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Bulleti und Goufiet 125 YEARS OLD ) pietoten prim 1 & Weeki S & mench; W Eatersd x e = '_‘..’-‘th- Tefegses Cafty, Bullstin Job OZice, 3.3 Wilimntic Offica 23 Chureh SL Telsphons 105. —_— Norwich, Saturday, July 9, 1921. ————— e MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, Amocdated Press o exelusively entitied e te ase for mpublieatien of all Bews damsich- @ cadiied 0 1t or net otherwim erediied to s vaser e5d also tde local bews bublisbed fehts of reubieation of @eelaly ~7eia wrw also reserved. CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING JULY 2nd, 1921 THE BONUS BILL. wild and piles the na- to give heed red by Secret department an of President Harding about of taking mo aetion at upen the bonus bill been through a . period of extravagance. We have piled without much regard for ways in which to meet we have reached the time when a tion tacties but reason the recogn fferent ¢ the s a clamor xation which ng conditions, consider that if there reduction, al- readjustments, a decided in- without heavy be pald Mellon means ¢ h thers ex must of inflation which voting ev- asked, urpose | are of the financial re- or an entire advaneed good epartment is Tt Aeery headed, o ntin btHer Q- cert nsider pide ch a would have r ostpone action and the at TAX REVISION. with mem- dent that matter | a matter ere is no preliminary well underway feral expense nue to ments that will be sible 'm of taxation, | a er others, but r > that others may T made plain sversiment ex- rm of taxa T surtaxes in the in e eliminated most of the ontinued and | be add 18 sion however nderway and the ¢ the president is to eee that SPEEDING A WENT. s of govern-| of the be worked out by the plan which roads as of the ounced for funding a part ot owed the government by the for equipment purchased and a sum aggregating t Million to the reads over a a half year In settlement of claims upon the government. f the delay that has been ex- checking up the various ess such as would result of buying beyond what is not been made. Pro- negotiations are completed in what is plannéd there be provided for the use of permit of the f materials and supplies in manner as to bring much relief iviness depression of the coun- ‘<) needed has to s funds that will s realized that the roads em- one way or another abeut a fifth hor of the country and purchase of the materials and sup- be appreciated What it en they are not previded with for carrying on their bustness lines and taking advantage of x conditions. o rallronds have beem passing Wrough trying times. They are not as ana | not the | a time when | but | RORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY JULY 9, 1921 out of the woods but the proposed settlement will, if carried through, put an end to one difficulty that has long been waiting adjustment, while the country will welcome any spurt to business in many lines that will result therefrom. It promises to be a settlement that will be of beénefit to' much more than the rail- roads of the country. THE MAN WHO TALKS One of the pleasures of life is derived from the beautitul. uty ie only an- other term for approach. to the perfect. Wae agply that term variously fo per- fection of form, sound, color and even character. - In this connection T wish to use it merely in relation to color, be- canse the present season i the time of flowers, and color is the ome thing in which the flowers love to riet. Is there anything that surpasses the red ramblar for. color when it has for-a& h-nlwmmi a large white surface as the side of a house? If a painter could exactly re- broduce such vividness of golor on his canvas we should call it overdrawn. Or it ne should give us a sunset just as it is we would pronounce it extPavagant. If there is In us an innate love of the beautiful much enjoyment may be deriv- ed from the vast world of color that grests us at every turn as the menth of June closes. We need mot travel afar to see the beawliful. The ‘Jardin des Plantes” is in our neighbbr'w garden; it may be in ours also. Beauty Is revealed to throvgh = multitude of phase ‘When beauty ja brought to our notice through the ehiscled form we call }t sculpture; when in the form of a building we call it avehitecture ; ‘when it appeals to us through the chan- nels of sound we call it music; but when it comes to our notice in the shape of right living we call it the “besuty of holiness.” It is just as proper te speak of bLeautiful lives as