of life® Statisties show that walking|pjg little faith into a strong and suc- | anything else. 3 < . bt wo S cles of J eria and | alone through life is a fruftful cause or|cesstul faith. He will get right himself |~ polk's -administration was neither ca- O’Nell'MCGrOl'y Electnc’.l Com any tonnaction with most’ methods of tran A Rog sliat £ | micide and do all he can to make the world|pahle nor warlike, however well disposed i . v s ] land of Yap and it is Sometimes a little deft toueh will re- | better. to biuster, and the secretary of state, the ortation. When vehieles are recosnize | they will cover s T home of the appearance of pov- | — timid. shitty and sesh pontician, Bu-|] FRANKLIN SQUARE NORWICH, CONN. s dangerous for the transportation of | considered necessary and as their im-| ert It is dirt that makes saualor mvri ‘\ chanan, naturally fond of facing both $ = here are means of safe- clean poverty. If you build a log cab-| yort nee warrant ways, was the last man to wish to foree | sl patrons by stop-| fuch has been in ome way or| D in the willergess and plant a rose || @DD INCIDENTS IN AMERICAN }l. Guarrel on a high-spirited and deter- ping its or requiring it to be brought | another regarding mattors. Opm| 10 front of it, the rose will kill the HISTORY mined antagonist like England. Accord- ip to requirements. Such isn't the case |iome have been sired here amd in Ta.| Fiderness. for somehow the rose identi- ingly, he made up his mind to back dowr ¥rom the Comsular Reports. ‘Ial'ln: off in cizaretts, locomotives, pas- 08 yet with the MPIMSE- Tt SIRKSS TH- | ooid s Bocts s ko Ao I it with civilization and culture. Dur- and try for the line of 49 degrees. as| yn 1919 Canada’s spruce lumber and|Senger automobiies and paraffin. In- le difference Now unsafe a fiying ma- Vet i sl e ast few vears the Italians have THE OREGON DISPUTE. proposed by Calhoun when in Tylers| ,uiowood production was worth $72,000,-| Creases are shown in illuminating oil, leat ne may be It there are those who are | ate s feeling of S e heenfcoloniziie 1o Alerent arts fiihel oyl [oniiory ‘alona) hie: Paciflc const] CADISL AR URE-RERUEN., SAEC AU CERMEL B00° | tobaeco and steel rails. il WD the. olatie bR a o e, and in the subures. Thelr| -, 0 on California on the south|affected indifference, had beén so much |~ jnaustrial ‘building of homes is at a| Coal that the British government has i with t e o s Been fully sealized] buildine Mas ot beem sécéolog o XEE, the north—Oregon, as it | Impressed by the warlike demonstrations| yeandstill in Britain: | bought in this country has been for ' with the aviator there is no law ot Eatiie i definite plan, and their plots of |2NC Alaska of ne MOT e een a|in the United States that they in tum | B Sitl ‘Sor.the: shtest ,.,.n.nna: entials ¥ es any official authority to step o Fai o d resemble crazy patchwork. AnajW¥as comprehensively called—had been | o . "qclighted * * * ; accordingly they| COreat Britain's o br e B akdt- SRR thAt the Miohine be made| SRR R cre ia something very artistic|Source of dispute for some time between | WET® CCOEREC o C 0§ ROCOrL NS | Ing of British industries provides for a| 1In the state of Tabasco, Mexico, there Btk SR NATINS. Cine ikt dha et e ¢ 2nd Ml about th: whole scheme. T's houses!the United States and Great Britadn. | s e 00l o0 accepted, Jume 15, | custom duty of 1-2 per cent. and wa- | is an active demand for tollet soaps and s a seems to be indicate A o After some negotiations hoth had agree 8 it *| lorem for five years on certain metaliic| tojler accessories, such as perfumes an .y B GG W a e it seems t nd are cheap, but there is something that both ihad ¢d| 1545, the offered compromise. e | » 8 A v ay be concerned with the ations- are prepared to 100k | reiia 4 = with Russia to recognize the line of 54 - tungsten products. This measure I ex-| toiler powders. Highly seented and medi- 2 relieves them from the Impression of & 2 s wnership of the machine, in the face and be g0V-| poverty. The rose and other flowers have | 1eErées 40 minutes as the southern | (Monday: The Development of Thanks-| jected to prevent “dumping” and flooding | cated toilet soaps arc preferred. French Vithin the past few months the atten- much