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Had the motion been able to curb the fo their number who made themselves of fensive to the public, there would have ‘been no reason for a cemsorship, but the institution is here, With all its dangers, and it deserves a fair trial. One of the principal dangers is that the censors will take themselves tap ot they are set up as guardians of the morals of the people . New York will make a good battle- ground, and after its commission has had a chance to show what it can do. perhaps the producers will run a few of ‘their number omt take up the fight with clean hands. interested in ships and cargoes while abread, accordingly inter- t ‘.geefing them. Ship- usiness are intimately of one is to suggest And so the hope of enlarging trade involves the hope for \ ‘merchant marine. Butl lives upon trade and possessing ade aids possessing a merchant mar- ine. The stremgth and e:.rnlng MT; But you re nyby with {of amy merchant marine is not to - Db“’mm found so much in the swift greyhound Soheaription peice 13 & week: Mo 3 month: W00 :E‘uh-o- 4t Nommi#, Casd.. & Taegians Gy, Pt MR e, 0 st Ofien 3 CUME Bt Pt 105 Norwich, Saturday, Aug. 6, 1831 Iess than five or water that has a s Never attwnpt te in th a ‘Weed, because you are liable to get al tangled us : pe ested in any glated for to ver attempt long dis the other. tance swini slome, ;u i foreign you may be as a immune frop: cramp ; When heated, never plunge into very cold wWater, and if you are unable t» swim be careful of 3 great American common senge ought to know ese things, for they have been dinned in- [of the Atlant to our ears ever since we were bo-n. Very likely, but tomorrow m will read of some lad losing h doing one of these things. We are regaled so often 4 articles of the achievements of modern times—and derful they certainly are, and are mot to be underrated, applied to locometion on land and nav- the the telegraph, tic, but ratber in the cargo rrier of lesser tcnnage. ing you | will develop her foreign .trade, a mer- life for |chant marine ought naturally to follow. However at present where is Wwaiting for the resumption of trade. Two thirds of the Norwegian fieet the pride of Norway, lies idle and rust- ing in the fjords. The arbers of Copen- hagen is a forest af laid-up ships and lit is even aificult to find in the Tiver Tyne an anchorage for an idle vessel. It America of business and shipping every- —_—— gk RUM RUNNING AT SEA. Solid shot from the navigatiom law, Volstead law, and comspiracy law, with a sprinkling of shrapnel from several old piracy laws is said to be all ready rum-running including steam phone, automobile, wireless and many | There is little demand for tonnage. The other things—but yet we are mot the sum total of W knowledge and to be turned schooner Henry T. Marshall which United States authorities seized off At- where the boat was com- verting the three-milo limit into an In- viting brass rail for the thirsty. Novel questions of international law promise to be raised by the seizure of Confessediy the schooner was overhauled outside the three-mile limit, after some of its cargo had been " |thrown overboard and its captain and mate had escaped in 2 SWift motor boat. It is no erime to sell liguor on the high 2lseas and no congress can ever make The nosition of the prosecuting officers is that they will prove a con- spiracy in this case to violate the cms- toms laws and that such. a conspiracy ery is no lomger for ships but for car- goes and those who control the cargees may control the ships. To ald foreign business is to aid our ‘We read much now- a-days about financing foreign business WEEK ENDING JULY 30th, 1921 11,230 achievement, to the extent, at least that in having the swelied head. Revived notice is called our at- {merchant marine. lantic City, tention to the marvellons attainments of old Friar Bacon, the great Franciscan|and one Wwould assume that we were monk who lived far baek in the 13‘h |willing and ready to do so through the century. He not only wrote, but con-|{numerous banking branches abroad. Yet GOVERNMENT PRINTING. While the country economy in government and Budge: Di- casting about unuecessary is talki . g shout the Marshail ease and elegance Latin tongue—who can do it today? mastered every science then kn ironomy. chemistry, mathematics, n the {1 found through personal selicitation not one banking representative abroad who as- | would consider financing a foreign owned business mo matter how promising