beautifu! roses. Whatever the form in which beanty is presenied to the senses R always arous- es the same sensations. I @ave spoken of the beautiful impreselon mads by the red rambler on a background of white. Let us transfer those terms to the moral world. White stands for purity of living, red for bravery, patriotism ard hereism. How many hoys America sent inte the World war, from our st homes, eican, INCREASING STREET ACCIDENTS. In the city of Providence there has re- cently been held a No Accident week and yet in spite of the effort to direct attention to greater safety there have been two killed and 115 hurt jn 366 au- tomobile accidents since the firSt of June. The conditions Which have been dis- closed there by the records prompts the Providence Bulletin to say: “For such economic benefits as it may reeeive from the development of the motor carriage and truck the public already taxes it- self heavily for the upkeep of roads and the maintenance of traffic polie. It suf- fers In health from the nerve racking noise by day and night and is deprived even. of the privilege of inhaling pure air while wasteful engine exhausts are poisoning the atmosphere with noxious gases. Is not this price emough withant paying ‘on an average for three persons a day physically Injured In the one city of Providence? Certainly the situation existing there is one to give concern, and yet it doesn't differ so much from that in plenty of other_ communities, in some of which the death rate is even greater. Some- row the placing of a vehicle that can make fast time in the hands of the many has resulted in a regrettable dls- regard for safety. The motor car has increased in numbers far faster than tforwerd, manly fsllows whe earn. there has been that development of aled their medals for faciag deats and rezard for others, and the willingness to |doing brave, valorous deeds! And how assume the responsibilities involved, which should afford pretection and pre- vent many of the acecidents. Similarly there has been delayed rec- ognition on the part of pedestrians that autos canont be dodged as teams might be. There is a constantly growing need of watching your step in the streets and | highways where hitherto little thought had to be given to_ it. Think, howeyer, what- would be If io happen if the same number of ace many did the same for whom there wers no medals! The red ramhle: &) its background of white is more in evidence than we think, It doesn’t require unusual powers of penetration, or rare ‘sagacity to learn lessons from the weeds. Whatever be the variety you deal with, they always reveal the lack of culture, no matter what interpretation you put upon that term. Weeds show their lack of culturs in that they srow anywhere, at any time, and ia any form. ‘“Paul does net plant | dents was causéd by teams or by trel-|noF Appalios Wll"gr;".‘ but the d;\'ildg-i\-“' lefs, and ere geems to o | “the ‘ncrease” all the same. Waads al- and vet there seems to be a feel-| B oL heir Tack: of culturs M théir ing that with_the number of autos in- |3 “0% thelr lack of cultors in bl reasing a greater number.- of accidents while the poor husbandman ‘"tlld‘ a eel- must be accepted. That is certainly |lezo commencement. They have me re- what can be expected when those who |spoct whatever for the academic atmos- are responsible for the dangerous condi- |phere. They do not suspend drinking ;s are permitted to continie their mad | from the soil while the owner of the fizid ourse, receive a slap on tie wrist in |drinks once agafn at the univarsity fount |the enforcement of safety regulations [N At other places during the class re- union. Weeds may lack culture hut they are not wanting in pendfration. In { respeet they are superipd to the averaa man who wields the hok. Caver them up S0 as to shut out the lizht of day completely and in a few Mays ey wili nd e permitted to retain their d es regardless of their contempt e laws and the rights of others. ving for | AROUSED BY COMPARISONS. That the, efforts that have and are|"bob up serenely vers Guch refrtsh- i 5 o ®led by the cultivation! Joy’ nava ejven ng made for better educational fa. hem. weed ouzhtito be adopted ss ties in mouthern states are having|'He™: The » ciltes in et ey i 13 vmmnrullt‘ ir SN THCRSae OB TEIet L 10 3y Crevetoditiat a gl oncerned s indicated by the eduea- | -t I reported tint cn;lgg:gh:;sl:". b 1al conference that ¥as been called fone member who had gome throush mers [for the state of South Carolina this|tan is usual for poor -mortaly remarkad |month. 