to do in .making these places at-|boundary of the latter's ons, and giving Day.) the market with inferior goods at 10w | and Spanish goods are now on that mar- on of the eountry has been directed to a good sig tractive. Let us make more of the rose, | Mexico's undisputed of Cali- Prices. | ket "and are unders ng American pro- * number of instances where machines the two nati fornia gave an equ well marked HEP0 erashid to the & oaus i e i 24 parallel. i ave crashed he ground causing the to deal with the important ques- | there is a startling dearth of ministers, | SOUthern limit at the 4 4 peealibls An Stories That Recall Others * of many lives. In certain of these|tions in the mamner that has been ar-| So much so that a serious study s be- | "CL7een was in dispute — netances it has been pointed out that the | ranged. There is no desire for any-|ing made into the causes, but at present| Lhe British had trading posts a h Poor Abraham Lincoln. ° . hines were not i emilitieg for 5 i e v the r - 3 mouth of the Columbia, which they em: ; nes were not in fit condition for the | thing but friendiy relations and peace | the remedy is mptofn;‘x?r::‘mr.‘:f'mmf“w?: phatically asserted to be theirs; we, on| Fight-year-old Jennie was studying lc - raw‘n ea 240 which they were put. This may | between the two countries. The promo- | {I<I067, MATY, B0, G0EbL, BA8 sometsng | the other hand, claimed an absolutely | the life of Abraham Lincoln st schosl e due to improper care, inadequate re-|tion of such ends would se o ith it, and | -1t 4 e s prop inadequate re-|tion of such ends would seem to be a ng to do with it. Of course s minie. | lear title up to the 4th parallel, aland wa _Throughont the entire Unlted States l American exports to China show 8| ducts, impressed by what she had pairs and the general deterloration of | sured by negotiations that have been | tor must have faith, but he must h couple of hundred miles north of the|found at home when suddenly she ex- of gupel’b fl&VOI‘— machine buj those conditions can, if we|arranged. Understandings and agree- | pork and beans fo Ko with it. To put |mouth of the Columbia, and asserted that | claimed in a pitying voice: “O mammat are te accept the opinions of exerts, be [ments have been reached 1 1 > territ | Just think! Ab: ineol! between the | ministers on & living -watge that swanig | (o7 all the balance of the territory up to|Just think! Abraham Lineoln had to found and remedied betors fights are |countrics before and there is mo reason | make strect-cleaners, bravemen and un- | (he Bussian (""S‘jf“”fi.l',""}‘{gh S w:?d""h:l;m:”' nn’t";zm?m: ':": made and ecertainly in the interest of |Why such a happy solution should not | skilled Tactory help zo on a strike has |87 Tale Detter than that of the i 2 e e Tl ki i : % St Doer e s eats ot b L In 1818 a treaty had been made pro- |Jennie pointed out the sentemce: “Abra-| afety It is only proper that fly- |be reached again and agaln. ; n ving ir churches. i s AN vgpellorsirudly Vg S With this fact in ming. wniverstn ones: | viding for the Joint occupation of the|ham Lincoln split rails for elothing. ng machines should pass some sort of is fa mind, u " | territory by the two powers, as neither - 25 e it iy bain- | skritory by the b nspection befere they engage in the EDITORIAL NOTES. Nothing. Soine Tor e in the teemysit | Was ‘willmi to ‘Kive up:its claiinito, s |~ IatWEens Geod. bes MUMRA) Eotes business of carrying passengers, either . % SR 51 Foge O = " | whole, or at the timé at all understood | TWo sisters near the 60 mark oec: . Suburban day in Norwich. Get an|cal shon Other reasons are apparent: ; 4 Ay complimentary or for pay : the Tamk and file . today e paret: | the value of the possession, then entirely | slonally drove up to the store. The When the commiander of a fiylng |G\ Start and prepare to make the|the mamk and fle today are eecking| ®ITVE @ i "{reaty of joint oceu- | younger weighed about 80 pounds and 4 most of it. it D bnan T p d sree ever, si was convalescing from o 8eld declares that he has no authority spiritual leader has been displaced by |Pancy had remained in force ever) since. LA & long fliness i y 3 itis] ad bui 3 S0 ded helping abeut, . o prevent o o p a | the ‘steial” edtertaimer: ihe Boipi "% | Under it the British had built their great needed he JJINENE B SRR L MR 6o a8l L it WE Dhbeeme it ot Sl e L T heemmitt gna!