Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 23, 1921, Page 4

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THE MAN WHO TALKS 1t is'the comimon opinion of all great - GHOST TOWNS OF NEW ENGLAND —— 's}&miwuiu 192 e e 5 {-—-————vm Do Qe s o e S e " thinkers that faith enters into the scheme | The ghost towns of New England ap- | placs. Ok, it was & busy tows e the =9 3 - of human life far more extensively than | o' €190 CRRE S S Ol o or [time was when er had i ’l v anyone imagines. It has an_objective e Retiet B R % g i o = side that has not been fully explored as|he was bom in 7 New Epl 1880 [appy days,” but that was the und ] 3 yet. We are so constituted by nature|which is mow a ghost What are the N that faith is a necessity. It ? writes The Nomad in The | Connecticut gentlemen, ift silk stocks and A £ 3 on our part Ghost Towns' es -S: = 3 is reasonable that we believe in 2 great Boston Transcript. They are the towns {high hats, e rsons things. And we ive man Ty by n.;-?:w e doubt that | that once possessed a soul and life of | D0 A% Iige them live there Dignified stately ghosts of grand old now? The Nomad saw non. Here as the exercise of faith on our partithejr owhi—that once were little centreés [well as at tihe neighboring town of Sutnectption pries e 2 waski 6 & S 8.9 - | strengthens the human personality all 2 ‘business and intellectual life, but new |anon, were the homes of the Tru » . ) known as spbjéctive faith, or faith in jylation, without snap or 3 who lieve th him, |tivity radiated, and the rage, but it |people, if they are filled along the line. In philosophy this is|are imert, without am active native DPoP- | from whose 1oins sprang Brother Jona- gumption, With- | than himself. Here, at Colchester, in it. Like lout local ve force and ' evenm 1313, born the Nomad's eld . obven ‘memories of the past— Lyz:g"l'?hhlfl. senater frem once made them |himself the friend of Lineolm, thought and ac- |of Benjamin Trumbull, divine, author of places of these |the “Complete History of Conmectieut.' at all, fllled with ! Wien you looked into the face of Lyman Y men and women, new-comers who lsay;o Hall, yod saw "l’he Tving rQ:; ships avs heavily armored and not what no connection or sympathy wi ¢ dyn- fgentative of a race @ noblemen. oy o as of a frail or obso- F amie past of the town. These places are [peauty of native distinetion radlated . If we want|the mere graveyards of their former |¢rom his person, and you spoke with Con- fo do a poor fellow & good turn, just let |sclves. Sometimes, if the place i8 small |sclence incarnated. him kmow that we have not lost falth in |enough, the village itself has quite vam- msplanted to the Wist, Trambull ished. That is very mearly the case With | took with him there the traditiens of of the airplané in way service have been | N ishe a navy aré gomg to bs abandoned. but in the mind considering it. That is,|In his early childhood, it s to be realized that the bombing |is aft to measure the size fo a chureh or | chair-factory, its stareh was done under the most favorable com- | public e & lotia, veshels Sintiowary facturer is revealed Dby the|busily pegged 2mh:“:°u::‘dm‘: :‘ the “,"; m;u of machinery it would hold; or|blacksmith, and so on. WEEK ENDING JULY 16th, 1921 11,466 THE EEOBGANTZED STATE POLICE. ginfire or manesuvering such as WOuld |y .. G¢ 5 warehouse. To the boy Fourth | What the people called bombs 6r that when such Bombs of the | period. Because noise is within him he|all day long the water right size are dropped close to the bat- By the action of the last general as-[tleship its power of resistance !s nof stmbly provision was made for the [such that it can expect to escaps serious Fiog of the state polics department|cequits. It has been shown that the 4nd the inspection division of the motor |bombers can find the target and it is to | but we ought to show him why it is_a[i$ there now? The foun vehicle department and the fixing of the |be membership in the new state police de- partment at 50. Af the erganization of as effeetively with o moving target as|must eupply the missing link which odmi; |shop, shoemaker's shab, y 3 é industries—its shop, [of his family—Colchester may stifl be at In the sinking of the German War-|(hings are revealed to us through some|its little nest of ships, from submarina to dreadnought. | controliing attitude of mind. A minister [Where wagens and buggies % hajl by its seating capacity; fo a|falls, its general store, a shoemaker who iNern AMERICAS O e tnssorowant in fhe| Im the midst of ifs Httle common stosd |} OPF NCT s I = 7 i in reality a foun- bé the case in sotusl warfars, THat [of july is measured by the noise and|trough” bué which was lemonstra- fusion because in, for to it was brought in pipes or :1.:-: "e":-i"’mm’.fflm aerial ::mu p}.