the investment or well secured. Heprew, Chaldean and Arabic. | fuctuations and cheap gold affords a sure and certain profit with the rising dollar and with our foreign banking there is little benefit to be derived ex- age produce a more remarkgble recctd? {gent to the selfish few interested i the ipstitytion. ‘With a high exchange rate ;nd an unwillingness to extend credit re can be little hope for the expan- sion of our foreign business. This nec- essarily affects the growths of our mer- and was proficient a department that can Those who have been to know have martveled at the of matter bearing the of the Government Prir‘ing Of- ‘Washington, B. C. wave proportiong when mails were fairly ciogged and the blanketed by a mass He had visions of flying-machines, div- bridges, and high explosives. @an th's enormoons flood It may he that the versatile brain of old Roger Bacon held the incipient sarms of the modern airship that recently ha %'Adeamch self revelation of its powe-. e damage that an airplane recently A did in putting an pld German war craft | Chant marine. out of commission by the drovninz of high explosives from a great altitudc revives the auestion of its probable nlace in future battles. The' exveriment has clearly shown that it is mot difficult to attack one of these floating fortresses from above, and that a battleship can- nat defend itseif from a great perpendic- ular distance. Whether this wi much effect unon the world's naval the future remains to be outside the three-mile limit. claim that proof that #o outside the limit to purchase on the high seas goods which are contraband in this country, would establi ot conspiracy. Those are novel points of law which must be threshed out in the courts, pas- of international law which must settled through diplomacy, as the Marshall, though originally a Gloucester now bears a*British regis- ‘We hear at home much criticism about the Shipping Board and its deficit. Much criticism is heard abroad but over there it is for a @ifferent reason. American flag quite conspicuous upon pursued one wninterrupted course from the government presses to % Souud e the wasto baskets. much white for congressional falk costs an- $500.000 as Congressional to send to the comstitucats at home speech may But this 's not the end. jurist, politician, edncator—he was one of the founders of Amherst college— ournalist,/ditor, and most of all lexi- he traversed more literature than any other American writ- A the work of compiling didtionaries that his name fishing Loat, Even if the s tained in their conmtention they are not likely to put an end to rum running by gramme for As long a® the nations are | fatuated with the attempt to sutdo one another in the productlon of big armu- heen delivered nres into print with ampual reports, ng will smash the s’on but the vision of bankruptey. as many nations are uncomfortably on the edge of bankrupicy now. fl;e doings of the airship will be respect e source of sunply in the West Indies is government's was about $7.000,000. a few dollars of bemng old pre-war ODD INCIDENTS IN AMERICAN for sound liguors, are large enough cent oxcavations ve opened wide the eyes of scl.ntific scholars to the fact that a won- 1 in existence interior that parch offer a ready market. the Canadian and the Mesi- can borders must be watched, the long line offers unending op- portunities -for the smugglers and creases by just so much the difculties of the prohibition enforcement officers. Imagine how many men and beats will be needed to meet rum-runners who approach our coasts by the high seas. Phantom fleets and unending coast lines give congress, 's and the public some- beginning to FRENZY FOR REPUBLICS. When France became 3 republic for Duplications and regupli- are taking tons of paper. Stand- cost-accounting, he short-cuts and efficiency devices that valuge ought to h2 in- number of gov- what is sometimes called the prehistoric " work has revealed one thing ngly, and that ancestors in the very tutored savages. I presumably eating raw fiesh. The rulns of an 0ld Astec civilization in northeas: the first time early in the winter of and the news reached this coun- enthusiasm ran rampant. forded almpst as much ex g inmoud buts and | 43" he establishing of our own republic a tew years before. e el | cember 27 was given over to a whole being | 48y of feasting, bell-ringing and can- Atlantic coast Dot all of our long azo were un- There are any In New York, De- wined out of existence. tactics of the give the