1t is noteworthy that the com-|{that “this is probably the ference comes as the result of the bad [union [ shall ever attend. The deeter advertising the state has recelved be- |tells me that my kidneys—" At this cafise of its failwre te respond to . the “”;”"' the '9"“.:“5“"""; ‘“5’"“““";1 "{ s S . on |a classmate who exclaimed: . “Blank noeds of education in Keeping with nel_.’n!m" it the b b R e boring states. It is In fact easy for it| . ieq Addiscnian English. hut 1t was |to distinguish where North Carolina has |cxpressive speecr, and Lreught a sizh of met the pfroblem much more suecessfully |relief to those who had lstened pafient- and as m be expected that is just|ly to a long recital of wees. May we now serving as a spur to greater effort. |not leam an important losson from this Tut regardless of what its neighbor to |the north is doing South Carolina stands |indictea by its own condition when It is h0] out by the Journal of the Na Educational Association that it b the sma t number of citizens whe read, with the_single exception of Louisiana, that it spends the smallest amount per oapita for the education of the children in publid scheols, that its| publie scheols are in operation the small- 3 number of in the year—110, the smallest number of boys attending high school—2.2 per ard similar cases? What early use is there n making everybody about vou un- corfortable by making capital out of vorr wees? Why Invits all youc frierds |to “Gather at the River! before the riv- er Is clearly In sizht? You ave net the only one on earth whose heart ships a heat mow and then. Other niople have joints that delisht In rhaumatie Why mot “learn to burn vour Nobody's Jiver or stamach ed twinges. own smekes.” #lways reminds him of the Kingdom of God. This week my thought seems fo flu tnafe hetween colleges and weeds, < probably beeause T have had a memor- that it has the smallest number of [ahle experience with beth. After one public libra 1.9 per cent., that|has been an alumnus for a good man educational lines it averages the|ycars anl zoes back to his class réunions state: W the country. {he cannot help noting the greater smpha- days | cent, vest of any | | | When sueh facts as these are present- P",j,_};":',h“b ‘;(m?\“ ::.,.:m,: :\Anm’a"r::f; |od to the people of a state can there |eature of even a centennial eelebration {Pe any wonder that a statewide confer-|miqt s large place should be siven to the {ence is called in midsummer or that|decelopmant of the physieal s partactlv e people of the state should smart un- | ecnsistent with the trend of our madern r such rev ions? life. Bur our colleges have 2 na'nful South Carelina may attempt to belit-|bahit of - forgetting * the individual tle the rating by clatming 1t Is not o |Sdent Who brings ensr upen them by [but it is not Tikely to get far on thie|P% SKII and prewess. Yeara axo one [basis. What it should seriously under- | oo reen'® pirake oarsman of a'sletorl- ous crew. Tn his examinations at the close of freshman Vear he utterly falled. The faculty merei sant him Fame to tend the pigs on his father's farm. His fellow students dld not carry 2im an trefr shaulders to the railwav station. T leads one to infer that & student who will use the last atom -of his strength > in bring athletic take is to tackle the conditlons which | revail there so that no such rating can ve given it, go that it does mot bring up e rear in the statistics of all \states and so that its children may get onal oppertunities that are bet- ping with those of other sely the i : : alory o his collegs i ommonwealths, It ls making what | prarab laler. . As 1y 1 eerion e 1 prove a valuable move by thelnow the siout of “erncify® is not far ng of a conference but it will get|away from tha: of “iosanna.® re unless It follows up the talk| The American coflege Is giving the remedial action. country at large a very much needed ob- | b J ject lesson. The collage and university EDITORIAL NOTES, most casmopolitan. and_conse- Constantine needs to worry lest his Seapcalio, Watiiiions s S g I N y One sees very little that is snab-- joes fensive becomes a boomerang, bish among college -lu\le‘“ls.ha s ow . enters an American uiversity with certainly great weather for a potato [taken out of his own svstem. and he is ug convention. brought down to the earth where he be: & longs. Tf he ati*mpts to make capital With remt profiteers forced to search |OUt of the sunposed blueness of his bleod ants it will