‘.’gcmrg‘:;:"m“:‘:n:.q.m ::p-m- the water ffom the hills and | TWO EX-PRESIDENTS DIE JULY 4. of Values noise outside of him. This is just|benefit of man and’beast, and while the |stranga tranisition to the American peo- him make more moise—if that is possible, | Was a real little mountain centre. What | proved to be, the day on whish the two With a statlonary one as the fests onl| nects his moise with the Declaration of fpeared—not 6nly the mét. but tife bulld- |in the history of natiens. e r rocess|the hamlet in which the Nomad first {(lonnentici; cuRure, pringiple dignity. well_sunstantinted. even though It does| We know many wnge DY G BRI L i morning light that at the ssme |in the memory of such men g i S0 & BN ¢ %= ¢ Jinot mean it the eavital ships of the o 2% SUANIE G fhiing considered | moment was flatfering the mountain-topk. |ehere’ are todey In tfhe town any who the village had fremember him or cherish the traditions were built, ast a very honorable ghost. factory by his bench, its the “watering HISTORY gushed for the | Joyous, painful and by sudden nad an impressario tain s gone, and | chief founders of the republic passed ristic ms 1 ic of every age and of every land. all have disap- |able coincidences that has ever oeeurred terpret the music you love best. Either hear them in persam as they from tim ufi--mmrm- a8 it ought to be. The boy has a per-(oxen and horses stopped to take deep |pel was the Fourth of July, 1826—the |l cert stage or hear them as can always be heard om the Vietrola. In methods there is real satisfaction for the fect right to this self revelation of the|draughts of the cool spring water the fanniversary of the first half cemtury of trye music fover. - Follrth‘ We older folks ought to help|men sat on the bench and gossiped. It jour national independence, and, as it With a Vietrols. however, you gain an advantage that can’t be dverestimated. To sil intemts you 3o it Beeome ourse Never on any ome stage has been usiembled such s brilliant wrvsy of artists s ean sing and play ¥or you in your own home. By careful selection of Vietor records you eam assure yourself und family the characte- resimed that such eam be deme quite | day for firecrackers amd torpedoss. We|all trace of it. Chair-shop, blacksmith |away. This is one of the most remark- The quality of the music need not trouble you for a moment, for if is & Victor yorard, ¥ gees without saying that - ¥t is the very best of its kind. The Vietrols has won its sapremacy béepuse of this.. It is the ene instrument that is . Indepéaaeice. ings that housed them. The houses that { It was the 50th anniversary of Ameri- (Ml ideally suited to play Victor records. s : the commissioners named to direct the the moving United States warship show- ds for re.|Still stand—thres or four of them—are |cant independence and great preparations 1f music means anything to you (and surely it does) It will pdy you te consider seriously the purchase of a Victroln affalrs of the department Robert T. Hur- [ed, 5 oot ;'h‘;:’“::"_“ country has ac.| farmbouses row. had been made in all parts of the union In ond store we have Vietrolas of all models and at prices that piace them well within the reach of #. One of :ic:fis ;;n n“zhs ‘:eg::e;m?‘z l\m{erl:- The ;em Knm‘: hc‘\r\;ehbe‘?‘ d:xa'z;eo:,n c:;v‘ihe; n {he eomparatively short| On the hillock, the old meeting house | for the celebration. It was not possibie t Inasmu ef Egan of the | mean that efforts will be mad 3 eriod of its national -history. But we @ department had recently stated that St Be did net desire to continue the dutles eorganized depaftment Mr. come such effects as have been disclosed. avors will be made to make the i) i ighted. %or tha place and there are rea-|In no better Way could thére have been | things from nations said to be benight believs tnat he will give the de-|shown the increased value that must be | FOT instance, the manner in which China Stilt stands, unscathed, but how lonely it | to foresee the bitter outcome of the glori- 3 By carefuly ‘gaard against fhe Aawell- |1o0ks! The stare, too, is there, but it is fous oceasion, - In the personal &nd publie ” é - {just a store at the crossroads, and when | career of Thomas erson and John INVESTIGA' SE SP Vi o ed head,” because we are not the sum |J% ’ d 5 ships invelnerable to the bombs that | total of human knowledge and attain- ;Tn;e“"";":flg‘:’fwffl;;z ;‘;"‘:}‘m ,e o &f:la‘l;w %\s{: :::: lr:::\yed u::;sl:fd !z!,:‘&, TE THES ECIAL CTROLA OUTFITS was regarded a3 3 man fully |may be dropped By the side of them, but | ment, * We can vet learn some important | PeoPle, e EAR T8 Tl Tl U0 it | dble lawyers. Their homes were in wide. Vbl o0 ; 1t is as if the fathers of the village, in de- | Iy different sections of the country, Mas- ictrol BT O R oF records you may care to hear. Vietrola 90 . {his Dia Worked well In preventing long |8E3In on the ofher tide of the Styx. Why |manship, while Adams was e chief par- Victrola Rs .....covvee. v 0o S15880 s department, a com- greater attention will be eon- | o by tith r - | not an immortality in heavep for villages | liamentary expositor and trimmphant ad- . t produce results ed upon nirplanes and there ean ?Ljn'{:‘ffsa;‘fn;"‘C?D’irmf,";fs“"me;:gdis",‘;Z_ as well as men—for good little villages | vocate in the “assembly of the migt 4 Records (8 selections) ...... 