strongest ey abandoned at the most conservative cal. | DOn-firing. When evening came the So- s a printer and something about the “back shon,” and the costs of Aided and abetted by Direetor Dawes, who can smell a wasted 1 the way aeross the capital, the is about to clean out and reorzanize the “shop.” $12.000.000 may culation at least a thousand years he- |clety of St. Tammany lit up its great tes of printin fore the Spaniards came to Ameriea. The | WigWam and the members spent their outside dimensions of one of the build- far after midnight 1 g ings excayated »re 280 br 360 feet. And |songs and drinking toasts to the French one portion of ihis br forcement offi thing to ponder over. the news reached Boston ized with France the workmanshin excites the |citizens who sympat Massive | decided on a Civic-Fegst, the like of stones are fitted together so closely with- { which Boston had mever seen. for the celebration was set for January 24, 1793, and the Tising sun was wel- ingtruments | comed with 2 salute from the casile and a discharge of cannon in the town. ven a huge ox. that & that may properly |ed during the previ It is the jUPOR & EDITORIAL NOTES. The present sample of August weather meets general approval. t money¥” i a national budget as not to admit every little helps. out -mortar or ceme; the blade of a ife this was done with of the most primitive sort. t five billions important of Not all ean be wrong with the south. Georgia reports a normal peach crop. d been toast- us night. was placed gh car, behind which came a with 800 loaves of bread. and a second creaking under hogsheads A great feast was According to the calendar reached the season be called the mid-year pause. period of the: vear when Nature speaks [Wagon heavy gll of us more or less loudly thro channels of depleted energy. teaching by internretation a bit on the usual activities until T pav a chance to repai | California ‘approves a tariff that pro- tects almonds; but not the almond eyes. AND FIRING Her | of federal punch. “Let up | enioyed by hundreds of the very shortly afterwards the fatizued pow- | Massachusefts cities followed And wise is the man or woman who listens to this voice and in some wa gets a release from the ordina: somewhere and in some way. Normaley ndw has a companion. is cataclysmical, and by the same au- is considerable of 2 Hiring a worker means a cost of the Metropokis. Funny how the bass nearly all bite on the kind of bait the other fellow ig king @ man out of a crowd at a fac- Then he has to be conduet- turned over to a fore: allowed a certaln amount of time familiarize himsel? Firing him means slowing up work by s0o much as his work is a part of the means, in many case: seemed for the time to have put away their wits and gone mad with re their speech and It is no sign that a |their dally conduct wero all regulatad man’s business or his church is going [on strict republican principles s of Imust be a flaming liberty cap in cvery house. There must be a cockade on There must be no more use Sir and Mr. Dr. and exclaimed one of man but institutions suffer from wastage | canism. Thelr dress. in hot weather. Predictions of an early fall are under Tith bs 1abor. | opicion~as propagands by to destruction because it shows s fatigue in hot weather as well a8 him- Some people think that the church- es have compromised with the devil un- Tess they run full blast through the sum- Nobody says the same of the pub- | these ardent republicans, “it is time the | lic schools that have a lonfer sum vacation than any of the churches. If tae offensiv b devil gets hold of the publie schools n | Tay S i%3. %0 P summer he lets go again soon after 1 bod Jay without apparent damage. us all manage to have some vacation. To all great citles and in the gested quarters of small cities and big |his neighbor towns, we have in evidence today quite | Citess. 