|irading stations and used the whole coun-| One morning the clerk Who had been ” an=afe machine and municipal, state and was once a throne -has hecome a foot i P T in f waiting on them met the older sister | federal officlals declare that thers is ne | "7 WAtchful waiting in the new Mexi-| stool to the forum, and the result js|UrY in the interests of certain fur com-} "WtinE Sr CI0H, FHE fne SCO6F Sier B snder which ok al R can policy. haidly a surprise: 35000 churches in th- | Danies. R A 3 3 L DS R ey (BTN v DN e United States without ministers, and the| The Americans, in epite of some vain |marked: has won the patronage of millions through its comes evident that with the large num- in | minister is not to be had. 4 efforts, were unable to compete ‘with| “WhY, your mother just walked down £ E f A engaged in soliciting public patron-| The Next thing to look forward to in ke : them In this Tine, but what was infinite- | the street. She must be mueh better.” incomparable richness of flavor + cannot be Jong before {en.|Teal earnest is the openinz of that ever| e are frequently reminded that this Iy more important had begun, even prior | And when the clerk was told of the o it 8 .onen B s a “practical age” To tell us this is i ; rocial error he had made he 1bst no ti ation is undertaken that will | Welcome watermelon season & e PP to 1840, to establish actual settlers along ! e no tis i " ; . Mos e | -3¢ ell of his mista 06 b siivant . = 2 3 ho. thiigs aries being the first to come in. The g fatalities, June doesn’t appear to b offering f"(; e {:" “":n“‘:‘““-‘ ““: little | Jopect of affairs was totally changed much encouragement to those who are|else. But in puting the main i) Of| when in 1842 a huge caravan of over SELLING WAR SUPPLIES waiting to test out the old swimmin' | }iVing on utility, do we not miss many s de-t ey g of the finer intincts of the human soul?| L0%% Americany mafe the Jourmey from Al the seandals connected with. the It is well enbagh for us to have textfle |y .oy their wives and children, their purchase and disposal of war material schools to teach boys how to manufac-|g oy anq herds, carrying their long haven't apparently beem aired if we are| 1o Esperanto is to be raised by Its|ture cloth; and scheols of agrieutture| b8 TG, TR LR S oTeg to fudge by the action which has been | C7TTS but something oneht to be done| to show them how to raise onions. But[Fifies on, thelr ehowleers and tmelt axes taken in breaking the eontract that was |!0 O¢StTOY the cubmerged wreck that;shoddy and omions omght mot to keep | (L 78 ) it A s lanting roses and readi 2 ; entered Into by the war department dur- | C2used it to sink. L‘,‘.‘”gu;‘ e :‘im:d‘“go!’?, The next vear 2,000 more settlers of ng the last administration with the o > = . 4 the same sort in their turn crossed the United States Harness company. Claims| Frost destroying Connectiout crops | oy e Ok sloves, breadopane, coal|yzst plains, wound their way among the are mads that the contract cannot bs|Makes it evident that thechilblain eason | fiic atenings on our walls, books of fine| ROCKY mountains through the pass ex- broken but whether it ean or not it ap-| /™'t EOINE to end much before the hay | poetry and the best movels in our book-|Plored by Fremont, Benton's son-in-law, pears at t fever activity starts. cases? . Why not cultivate the intellect|2nd after suffering every kind of hard pears at the present time to be more or intel ship and danger and warding off the at- ecs seriously upset by the aetion of the as well as sweil the bank account? Not a| . 0 "¢ hontile Indians, descendsd the president Such leadership as this country takes| Word is to-he said against advancing the | o iy siope of the great watershed to Pradas Hartior 1 In the way of world disarmament will be | Uceful. but a great deal more ought to be| ;& % i "rollows by the banks of the O the atiorany acted WPOM 1M lin calling the leading mations together| SAld In favor of promoting the esthe- T pinion of the attorney gemeral to the Sh ! 4 " Columbia. effect that the contract violates the fed.