3.40 the consolidated department. Bstab-lbe no question but what General Miteh-| sause they must reveal their methods to | that Rever did any harm. Mr. Adams retired to domestie liic tished on broader lines and provided with has suceeeded In the efforts which he| their own guilds. There is some solid well as being given [hag been making in that divection. | sense in. the Orient. uch is to be expected | The following sentence is taken from | THE DUTY ON HIDES. [from a.recent baccalaureate address: ! uccess often depends on the ability to pposition to the plan of placing | the aiffercnce between a difficulty and upon hides was by, no means con- wreater (& increased from the reors: in the That is one of the ph: other phase, which the Egan the the one who direct- intact, and which may f - ot - ’ What to a falmt-lpouced to the original number, but where | 50th Fourth of July he had‘ been fast B TR & petick of 7ile te Sak to_any ‘one section of the country. | hearted man is utterly impossible, 10 @ | tpe org Jite hae boen B R A hese of (o Tts Arther| diffcultics of furnishing a tariff | man of courage and vigor is only a dif- e valuable e of the late 2 b i at Wil satisty everybody be | fieult thing (Mat is to be used as an op- L. Story of thls city as his assistant, and ] T ity. ngit f a long time reatized but when it {s proposed to place | PO tumity e & - ays down the| . "l v o contended that the construction of tubes at the mew am. |3, L2 W0 @ commofity with & wlew (o (TGS, Hidson was impossivl. This maples and pine trees, with ghosts every day. and a beautiful one, is 1 Benefit by ¢ England ghost-villagé phenomenon. An- [ spected and honered by all his country- upon more particularly today, is the lit- | ing before his death was more or less ile town which seems to be structurally | uneventful. 1801, when he was 61 years of age. His! ases of the New |was the peace and quist of the citizen re- $153.40 Nomad will toueh | men. The quarter of a esntury interven- (Pay $1.50 Weekly) even lrave added | For several days before the memerhble ¢he common, with its ancient elms and |day, he wrote a pa‘irotic note full af the you may walk | fire of his best days. > s completely sup- | failing, though, in reply to an ivitation A F R d S tl t 85c planted by another population. There, on | to participate in the celebration of that ew eCOl’ 1 “ om a Cherie Sud: a towa, | Being desired to furnish a toast for the Moonlight . I Never Knew the anclent town | oceasion, Adams gave “Independencs Slm 2 Belfast 'm sfould belong to you—why not let us explain in detall our ewsy terms. At the same fime we'll piay for you am ... $125.00 ¢ Mas e o bl e capl. | Parting for the old world, had taken the | sachusetts and Virginfa, which at the|ll 4 Records (8 selections) ... 4 Records (8 selections) ...... 3.40 ent the high grade service that i |attached to the airplame in connectton | dcals With the labef problem. THO 2P| inage with them. Perlbaps you may |time of the Revolution were the largest A d feom one in that position. it the maintenance of an srmy and { (75 224 T ¢ house. The pesce of the|meet it over here one day_shoemaker's |and most powerful states and nad a lead : Se—— famillar |ravy. and the impertance that must be | community is not disturbed by the paid ;‘;‘:5(;:: ;’:‘""'fi,,;"‘l‘:: Bliclamith Wit | Both ‘mon Wete: Bt bire of the somd $12840 o o ¢ n @ futue war seevl | rguriser or waking deege | Difer | St Edet e e o swung | it hostn o rasere the Deskreton (Pay $1.00 Weeldy) Pay $1.25 Weekly) ties. & - i - the mild-éyed oxen for thel oeing, of Independence. erdon o i While it will not be admitted that mo|an u"’l;fl\d committee “h?w are *:f:seflh;‘; ell the rest—a Yanjee =village 1iving [thor of that noblest production of states- who hes been chief inspector leships will be BHIlE ff doed | MOUSkY. For/moré than a century Each 6 of N was answered by putting in the tubes. | (folioncotor, in eastern central Con- |Forover!” He was asked if anything Bright Eyes Do You Ever Think of Me some form in the dep: S b ,“m e Tor -'"‘5“ 1°h"'='_ centuries Italy Secure . avient, which the Nomad lately visited. | should be ‘added to it. He immediately ’ responsibilities are 1o be s it oF. Inbs ench imvasion by land because |y cino 1igh on a breezy plateau, fits|replied: “Not a word!” This toast was e B o 2 ymnensating offset it he Alps were Tegarded as insuperable |pi0f To (illage street looking west- | drank at the celebration fn Quiney sbout Baby’s Hands - Love Bird My Mammy e op and conside? before cutting s But o oleon gaid: ne day W 51 23 B po! der his tom- manding genius ¢ as an insuper- es mot . not produce enough ble b £ Mareo: e icle for communication messages, and the i just 2 t @ Bringing it about. That a: e aim of those who a s activities slature | npossible being encouraged to | batriers " in the pathway of human make un (he difference. S proposed for| The zreatet fleld of all yet to be mas- | red is the home