2 mneccssary modes as the “traffic cop regulations have lo Increase of automobiles, and the “traffic cop”, is their living expression. But how According to jewelers, wrist watches for men are going out of style. news for the pickpockets. of the old titles, cogragement depression—for as of the hour when . may be fired, they take their minds from The committee elimination of wrste putes the cost of unnecessary lahor turn- er in the metal trades at $100,000,000 What it must be in all indus- tries together would, in . pay the national debt 2T luse of these diabolical The man on the corner says: succeed no better than trains in passing on the same track at once. At New ¥York, newspaper editor made haste to beg his friends to address him Henceforth as Citizen, and not as Mr. which was a short form of Master. At Boston, every man was soon calling industry com- Statisticians tell white male a'iens 60 per American citizenship, which is not such a bad propertion. us that out of 100 institution known ‘To cool men whose republicanism was Very strict traffic | of a less ardent kind this folly was In-| cally followed the AWAY FROM CENTRALIZATION. was a worth-while warning that in his Ply- speech when he said against the supreme of power at home This is the time when your friends who are on vacation rub it in by sending your picture post cards whils you hava to ‘stick at the desk. finitely diverting. To laugh at it,to turn it into ridicule prose and verse was long an amusement about those uniformed ckaps on motor- cycles whose duty it is to gee that speed laws are not exceeded? ihe | French republic were impervions o rid- were turned. v could talk of nothing but cockades, | erty and equality and the rights of man. One day the women held a meeting, in liberty caps and French sang patriotic songs. The Knights of Columbus Tuelr. hoads feel complimented by the pope to introduce American work in Italy. seen in the fact that some people are prone to drive recklessly, and reckless driving is responsible for a vast majority of all automobile accidents. But is there not another side to the matter? Are mot. the drivers of machines at the mercy of these cops? tha other day arrested in one of our bi cities by a young beardless officer appar- ently for no just cause. been that he was not turning over as to the main office as his superiors expecj-d, and that he might be t no more a centralization of power do the super- e to control the affairg of the world at history and around at tricked themselv ‘Weighing all the appears that Senator for the modern cent abroad in his trip to Russia. drank toasts and T saw a dri France qualifies °d 5o much in the past President Harding says that “we must combat the growing assumption that the state moust support the peonle, for just is merely the guarantee to the people of the right and opportunity people to support The one outstanding danger of today is the tendency of the peaple to turn to ‘Washington for the things which are the tasks and duties of the forty-elght com- which constitute the na- truckmen at Philadelphia saw the con- unfortunate sailor Their blood boiled leaving their truck they asked why their fellow-cltl- down on his job. Of |2en Was being deprived of his liberty protected, but [2nd when told that he was a debtor. in a moment they the amount of the debt. gave him a few pemce and told him to g0 to the nearest tavern and drink to the liberty, equality and the righis of man, stable dragging through the streats. Tt might have Theoretically American airplanes destroying eities and flests With precis- fon and regularity. times is one thing and actual practice much mgne regarded as falling ocourse we want th we must also insist that justice de giv- en to all drivers of ‘cars. There is no question but thaf the pow- er of heredity is seen In our lves, it probably has less influence over our conduct than our present environment. The Apostle Paul gives his opinion of the subject in these words: “ open face beholding as the glory of the Lord, are changed in- o the same image from glory to glory.” We grow into the image of what de- 1t we stand gazing at red light our faces will show red. If we live in the brazen red Hght districts of | Medusa but a cap and a spear. cilieg, and came into constant theory some- coliected four set him free, Automobiles will have to look to their laurels when a Fokker monoplane car- ries three passengers from Washington 10 Mincola at a total expenss of $5.30 tor gas and oil Even the design on the cents which “We all ' with | P€8an to appear early in March, 1793, in a glass|Was offensive to all friends of France. One grumbler remarked that the chain of fifteen links was a bad omen for liberty. Another took up half a colemn in a newspaper to prove that the true emblem of liberty was not the head of Federal aid. jeaning on federz! help and power have bacoms {00 much the easy and shiftless States confronted tles turn to Waghington, hardly attempt- ing to solve them by themselves. Com- munities look to the state to them what they should be glad to do for themselves. Shifted responsibilities have taken the place of sturdy independence. The president is right. There is men- “the state must support tha people.” After all, the siate is a creation of the people; they have Blown the breath of life into it. fall without their support amd active participation, States are bumilt from the peovle up- ‘ward and not from the figureheads and wmbols of etate downward. The pres- ident has shown the evil roots of the tree. But the ax will meed to be laid “kiss bandit” in Geeneville, C.. who holds up spooning couples with a gun, steals a kiss from the girl and collects $5 from the man practices the refinement of cruelty. lights us ‘most. little word was rece with its coarseness, its materfalism, its |either France sin and shame, these things will be seen [through rellable sources, which were as| - When it suits his convenience Len Small will put himself within reach of the sheriff who has a warrant for him. Thera seem’ to be some advantages in | being the governor of Iiinok in our faces and stamped on our deeds. Can we hide them? 1921 yeass after Christ, than people years before Christ when a certain man wrote: 16 change his spots Or the Ethiop skin? Most people are just what they look to be, and they look just like the things that control their lives. conflicting as they were numerous. At last all doubts were put one morning in April packet was discovered coming up tha In a fey minutes a quarter of the city was at the battery. The momenf. bowever, they heard that France had beheaded her king and was at War with England and Spaln, affairs S year furnishes along the book [began to Wwear a new aspect. line what are calculated the “best sell- They are the beoks that have made the strongest appeal to the general public. They are usually books that set forth in a clear and -convincing manner England fundamental facts of [ mean war, an book that s mus} never 2 “best Seller.” The dislikes both Poverty Of course the “best seller™ Not a bit more in e leopard | New York harbor. Although a public schools bulletin de- clares that two-thirds of the children have physical defects, the one-third are healthy and hearty enough to make any country proud of them. American sympathy with France might be just as strong in the heart, it was not good polities for the American people to get into controversy ith and Spain, which might gradually the enthusi- asm for the mew republic subsided, and with the coming of Citizen Genet, the new Frengh minister States, and the amount of trouble he caused here before the country demand- ed his recall, enthusiastic spirits of the republicans soon became normal once [him almost apologetically: “I—er—want President Harding will be popular in the Rye school district where the open- ing of school has been deferred in order that there may be caddies enough whe) the president and other personages arrive to play golf. some of the great! A really po and immoral i i they can be hacked away. distinguished —_— the United CENSORIHIP ON MOVIES. ‘The state of New York is now sup- plied with a board of movie censors, thres people—two men and a woman— ,Who fer 37,800 each a year will do noth- look at motion pictures and tell At the hearing of the Johnson bill to prohibit smoking by women in the Di trict of Columbia, opposed it but only one appeared in its favor. Merc man's effort was love's labor lost. next to it was Webster's Elementary Vi up to 1576 had old to the number of 70,000,00 - Noah Webster is the known of the men of first magnitude that this county has produced: lawyer. twenty-four (Monday—Famous Ride of Isracl their only need Is cargoes. The development of our merchant mar_ ine is begioning to be feared. Our own criticisms are blinding the public as to our achievement. We should rather look to its needs and correct its fault. Onec of the greatest faults is unjustified crit- icism. The weeden fleet, so much tbe object. of carping, is met our merchant marine. They have served their purposc. They were built for the great emergency on the theery that if they made one suc- cessful trip across, their cost was justi- fied. They were bullt in answer to the cry of “Ships, Ships.” . The cost at the outset may be terrific but to drop out of the race now would be to leave the bounty -of shipping to others. I found the Shipping Board of- fices abroad guite elaborate perhaps but efficient. 1 saw Shipping Board vessels enter discharge, load and clear within extraordinarily reasonable time. The of- fice staffs of young men are alert and active, full of enthusiasm. 1 Ourworst competition will be found in Germany. She has already begun to buy foreign markets tonnage &t the low prices, lower than the cost of producti-n. A licensed master of ocean going vessels | and steamships is paid what we pay our stokers. Ship supplies in Germany are cheaper than eclsewhere. But Germany at present is without the control of car- goes. Time may sfe her carrying her own cargoes in her own bottoms. A's to British shipping, 1 taink that we are her equal. Her operating costs amo the same as ours especially out of her European ports. However Britain is for- tunate in that she has linked her ship- ping wiity foreign business. Her pol- lcy is free tragde, the gocd will in her foreign markets. Seuth America aflords you an example in this. There vou find English business well entrenched. Pref- evence is given to English bottoms, They control many cargoes. Norway is struggling to maintain it- self but unfortunately for her, she con- trols few cargoes. She exporis little, her merchant marine is dependent upon the trade of others. You will appreciate from what T have said that the success of our merchant marine depends upon,our fereign busi- ness, a free policy in trading with our neighbors. Our president has expressed is interest in our merchant marine. am out for a strong interpretation of the Jones Act. T firmly believe in the doc_ trine of preference to American bottoms and that rebates should be given to shippers who ship in American bottoms. Panama Canal shoud always remain tall free to. ghips of American rogistry. We have the mecessary legislation, the siips, jthe men, the capital we need the foreign i business, @ liberal policy to others. Sunday Moming Talk Continuity of Christinn Happiness This world is a very contracted stage for so capacious a being as an immsrial |soul. True it is a world where pleasures may be sought and found but those pleasures have never yet wmeasured up to {the infinite of the soul's inherent long- ings. = Study the history of men who have lived in the past and tasted thousands of sweets between cradle and the coffin, and we find that they have all found the world unable to fill all tue orders the soul puts in for happiness. The soul is | wo big, the world is too small. How could the soul be comtinually “fat and flourishing” and how could it display e larger than the world in which it moves. Even here “the bed is shorter than a man can stretca himself on it” as one has said. it formed for immortality.” of happiness? Not the natural man, for he sez that ever bear the index of death. The wave comes to him but to recede again, and there is a last wave some time. The thesis in the center_current of joy which flows onward and upword: and though death may come, the soul leaps from its outgrown shell to expand in its own sweet little curl or wave, is an indication of | extreme sensitiveness in the person pos-| sessing it Such persons vou will find. dre guite be keen intellectual invariably the their su: , or they may, but are keenly responsive to oundings and through ail the| 1 or discordant to a greater | degree than the average. In your mind go over the list of your friends and acquaintances in whom you have observed this type of fine, silky hair. Aren't all of them ready to take a hint without its being bluntly administered? It's because they are keenly sensitive to little changes in your manmer, your tone, your choice of words. Instinctively they notice these things when many others are oblivious to them. They're not rugged people, these fine- haired ones. You may find muscular| ones among the men, but muscularity is a| different thing from the ability to stand continued strain and take hard knocks. It's also different from the courage and | sense of duty which often impel people to subject themselves to thesa things. But you can bet that the silken-haired man doesn’t like the hard knocks and that the silken-haired girl will be easily offended by the roughly spoken word or the crude jest. On the other hand, if you take the trouble to find out, you'll learn that they both of them responsive and appre- ciative of little courtesies and considera- tions that might be utterly wasted on others. (Monday: Coarse Skin.) Stories That Recall Others Not am Obstructionist. He was a stranger in the town and was obviously looking for an address. But he went about in that half-ashamed way peculiar to shy Deople as though the mere fact of being a stranger were a crime of the worst description. He was getting hopeless about ever reaching his destination, when he es- pied a small, ragged boy standing de- jectedly on the curb. To this young- ster he made his way and addressed to go to the electric light station,” he said. The boy eyed him for a2 moment. “All Now is the time to put in" your wintes coal before bad weather interferes with transportation. . We have a complete stack of Lehigh and Wilkesbarre Coal Co's Wilkesbarre Coal Iron Co’s : o Pennsylvania Coal Co's asc: Egg — Stove and Nut et $12.7 PerToa_o‘f‘mes. Screened Coal Quality, Quantity and Servies - Guaranteed Careful attention given telephone ordery . THE EDWARD CHAPPELL (0. Central Wharf w= ATTENTION! We wish to announce to our patrons ndpnchi Nor- wich in general that beginning August 15 we will have connected with our Ladies’ Coat, Suit and Fur Department, a first class Fur-maker who comes highly recommended from one of the best Furriers in New York. ; Furs of all kinds Remodeled, or new ones Made to Order The Eagle Clothing Co. Outfitters to Men and Women 152-154 Main Sreet all of its operations when it is so much | right, he said. “Trot along.” And Father Swallowed It. They were passing through the village “There is no proportion between such a |°f 2 scanty space and such large capabilities, | had been studying physiclogy amd an- such trivial pleasures and such boundless | 3tomy and the name impressed him at desire, such fleeting duration and a spir- | once. “f3 that where the Now. then. who enjoys a continuity |Bame avple comes from? eks it among the mutable things|psrROLMAN RESCUES CHILD FROM WATERY GRAVE heroic resecne by Patrolman Frank Christian alone knows the joys that are |Linehan saved Amello De Stef- eternal. " He derives happiness from the | fano, 8, of § Mitchell court, New Lon- boundiess, immeasurable God. “All my |don, springs are in Thee' In surveying this | evening, when world he gets more happiness out of the'| ter the officer brought the child up from material than even the natural man, be- |the bottom afthr the boy cause God blesses him in its rel¥gious | the use: and he has a spiritual instinct that | zgitchell extracts sweetness out of the bitter ex- |plunge in the cellar full of water gather- periences that morta! flesh is heir to.|eqd in the Then, as he looks forward his thoughts | property. at the corner of Montauk ave- pierce the bright ream of endless prog- fnue and Bank street ress and @nticipates no dying day. Sor-|is reported row may come, but it makes no paren- |ing in this cellar within the past year. iving Into 12 feet of wa- had sunk for ollow. 6. of 5 cued, after a ourt, was also apen foundation on the Bure ew London. This to be the sixth near-drown- The two little children were playing and sailing following the in the open about boats on the water, which had gathered recent and beautiful eternity. While rompihg about a certatn cellar. portion feet below the rest, their attention was attraced by a ntmber of green apples READ YOUR CHARACTER ||5itmcct b i The apples had fallen from a tree high % Bieks Riliae in an adjacent yard tomache and above Copyrighted 1821 -l ~ Romach il reached out over the edge of the foun- e Topmes. the children. stretching to grab a floating apple. Jost Fine hair, of the silky kind that has | pajance and fell in. daiton In falling over the wall the first child grabbed the second | and in both went : o X : | mates. ¢ keen in their perceptions. They may not|[Btes 9 METCUE RS K, O e {han, who was on the other side of Bank was off duty for the evening, street. senses. They are adversely affected by |°% M dressed in his best. Rushing to the scene the officer took in the situation at a glanoce and peeling off his coat and hat, dove head foremost in the vat of water. He went directly to bottom and groping blindly about manazed to lo- cate the small body and bring it to the susface. The dive was a feat of brav- ery as the cellar is kmown to be full of jagged rocks. ‘Waterbury.—Earie C. Beebe of Water- bury has een appointed assistant ssout executive 4f the Greater Providence council, Boy Scouts of America. Three weeks ago he began duties at Camp Yamgoog, Rogiville, where he will for the summer. . By Four Eatonics i E%’_ it to everybody,’ says &7—-&-“ you have THE NEW YORK BARC 8 THAMES STREET Sl ot Lo Prices will surprise the public of Nor- v;ieh. Therefore we reqwcty«ltoeo-nmln‘conflnce yourselves. We are offering unheard of bargains in Ladies’ Dresses, Skirts and Waists, also in Men’s Shirts and Pants. ICE CREAM WuPfiwmomnnditwlpfi;W to_ohr_Storeangei‘lp ' it “ oy RNOYS