be a bit of punishment have to look for a while. will pass a great many blue days dur- ing the period cn’ adiustment. Nowhére in"all this wide world is the spirit of a common brotherhood more clearly pro- nounced than in the American calisge. Tt was refresaing the other day to sce 3 eol. ored senior at Amherst step ta the plat- form and receive his diploma athid thup- ders of applause. He was clean, straight, manly fellow who had done fine work as a student. Tu college a fellow In zauged by his mental and moral worth. The strangest thivg iu America is American weather. It was Mark Twain the tasif® wha sald of New Fngland weather fhat ok ml‘ ’mn nromfl(ze: te !nt‘snme e S i e o and te “.':‘.’?. attepi a8 s0om as it 1s le¥ 100se | e one ward that oharacterizes it beste |in congres ¥ than any other I know is “incengrusus It is fickle. ineonstant, freakigh, centra- dictory and abselutely unreliable. Yau an use almost any adjective that Neah ebster has produeed and nat go far astray in applying it te the weather. To realize What a perfect sametsault the weather can make in 34 hours, one need- ed only to campare the classic shades of a oellege campus on Monday, Jume 20, with the following evening. O Monday evening the girls were olad mostly in furs, while the men. looking 3t the girls, predicted a frost before moralng, prov- ing that even masculine judgment is not always infallible. On the Tollowing even- ing the same beaulies Wers olothed—in- sofar as clothing was apparent—ia fiuffs and gauze. From the slapping of dainty hands one was led to infer that academic mosquitoes were having the time af their lives. While brandishing my hoe the ather day amid 3 vast eontiment of Woeds, it sudiienly dawned upon me that there s a striking ‘analogy between weeds and bad habits; 1. Yeu don't have to pres pare the spil for sither. Weeds will s0il, kROowR or unknows, te Somehow predictions about the sever- ty of next winter never make much of |an impression at this season of the year. Three hundred canoes were burned at Dedham, Mass., and thus all chance f |loss of lite threugh their capsizing has been lost. From all that is being said about it, | The demand in the Philippines for Gen- |eral Wood's veturn as governor general! |indicates the excellent impression that he created when there- before. While Big Bill Haywood is said to be willing to come back and take .his med- icine, the country would prefer that he would take it by remaining where he is. The fact that La Follette is demand- Ing that thig country take mo action in Mexico might get more attention were it sponsoredl by another. But no one eise would make such a demand. The practice of going about raiding flower gardens at this season of the vear is bad enough, but it is exasperat- ing When the raiders insist on- taking not only blossoms but plants, roots and ail. A Philadelphia man is given years Sl in the penitentiary for stealing an auto| 8T0W in am3 | science. Wu have seen some’ weeds erow jnd leaving & vietim af his recklees driv-| i ng ang rank in the personality ot eoi- Irg lying in the street. It is a semtence lege profésors, and 3lso in the far light- that should have a benefleial effeet wpon | er soil of the ignoramus. To make weeds the man and others. - | grow you need mot load the fisld down Concord, N. H., July 8.—One hundred s ago next Saturday—on July 16, 821 was born m the Tde R tows of Bow, New Hampshire, the child who was to become known throughout the world as Mary Biker Eddy, the dis- coverer and founder of Christiance Sei- ence. The sentennial of her birth will be flittingly memoralized by many members of the -Mother Church, public officials, prominent citigens and others who, re. gardless of their personal religious views Tecogmize that little New England wo- man left the world with more ioy. health and good Will because of her hay- Ing lived in it. ‘The governor of New Hampshire, the state in_which Mrs. Eddy passed most of her life, has Accepted an invitation to go to Bow on this anniversary day when fitting evidence of recognition will be piven to this great religions leader. A few words appropriate to the ocea- sion will be spoken, and probably pas. sages will be read from the Bibie and from Mrs. Bddy's writings. Visitors who journey to the uplands af Bow will not see the old Mark Baker hemestead where his youngest child, l‘lry, ‘was born and spent her childhoad, The farm buildings disappeared long ag0. The place where the house atood is today marked by a massive granite mono- lith, over six feet hizh, carved in the shape of a pyramid from the largest block ever quarred In New Hampshire. Its form and size are sald to be such that it weuld exactly serve as the cap- stone of the great pyramid of Rgypt, spoke of by Mrs. Bddy in her writings and produeed in relief unon the reverse of the Great Seal of the United States On the four sides of this massive mem- orial which face the four points of the compass, are tablets of Benedict nickel, the only brenze which will not tarnish nor corrode. The tablet on the south side scribed : is in- — e ith commercial fertilizer. Bovs. and gitls, too, cap lie and® steal without a Knowledge of cube root or algebra. 2. You dom’t have to plant weeds to make them grow, but you do cofn and pe- tatoes, onions and squash. 'Schools are not necessary to teach either the voung or old to take God’s name in vain. 3. Weeds never require cultivation : they can get along quite well without the hoe and Simply let them alome and they will come to fruition. You need no text books to show boys hew to fizht, or lose their temper, or to degenerate all along the line. Just let the bovs and zirls alone and they will grow up just like weeds. CIDENTS IN AMERICAN HISTORY EENNSYLVANIA NEARLY CAPITAL STATE. In 1787, ipmediately after the adop- tion of she Constitution of the United States, the town of York, sidered as an appropriate place for the permanent seat of government. Will- iam Maclay, who had held positions of prominence durinz the Revolution and lse served in the Pennsylvania as- Sembly in the supreme executive couneil, was an earnest supperter of a Plan to select York as the place for the Natienal eapital. In the fall of 1788 Mr. Maclav ad- dressed a letter to James Smith. one of the signers of the Declaration of Inde- percence, asking to prepare a paper showing the advantage of York and vi- cinity. He further said that York would be piaced in nomination as an eligible site after the Inauguration of President Wash- ington, /in April. 1789. Before this date delezates from thirteen orizinal states, composed the membership of the Continental Con- gress which met asome body. Un-| der the Censtitytion the lesislative autherity of the country, was vested in two bodies, the senate and house of ren- resentatives. William Maclav and Reb- ert Morris were the first United States senators from Pennsylvanta. The selection of a permanent site for the seat of sovernment brought forth an animated discussion in both branches of congress during jts first session which convened in Naw York. Some of the sen- ators and representatives wanted the na- tional capital built on the banks of the BECAME | Pa.. was con- the Susquehanna at Wrizht's Ferry, others upon the Delaware and still others on the Potomac. Durinz this diseussion which lastéd a long time, Wrizht's Ferry York, Harrisburg and Peach Bottom were mentioned. Some wished a center of territory, others a center of population, and others again a center of wealth. Senator Maclay argued in favor of| Wright's Perry as the most elizible sit and Robert Morris fayored Germantown Tt is possible that .the difference of opinion of these twe mer lost the canital of the United States to Pennsylvania. The Susouehanna measure passed the house and was agreed to in the senate, but Germantown was afterwards stituted in the senate throuzh the of Robert Morris. Tt was in vain. that Senater Maclay ralsed kis prophetic voice that if the 8usquehanna was vielded the seat of govéernment would be fixed on the Potomac. His propheey was verified. At the next session of consress while the fumding bill was under de- Bate, Alexander Hamilton. then secre- tary of the treasury in Washington's cabinet, secured the passage by vielding the capital $o the southern states and the permanent seat of sovernment was fixed in the District of Coiumbia. The diseussion of the funding hill according to Thomas Jefferson, produc- ed the most bitter and anzry contest known in cemgress during the first thir- ty vears of its history. The seleotion of 4 site for the national overnment he- came invelved in this discussion and its interests were combined with the fund- ing bill. This was the main reason’ whv the banks of the Susquehanna were net selected as the permanent seat of gov- ernment. At one iime the house of renresenta- tives passed the following resolution: “Resoived. That thé permanent seat of the gavernment of the United States ought to be at some convenient bvlace on the east bank of the River Susque- henna; and that until the necessary buildings be erected for the purnose the seat of government aught to continue at the city of New York.” The resolution was later amended to cut cd the ward “east” and use only “banks” and am- other amendment was suggested that the wards “er Mar¥land’ should he inserted aféer the werd “Pennsylvania.” The heuse then adonted a resolutian 1o the effeet that the president be anther- ized to appoint three commissioners to examine and report “to him, the most eligible situation on -the banks of the Susquehanna, and that the sald commis. sioners be authorized to purchase such quantity of and as may be thought nec- essgry 3md erect thereon. within feur vears. suitahle buildings far the acoom- modation of congvess and of ather offic- ers of the United States. g The diseussien of this subleet qom- tinued for 3 long time, and fimally Phila- delphia was chosen to be the canital for a peried of ten years. from 1790 to 1390. Roth hauses of coneress finailv da- cided the permanent seat should be om the banks of the Potomge. It is interesting fo nate that n° 1791 President Weshingten made a tour of the seuthera siates and upan his return to Philadelphia spent three days i suh- efforts | Raker mm"nh;';im. Scienee Discoverer of * k Baker Homestead Around the Golden Days dm This quotation is reproduced in enlarged facsmilie from a letter in to her. gir! home, written br Eddy to a On the east side is the following t tation ‘from the sixteenth verse of twenty-eighth chapter of Isaih: ay in s tried stone, & precious sure foundation, he that bélieveth not make haste.” On the north side is ti Mre. Eddy page 38: following frem writings—"No and " Yes” “This Truth is the rock. which' the buflders Tejected; but ‘the same is be- come the head of the corner’ ‘This is the chief corner-stone. the basis and support of creation, the Interpreter of one God, the infinity and unity of ood. MARY EDDY BAKE. On the west side of the tablet bears the following: “Novus Ordo Seclorum™ This is an_intentionally - altered gue- tation from Virgil's cellection of the ibylline books and transiated means, “The New Order of the Ages.” Tt alse appears on the Groat Seal of the United States, With a fame world-wide and a fellew- ing embracing literally all lands and tongues and peoples, it Is worth net- ing that practically all of Mrs. Bddy's long life of eighty-nine years waa passed if mot in sight, certainly within two hours' travel of the place of her birth. She lived a few menths in Wil- mingten, N. C., when first married. She went to Philadelphia at the time of, the Centennial and to Washington a Jfew years later. In 1334 and agaim in 1838 She visited Chicago. But aside from these instances she practieally mever left New Fngland. Boston and vieinity and Con- cord, saw the beginnings and the frait- age of her great work as a religions teacher and leader. A few davs age a little party of Bes- /o and Manchester newspaper writers journeved up the Merrimac to Bow and Climbed through the counfry lane to the plateau on which stands the Eddy mono- lith. One of the party in speaking of Mrs. Eddy, expressed a deside for some estimate of her work and worth from some follower who knew her per- sonally. The following was therefore furnished : “The life of Mrs. Eddy was noticeable one of contracts. Hailed hy her fol-| lowers as the restorer of this age of the true import of the teachings of Christ Jesus—as the emphasizer particu- larly that the healing of physical disease, which had been ovarlooked by the ortho- dox Christian religionists, was inherent in the Christ message — Mrs. Ed- dy in her personal aspeets remained al: ways a fine tvpe of the New England wo- man of the old sehool. Although i/t teachings were cosmo- politan and universal, she, herself, was| interestingly provineial, an old-fashioned New Englander of the Sturdy Puritan She had sound | strain_to the baekbone. New England virtues of moral eeurage,! independence, simple living and definite | unswerving purpese. A vers human wo- man was Mary Baker Eddv, a8 human ag her great conutrymen, Géerge Wash ingten, and Ahraham Linceln were hu-| man, and a character of extraordinary interest to all who knew. her as well as a great sniritual light .of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. At present one hears a great deal about Finstein and his fheory of relativty rob-| bing time and space of their actuality and making them incidental instead of fun- damental. How many realize that Bin; stein is stating in his own terms eon- | clusions which Mary Baker Kddy grrived | at and published some fAfty® Her teaching of the “unreality ter” might just as well have been stat ed as the “relativity of matter, time and space.” Mereover. she went Winstein one better. She said she eduld nreve her theory by healinz physical disease, and there is an abundance of evidence throush out the world to show that she made good her clatm. ¥ Right here is another contrast. Mary Fddy was mot of a humanly sei- entific or philosaphical trend of mind Her early home and scheol education had been adequate aecording to those times. She wrote all her life. but her natural bent was toward poetic expres- fon and the paramount interest of her life was relizious. ['nquestionably, how~] ever, her teaching is just as revolutionary philocophically as it has vroved te be religiously, and furthermore it fs just as revolutionary socially and economically as it is philosophically, a point which it is doubtful if even her follawersy have vet definitely percsived. Tn addition to her many published re- ligious works, Mrs. Eddy developed a code of church Jaw unicue in its pro- vislons and operation. This Jaw is so in- zeniously worked out that a failure on the part of the membership or the eon- stituted authority of the church to com- petently fulfill the ohlizations of their membership or their office accarding to the teaching of Christian Sclence anto- matically results tn rapid collective dis- integration until a new and spirttual advanced viewpalnt is gained and thus insures continued unfoldment in the right [show that there is one community which {human jovs; soothers of human sorrow : : ANNOUNCING THE ? me Our July Week-End Specials To acquaint mmofmwhthwlub-’s High-Grade » qm]’m,wehvelelededunnlll“,d . SHARPLY REDUCED PRICES FOR WOMEN ! FOR MEN Wh:mkumlnn?mmuy Fan Calf Brogues. ........ _ several styles of trimming. .... $7.00 AT REDUCED PRICES. 'MODEL BOOTERIE 132 Main Street, Norwich, Ct. tenary of Mary Baker Bddy's birth in an} ococasion of mational and even interna- ional interest. She is a great womanm, whose true greatness s even .partially felt by only a few today, for it was the Aceatness not of the founder of a new religious order which may or may net endure, singleness anw tecnacity of pur- vose, made a positive contribution to the progressive development of all man- kind." LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Beauty of Road Should Be Preserved. Mr. Editor: An excellent road is be- ing bullt from Nerwich to Westerly, through real eountry. I urge evervome to help preserve ita beauty and keep it from the hideous ad- rtising signs whieh have speiled so many other roads. Already several large sifms have been erected. Will the landowners along thig road NEW SPRING PRICES IN LEHIGH-WILKES BARRE COAL NUT STOVE EGG . No. 2 NUT $14 $14 $14 S13 50c EXTRA IF BASKETS ARE USED. JOHN A. MORGAN & SON Telephone 884 5 CENTRAL WHARF appreciates nature, and cooperate keeping out such monstrosities? MARY HEWITT MAN. North Stenington, July 1921, Sunday Morning Talk Flowers the Stars of the Farth. Flowers of all created things, are the, most innocent and simple, and most su- bly complex; playthings for children. | ornaments for the grave, and the com-| panions of the cold corpse in the cof- in| azines, purse and box of candy. she stretched herself in the choice seat, leaving not an inch of room for any other person to occupy. For a minute the man stood regarding | the bit of space beside the hat and can- Then |the proposed improvements nescssary to open the Great Lakes to ecean-geinz commerce. The party will be the guests of the Canadlan government which will place a steataer at their disposal for the trip fin. Flowery beloved by the wondering 1Y PoX. Then he turned on his heel and|iprougn the Welland Canal to Toremto, idiot, and studied by the deep-thinking |ent to the smoking car to stay until yp the St. Lawremce river te Quebec the young woman had reached her des- man of_science! Flowers, that- of all y tination. verishing things are the most perishing. | vet of all earthly things are the most and the return to Montreal where the journey will end on July 15. % During the trip, the engineers and eco- heavenly! Plowers that unceasingly ex-|TO TOUR GREAT LAKES nomists, who are to accompany the ex- pand to heaven their srateful and to ST. LAWRENCE ‘PROJECT |pedition will make a detailed stody of man their cheerful Jeoks; partmers of T {the problems. and while ne formal pro- grammes have been arranged. there will |be zroup discassions and comferemces re- | garding the project. gara Falls, N. Y., July S.—~The and sixteen states ed on a tour of the pro- Lakes-St. Lawrence water- project to start from here on July|. fit_emblems of the victor's triumphs. The young bride's blushes: weleame to crowd- |[*0¢Fal government ed halls, and graceful upon gravest |Will be repres Flowers are, in the volume of nature, |posed Great at the expression God I3 love is In|yay the volume of Revelation. What al r dreary. desolate place would be a face 1l : Without % smile A feast withont wel.| Several members of President Hard- Some. " Are ot flowers the stars of tne,InE's cabinet, U. S. senators ,representa- earth and are not the stars the flowers !IV°S. state executives and engineers will of heaven. Flowers are the emblems of Probably make up the party which will Congress and the Docters : There is nothing in the Bightenth Amendment that gives Congress- the power to prohibit intoxieating liquors as medicine, to decree which of thoss liquors may be prescribed. how much s Tove. to et useq make (he trip under th causpices of the|of them a physician may prescribe or " mcany. of ‘showing mans love for hia|Great Lakes-St. Lawrence Tidewater as-| how many prescr riptions be may be a! fellow-creatures for they awaken in h‘\ sociation, lowed to write., An o trip was planned so that the of-|such right at all, then the rights of representatives of the. association | Physicians are not protected by the obtain first hand knowledge ef coDStitution. Ring’s Busy Marketm SHOP AT THIS SANITARY MARKET All Fresh Meats Sold From Cold Refrigerated Counters. mind a ful. se of the good and beauti-|. i might Stories That Recall Others . Leysl te Dad. Little John was sent alene to the barber shop for a hair eut. The barber in his joking way inquired what kind of a hair cut he wished and then point- ed to the man in the chair. “Do you| want one like this man is getting?”’ “No, sir” the little fellow returned after he had iooked at the manm. *If You have to eut it like somebody's, just cut it like my dad’s with a, little hole Th the middle.” The Same Old Camel Some of us remember the story of the camel that wanted to put his nose into the masters tent to warm it a bit. Well that camel 1& still alive. The other day she got on the train, dressed very prat- tily and leoking as if she were used /to having half the work, _whenever Ahe wished it. But she didn't get it, fof all the seats were taken. Finally_a middie-aged man, notloing her discomfiture motioned to the conduc- tor of the Pullman that he had the whale section reserved and since the voung woman was going only a comparatively short distance she might have a seat ARMOUR’S BEST STEER BEEF = BEEF RIB Boned and Rolled, Potting ROAST, Ib.... 25¢c| BEEF, Ib.......: 19¢ T Gourlly he reps from ba sest, fac. LEAN CHUCK No Wi ¢ ing the engine and indicated that she was to have it while he would ride back- ward. While he stood waiting for her to settle herss in it she lifted her grip, put It on fhe seat facing her, drap- ROAST, Ib. ... 16c| Neck Pieces.. 121/5: For Qven Roast FOR POTTING direction, Altogether, therefore, the sen- LADIES’ CORSETS - Value $3.00 SPECIAL $1.49 BUNGALOW APRONS 79c—value $1.50 ' Ladies’ Full Fashioned SILK HOSE, 98¢ Value $2.75 Ladies’ Full Fashioned SILK LISLE HQSE, 29¢ All colors—Value 50¢ LADIES' MUSLIN NIGHT GOWNS, 68¢ All sizes, white — Extrg sizes, pink—value 78e LADIES’ PURE JERSEY BLOOMERS Georgetown, mow in the District of Columbiz. He §tates in his diarv that hefore leavir (Heargetown he selacteq 3 site far the executive mansion and the nattonal ‘capital. After having complet- ed this duty he returned to Philadelphia. passing throuszh Fredorick, York and Laneaster. (Monday—The Battle of Tippecanoe.) SPECIAL 19¢ SPECIAL THAMES SQUARE A REAL SAVING IN EVERY ARTICLE PURCHASED AT QUR NEW STORE Corner West Main and-Thames Streets, Connor’s Bldg. MYERE ANT!KOL ed her coat beside It, also her hat, mag- FRESH LITTLE PIG LEAN PORK Shoulders, Ib. . 18c| Chops, Ib. .. ... 25¢ LEAN LITTLE PIG PORK LOINS (to Roast), lb..... STE AKS SHORT, ROUND, 29 c PORTERHOUSE, BACON,bb. ... 19¢ UVER.bLSc SIRLOIN, Pound. . .. LADIES' GEORGETTE WAISTS, $3.95 Value §5.95 MEN'S PANTS, $1.69 Value 8&50 FOREQUARTE.RS. Ib, 18¢ o 0] CHOPS, bb. ......... 36 MEN'S WORKING SHIRTS, 69¢ All Colors "MENS ATHLETIC UNION SUITS, 69 BATHING $1.00 's Z-Piece—1-Piege Omu&-—d!ml& CONNOR'S BUILDING