feld, the field of con- cious personality. In #0 30B FOR UNCLE saw. Unfortunately for Silesia and rget, by buildings that d in tion of this than the career of would apoleon. He conquered nations, he con- s of shoes Worn by the |Quered nature, he conauered his enemies, ¢ this country and that it would | " <onauered others, but he mever con ¢armers as much if mot more | GUeTed himself. He looked upen it as every whim of a capricious nature. In- stead of holding his minor appetites in sh, he allowed them to master him. If apoleon hiad possessed the moral power the duty but those of Washington or the heart of Lincoln m fhe r price of hides. is realized that the for- bably not be the one who fr ed to hear them fluttes ndled the hides he pre- jhe would, easily have been greatest | profound. man who ever trod this planet. Ts it a #% reason why. the hides mark of greatness to t an ungovern- c; 4ble temper make one's dependents fear 'ndeq to remain on thé fre€ | ang (rembie? or is it a sign that a man is ways.and means committee. | not big enough to govern himsélt?, The ficlent reason why opposi- | biggest job any person ever undertook Fanty it is left for the &) gist shall be done in Sil Quite } B unfortunate that there has been noll’’ eurious and typical thing cemetery a burial lot, by an iron rafling, upon g ve: great spruce tree that ses Pitston readhiel fs ihé fact that the ar was raised to the effort that was|was to control his own epirit. tinguished every prestize Rave not Beem able (o reach an |WA0¢ to lacing an ad valorem duty of igreement amongst themselves as to per cent. upon them, and fn the step | Sistent credture What should Bé dome. They realize that taken by the house fa réturm-|are meither Whol good nor wholly bad, | trunk of this tree; its _ ! but we are both good and bad in streaks, | action should be taken, that they fould aet together m the matier and yet |° ére appéars to be unwillingness to | ihér endorse the views of the other Blow or to agree unon a compromiss | hides to the free list before the pa © BTl one of the threatenod in- | I ¥ @ marvel how strong and brave w (lot. s was eliminated. The pro. | 27¢ Under some conditions, and how con- |fat on their faces, _lie # f temptible under others. Men will go mla]mnve!lnnts. Have they as against committes rec-|paitle and fight like demons when the | nd against \ What Was | danger is very great, without a trembling n overwhelming majority of | 4 the street. This anclent and beautiful ::[':V!s and Lieuetenant Governor Win- e & ey shes no beiter | cemetery is now a knee-deep jungle of | throp. R with this aipaions epldis o firsh s Whileh e myftle and other vines, through which | When Jefterson retired from the presi- Sunday Morning Talk aistrac town and vou must struggle in order to read the in- |dency he went to his beloved Monticello Find the seriptions on the gravestones of tine fore- |in Virginia, which, for the yeais that in- fathers. Here the Nomad spent an hour 28 | without seeing a living soul; souls there ihoes than the bemefit they | CVidéNce of perfect supremacy (o’ gratify |may have been, fiitting aboui—one seem- abounding vegetation—but though: the {hack of the houses and stores of the vil- | lage thoroughfare flanked all of one! e of the cemetery the solitude was at the very best. We|in the middle of tiie plot stands the vas; | moment have heard read for the fourth |ing circumstances, is Worth more to a togenarian. My sight is very dim,|than a fortune withont it. Make up|in the afterncon, apd I have seen them jextend outward to the very edge of the | 27 °C imist ; 2 E On the ground, outside the raiiimg, |PeATing g00d _enough, memory _poor |your mind that you will be an optimist: ward over a wide sweep of country to |50 minutes beforé the departure of the the Martboro and Glastonbury hills and | venerable statesman from earth. ithe valley of the Salmon river, its old| On the morning of the Fourth, which ouses still radiant in their tree-embow- | was ushered in by the ringing of bells g B . ered dignity, its triangular common still [and the firing of camnon, he was asked if 5 'z ’ i E : surrounded with meatly kept houses, the | he knew what day it was. “Oh, yes," e au — a n an 4 A4 - b et il A T Village does mot appear to have fallen |he revlied, “it is the glorious Fourth of kg e S R o] il e A info . material doeline—but how very | Juts—God bless it!—God bless vou all staid that tax without [ titimate L any way is its active past! e change | Inl the course of the e sz a i< painly declared in the condition of |great and glorious day. The last words 135-143 MAIN STREET (ESTABLISHED 1872) Nm CONN. he villige burying-ground, which the [he uttered were “Jefferson survives!" : village itself has swut out from its view, | But the snir” of Jefferson had already if it were a thing that it wanted to |left Ris body. Among Adams’ pallbearers conceal it from |were Prof. Kirkland, Judge Story, Judge time they indeed experjence quivers of | tér surrounds us wi nny Side, tervened before his death, was the mecca | Nothing contributes more to the - { ainful it i langerous. country. — He was mote demoeratio thin |the habit of enjoying things. Whatever | 'S Bainful it is not dang r through the “It is very long since I have written to |possible real enjoyment out’ of every|i,n of the river. I imagined then that|which the ers of you. My disabled wrist is now beeome so |6ay; that you will increase your eapac- Stiff that 1 write slowly and with pain. |ity for emnjoying life by trying to find : there is In this | OnCe in a while how we do? I have ever |the day. Refoiwtely determine that you ith. Vacation effers horror. I have, never known any ene sense of plenty of time ahes. to be bitten by them, however, and|w] one needs before embarking up- . Yon o¢ | naturalists declare that while their bite|on a long and serious book. where assembled all the great men of the [Nighest success than the formation of Bhire 856 eiitirs classes of light fic- & oioy When 1| was a child one of eur|tion which do not fit into th> summer John Adams, and naturally more sought|your ealling in Ilife may be, Whatever|; .orito walks was dewn what was|heliday, Nature, éven at its mildest in after, misfortunes or hardships may come 0|1 noun gy the ‘Brilige Road. Here we/|the vieifity of the summer hotel, with In a letter written by Jefferson to Ad- |you, make up your mind resolutely thatd ,;gpt encqunter many members of the |its real touch is apt ams in June, 1822, the Virginian said: |come Whai may, you will get the most| ;raniyla family moving in the dirsct-|or out of the flaring landscapes over to take the col- the Wild Western they were going down to the brink|ranges sweep on te duty, fortune, and of the stream for their evening drink|love. It induces indifference to the And here the Nomad observed a most | Vet it is due to mutual friendship fo ask {the sunny side of cvery experiemce of |.: qid our friendly cows. I suspect,|great Canadian spaces over which the 4 however, that it was their hour of em-|mounted police go through their mag- St surroundeq | dreaded a doting old age. T ride dafly, |will see the Rumerous side of things, no performances. erging to seek their prey. I have head | nificent hich stands a |PUt Teading is my delight” matter how hard or unyielding your em- i 7 i 3 1s 2 ems to have ex.| 1IN his Teply to this letter, of which only | vironment may seem to be, there fs stated that they only emerged at night of the eraves of | & feW extracts are given, Adams wrote: sunny side if yoa can only see it. The at night. But 1 do know that the ;lzg‘i:h-hnl ,?1 i s tl i artis 11y 2 T e butiressed toats | tiMe the best letter that was written by [young man or woman starting out in life | come out frequently from 5 to § o'cloc! D, tion and I have ever heard of one|Young woman eomin two or three |cnOugh. 1In wishing for your health amd |that thers shall be mothing of the pessi- been pushed out | happiness, I am very selfish, for I hope [mist about you, that you will @rry your rival presidents was reow Herioes pale nature articies in which the writer|down in the glow of a summer after- This may be their favorite hour, 1| Ghost and detective stories ars quite We poor mortals are stramgely inoon-|{he people buried upon the lot. Squarely | 113f an hour ago I received and this |mirth-provoking faculty, even under try-|cannot say, never having seen them |{eut of the question. The neccssary set- ot there. A visitor impsed through the merely sugsest a g back from tennis as early as 3. which may be interesting enough, but “They have no fondness for eiviliza-|in quits a different way. Tales of there hy the growth of this tree, so fam. | (O, TOTe letters,” ete. own sunshine Wherever you go. | being Tound in a house as are its|murder and mystery are ineonceivable ously thriving on the dust of the ¥ This correspondence between the once| Thers is longevity in the sunny soul |relatives the ordinary web-spinning|for that we néed a corr le; they will risk tI®ir lives in fes- |Dbeing buried Fere? That is the quiet wintér hour v 55 & long dark hail through which one hed in full |that eases our joits and makes our sides | spider, They are said to line their|a story s =, 3 _| gro v mist walk to bed, shadows in the eor- Hea 5 " Burope, where it excited 2 3 #s a won-|ground homes with webs. E pe? S | e e 16 1€ B Bd e | B e s et p 2 Rum folainy, STt Tk Banik ad Wik Téfigacion, Thonah Seferan MER Bamh |t iy Bat Tt gond” chae. | “Thy soeciee Totdd b Eouthech M| e 8¢ ibe room where ali sorts of tmply one way of dodeing|*"\0 OPuosition it from the 2 s ing, an n thanked wiil say |17 spreading br: es, by the buttressing TS T % . scirope and along the Mediterranesn|animated evil may be lurking, and the i - oA gy T lfint thiese | rocts, by the prostrate stories ontside {ne F i arerdp s N g ol b fe ‘;’,’!,."’3,,5’,‘,“‘,.&‘3,‘&? BaTe & e res must. difier from girs in ihe|sudden ciick of the radistor which * ” me soldiers will kick like steers at|railing. en in their death the old 3 ' . = Sflesis (s 2 distinetly European FDITORIAL NOTES. mess if the meéat is too cold or the cef- yushe fhastion. I i nothing in which this| The on the corner sayi: There's a | fee too weak. Why is it that men will [out of their mests. Nat mee Phe Bool wave is due to someone | play baseball, or wateh a ball game,|with the new comeérs. ng fo explain the hot spell. right eut in the, broiling sun at 120 de. @ontcy Ras any direct interést and it is thing In which this country womld con- the middle of the night he asked the ure Is in league | noyr and on being told it was 1 o'elock ed by oné sunny soul. On the other hand | Ceed three-quarters of an inch in}of reinearnation can Well, it fs Na- t G Gulf St o id net to ex-|oturdles eur bicod. Ne tale of detection Coichestér folk seem to Rave been pusheg | P60 On the 3d he began to sink. Near| vye oeten see a whole home transtorm- | GUlf States. These are sai be savored in the We have seen them blighted and made | 1eNSth, and I have seen them here full withqut the chill thought of the e have the: ed and made Kprest g |k s an ordinary saucer. Too, I|irip downstairs to pbke up the fur- ture’s cue to seize her oportunitien. Her | ni i wenold tho liony o thes o ti¢ |dark by & gloomy, morose, fault-finding | AEE 35 An Ordinary SROeeR o elon Hder playing & part. It would like to see ———— Brees and forget all about it, but will it |spruce tree had & fine chanae in this | 7000 % CSNGE MRETC S8 DAk SaY T | person. Bated sotfers Al otr nactes SAAY A48 ““_ Peonle e nikt GikEEsR e o & hile 8 sdfustment reached uile the same| The occasionsl coplous ratnfalle se |7 MeI” Verandas ama (Wi it is awfullot and hes made the most of tt.' Nor |eRienre Sa% (K wish mas gratifed Flor bctingd o be Found. The Tesss| 1433 And when psopls are most thera- @ it would like to sge 2 proper settle. |doing much for the gardeners ss well ay| 3 l“ 1 - xh:fl&y Tan yfenm!!e":l;lyl |sn:t st)l‘bat}rhl n;‘ing for the lnuamlnu. noon of the 50th anniversary of the inde- —= specles are black covered with very s 'I‘l:)l’?lel“:?l a‘pt to be, ”f.. 5’.5 Ment of the Armenian question but it is |providing lberally for ou . ] , peop! after a ey have left their earthly |poo0 0 0 Gyt BRI Sioie Thit Resim Ofhers owe o Dinak Rairs: Thoy 47 #f & : e, A . P . ty OUT TEServelrs. . |eit for two hours in a theatre with a|heds and gone up into the atr, where | B rich velvety appearance. lisher assumes them te be. This much ifainst the policy of the United States heavenly grin on fucir faces, but if their|day by day they eonsort with the red. | (Monday: The Braveryof Lydia Darrah.) i © _4tp into Eurspean troubl With swarms of locusts mvading soviet | minister preaches for more than half an Having been left to the sypreme conn- Ruzsia 21! thet is needed now is the wilg | hour—even if he coesn't put the probe in ! to say what shall be done concern- homey to pravide for the starving mil- | YO deep—they will have eyed viero that is at this mement preach- ing over their obliterated graves, and One Way to Spell It. ‘T have often peered down intd|We know, that sumimer is the time their holes in the ground and seen them | When pooks are mostly written and i the whole it should be as easy to i : Jimmy had been laid up a few days—| watching just safely within, I have|on s } i IR |1 i o o LA (e g i ‘mite apples com- | never known of their sttacking any-|zéad & Book ds to write it.—New York B Silesia the countries numbered |lione their _faces which, by ®iferpretation,|the adjoining clm tree,and the sashine || RGAD YOUR CHARACI'ER ffioea—_‘nhq h;a‘:‘ zao"dm!:fi:z Phe mem. | thing for & battle cxcept the tarantu-| Evening Pest. ijerein should riss to thelr dmty. It is 2 means: “Stop or we'll hurl the hymn|tanager that is ehip-cherring at the un- > t 5 Be &xpected that justice would he S beok at you!” It was Josh Billings who | wonted intrusfon of the He Is heading away from it but before foris By whatever decislon was remched said that “people are as funny as amy- 't stand the la killer. This enemy of theirs yesem- Tving visttor. In By Digby Phillips, ek Bt the giis camastl was = n ldn’t stand the eep- | Dles a red wasp, only being almest The Junk Maws Winnings the midst of death they are in Life. e riamgilt i M. P vy The in-| three times as lirge as the esmmon 5. i ) e 4 - he returms Explorer MacMillan is likely | body.” Oopyrighted 1921 :I;fi'esn-}gat"c:n:kzm; ::é‘&msm!d: species. You will notice ene fiying "w:ln:s‘lg W un.% away 300, 5t ls put the more |to wish for someé of the heat Be is Iéay-| 1Is it mot singularly amastng that in |’ Just before he squezzed Ms way nto BROWN EYES. with The umderstanding that there would |ound the fields much as a buté L] u?:e?h frem the fight and the thactic the eomditians in that region are!ing behind | telligent péopie, as wo boast ourseives |the burying greurid Siroush e Bacases Bo mo reugh house staff. As 4 harmless | does. Then suddenly he will dart fo| FARAUished Rers, Georgee, has gt S0und to gét and the more diculty those Sans jlo be go little realize the kindness of |Way at the baek of the store, tHe Namad | Biue cyes have been desoribed ateady |a; eujon the susgested a spelling hee.| the Eround. In all probability he has e arip and buy suntziey ar¢ going {5 have to malmtain| Gradually and with the help of Mys, | MA{UTe in her dealings With the human|noticed the bleak 614 Bacon seminary. 1St & . et and prevent troubls from epreading "’ family? This thought came to my mind | bujlding of brick Which onez was a Bergdoll are some of the interesting el tower with, as signais of decision, action and a ten. |Schacl Bad been aut too long probably|located a tarantuia or his hele. The all of which was money, there is a little junk man v toward impatience. ‘ i % {tarantula sometimes puts up a 2 3 ] Frig whils we were feeling the inconvenienca |noted seat of learning in Commeoticnt. | popme wocs ool “avpottte. quRLtiGe, | o mnnlxlu'yh e-::rd;vge (he word | but he is usually paralysed with the glghg.:"nJg E;:flnml. 'ln:rl!- . connected With the draft dodger's|of the hot, humid stmosphere. That it|And here in the cemetery, on 4 grave. They also indicate qualities which at first | “August” and the invalid tackled it tarantula killer's sting. Semetimes the 83 Jamam B, Green of Atwayis o cfcape being brought te light. | was depressing goes without saying. But |stone, he read all about Bacon himsel, thought seem contradietory. But they're ,E’C‘“‘“_‘ A-u-E.period” was his ver.|i2rantula killer will dart to the greund remarki tlan THE NORRIS BTLL e | @id you ever seo backward garden vege-|who seems to have founded the institu- 2 al &-pe: g t each week, Plymouth is going o be | While the mercury frequently ran up|eentury, with a gift of the senate to the Norris biil fe Tk Py Ouo. -4 or the au. the one big magnet in New Bngland for and etayed at 90 degrees in the shade,|take mors than $55.0 : bringing more or less pefsonal discom- |notable school nowadays lovers of ‘the historical pagesnf | fort, did it occur to us what would prob. ably happen if the mereury should go academy has plainiy gon: billion a year om non-essentials what 2 r;tm‘ldi nature double the intensity of heri lot of eireulstion would be stopped if | activities if unregulated by the kindness evéryone indwiged -‘n‘umhu only. |0 1aw! When ocoasionally in winfer the |and afl his Col the level in parts of our country, caus-|Manifestly his seminary Dévelopment in Florida s making iing much inconvenience, what would re- & Menate to the Snancla] sta. | UCh Strides it 18 claimed the state will | suit if it snowed to the depth of 10 or 12 conaquér the world witih eredit will Colonél Dryan elatm for that? | of smow! But it never eame, and it never will. .Prcbalfly New England will never | Nomad satisfied himeelf The S, Swithin day p fediotion appears | 26 educed to Greenland conditions. T | an interview with the ca b [ i The oppesliien that has Aeveloped fn For the next 16W waeks, or four daya|tebles grow with greater rapidity?|tion some time i the earl; g A Fudis 1as | Detter fight or if he escaped. Latar | Eta! and at the same time greater patiemce.| Bmily Margaret, a_six-year-old, has| AL B . 2nd Mr. Bacon | These are, in reality, two quite Qifferent |straight blond hair. This s a source of |07 However, :"';:n:&’:“m:: dragsing | 8Uring the fight, Just so soon as the Toas lucky perhiaps, 1o have achieved hls | things. Take as an example an appeal|{much distress to her as she is not too| Wil see the ta 4 local fame at the time he A1a. Rut s |ty either the anger or the affactiohs of & With the pedple spending about five|twice as high? Why not? How easily his gravestone seems to tatter a lttle, and there is no telling how soon Bacon |rather, will not push other things aside | recentl: i P T 3 y and the teacher was telling of | urday this little band had collected ?.;ha.eu famé will go the | so much, in his or her consclousness as it | the terrible plight of the ehildren of the What to Reéad in Summer and rémo VJ where near 48,000 A tradition which is really @ Super- g.tflfl., -.l&d w?unt 'l’ll'ho :::.m: Jui, of one cent apeice a “of gogdly size, will snow falls to the depth of thres feet on|way of the pedple on the spruce tres Iot. people who onee went forth from it to not know itset next year. How much|feet? Think of New York under 12 feet s roper appreciation of their bless- tied up light n aaucgtls:’.‘l #heine of the same soft of | tonded to evoke @ real declsten and im- ing s proper app! stition has tied up light reading wil arms of thélr Baconian learning, The 3 f the emotion, however, the reversé will| ‘wh she concluded, “you Iittle onmes| . ty worst books he can . is 2 kindly hand, after all, that grips the lating, 2 " she ; wenty 48 badly upset as the groumdhog | esthn snmised in conteraplating. érom the frant | o true. not. They only seem s i d_then the party broke up. nineteenth | They indicate, for ing sion and t party s number of times and then fly off ag| €!tY: “This junk man paid $50 for the ties that weré thrown under the A, Ereatic thoush waiting for something, ana | Prifllese of taking awas the empty 55000 Tt would | rush or stress of emotion than blue ayes. Source of Distress. you wonder if the tarantyis it uh & fo_establish o nds in the aren: ‘dend &pldiers’ that Joung to &ppreciate the advantage of|AWaY his prey, and yeu wendér liow i = ? to werk rescuin person. The emotion arouséd in the blue |euriy hair, ang she partieularly admires | N will 1:’:-:':5\:1»;:".""“ sately with | fi0, eved person will not be so strong, or,|dark hair. She was at Sunday sehool | © e into a decline ; will in the brown eyed person. But sup- |war-stricken countries. By way of plant- 15 no longer the | pose the arousing of this emotion s in- t T ings in the minds of the children the| aylight-saving reading, tied up vaca- portant action on the part of that person. |teacher called their attention to the con- tion fictipn with more or léss trast between tkeir own condition and|fiction. The man who starts "[ that of the unfortinate youngsters ovér-| two weeks upon & desert isiand is nf the gllttering | Yowll get your reaction much quicker from the blue eye tham from the brown. on that pont by |1t you're looking for more demonstration rpenter who was seas. adays invited to take witl 3 at Jersey City, had done their bit hé and his mien the discarded bot- ‘working fer lows him at $10 each. Before nightfall Sat- cents and some ive cents to their -‘w. t the ‘lowest ible ol T o H : have no ldea of What sorrow means” | experience would show t is da: k, after paving for the n, and yet youll find people steps, some. repafrs which his assistant| The brown eyed person Is more dem- E:nfly Margaret was impressed, but sl m.Pny heavy books are con« d‘-& -.gmgn bitls for la- dolng thelr best o prow both July 30, 1619, was the day on which|was leisurély exeouting on the Comgre. |onstrative than the blue éyed simply be-|sonid not let the statement g0 unchal-|a great many more Wi o be re and dravage, 3 4 ¢ that B7¢|the Jamestown settiement opened its|rational church. The town. he &1id had |cause his or her emotions take stremger |ienged. She addressed the teacher!people followed inclination e 0 W Dr: Crafts and the Inter- right. ' legisilative assembly, the firat deliberative |oaaged ifito entirely new hands. Oid peo- | hoid. - But for the rest, brown eyes In-|ihus: “Miss Blink, I'm awlully sorry | presceiption. : teg P o body of white men on the American con- |vle ANl gone—farms in hew and strance | dicate a greater degree of patlence, of |br ihers rut ol the same I G Tuos | & warm day in the HAMOEK 18 - Qispensed with. Afer eher be generally admitted that the | tinent. Although presided over by an|kands—meoplé who ‘m"hfi them for | the courage as well as the ability to en- | what sorrow means. Bvery time I see a| precisely the time to kle Bryce on int at botties the large v s been sy BN We can. get|BURSIGtes 9C tho Rig, 1f Ban mo resl| 2160 nd weip now Rl dlng them at | dure either & mental or a phyaical strain. [Nty girl with dark curiy hair 1 have|Democracy, or William on_Jun- - oy tolerably wall without amy dog | CTELDIC comnéction With the Britien par|$12000 even fie Irish neople who had | They indicals less of the ploneer apirit ~ e N 8 | liament. This assentbly was made up of | replaced the origifal Yankes inhabitants |and mofe of the conservaf ralsteg the regular time comes for | freemen who came together to discuss|were mone now—a third #j #e mon weal. It put emphasis upon the matters that pertained only to the com-!might eall the present population of the fnearnation, one | They indicate, too, mental intensiety and fact that the Anglo-Saxon race was com. [ petent to govern itself. By & singular|action he put fetters on coincidénce that amounts. to the irony of | body and on his soul fate, on that very day there was brought | 250 vears the enfranchi fo the Virginia cosst the 8rst carfo of | amd the subjugation of When there is | slaves. The very day on which the White | side by &ide. ‘We can at least rejoice to. | heart.” nd the hest time for cent concentration rattier than the mentai| N THE DAY'S NEWS |ic' hot, humid day in the quickness and mpatience which bae eyes | . when all the motor facuifies ar indicate. / THE TARANTULA ed, when man hunts for ’ the bldck man's| In short, brown eyed persons are fn-| “Laughable reports about the Texas|air and finds it not. Thus driven And for nearly|clined to be ‘“slower of head” and tarantuia have 'i':’.n circulated since | upon his ewn littleness in a - ent 6f the one | “quicker of heart,” whereas the blué eye | {he iers have been eamped in the|of Fahrenheit, he is in the othier lived|is “quicker of head” and “siower of mue-nv‘"sme " writes Kate R. Me-| state of ity for fai < nefée in Boys' Life. “No Joubt when and serious v.hnuxv. Summer 4 (Mondey: Evasive Eyes) / #0%_ene -of .them came face to face country obviously offer that escape and t have cause B t 2 ing.” le Peace. What is needed for % n tile brigade at % (idenay. to shut my eves to kéép from crying. lgw"“ % ot se, toncentration; .g‘ & 8 i:‘, u"’ ea o83 3o

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