|!© Teach an understanding. e ! When Amériean gettlers were once in eral criminal eode and there promises te . aetual possession of the disputed terri- % Sunday Momlng Talk tory it became evident that the period of be some interesting revelations as new | The Lockwood committce seems to he Great Britain's undisputed sway was ght is shed upon the situation, which |able to uncover profiteering wherever it BLESSINGS OF FAILURE. aF a matter of fact ig nOt a new dis-|starts investigating in New York state, It is sometimes a blessed thing for a|to embroil itself with England, so it re- “You Can Do No lefitt Thn covery. It was revealed during Investi- | The only regret is that it couldn't have|Christian to meet with an astounding |fused any aid to the settlers and de- Buy Our Wi ». et el o |5 oy e S S SRR S e o i YOUR BINS FOR NEXT WINTER ! ation Tut WM whe ot bd Bt suing, or in a piece of workxat which he |under the joint occupancy treaty they . d The man on the cormer save: If you|!S ¢nEaged. Uninterrupted success in any |would have given Lngland offease and No Salad Complete Withou? SILK SHSERECS"ME‘;TOS&‘,‘PR“ SALE SALE WIRE FRAMES The Norwich Electric Co. 42 FRANKLIN STREET s ood pursuit has a dangerous side to it, | cause for complaint. _ The contraet exists becawse of the|hear any groaning it may be because| iy the hands of many Christians, because| = But Benton and ihe other westerners Th ] big surplus of harness supplies that the | Word comes from Paris that the short|iney are often tempted to attribute thelr | were perfectly willing to offend Kngland. ux,l|rl ' war department had on hand at the close | SKirt has had its day and may not sur-|suécess to thelr own wisdom and work,|it by so deing they coull help America was disclosed that the department hai| The optimistic attitude of President |!han they would it they were arrested by |tions, Acoordingly a hill was introduce Maym aid in a stoek of harness mupplies that | Flustis of the Hoston & Maine even|(2ilure on their way. My wibjeet eame | providing for the settiement of Oregon, . " During Christ's absenee a| The bill passed the senate by s elose under fire the trouble in conmection with [it is darkest first before dawm man took his sufering mon to the disci- | vote, but failed in the house. The un-| DF] JCATESSEN ST the efforts to dispose of the goods de- P o vles for a cure. They tried to cast out |successful attempts made by Benton and ORE P l ’ l eopie s Coal Co. 3 as to the reason for their failure. His|treaty should forthwith be given were he war department. By the federal|tions at the very scason when the busi- |jo; 514 TELEPHONE 542 yrie : ISWer B S = d N YO > o Bt S H ik el fe v s i | f answer was “Because of your little | certainly ill-advised. However, even HEN Y0U W. PUL yaur Dus:. % ¢ the war and which it disposed of to|Vvive the summer, and algo beeause they are frequently in-|to ebtain Oregon, and Were too rash and Home-Made . . . the United States Rarmem company. 1: ok o 10 (L DL S S e s sl o kot G Is the Best You Can Fill Your Bins With. < o "1 to me as I was thinking of the question | giving each settler 640 acres and addi- i - H H would have lasted an Indefinite period | though the road has deferred its div ¢ Christ's disciples, west rice es and while sweh gransactions have been |dend recalls the oft repeated saying that| s 1t g Ohr b, | Hopal land. it e had a family. THUMM'S g t velopg from the fact that those involved | While the New ITaven road is justified | the trouble, but utterly failed. ‘This | his supporters to persuade the senate to H in the purchase of such goods had' been |in cutting®expenscs and eliminating | [Ailure suggested an earnest inguiry.|pass a resolution requiring that notice of 40 Fl’lllmlll Street faith”” The difference between their | Benton was not willin , ' Dess beiore the pul M {hele 6 ne medi- rovernment are forbidden te have anvla bit veculiar. Tallure and. thelr nossibla KGNS Waa the | lenpth. t8 Which eartaln Whetern mer V. DeLlSF than gy the Advertising buyers and Inspeetors in the employ of | waste the closing of certain shore sia.|Th disclples anxiously inauired of Christ | the termination of the joint beupancy woumhbs of The

Other pages from this issue: